Hopeful Christocentric universalism

I’ve been re-reading Carl Braaten’s Principles of Lutheran Theology – it’s really a good read and a great encapsulation of some classic Lutheran themes.

One of the best chapters is the one on The Christocentric Principle. Here Braaten discusses the work of Christ and its implications.

He recognizes that soteriology has fallen on hard times, especially with a shift from an otherworldly to a more this-wordly focus. Liberation and other political theologies have taken their cue from the story of the Hebrews in the OT, especially the Exodus, as the paradigmatic act of God’s liberation for his people.

However valid this insight might be, Braaten thinks that it is at best a partial account of salvation and shortchanges the gospel. Liberation, understood as political praxis has two major shortcomings: it shifts the burden of providing salvation from God to human beings. It is at best synergisitc and at wost Pelagian. Secondly, it doesn’t sufficiently reckon with the enemies of human life and flourishing that go beyond the structural injustice and political oppression. “[F]or all the liberating praxis in history can do nothing to produce love and freedom and can do nothing about human bondage to sin and death” (p. 78).

Instead, Braaten contends, Christians need to hold on to the cosmic and universal signficance of Jesus. “The most important notion, common to preaching, piety, and dogmatics, is that ‘Christ died for us.’ This is the sin qua non of every doctrine of atonement.”

He goes on to say:

In dying for us, Jesus did not die instead of us, for we all still have to die. In suffering for us, he did not suffer instead of us, for we all have to suffer. Yet he represents us before God. He speaks for us when we are silenced by death. He claims that each one of us is unique, indispensable, and absolutely irreplaceable even though the world treats us as expendable and exchangeable and as mere statistical units. Here we have the solid ground of personal identity free of charge, while people are madly searching for security in a supermarket full of answers with high price tags. In this world in which the value of individual human beings is becoming infinitesimally low, Jesus is our representative in his life and in his vicarious death and in his victorious resurrection.

Faith is an act of letting Jesus be our representative. Because he died for us, we never die alone without representation, without hope for personal identity beyond the grave. We will never have to die alone on a Godforsaken hill outside the gate. We can die in a communion of his love, in the assurance of the forgiveness of sins, with undying hope for resurrectoin and eternal life. Because Jesus died the death of the sinner as the sinless one, assuming our lot by his love, he can be our representative. Because he died the death under the law as the man of love, full of life to share and taking time for others, he can be our representative. He can be our representative because, in being raised from the dead, he was approved by God as having the right credentials to be the ambassador of the human race. (pp. 72-3)

This seems similar to what some theologians have described as “inclusive substitution.” Jesus doesn’t die instead of us so much as he enters into our condition and transforms it. We still have to die, but death has been transformed; it need no longer be a source of terror and hopelessness.

Braaten goes on to discuss the universal implications of Jesus’ saving death and resurrection. He acknowledges that Christians have to take account of the other great religions of the world in a way that wasn’t always clear to Christians in the past. However, he also doesn’t think that Christians can sacrifice the uniqueness of Jesus as God’s “only saving bridge to the world.”

He identifies two unsatisfactory positions about salvation. There’s the old-fashioned view which requires as a condition of salvation that one be a member of the Church in good standing (the traditional Catholic view) or that one have explicit faith in Jesus (the conservative Protestant view). Both of these variations consign possibly the majority of the human race to eternal damnation by God’s sovereign decree. Then there’s the modern pluralism that sees all the great religions of the world as equally valid means of attaining salvation (the position of someone like John Hick).

Braaten points out that the first view, held by traditionalist Catholics and conservative Protestants has already been forced to create various loopholes (for infants, virtuous pagans, the Old Testament patriarchs, etc.) and thus isn’t as rigorous as it first appears.

The second view frankly sacrifices the universal significance of Jesus, treating him essentially as one potential savior among many. This is hardly compatible with the main thrust of the New Testament witness, which sees Jesus not simply as the savior of a small band of followers, but as the cosmic Christ and Lord of all.

Parenthetically, it’s always seemed to me that the “hard pluralist” position claims to know a lot more about the divine than seems to be justified. If particular religious traditions are relativized in their truth claims, on what grounds does the pluralist claim to know that God/the divine can be reached by any of these channels? It seems to me, rather, that Christian assurance of God’s good will is rooted firmly in the revelation of God in Jesus, which requires the kind of robust Christology and doctrine of the Atonement that is anathema to pluralists.

