One of the important questions that Maurice raises and answers is, How is Christ to be regarded? Is he to be regarded "merely as a man born at a certain time into this world, and the head of a sect called Christians," or, rather, as Maurice contends, "as the Son, the Word of the Father, begotten from everlasting of the Father"? (The Doctrine of the Thirty Nine Articles: 43). Unless I'm mistaken, I raise and answer the very same in a closely parallel, if not convergent, way in The Point of Christology. Consider, e.g., such passages as the following:
While there does indeed seem to be a difference in principle between even perfectly actualizing authentic existence and being the incarnation of God asserted by Nicæa and Chalcedon, these are hardly the only terms in which what is really essential in this difference may be formulated. On the contrary, . . . even in the supposedly 'low' christology of the earliest Jewish-Christian community, the claim made for Jesus was that he is the decisive re-presentation of God and as such belongs on the divine rather than on the human side of the relationship between God and human beings generally. But if I am right about this, the really essential difference, upheld in some terms or other by all New Testament christologies, is the difference between being merely one more authority, even the primary such authority, and being the explicit primal source from which all authority derives. Because even a perfectly authentic human existence need be no more than one authority among others, on the same level as ourselves, even if first and foremost among us, Jesus' having actualized such an existence cannot possibly be the sufficient condition of the truth of these christologies. For the essential claim made by each of them, whatever the concepts and symbols in which it was formulated, is that Jesus is rather the primal source of all authority, on the same level as God, even if also distinct from God as this very source now become fully explicit (81). |
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The other important point at which, I am convinced, I am, in my own way, trying to uphold something that Maurice is keen on is the distinction he draws between "a gospel of facts" and "a gospel of notions" (The Kingdom of Christ, 1:10). Unless I'm mistaken, this is his way of distinguishing – in my terms, following Bultmann – between "the that' and "the what," and between "self-understanding/understanding of existence," on the one hand, and ''world view," on the other. And recognizing this is also the key to making sense out of his otherwise merely question-begging and questionably meaningful statements that "creeds" are "facts," while "dogmas" are merely "notions," or "opinions." Clearly, creeds are no more facts, or no less notions, than dogmas are, unless they're taken – as Maurice and I both argue they are to be taken – as "direct address," the gift/demand of a self-understanding/understanding of existence, rather than the "indirect address" communicating a world view. "The most awful and absolute truths, which notions displace or obscure," Maurice argues, "are involved in facts and through facts may be entertained and embraced by those who do not possess the faculty for comparing notions, and, have a blessed incapacity of resting in them" (1:10). In my terms, "facts," which is to say, existentially significant facts, mediate self-understanding/understanding of existence, which is something importantly different from "symbolizing ideas." This is the conceptual background of Maurice's question about Christianity – namely, whether it "shall be a practical principle and truth in the hearts of men, or shall be exchanged for a set of intellectual notions or generalizations" (2:44).
I'm aware that this is not as well developed as it needs to be. But I trust I have said enough to make clear that, at this second point, also, the parallel, if not convergence, between Maurice's intentions and my own is very, very close. It's hard, therefore, not to think of Wilhelm Herrmann, who, as Bultmann recognized, had all, or most, of the right ideas, but remained very much in need of "the 'right' philosophy."
18 August 2007