Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Bayer contra Barth, part 2

See part 1 here.

On the Scheme of Theory and Practice:
“The twofold scheme serves as a basic model right up to our own day.  An impressive example of this is the motto of Taizé: contemplation et lutte, ‘prayer and engagement.’…The Roman Catholic tradition has at its best maintained the twofold scheme up to the present in the sense of Meister Eckhart’s dialectic [that practice must be adopted in such a way that it does not exclude theory].  Karl Barth has also followed this twofold scheme in his strongly cognitive and contemplative understanding of faith, which of course is connected to the modern emphasis on construction.  However, this scheme, together with the Platonic-Aristotelian concept of science that always goes with it, was dealt a fatal blow by Luther’s concept of theology.  For him, faith is no longer subordinated to theory, but it is a unique and distinctive kind of life, a receptive life (vita passiva).  Theory and practice are no longer related to each other in a two-fold way.  Rather, both are related to faith, and it is this third element that determines whether they are true or false.” (p. 109) 
         “Festivals and holidays (holy days) make harsh demands on the old nature, for it means that we must cease from our work: ‘For our sinful nature is very unwilling to die and to be passive, and it is a bitter day of rest for it to cease from its own works and be dead.’  This has been a bitter pill for modern theological anthropology, right up to the theology of Barth and Bultmann, in which humans are always seen as active subjects, as doers (for Barth analogously to God)…. However, this overlooks the power of the Sabbath, of Sunday, to establish life, because on the Lord’s day human work ceases and God is active.  If we receive this power as a categorical gift, the urge to realize ourselves, not only in our work but also in our actions, even in the act of faith, must die…        
This kind of dying, however, makes room for life: ‘Keep hand and heart from labor free, that God may do his work in thee. (Lutheran Hymn)’…  Faith, of course, is nothing but ‘a divine work in us which changes us and makes us to be born anew of God, John 1 [12-13].  It kills the old Adam and makes us altogether new persons, in heart and spirit and mind and powers.’If it is true that we must rest from our work, die to the old self, to let God do his work, faith is primarily neither theory nor practice, neither a speculative life (vita contemplativa) nor an active life (vita activa), but, to use Luther’s term for it, a receptive life (vita passiva).” (p. 92-93, quotes from Luther)

Since Aristotle, discussion of science as an academic discipline has involved the distinction between theory and practice.  Theology has largely remained in this scheme throughout its history.  Bayer proposes that to remain within the scheme of theory and practice, of speculation and activity, is to succomb to the temptation to justify one's self and neglect the importance of faith, which is neither theory nor practice but something separate which God does to us.  Theory and practice are merely the outgrowth of that faith as it is challenged and seeks to establish itself.  Theology should not concern itself with striking the proper balance between theory and practice, but rather it should rest and be captured by God's work which kills and makes alive.

7 comments:

  1. Tyson- I also realize this seems to contradict your portrayal of Bultmann as emphasizing "faith as an open hand." I don't know anything about Bultmann, so go ahead make that objection, just don't expect me to make any sort of sensible defense for Bayer. :o)

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  2. Here are some of my initial thoughts after reading part 1 and 2:

    Bayer, with a rigorous demeanor and intellectual stamina, makes the argument that the work of a christian is not to achieve understanding and make good arguments.

    I see a function of his activity in the theo-intellectual community to be protection for those outside of it. (I'm not calling this definitive, and I'd be interested to know if you read this into the text.) If the correct program is "faith seeking understanding" then our community has this problem -- churches are filled with people seeking comfort or routine and not understanding. (What jerks.)

    The other piece is, for the intellectuals, theology becomes a tool for self justification, for becoming more right. At the end there will be a reader board listing those special men who died the most correct.

    Luther/Bayer seems to be saying that it isn't about making it to enlightenment, it's about making it at all.

    The person who suffers and throws his books down, questions God's goodness and his own program of understanding, is actually engaging in the experience of theology rather than putting it aside. God's unmaking us in order to make us to himself.

    I see Bayer's words as the official intellectual permission to not be a christian intellectual. Because what matters is what God's doing and not what we do.

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  3. Amy, I think you've got it mostly right. The only adjustment I would make is that Bayer isn't so much getting rid of academic theology, but rather trying to put it in its place. Academic theology serves a regulatory role to the proclamation; the problem comes when it displaces that proclamation. God's direct word to us (through scripture, preaching, sacraments, life experience, relationships, etc.) is the primary business of the Christian faith, academic theology is necessary in interpreting God's word and regulating our proclamation, but it is secondary in importance.

    That said, you're always a delight to read! Thanks for sharing your insight!

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  4. (Oops, I just realized I didn't answer part of your comment very directly!)

    So, Bayer is protecting the proclamation of those outside the theo-intellectual community by attacking academic theology's excesses, not by negating academic theology itself.

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  5. What does regulating our proclamation mean?

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  6. It means guiding our presentation of the gospel to others. Academic theology helps us to use language that is faithful to God's word to us.

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  7. Huh, that's a lot more humble minded than what I thought it meant.

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