January 2001 Question
What is the meaning of the 'incarnation' from the process perspective?
Dr. Cobb's Response
We associate the incarnation especially with Christmas. That may be a mistake. It implies that Jesus was born unique, whereas our evidence for his distinctiveness comes from his adult life. It has encouraged thinking of the differences as metaphysical rather than as structural and historical.
I am not on a crusade against traditional Christmas
sentiments or against
their association with incarnation. The historical implausibility
of the
date of Christmas and of most of the stories connected with it
does not
undercut the beauty and meaningfulness of the celebration. A bit
of
demythologization can go along with full enjoyment and appreciation.
But perhaps in the aftermath of another Christmas
it may be worthwhile to
ask what, in process perspective, does "incarnation"
mean and especially
how is the idea connected with the historical figure of Jesus?
We can
begin by noting that process thought overcomes the main obstacle
in most
other forms of thought to conceiving of incarnation. That obstacle
arises
from the supposition that two things cannot occupy the same space
at the
same time. From that it follows that if God is present in Jesus,
some
feature of Jesus' humanity must be replaced.
If we study the debates in
the early church with this point in mind, we will be struck by
how many
efforts there were to identify what was replaced: his soul, his
reason, his
nature, his will. We may be even more struck by the fact that
the
councils, for all their shortcomings, steadfastly refused to accept
these
rational accounts. The great mystery was that God was in Jesus
without
displacing any feature of Jesus' humanity. This is an instance
in which we
can be glad that the church refused to be rational!
Unfortuntely, after the last of the Christological
councils had ended, a
process of interpretation set in, governed by the principle that
something
human must be lacking. The dominant view came to be that what
was lacking
was a human self or person. God constituted that self of person
in Jesus.
This is called the doctrine of Jesus' impersonal humanity. It
came to be
thought of as orthodox. And from my point of view, and that of
many
others, it has done great harm.
For process thought, this whole problem vanishes.
It is the basic nature
of reality that one actual entity is present in subsequent actual
entities,
participating in their very constitution. This presence in no
way detracts
from the fullness of the new actual entity. On the contrary, it
contributes to it. My present moment of experience is vastly enriched
by
the presence in it of preceding occasions of my experience. Apart
from
their constitutive presence I could not be human at all.
Clearly this applies to God's presence in the
world. God is present in
the most literal sense in every creaturely occasion. In human
beings, God
is the source of novelty, of purpose, of meaning, of openness
to others, of
freedom, of responsibility, and of much else besides. Far from
diminishing
our humanity, God is the giver of that humanity. The more fully
God is
present, the more fully we are human.
We confront, then, a very different problem than did the Church Fathers. They had no way of thinking of how God could be genuinely present in Jesus without diminishing Jesus' humanity. What is remarkable is that despite this, they insisted on Jesus' full humanity.
We see that God is present in everyone in such
a way as to create and
intensify our humanity. For us the question is whether there is
anything
distinctive about the way God was in Jesus.
One response is to say that there was not.
The only distinctive element
is that the idea of incarnation developed around Jesus and has
provided a
different way of thinking about God and the world. Whatever else
we say,
that may indeed be the most important point. The God whom we worship
is an
incarnate God, incarnate in the whole world. It was because of
Jesus that
we learned that important truth.
A second response is to think in terms of degrees.
God is in all of us,
calling us to be all that is possible in each moment. The more
fully we
answer the call in one moment, thereby embodying God, the greater
the
possibility for a fuller embodiment of God in following moments.
The more
we resist God's call, the smaller God's role in our lives becomes.
Thinking in terms of degrees, it is not difficult to see Jesus
as having
incarnated God with remarkable fullness. He can function for us
as a
paradigm of incarnation.
A third response, the one that interests me
most, is to reflect on how
different cultures encourage different patterns of divine presence
as well
as the further differences that occur among individuals in each
culture.
This reflection leads to considering the difference between the
way God
functioned in Jesus and the way God has functioned in others,
including
other great spiritual leaders such as Buddha or Amos or Paul or
Eckhart.
In my book on Christology I argued that in Jesus, at least during
significant periods of his ministry, his self was co-constituted
by his
prehensions of his personal past and of God.
The kind of doctrine of incarnation process
thinkers cannot accept is that
which makes Jesus metaphysically different from all other human
beings.
For process thought that is not possible. Nor would it be desirable
if it
were possible. We also think that idea has very little biblical
support.
Within the range of possible process doctrines,
whether one emphasizes
similarities or differences largely depends on whether one thinks
of Jesus
more as the elder brother to be emulated or as an authority through
whom we
learn to think rightly of God and neighbor. There is nothing about
process thought to determine which of these emphases is more important.
And the general openness of process thought suggests that both
have their
place.
God was in Jesus. Even a process thinker who
is not a Christian must
acknowledge that. Jesus' response to God has had world-historical
importance for good and ill. Few would deny that.
Christians find grounds in their belief in Jesus' importance in the scheme of things to repent of the great ill that has been worked in his name. We are empowered by the field of force he generated to seek ways to understand our world and to serve our neighbors wisely. We are inspired by what we learn from him to serve others even when it is costly. We are assured through him that God loves us and forgives us for our sins and failures.
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