AEJT 4.5 Dupuche
AEJT 4.5 Dupuche
AEJT 4.5 Dupuche
Abstract: There the sun does not shine nor the moon nor the stars nor does the lightning flash. What to speak of fire! Because of Thy Light All is illumined. With His Shining Everything shines. - Mundaka Upanishad Key Words: Hindu-Christian dialogue; Kashmir Shaivism; human person nature; cosmos; sin ignorance; redemption recognition enlightenment; dualism monism
The first generations of Christians moved out of the Jewish framework into the thoughtworld of the Greeks and reinterpreted their faith in a new way. Now with the end of the colonial era, where the East was interesting only if it was exotic, we are witnessing a massive new shift. Rahners comment to Bettina Bumer reflects his awareness that the Hindu thought must profoundly affect Christian theology, making Christians qualify categories and images that are so familiar as to be unquestioned. Christian anthropology, as presently understood, is profoundly dualistic: God and man, heaven and earth, nature and grace, faith and reason, Church and State, sin and grace, good and evil etc. But St Paul says: all are one in Christ Jesus.3 New anthropologies are needed.4
1 2 3 4
Prof. Dr. Bettina Bumer, Institute of Religious Studies, University of Vienna. Personal communication, 9 April 2004. Gal 3:28. Cardinal Ratzinger, in the recent ad limina visit of the Australian Catholic Bishops spoke of the need for
the Church to present a Christian anthropology which opens out to the world a deeper understanding of the human condition A positive vision of what it means to be a human being Letter of Archbishop Hart,
The method of this paper is to present some aspects of Indian and Christian thought. I will weave between Christianity and Kashmir Shaivism ending not with syncretism but reinterpretation. I will speak of consciousness in place of the word God, of emanation in place of creation, of ignorance in place of sin, recognition in place of redemption, of identity instead of faith, of universal bliss instead of eternal life. These pairs of terms consciousness / God etc. are not deemed to be equivalent. Neither are they being compared but only connected. What light can one throw on the other? What questions are posed? Can the Christian experience be expounded not falsely in these terms, given, as we know, that Christian vocabulary cannot adequately express Christian experience? Can these Sanskrit terms become the vehicle for a theology which leads to the knowledge of the Christ who exceeds all that can be said of him? This attempt will be the beginnings of a Shaiva Christianity or a Christian Shaivism. It is part of the future task of theology. In the opinion of David Tracy the inter-religious dialogue will become an integral part of all Christian theological thought.5
David Tracy, Dialogue with the Other: The Inter-religious Dialogue (Louvain: Peeters Press, 1990), 94. 1 Cor 15:28
b. A few words now, on the Judeo-Christian idea of creation, which may at first seem totally different from the Hindu view. The Hebrew word lm first meant both heaven and earth. It is only in later Hebrew that it came to mean the world. The Greek word kosmos, for its part, refers to the order of the universe formed out of pre-existent chaos.7 The Septuagint, therefore, in choosing the word kosmos to translate the Hebrew lm colours the meaning of this latter term. The term kosmos occurs most frequently in the Johannine writings, some 105 times, which is two and a half times more frequently than in the rest of the New Testament.8 It can have a quite neutral meaning in itself9 although it is full of possibility because the kosmos proceeds from the logos and is essentially linked to it.10 The word kosmos can also have a positive meaning because God loves the world.11 Later in the Gospel it acquires a negative meaning when the world is seen as hostile to Jesus.12 c. It is against this Greek view of kosmos formed out of chaos that Athanasius teaches the doctrine of creatio ex nihilo.
Prior to the debates of Athanasius with Arius, the theory of creatio ex nihilo was propounded, if at all, with uncertainty [but] with this assertion of creatio ex nihilo came a recognition by Athanasius of a clear and substantial distinction between God and the created order, between the uncreated, non-contingent and asomatic Creator and the contingent and somatic creation, called into being from nothing by the will of God.13
This Athanasian view has become dominant even though an emanationist interpretation of creation is available in the neo-Platonic Christian tradition.14 The seeming opposition between Hindu emanation and Athanasian creation may not, however, be insuperable. In Hindu thought there is a distinction between the expresser and the expression but not a separation. The term mantra can refer both to the deity and to the phonic expression of that deity, to the reciter and to the mantra she recites. The speaker both transcends her word and is her word. When the speaker fully communicates herself, she and her word are not dual but identical, distinct but not divided. The one leads to the other; the one is the other and, even if our minds construct a separation, in reality there is none. The analogue for understanding the formation of the world, therefore, can be the dancer or the poet or prophet rather than the architect. Indeed, the first account in Genesis sees creation as a prophetic act. God is his word and transcends his word. But word is work and work is word. The work of creation is God and is not God. This is all the more true in the Indian philosophical system, which is based on the word rather than on objective reality, on revelation rather than on being (esse).