In Braaten’s view, a Christian hope for the salvation for all people has to be firmly rooted in the person and work of Christ. “The Christian hope for salvation, whether for the believing few or the unbelieving many, is grounded in the person and meaning of Christ alone–not in the potential of the world’s religions to save or in the moral seriousness of humanists and people of goodwill or even in the good works of pious Christians and church people, who perhaps are compulsively believing too many things and going to church more than is good for them[!]” (p. 82).

It’s important to note, I think, that Braaten is also ruling out what we might call the modern “inclusive” Christian view that wants to hold on to the uniqueness of Jesus, but nevertheless holds that everyone who “does their best” can be saved. This ends up being semi-Pelagian at best. If all I need to do is the best I can, what need is there for a savior in the first place? This is precisely the attitude that Luther railed against – the view that God would give his grace to those who “do what is in them.”

Lutherans have traditionally not followed Calvinists in holding to double predestination and limited atonement. However, there is an unresolved tension there in that the implication of monergism (human beings don’t contribute to their salvation; all is a gift from God) and unlimited atonement would seem to be some form of universalism. After all, if Christ’s sacrifice is sufficient for the sins of all, and we can do nothing to secure that salvation for ourselves, and God doesn’t predestine to reprobation, then it seems like all will be saved.

The traditional response has been to say that God predestines for salvation but not perdition. But it’s far from clear that this is more than a verbal distinction. What we might say, though, is that the mysteries of the divine will remain permanently inscutable to us, at least conernign these matters.

Braaten writes:

Will, then, all people be saved in the end? We do not already know the answer. The final answer is stored up in the mystery of God’s own future. All he has let us know in advance is that he will judge the world according to the measure of his grace and love made known in Jesus Christ, which is ultimately greater than the fierceness of his wrath or the hideousness of our sin. (p. 84)

This has always seemed to me like the best answer. We hope that all will be saved, but that hope rests in Christ, not in us.

Comments

13 responses to “Hopeful Christocentric universalism”

  1. It has been a while since I’ve read that book, but I recall thinking that Braaten doesn’t do justice to Liberation Theology. And whenever a white guy from North America slams a theology that is born out of the experience and faith of the Third World, well, I get nervous. (This goes, too, for the white liberals who slam the theology and practice of Akinola and the African church.)

  2. Camassia

    Lee, have you ever seen a book called “Christ and Horrors” by Marilyn McCord Adams? It’s interesting because Adams studied under Hick and dedicates the book to him, but she rejects his pluralism and instead spends the book outlining a case for universalism combined with a fairly traditional Christology. It does seem like universalists, or hopeful universalists, are going more for a “third way” approach these days than previous generations.

  3. Chris, fair enough. Though I’m probably not doing justice to Braaten’s account of liberation theology – in fact, he doesn’t deny that liberation is a key part of Christian life and witness. What he denies is that the political dimension exhausts the the content of the gospel – he holds fast to the traditional Lutheran teaching on justification as the heart of the gospel. He does make some interesting proposals for integrating liberation (the “horizontal” dimension) and justification (the “vertical” dimension) in his chapter on the “Two Kingdom” principle.

    Camassia, funny you should mention that because I recently read Adams’ “Horrendous Evils and the Goodness of God” which I imagine covers some of the same territory. I’ll have to go back and take a look at her discussion of universalism in there, but yeah, she wants to say that a fully incarnational Christology provides the best answer to the problem of evil, and universalism is definitely a part of it as well. I think you’re right, too, that there is a growing sense that the old paradigm of exclusivism vs. pluralism has outlived its usefulness.

  4. Josh

    I would agree with Chris. Liberation Theologians, as I’ve interpreted them anyway, aren’t argueing that “political praxis” is the fullness of the gospel.

    What they do point out is that it is impossible for a theology to be apolitical. If you try to be apolitical in your theology you end up reinforcing the political status quo. All theology in order to be sound must take into account the suffering of the poor throughout history, whether in Latin America, Black America or the Holocaust.

    Anyway, my fear about this “christocentric” view is that it very easily can fall into a sort of gnosticism, where all that matters is mental assent to the points of the Augsburg (or Westminster for that matter) Confession. Or worse, feelings of guilt or feelings of salvation being all that are required.

    A more balanced view, I think, is one that recognizes Christ’s death and resurrection as the fulcrum around which Christian life and thought rotates, but also recognizes the role of the Spirit and the Father. The Father continuing to work in the world and the Spirit inspiring us to go forth, preaching, teaching, worshipping, keeping us unstained by the world and caring for the widows and orphans.

