September 2000 Question
"Process theology presents images of God which are very positive (God works by love, encouragement, persuasion...) but are there others images too? How does process theology understand the anger of God, the notions of devil, Satan...?"
Dr. Cobb's Response
It is quite correct that process theology emphasizes the goodness
of God.
God is that which can be completely trusted. We can take this
position
because we believe there is a great difference between what happens
in the
world and in our individual lives on the one side, and what God
aims at
moment by moment, on the other. Those who believe that what happens
is
what God causes to happen must, of course, adopt a much more ambiguous
view
of God's character.
Even so, there is a danger that the emphasis
on God's goodness lead to a
somewhat sentimental view. That would be false to our tradition.
Whitehead wrote that what God gives us in each moment, the initial
aim, "is
the best for that impasse. But if the best be bad, then the ruthlessness
of God can be personified as Ate, the goddess of mischief."
(PR, p. 244)
The language of God's wrath can fit in here. We can trust God
to direct us
to the best possible, but we certainly cannot assume that that
will be
pleasant of desirable!
Process theologians sometimes pick up on Kazantzakis'
vision. Here God is
seen as pushing and pulling toward some more complex form of existence
at
great cost to those through whom God seeks this end. In more technical
Whiteheadian formulations, God draws us toward new contrasts that
involve
the sacrifice of earlier assurances. To follow God is repeatedly
to die to
what we have been in order to rise to what is now possible.
The question points also to the possibility
of negative forms of divine
reality and power. Does process thought affirm divine beings that
work for
evil alongside or over against the always trustworthy God? The
answer is
No. The evil in the world is all too understandable without positing
such
entities. Inertial resistance to God in the natural world becomes
sloth in
human beings. It simply expresses how all things would be apart
from God's
lure. Furthermore, once there is life, there is competition for
survival.
This is ruthless. The few successful life forms crowd out or kill
myriads
of others. At the level of sentient life, this involves suffering.
God's
call to each creature involves acting in such a way as to strive
to survive
despite the costs to other creatures. The net result is a world
that grows
richer in value. But this is gained at enormous cost in suffering.
Among human beings, this same tendency to struggle
for survival and other
advantages continues regardless of the cost to others. In us it
becomes
sinful, since in our case God calls us to broaden our concern
and to seek
our good in concert with others rather than at their expense.
But we need
no special explanation for our resistance to this call.
It is also striking how what is best in us
can easily intensify evil. Our
relational being leads us to identify strongly with us in a social
group.
"We" is central to our language and our being. The group
commands our
devotion and we are ready to sacrifice for it. This is of great
value.
Without it human beings (as some species of animals before us)
would not
have survived.
But when the struggle for survival and other
goods shifts from the level of individuals to that of groups it becomes even more destructive.
Warfare
is its most dramatic expression. God calls us both to loyalty
to our own
groups and also to appreciation and acceptance of other groups.
Response
to the first part of this call often blocks sensitivity to the
second. The
consequences are often terrible.
Of course, with human beings, far more complex
forms of evil arise. We
can employ the capacity to transcend ourselves in real concern
for others
to aim at control of others and even at their destruction. We
can even
take pleasure in the suffering of innocent people. We do need
explanations
of these perversions, but process thinkers turn first to students
of
sociology and psychology for help rather than to students of demonology.
Several process theologians have been impressed
by the biblical image of
powers and principalities. It seems clear that social structures
develop
that promote evil and inhibit good beyond the will and control
of
individual human beings. They may well be regarded as demonic.
Their
emergence, however, can be explained without recourse to demons.
Only if
sociology and psychology turn out to be clearly insufficient,
will we turn
to another account.
I leave the door open here. Process theology
offers no metaphysical
grounds for the denial of evil forces of a personal or quasi-personal
sort.
For example, some students have found the phenomena called
demon-possession to be best explained in just that way. Although
few
process theologians have accepted this analysis, it is not to
be rejected
out of hand. These demons would not constitute a "divine"
power of evil,
but they could certainly constitute important creaturely powers
of evil.
Like so many questions that many try to resolve
metaphysically, process
theology treats this one as an empirical issue. We should not
quickly
accept explanations of this kind, since so much once explained
in such ways
is better understood in scientific terms. But we should not foreclose
such
possibilities if the evidence is sufficiently strong. My judgment,
as of
now, is that the evidence is not sufficiently strong. But I realize
that
this may be because I have not examined it with sufficient care.
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