7 8
Raymond Brown, The Gospel according to John, 2 vols. (New York: Doubleday, 1966), 1:508. N.H. Cassem, A Grammatical and Contextual Inventory of the use of kosmos in the Johannine Corpus with
some Implications for a Johannine Cosmic Theology, New Testament Studies 19 (1972-1973): 81. 9 Jn 3:16. See also Jn 11:9; 17:5, 24; 21:25.
10 11 12 13 14
Brown, Gospel according to John, 1:25. Jn 1:29; 3:16; 4:42; 6:51; 8:12; 9:5. See 12:31; 14:17, 22, 27, 30; 15:18-19; 16:8, 11, 20, 33; 17:6, 9, 14-16. Alvyn Pettersen, Athanasius and the Human Body (Bristol: The Bristol Press, 1990), 5. Tracy, Dialogue with the Other, 86.
Jacques Dupuis, Christanitiy and the Religions (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 2002), 123. Cf. Mk 8:35. Ecumenical Council Lateran V, Bull Apostolici regiminis, in H. Denzinger and A. Schnmetzer,
be placed upon the soul or the will. The individual self is indeed real and not imaginary, but is essentially contingent and in this sense profoundly unreal. Only God is truly real. This ignorance leads to acts that are absurd and divisive, bearing a harvest of unfortunate consequences (karma), which may take lifetimes to redress. Where the Western mind distinguishes in order to understand, the Hindu mind absorbs in order to perceive the essential nature of things. The Western mind says one is not the other; the Hindu mind says that one is essentially the other: sarva-sarvtmaka.
18 19
Gal 2:19.
Raimon Panikkar, On Christian Identity in Many Mansions, ed. Catherine Cornille (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 2002), 139.
shut he sees the same. His eyes are both open and shut, for he is in the world as in his own body but not defined by it. It is not a state available only after death but can be achieved in time. The practitioner is liberated while alive (jvan-mukti), so that his every word is mantra and his every act is ritual. St Augustine, on seeing a drunken man, said in all humility and against the Pelagians, There but for the grace of God go I. The outlook proposed by Kashmir Shaivism would add: He is not apart from me, someone other than me. He is my very self. Indeed, true knowledge of an object is possible only by identification with that object. I can truly know the mountain only if I am the mountain. Only God can truly know God, only God can fully worship God.20 That is why Jesus, the true High Priest, must be God from God, Light from Light. Furthermore, if God wishes to speak to humans it is only by means of the divine Word being also human. Again, if God is to be worshipped by humans it is only by humans being divine. The Christian can truly know God only be being God in a profound sense, by means of theosis.
20 21 22
This is a commonplace of Hindu thought. This is fourth in the listing but in fact underlies all three separate forms.
This notion of light seeing its light by means of its own light is found in the theology of Gregory Palamas, the last of the Greek Doctors of the Church. He makes a very striking analogy with the eye. After referring to St Paul (2 Cor 12:2) he pictures a sun of infinite radiance and size - at the centre of which all stands but now transformed into an eye. Paul, like that eye, is in light and seeing light. There are no limits. If [the visual faculty] looks at itself it sees light; if it looks at the object of its sight that is also light; and if it looks at the means it uses to see, that too is light; that is what union is: let all that be one. Triads, II.3.36 (London: SPCK, 1983), 66.
true nature. But that method is still imperfect because the practitioner sees himself as distinct from the means and the object of knowledge.23 c. The most exalted means is really a non-means (anupya) because in fact there is no path to follow: the goal is reached suddenly and totally, due to an intense descent of energy (akti-pta), an immense outpouring of grace (anugraha). Nothing more is to be done; there is no need for repeated practice or deeper understanding. The revelation [of this Light] is given once and for all, after which there is no means.24
The reality of Consciousness shines forth by its own radiance. What is the value, therefore of those [means to make him known]?25
The anupya is described largely in negative terms since the light of consciousness cannot be described by what is less than the fullness of that light:
The supreme state is neither being nor non-being, neither duality [nor non-duality], for it is beyond the realm of words. It is located on the apophatic (akathya) level. It is with energy, it is without energy.26 [The Light of consciousness] is not a mantra, not a divinity whose mantra is recited, nor a reciter of mantras. [The Light] is neither initiation nor initiator nor initiated: It is the supreme Lord.27
The practitioner who has achieved this state is not introverted. Rather, universal bliss confers universal bliss.
