Theopaschitism [Yes, that’s the topic. Pronounced (OED): theo-PA-skit-ism.]

by Crossings

Colleagues,

The OT reading for last Sunday (Pent.16) in our congregation told of Moses beseeching God: “change your mind.” And God did. The world-wide media chatter for the weekend was all about Islam — 9/11 remembrance, the Muslim festival Eid-al-fitr, the Qur’an as tentative-tinder in Florida. Got me to wondering. Would the deity revealed in the Qur’an ever change his mind?

I did some Google-gaggling. One item I stumbled onto was http://www.reformedreflections.ca/other-religions/islam-doctrine-of-god.html “Islam’s Doctrine of God” by Johan D. Tangelder, theologian from the Christian Reformed Church. Although Tangelder didn’t explicitly answer my question, I learned some things from his “compare and contrast” presentation. And it seems to me that the conclusion is clear: Muhammed’s god speaking in the Qur’an would not do what Moses’ god did in last Sunday’s reading. So there is a difference. Does that difference MAKE any difference? In Moses’ case it did: the difference between life and death for the people. When Israel’s God changed his mind, he switched from giving them their just deserts to giving them what they didn’t deserve–forgiveness. Does the Qur’an, could the Qur’an, report such a switch in the deity?

In this case the switch also includes another switch. The one who bears the “ouch” is God, not the ones who deserve it. God suffers. Does God, can God, in the Qur’an suffer? I think the answer is No. If so, does that make any difference? Once upon a time in Christian history it did. But in order for us to get there, please follow this “scenic route” segue.

Last Thursday just-retired Pastor Ron Neustadt and I began a re-run of the happy venture we tried two years ago. Namely, team-teaching a Lutheran Confessions course under the auspices of the Lutheran School of Theology here in St. Louis. Guess what? Islam gets mentioned in the very first article of the Augsburg Confession! Do you Lutherans out there know that? Title of that first article–no surprise–is Doctrine of God. After stating the affirmative the article concludes: “Therefore all the heresies which are contrary to this article are rejected. Among these are the heresy of the Manichaeans . . . Valentinians, Arians, Eunomians, Mohammedans, and others like them . . . .” And there’s an editor’s footnote: “The Reformers frequently referred to Mohammedanism as an anti-Trinitarian heresy.”

Islam a “Christian” heresy? If we started from there nowadays, where might we wind up?

The issue of whether or not God can suffer is in the mix here too. And so I’m going to pull another “item from Oz” out of that computer file “Australia 1994” for the rest of today’s ThTh post. It’s about God suffering, aka theopaschitism. I can no longer remember how it came to pass that I was asked by an Anglican congregation in Adelaide to talk about that very topic. But it did happen. So I went and basically told them what I had learned from Elert’s work on that topic, “Die Theopaschitische Formel” (1950). Here it is.

Peace and joy!
Ed Schroeder


The Church of St. George, the Martyr (Anglican), Adelaide, Australia

PERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS AND THE TRINITY
A series of 6 seminars with discussion exploring the essence of Christian Faith.

Seminar #5 Friday, July 1, 1994 WHO SUFFERS IN THE TRINITY?
An odd question. Yet the Trinity is an odd god. Who cares about God suffering? Who gets any benefit?

From the 3rd to the 6th century the “Who Suffers in the Trinity?” question was one that divided and united the Christian churches. It was a hot-potato–and it was so hot because they thought salvation hung on the answer.

The technical term was “theo-pa-schi-tism” . So long as the Christians restricted their talk to the language of the Bible, there was no problem. No question about Jesus, the Son of God, suffering. And in the Hebrew scriptures, the God whom Jesus called ABBA is clearly also one who suffers. Israel’s God Yahweh continues in covenant faithfulness with his chosen people vis-a-vis their constant and manifold unfaithfulness. That hurts.

The debate arose in the early centuries of the church’s history as Christians sought to talk about their faith in the language of the non-Jewish Hellenistic world. Even though the NT was written in Greek, its thought world is fundamentally Hebrew. And the conflict arose when, in talk about Jesus, the Jesus of the gospels, the word God was predicated to him. Fancy word for this is Christology.

    1. In the first and second cent. with an undeveloped Christology there is no problem talking about God suffering.
    2. The early Christians came to their picture of God via their picture of the Biblical Jesus. Not the other way around. From Ignatius to Tertullian there are God-suffering statements without any concern.
    3. But with Clement of Alexandria the process is reversed: the Christ-picture derives from a pre-existing God-picture. Plato’s axiom about God’s “a-pathy” becomes the apriori, the premise, for any orthodox concept of God. It is never argued. It is just taken for granted. “Everybody knows….”
    1. How it was nuanced:IRENAEUS said “the impassible became passible in Christ.”