    If all we do is build a tabernacle for Christ on the top of the mountain, we’ve missed the point, and it’s a fair question whether we ever really saw him at all.

  5. I’ll happily defer to others on Liberation Theology since I’m woefully underinformed about it. 🙂

    I think Braaten’s Christocentrism is designed to affirm that the work God does in Jesus is, or at least can be, effective beyond the bounds of those who explicitly have faith in (or have even heard of) Jesus. Jesus can save even those who don’t know him, but it’s Jesus (or perhaps better, as you say, the entire Holy Trinity) that does the saving.

    Maybe it’s worth bringing the idea of the “Cosmic Christ” found in some of the epistles in here – the Logos is universally present even to those who don’t know Jesus of Nazareth. Or maybe that verges on gnosticism too?

  6. “…that one have explicit faith in Jesus (the conservative Protestant view).”

    The Baptists (among whom I was raised) believed in an “age of accountability,” for which I can find absolutely no evidence in a literal reading of the Bible. Their justification for it sounds suspiciously like the Catholic argument for “baptism of desire.” So if small children are not judged beyond their knowledge, how is the adult in a state of invincible ignorance any different?

  7. Josh

    “Maybe it’s worth bringing the idea of the “Cosmic Christ” found in some of the epistles in here – the Logos is universally present even to those who don’t know Jesus of Nazareth. Or maybe that verges on gnosticism too?”

    Ironically, maybe, that “Cosmic Christ” resembles the view of the liberation theologians. In Guitierrez’s A Theology of Liberation, he argues that liberation is what history is all about, and is the work of God in history. Thus Bolivar, Malcolm X, Daniel Ortega, Washington and Lenin are all participating in God’s work in the world, whether they think they are or not.

    BTW, I can send you my copy of the aforementioned book if you are interested.

  8. Kevin, I think that’s one of the problems with requiring an explicit confession of faith as a condition of salvation: how do you determine when people are “really” capable of such a thing? (This is distinct, of course, from requiring a confession of faith for church membership which seems a lot more defensible).

    Josh, That sounds great. I really should read more liberation theology; it’s a pretty big gap in my knowledge of contemporary theology (sparse as that is).

  9. Adam

    Josh–

    Bolivar, Malcolm X, Ortega and Lenin? So George W. Bush as well, right? Needless to say, Mao. Probably Hitler, too–he must have liberated somebody. The trouble here is that the line between this kind of liberation theology and the old fashioned Hegelian liberal theology that proclaimed the German state to be the outworking of God in the world is vanishingly thin. Besides nearly drowning the world in blood, what did it get us?

    Chris– “born out of the experience and faith of the third world”? It’s born out of Hegel and Marx. I get nervous when I hear a white guy from North America annoint a couple of 19th century, university-educated Germans to speak for the faith and experience of the developing world.

  10. […] and liberation Since the previous post on Braaten’s soteriology made it sound like he had a completely negative view of Liberation […]

  11. bs

    Having followed the blog and its comments for a while, I’ve noticed that Pelagianism is taken (by Lee and commenters) to be a dirty word. Embarassingly, I didn’t know what it was and googled it. While I can’t say that I necessarily agree with Pelagius, I admit that his theory, at least superficially, does not strike me as all that bad. Has rigorous analysis revealed it to be half-baked?

  12. […] wrong with Pelagianism? In a comment to this post bs asks: Having followed the blog and its comments for a while, I’ve noticed that Pelagianism is […]

  13. Lee,

    A wider more inclusive theology is good news to all men.
    I am glad so many are discussing this today.

    It is intriguing that you connect gnosticism with your discussion on universalism. My understanding of Gnosis is that it found insight in many traditions. Rather than being dry intellectual assent, I suspect gnosticism may have been freethinking, inclusive, and charismatic. But more so, Christian Gnostics saw gnosis as a revelation, a deep knowing, and a relationship with the “living Jesus” that got branded as heresy (ie. causing divisions).

    Ironically, a philosophy that emphasized seeing through the divisions to the universal oneness got labeled as divisive.

    The impact of “Gnostic Christianity and Oneness Universalism in the New Testament” is an interesting topic. The ideas of the Universal Body, the Cosmic Christ, and the Perfect Man are useful in understanding both gnosis and universalism. There may be a connection worth exploring.

    Blessings on your journey,
    Hope does not disappoint,

    URfriend,
    Dean Johnson

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