A
Résumé of My Thought | Hans Urs von
Balthasar
Translated by Kelly Hamilton
Hans Urs von
Balthasar (1905-88) was a Swiss theologian, considered to be
one of the most important Catholic intellectuals and writers of the
twentieth century.
Incredibly prolific and diverse, he wrote
over one hundred books and hundreds of articles. In this essay, first
published in 1988 in Communio,
the theological journal he helped found, and later in Hans
Urs von Balthasar: His Life and Work (Communio
Books/Ignatius Press, 1991; edited by David L. Schindler), he offers
an introduction to his thought and writing.
Visit this
IgnatiusInsight.com Author Page for more about
Balthasar's life and for a full listing of the sixty volumes of his
work translated and published by Ignatius Press.
When a man has
published many large books, people will ask themselves: What,
fundamentally, did he want to say? If he is a prolific novelist-for
example Dickens or Dostoevsky-one would choose one or another of his
works without worrying oneself too much about all of them as a whole.
But for a philosopher or theologian it is totally different. One
wishes to touch the heart of his thought, because one presupposes
that such a heart must exist.
The question has often been
asked of me by those disconcerted by the large number of my books:
Where must one start in order to understand you? I am going to
attempt to condense my many fragments "in a nutshell", as
the English say, as far as that can be done without too many
betrayals. The danger of such a compression consists in being too
abstract. It is necessary to amplify what follows with my
biographical works on the one hand (on the Fathers of the Church, on
Karl Barth, Buber, Bernanos, Guardini, Reinhold Schneider, and all
the authors treated in the trilogy), with the works on spirituality
on the other hand (such as those on contemplative prayer, on Christ,
Mary and the Church), and finally, with the numerous translations of
the Fathers of the Church, of the theologians of the Middle Ages, and
of modern times. But here it is necessary to limit ourselves to
presenting a schema of the trilogy: Aesthetic, Dramatic, and Logic.
[1]
We start with a reflection on the situation of man. He
exists as a limited being in a limited world, but his reason is open
to the unlimited, to all of being. The proof consists in the
recognition of his finitude, of his contingence: I am, but I could
not-be. Many things which do not exist could exist. Essences are
limited, but being (l'être) is not. That division, the
"real distinction" of St. Thomas, is the source of all the
religious and philosophical thought of humanity. It is not necessary
to recall that all human philosophy (if we abstract the biblical
domain and its influence) is essentially religious and theological at
once, because it poses the problem of the Absolute Being, whether one
attributes to it a personal character or not.
What are the
major solutions to this enigma attempted by humanity? One can try to
leave behind the division between being (Être) and
essence, between the infinite and the finite; one will then say that
all being is infinite and immutable (Parmenides) or that all is
movement, rhythm between contraries, becoming (Heraclitus).
In
the first case, the finite and limited will be non-being as such,
thus an illusion that one must detect: this is the solution of
Buddhist mysticism with its thousand nuances in the Far East. It is
also the Plotinian solution: the truth is only attained in ecstasy
where one touches the One, which is at the same time All and Nothing
(relative to all the rest which only seems to exist). The second case
contradicts itself: pure becoming in pure finitude can only conceive
of itself in identifying the contraries: life and death, good fortune
and adversity, wisdom and folly (Heraclitus did this).
Thus
it is necessary to commence from an inescapable duality: the finite
is not the infinite. In Plato the sensible, terrestrial world is not
the ideal, divine world. The question is then inevitable: Whence
comes the division? Why are we not God?
The first attempt at a
response: there must have been a fall, a decline, and the road to
salvation can only be the return of the sensible finite into the
intelligible infinite. That is the way of all non-biblical mystics.
The second attempt at a response: the infinite God had need of a
finite world. Why? To perfect himself, to actualize all of his
possibilities? Or even to have an object to love? The two solutions
lead to pantheism. In both cases, the Absolute, God in himself, has
again become indigent, thus finite. But if God has no need of the
world-yet again: Why does the world exist?
No philosophy could
give a satisfactory response to that question. St. Paul would say to
the philosophers that God created man so that he would seek
the Divine, try to attain the Divine. That is why all pre-Christian
philosophy is theological at its summit. But, in fact, the true
response to philosophy could only be given by Being himself,
revealing himself from himself. Will man be capable of understanding
this revelation? The affirmative response will be given only by the
God of the Bible. On the one hand, this God, Creator of the world and
of man, knows his creature. "I who have created the eye, do I
not see? I who have created the ear, do I not hear?" And we add
"I who have created language, could I not speak and make myself
heard?" And this posits a counterpart: to be able to hear and
understand the auto-revelation of God man must in himself be a search
for God, a question posed to him. Thus there is no biblical theology
without a religious philosophy. Human reason must be open to the
infinite.
It is here that the substance of my thought inserts
itself. Let us say above all that the traditional term "metaphysical"
signified the act of transcending physics, which for the Greeks
signified the totality of the cosmos, of which man was a part. For us
physics is something else: the science of the material world. For us
the cosmos perfects itself in man, who at the same time sums up the
world and surpasses it. Thus our philosophy will be essentially a
meta-anthropology, presupposing not only the cosmological sciences,
but also the anthropological sciences, and surpassing them towards
the question of the being and essence of man.
Now man exists
only in dialogue with his neighbor. The infant is brought to
consciousness of himself only by love, by the smile of his mother. In
that encounter the horizon of all unlimited being opens itself for
him, revealing four things to him: (i) that he is one in love with
the mother, even in being other than his mother, therefore all being
is one; (2) that that love is good, therefore all being is good; (3)
that that love is true, therefore all being is true; and (4) that
that love evokes joy, therefore all being is beautiful.