      GREGORY THAUMATURGOS said that God did it with style–willingly, on his own accord (not resisting suffering as humans do)–to become Lord over suffering, & without fear.

      For the ARIANS God’s apathy was an absolute axiom. Therefore the Christ who suffered on the cross couldn’t possibly be homo-ousios with God.

      For the NICAEANS who were committed homoousians, suffering was true only of the human Jesus, not the divine LOGOS, the second person of the Trinity.

      Yet even ATHANASIUS could say “The One who was Crucified is God,” using the concept of “idiopoesis” (=the Logos appropriated everything that constitutes the human) as his instrument for doing so.

    2. In the West, LACTANTIUS, JEROME, HILARY found Latin language to say yes and no at the same time to God’s passibility.
    3. Back in the East conflict arose with APOLLINARIS and his concern to join the apathy of God with the sentence: “God was crucified,” and doing so with his “one nature” notion to join apathy and passibility in the incarnate Christ. But it was not really a union. Instead an add-on. The “orthodox” response was the necessity– because of the reality of suffering in the incarnate son of God –to talk about two natures. Only the human can suffer, for suffering is something that requires a body, if it is to take place at all.

    Summa: “With Gregory Thaumaturgos, Athanasius, Hilary and Apollinaris the reality of the suffering, where it is not just ruled out, is nonetheless reduced. With the Antiochians the possibility of God suffering is not questioned, but because of the apathy-axiom the completeness of the incarnation gets fuzzy.”

  1. Even the opponents of these proposals still granted the apathy premise, but then worked to show how in the incarnation God had changed. CYRIL of Alexandria is the one who consciously worked to attack the dominance of the apathy-axiom in Christology.
  2. Council of ChalcedonOne person (hypostasis) two natures (physeis) in Christ is the orthodox language for Christology. Condemned therefore were the monophysites –many of them churches of the Middle East who didn’t speak or understand Greek: Armenians, Syrians, Persians. The monophysite response was that Chalcedon (as interpreted by Pope Leo in his Tome to Flavian) had two distinct acting subjects in Christ, thereby dividing the incarnation in two–one did the miracles, one suffered injury. Splitting Christ in two cannot be orthodox teaching.

    Chalcedon gave Cyril’s perspective the victory. Yes, the divine nature can and does suffer in the incarnate Logos. Yet Christ’s cry of dereliction (My God, my God…) was for Cyril a stumbling block and he backed away from saying that the one uttering that cry was God-in-Christ.

  3. The term theopaschitist became the dirty-word for labeling the monophysites. By saying God suffered, they were charged with denigrating God. But they were unconcerned with such a charge in their own use of the term. Rather they were concerned with the salvation agenda (in their perspective, the divinization of human nature) via the one-nature formula. Thus God had to come all the way down to the lowest human level if all of humanity was to be divinized again. The orthodox Eastern Chalcedonians fought the monophysites with dull weapons, since Christ’s suffering had no fundamental role in their own notion of salvation. For them the incarnation (Bethlehem) was already full salvation. The Christ of the Eastern Orthodox churches is not the Suffering Christ.
  4. In the West.
    1. Christ’s cross moves to the center. God-suffering is at home in folk piety, but not in scholastic theology–neither in its Christology nor in its doctrine of God.
    2. Au contraire Luther, especially in Christ’s cry of dereliction, “My God, my God, why . . .?” His entire theology is theology of the cross..
  5. Today?Theopaschitism? It has disappeared in theology too. Ho hum. Since Leibniz the tables are turned: Not God’s suffering is problematic, but the world’s suffering, our suffering–the so-called “theodicy” issue–that is the question. Can God be a just God if suffering abounds in the world he created? A Copernican revolution, a child of the Enlightenment.

    Yet vis-a-vis human suffering the Christian gospel offers God-suffering as an answer, a good-news answer. A faith-answer, of course, but an answer. Better than no answer at all.

    Why has theopaschitism been forgotten? Theology has forgotten its world-connection. Christology entails an interpretation of the whole world, all reality. Christianity has let our Enlightenment culture squeeze it back into the thin area of religion, personal religious feelings and convictions. Today’s physicists are again pushing theological questions about the world. The world is helped with the suffering of God.

    Third world Christologies are speaking of the suffering God. Some samples: Kozeh Kitamori’s “Theology of the Pain of God” from Japan and his fellow citizen Shusako Endo in his novel “Silence” with its “fumie” Jesus. Also Gabriel Setiloane from Botswana in Africa.

Edward H. Schroeder

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