The Theologian as Authentic Subject Lonergan and the Centrality of Method by Alan Wade BTheol, G.Dip.R.E., TheolM. A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Theology MCD University of Divinity Melbourne, Australia March 2012 Abstract This thesis is concerned with understanding the relation between transcendent fulfilment of human life through relation to God, as declared in Church teaching, and finite fulfilment through knowing and loving. It is dependent on the work of Bernard Lonergan SJ in arguing that understandings of the cognitional connection between subjectivity and objectivity have direct foundational implications for theology. Comparison and contrast is used to demonstrate the effect of ‘conceptualist’ and ‘intellectualist’ approaches. Authenticity of meanings and values is understood as resulting from sustained faithfulness to transcendental precepts of being attentive, intelligent, reasonable and responsible. Religious conversion, theology’s foundational reality, adds the further precept of complete self-transcendence through unconditional being-in-love which involves ongoing conversion towards authenticity and consistent renunciation of unauthenticity. It is maintained that since conceptual formulations bear the marks of an originating context, theology must always be contemporary and authenticity in regard to raising and answering questions is vital, requiring openness to collaboration, further knowledge, and further questions by religious traditions and theologians. The manner in which Christian faith is held to be true is as fundamental as truth itself. ii Statement of Originality I, Alan Wade, hereby certify that this thesis contains no material which has been accepted for the award of any other degree or diploma in any university or other institution and affirm that to the best of my knowledge, the thesis contains no material previously published or written by another person, except where due reference is made in the text of the thesis. 7th March, 2012. iii Acknowledgements This thesis would not have been possible without the patient and wise guidance of my supervisor, Dr Kathleen Williams, RSM. For her encouragement, guidance, support and friendship, I shall always be grateful. I am also thankful to: the Melbourne College of Divinity for the grant of an Australian Postgraduate Award and allowing additional time to complete the work; Faculty, staff and students of Yarra Theological Union, who have constituted a stimulating and nurturing community of learning that has been a blessing and privilege; Tony Kelly, CSsR, for introducing me to the work of Bernard Lonergan and for guidance at a critical time of transition; Dr Richard P Gerraty for medical advice; and Bernadette Reeders for proof reading. Finally, I acknowledge with profound thankfulness the love and support of Melita, my partner in life, who has been a sustaining source of encouragement through difficulties encountered on the way. My gratitude is far deeper than any words of mine can tell. iv Preface The motivation for this thesis arises from an ongoing transformation of my self- understanding as a subject in relation to God through acquaintance with the work of Bernard Lonergan SJ. I have been enabled to understand a basic issue that had been the cause of confusion, unease, and self-doubt for many years. Since recognition of theology as the product of human minds is central to the thesis, this preface is an introduction to relevant formative influences on the mind of the writer. The thesis arises from reflection on experience that has involved three major changes of ‘spiritual habitat’ or Christian tradition. The first major change was a decision to leave the Christadelphians, the exclusive and fundamentalist sect to which my family belonged, and become a Baptist. I received theological education, ministerial training, and was ordained and served as a Minister in the Baptist church before being received as a Minister of the Word in the Uniting Church. In what I pray is a final change, I was received into the Catholic Church. This sequence of changes was entwined with other profound changes in personal circumstances. It is a history that has been both sad and sorry as well as energising and expansive. Because my story is ‘me’, and I would not be who I am without it, I have no regrets about the changes of spiritual habitat. Instead I feel profoundly grateful for the spirit of questioning that engendered them and persisted with me despite the desire to settle down and rest. Since the most influential formation is in childhood and youth, I will briefly indicate something of that experience. Christadelphians are a small group that originated in the mid-nineteenth century seceding from a movement known as Restorationism or Christian Primitivism. Their self-understanding is one restoring the simple faith of the first century ‘ecclesias’ and of having discovered ‘the Truth’ of ‘Bible teaching’. The v maintenance of a very limited horizon of thought, particularly in regard to scripture and history, is regarded as a matter of faithfulness and a necessary part of being ‘separate from the world’. When belonging to a faith community is a basic part of one’s identity embodied in personal relationships, it is set in a large context. If renouncing the basis of faith of the group means being cut off from all that is known and familiar, including people who have been generous, supportive and influential in formative years, it can be easier to suppress questions, the answers to which might cause such disruption, than pursue them. Coming to the inevitable conclusion that the form of religious belief I had inherited was basically erroneous was a process undertaken only fitfully and reluctantly over years. Once the rejection of a tradition has taken place, there is heightened awareness that religious self-identity is a matter of personal responsibility, deliberation and choice. There is no stabilizing factor of “having always belonged” that indicates an identity with a sense of shared communal responsibility and which enables tensions and divisions to be more easily borne. A search begins for adequate foundations capable of providing the basis of a religious identity that is in the process of being formed. My search took place with an in-built suspicion of propositional forms of expression of religious belief that claimed to be certain truth. At the same time, the question of God had also become the most important life question. Theological education, ministerial training and pastoral ministry in the Baptist and Uniting Churches led to a personal re- formation and an understanding that the realities of faith were known in a more direct, embodied and personal way by many great figures in the history of the Church than I had been prepared for in my childhood and youth. Theological reflection had then vi been a matter of correct understanding of formulations of doctrine and relating them to one another within a very limited framework. The question of the relation of such knowledge to lived experience was of little importance because assent to propositional truth was vital for salvation. The only relation to ‘the Truth’ was that of a particular to a universal. The proposition that “God loves all people”, invites recognition of being a person and the logical conclusion “therefore, God loves me.” There was evidence in the Bible and the influence of kind and generous people who assented to the proposition. Faith was a rational decision and one lived “as if” it were the case, regardless of experience. Indeed, the act of assent, of ‘having faith’, was purer or more heroic if there was little or no consolation by way of experience when striving to conform oneself to the obligations of being ‘in the Truth’. Of course, there has to be some connection, otherwise belief is nonsensical. In my judgment, the lived reality connecting Christadephians and their faith is “fellowship”. One belongs to a group of simple, upright and kind people who provide a sense of security by operating as a large extended family. Such a depth of acceptance and support is rarely found and can be very attractive when discovered. The outward focus emphasising “bible teaching” and “right doctrine” provides a framework for group identity that notionally assures observant members of their relation to God, eternal life, and the world. Discipline concerned with maintaining doctrinal purity ensures a group solidarity necessary to provide such mutual support. Since one’s experience is always understood in the light of a tradition in which one has been formed, or has adopted, the benefits of belonging are easily equated with the soundness of the professed beliefs. This leads to tacit agreement not to explore questions that might query those beliefs. If the horizon of understanding is severely limited, and being a person of faith is equated with maintaining that limitation, a circle is completed that encloses the whole of life vii and deals with all relevant questions. Other questions are of no real concern or interest or are evidence of ‘falling away from the Truth’. The situation described may be extreme but in my experience the same basic ‘spirit’ can be found across the broad spectrum of Christian churches. Often I have encountered concern for a ‘correct’ theological approach that is held to take appropriate account of all necessary factors and considerations. Formal and informal groupings centre around many such ‘correct’ approaches. Group identities are delineated in terms defining one approach over against opposing views. Certain questions are considered important and others are marginalised as being of little or no concern. To ask them is to betray either ignorance or a leaning toward a position that has been excluded and belongs to the territory of another group. The understanding of being related to God and engaged with theology is primarily through a tradition and a conceptual framework of choice or, as Lonergan once described it, as “substance” rather than “subject”. Eventually, the following questions emerged: What is the connection between human living and relation to God? How does, and how should, theology take account of the human subject? Why does the Church often seem to seek to neglect or supress the subject? Only in more recent years have I begun to understand that answers to such questions are dependent on answers to questions about human understanding and knowing. Thus began the journey that has led to this thesis. viii God guard me from those thoughts men think In the mind alone; He that sings a lasting song Thinks in a marrow-bone. W.B. Yeats, from A Prayer for old Age. This, then, brought our new making. Much emotional stress … Call it conversion; but the word can’t cover such good. It was like being in love with ambient blessedness ... In love with life transformed … life breathed afresh, though yet half understood. There had been many byways for the frustrate brain, all leading to illusions lost and shrines forsaken … One road is before us now, one guidance for our gain, one morning light – whatever the world’s weather – wherein wide-eyed to waken. Siegfried Sassoon, from Lenten Illuminations. With the drawing of this Love and the voice of this Calling We shall not cease from exploration And the end of all our exploring Will be to arrive where we started And know the place for the first time. T.S. Eliot, from Little Gidding, Four Quartets ix TABLE OF CONTENTS ABSTRACT……………………………………………………………………….…..II STATEMENT OF ORIGINALITY…………………………………………………..III ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ................................................................................ IV PREFACE…………………………………………………………………………….V TABLE OF CONTENTS .................................................................................... X INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................... 1 CHAPTER ONE BEING HUMAN, AUTHENTICITY AND THEOLOGY .......... 6 1.1 A theological inquiry into being human and related to God .......................................................... 6 1.2 Presuppositions ................................................................................................................................... 7 1.3 The wider present context of the inquiry ....................................................................................... 13 1.4 Theology and the human mind ....................................................................................................... 16 1.5 Knowing and Loving ........................................................................................................................ 19 1.6 Theology of the head and heart ....................................................................................................... 25 1.7 Theory and Theology ....................................................................................................................... 32 CHAPTER TWO THE INTELLECTUALIST POSITION OF AQUINAS AND ITS THEOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE AS EXPLICATED BY BERNARD LONERGAN .................................................................................................... 37 2.1 Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 37 2.2 Background and Outline of Lonergan’s Main Thesis .................................................................. 40 2.3 Subject and Soul ............................................................................................................................... 45 2.4 The Inner Word in Direct Understanding and Definition ........................................................... 48 2.4.1 Questions that seek understanding of a cause or reason ............................................................. 48 2.4.2 Insight into Phantasm .................................................................................................................. 50 2.4.3 Emanatio Intelligibilis ................................................................................................................. 51 2.5 The Inner Word in Reflective Understanding and Judgment ..................................................... 56 2.5.1 The synthetic element in judgment – composition or division ................................................... 56 2.5.2 Judgment as the positing of the synthesis ................................................................................... 58 2.6 Wisdom .............................................................................................................................................. 60 x
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