|
By Thomas M. Fidelis, OCSO
(Father Thomas Fidelis is a member of the
community at the Monastery of the Holy Spirit in Conyers.)
On Good Friday of the year 1578, in the cramped
cell of his prison at Toledo, the diminutive but indomitable friar John of the
Cross took up his broken quill, dipped it in black ink and sketched a scene of
the crucified Jesus from a perspective never before attempted: the Father
looking down upon His Son. John attached no Scripture text to the image, but
one can readily supply the very words the Father spoke, as out of thunder at
His Son's Baptism and Transfiguration, "This is my beloved Son in Whom I take
delight." Unfortunately, the sketch had little subsequent impact on the history
of sacred art until our own day, when Salvador Dali took vital inspiration from
it and created his own modernistic version.
But let us turn for a moment to another prison
cell, and its distinguished occupant, Dietrick Bonhoeffer, the heroic Lutheran
pastor, imprisoned by the Nazis for his vigorous opposition to their
anti-Christian programs. Concentration camp solitude gave him time to reflect
on the cross of Jesus and its significance for contemporary man. In that cell
he too drew a picture of the Crucified, not in linear drawing, but in words
that are only now shedding their profound meaning:
People go to God when they are sore bestead, Pray to him for
succour, for his peace, for bread, For mercy for their sick, sinning or dead:
All people do so, Christian and unbelieving. People go to God when He is sore
bestead, Find Him poor and scorned, without shelter or bread, Whelmed under
weight of the wicked, the weak, the dead: Christians stand by God in His hour
of grieving.
What is startling about Bonhoeffer's vision is
that where we would have expected him to say "Jesus in the second stanza, he
deliberately inserted the word "God". Most interpreters of the poem ignored the
substitution, claiming that it was a theological slip on the part of poor
Bonhoeffer, so beaten and starved, that he could not think straight under his
cruel prison regime. However, in 1972, the prestigious German Protestant
theologian Jurgen Moltmann shocked the academic world by his support of
Bonhoeffer's view, writing a vigorous defense of it in his book, The
Crucified God.
Moltmann argued that both Western and Eastern
Christianity have illegitimately borrowed too much of their theology of God
from Plato and Plotinus, and have not taken seriously the startling language of
the Old Testament about the God who changes. The Greeks taught that God was
immutable, unchanging, totally unaffected by His creation. When confronted with
the God of the Hebrews, they merely shrugged their shoulders, charging that the
changing Hebrew God was either an inferior deity, or that the language was
purely anthropomorphic. Even previous to Bonhoeffer and Moltmann, Professor
Whitehead was warning the West in his Process Theology that Greek notions of an
unchanging God could not be square with the biblical revelation. He taught that
once the transcendent God had decided to create and save His people, then He
must, of necessity, enter into a living, changing, relationship with them. In a
word, God is now heavily involved, and that means constant change on His part,
as He initiates or responds to His creatures.
Only the New Testament, of all the ancient
religious, claimed that "God is love," and not merely power or knowledge. But
the willingness and ability to suffer with others is a basic component of love,
or else it forfeits credibility. Can God truly describe himself as love if
historical love does not affect him? Moltmann answers: "If God were incapable
of suffering
then God would also be incapable of loving." Since love is
the acceptance of another, without taking thought of one's own well being, then
it contains within itself the capacity for compassion, and the freedom to
suffer the otherness of the other. An inability to suffer would contradict the
basic Christian assertion that "God is love."
But lest we bog down in theoretical discussions on
whether God can or does change, or whether one can interchange Jesus and God,
let us go to the New Testament, and hear Jesus Himself, less than twenty-four
hours before his crucifixion, treat this very issue. At the Last Supper, as he
was speaking of the Father, Philip interrupted, "Lord, show us the Father and
that will be enough for us." "Philip," Jesus replied, "after I have been with
you all this time, you still do not know me? Whoever has seen me, has seen the
Father
Do you not believe that I am in the Father and the Father is in
me?" (Jn. 14: 8-10) Now, dear reader, look again at the pen drawing of the
crucified. In the light of Jesus' own affirmation "I am in the Father and the
Father is in me" cannot you see GOD crucified!
Someone might object that the agonized words of
Jesus on the cross, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" do not bear out
this thinking. It is true that at this scene there is no voice thundering from
heaven, "You are my beloved Son in whom I take delight." And why? I suggest
that Calvary is the complete reversal of the ending of the Book of Job. There,
God roars out of the whirlwind, browbeating Job for daring to question Him on
the subject of the innocent person suffering. Does not Job realize he is
dealing with the unchanging, transcendent God? But on Calvary, the desperate
plea of the innocent sufferer is met with complete silence, because
because
"God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself" (2 Cor.
5:19) -- right there on the cross.
|