They have no other work to accomplish but to confer grace.30 The worldly person works assiduously for himself, and does nothing in favour of others, but the one who, having overcome all impurities, has achieved the divine state works solely for the benefit of others.31
23
(In this method mbhavupya there is still) a conception of a difference between method and goal
(upya-upeya-kalpan), whereas (in the case of anupya) there is not even a trace of any difference. For in the non-way, who is to be liberated, how and from what? T 3.272-273. Bettina Bumer, The Four Spiritual Ways (upya) in the Kashmir aiva Tradition in Regional Spiritualities, 17-18.
24 25 26
sakt-syd-dean pacd-anupyatvam-ucyate // T 2.2b. savit-tattva sva-prakam-ity-asmin-ki nu yuktibhi / T 2.10a. na bhvo na-apy-abhvo na dvaya vcm-agocart / na mantro na ca mantryo sau na ca mantrayit prabhu /
na dk dkako v-api na dikvn-mahevara // T 2.26. e na mantro na dhyna na pj na-api kalpana / na samayya-dika-crya-paryanta ko pi vibhrama // T 2. 37.
28 29
ete sukha-dukha-aa-ak-taka-vikalpan / na-anugraht-para kicic-chea-vttau prayojanam // T 2.38b. sva kartavya kim-api kalaya-lloke ea prayatnn-
nirvikalpa-para-vea-mtr-aeatvam-gat // T 2.36.
30 31
d. However, according to the thirteenth century commentator Jayaratha, the term nonmeans (an-upya) can also be understood as a very reduced means (alpopya)32 or a subsidiary means (parikaratvam).33 He lists a certain number of the reduced means.
The sight of the Perfected Beings and yogins, the eating of the oblation, a teaching, a transition (?) (sakrama), spiritual practice, service of the Teacher.34
Any one of these is sufficient to bring a person to full realisation, suddenly and without any need to engage in practices to deepen the realisation. Yet, the ones who receive such an immense outpouring of grace are few in number. The vast majority of beings need to follow one or other of the three lesser paths, according to the measure of grace given to them:
However, those whose consciousness is not utterly pure receive grace only by following one of the paths.35
Jesus of Nazareth
What sort of Kashmir Shaiva Christology emerges form all this? On seeing (darana) Jesus or hearing a teaching (kathanam), the disciple experiences his own consciousness expanding. He then knows both Jesus and his own self, and indeed realises that Jesus is his own very self, for only like can see like, only the same can see the same. In fact, not only is the self of Jesus the very self of the disciple but the whole world too is an expression of the one Self. In short, the sight and teaching of Jesus are examples of the very reduced means (alpopya) noted above. But more; in contemplating Jesus and so arriving at consciousness, the disciple penetrates to the utterly Transcendent (anuttara) so that it becomes clear to him that Jesus of Nazareth is essentially the I am, the Supreme Word (paravc), the self-revelation of Consciousness. Since from that Expression all other expressions derive, Jesus looks upon the world and sees it as the expression of his self. Jesus is the Lord of the Dance.
He is the image of the unseen God and the first-born of all creation for in him were created all things in heaven and on earth all things were created through him and for him.36
In the events of the Sacred Triduum Jesus knows both the depths and the height; knowing good and evil, able to descend lower than any because he knows the height. The Paschal Mystery is the moment of supreme revelation. Although the Word of God has been revealed in various ways since the dawn of time, the Word incarnate is best able to reveal to flesh, since flesh needs flesh. Flesh best reveals flesh to itself. In the fullness of his living and dying he is the perfect expression of heaven and earth. Jesus, therefore, is able to provide the knowledge which leads to the utterly Transcendent (anuttara). He is the Light that brings all to Light. The Word made flesh makes all flesh Word.
yas-tu dhvasta-akhila-labhava-malo bhairav-bhva-pra ktya tasya sphuam-idam-iyal-loka-kartavya-mtram // T 2.39. 32 Tantrloka, 2:312, line 13.
33 34
Tantrloka, 7:3420, line 12. siddhn yoginn ca darana caru-bhojanam / na-anirmala-cita puso nugrahas-tv-anupyaka // T 2.47b. Col 1:15-16.
God wanted... all things to be reconciled through him and for him, everything in heaven and everything on earth.37
All is non-dual (a-dvaita). All is one. Author: Rev. Dr. John Dupuche is a parish priest and lectures at Monash University at the Centre for Studies in Religion and Theology.
37
Col 1:19-20.