We add
here that the epiphany of being has sense only if in the appearance
(Erscheinung) we grasp the essence which manifests itself
(Ding an sich). The infant comes to the knowledge not of a
pure appearance, but of his mother in herself. That does not exclude
our grasping the essence only through the manifestation and not in
itself (St. Thomas).
The One, the Good, the True, and the
Beautiful, these are what we call the transcendental attributes of
Being, because they surpass all the limits of essences and are
coextensive with Being. If there is an insurmountable distance
between God and his creature, but if there is also an analogy between
them which cannot be resolved in any form of identity, there must
also exist an analogy between the transcendentals– between
those of the creature and those in God.
There are two
conclusions to draw from this: one positive, the other negative. The
positive: man exists only by interpersonal dialogue: therefore by
language, speech (in gestures, in mimic, or in words). Why then deny
speech to Being himself? "In the beginning was the Word, and the
Word was with God, and the Word was God" (Jn 1:1).
The
negative: supposing that God is truly God (that is to say that he is
the totality of Being who has need of no creature), then God will be
the plenitude of the One, the Good, the True, and the Beautiful, and
by consequence the limited creature participates in the
transcendentals only in a partial, fragmentary fashion. Let us take
an example: What is unity in a finite world? Is it the species (each
man is totally man, that is his unity), or is it the
individual (each man is indivisibly himself)? Unity is thus polarized
in the domain of finitude. One can demonstrate the same polarity for
the Good, the True, and the Beautiful.
I have thus tried to
construct a philosophy and a theology starting from an analogy not of
an abstract Being, but of Being as it is encountered concretely in
its attributes (not categorical, but transcendental). And as the
transcendentals run through all Being, they must be interior to each
other: that which is truly true is also truly good and beautiful and
one. A being appears, it has an epiphany: in that it is beautiful and
makes us marvel. In appearing it gives itself, it delivers itself to
us: it is good. And in giving itself up, it speaks itself, it unveils
itself: it is true (in itself, but in the other to which it reveals
itself).
Thus one can construct above all a theological
aesthetique ("Gloria"): God appears. He
appeared to Abraham, to Moses, to Isaiah, finally in Jesus Christ. A
theological question: How do we distinguish his appearance, his
epiphany among the thousand other phenomena in the world? How do we
distinguish the true and only living God of Israel from all the idols
which surround him and from all the philosophical and theological
attempts to attain God? How do we perceive the incomparable glory of
God in the life, the Cross, the Resurrection of Christ, a glory
different from all other glory in this world?
One can then
continue with a dramatique since this God enters into an
alliance with us: How does the absolute liberty of God in Jesus
Christ confront the relative, but true, liberty of man? Will there
perhaps be a mortal struggle between the two in which each one will
defend against the other what it conceives and chooses as the good?
What will be the unfolding of the battle, the final victory?
One
can terminate with a logique (a theo-logique). How can
God come to make himself understood to man, how can an infinite Word
express itself in a finite word without losing its sense? That will
be the problem of the two natures of Jesus Christ. And how can the
limited spirit of man come to grasp the unlimited sense of the Word
of God? That will be the problem of the Holy Spirit.
This,
then, is the articulation of my trilogy. I have meant only to mention
the questions posed by the method, without coming to the responses,
because that would go well beyond the limits of an introductory
summary such as this.
In conclusion, it is nonetheless
necessary to touch briefly on the Christian response to the question
posed in the beginning relative to the religious philosophies of
humanity. I say the Christian response, because the responses of the
Old Testament and a fortiori of Islam (which remains
essentially in the enclosure of the religion of Israel) are incapable
of giving a satisfactory answer to the question of why Yahweh, why
Allah, created a world of which he did not have need in order to be
God. Only the fact is affirmed in the two religions, not the
why.
The Christian response is contained in these two
fundamental dogmas: that of the Trinity and that of the Incarnation.
In the trinitarian dogma God is one, good, true, and beautiful
because he is essentially Love, and Love supposes the one, the other,
and their unity. And if it is necessary to suppose the Other, the
Word, the Son, in God, then the otherness of the creation is not a
fall, a disgrace, but an image of God, even as it is not God.
And
as the Son in God is the eternal icon of the Father, he can without
contradiction assume in himself the image that is the creation,
purify it, and make it enter into the communion of the divine life
without dissolving it (in a false mysticism). It is here that one
must distinguish nature and grace.
All true solutions offered
by the Christian Faith hold, therefore, to these two mysteries,
categorically refused by a human reason which makes itself absolute.
It is because of this that the true battle between religions begins
only after the coming of Christ. Humanity will prefer to renounce all
philosophical questions-in Marxism, or positivism of all stripes,
rather than accept a philosophy which finds its final response only
in the revelation of Christ.
Forseeing that, Christ sent his
believers into the whole world as sheep among wolves.
Before
making a pact with the world it is necessary to meditate on that
comparison.
Originally published in Communio 15
(Winter 1988). © 1988 by Communio: International Catholic
Review.
NOTES:
[1]
In the trilogy, Hans Urs von Balthasar approaches Christian
revelation under the aspect of its beauty (Herrlichkeit),
goodness (Theodramatik), and truth (Theologik). See
"English Translations of German Titles" in Appendix of Hans
Urs von Balthasar: His Life and Work for full
titles.
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