Agape Eros PDF
Agape Eros PDF
Agape Eros PDF
By Carsten Johnsen
1982
Carsten Johnson
Printed in USA by:
US Business Specialties
Yucaipa, California 92399
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
INTRODUCTION 1
IS IT TRUE THAT AGAPE IS IRRATIONAL SINCE IT LOVES THE UNLOVABLE? 5
THE OTHER-CENTEREDNESS MOTIF IS DULY CHRISTENED, THUS RECEIVING ITS HISTORIC
NAME: AGAPE 7
SUMMING UP SOME HUMAN INTEREST ESSENTIALS OF MY WORK: THE PART OF THE STORY
YOU WERE NEVER TOLD--ABOUT WOMEN 9
WHAT HAS LOVE GOT TO DO WITH DUTY AND SOUND REASON 12
HOW COULD LOVE EVER BE REASONABLE? OR: WHAT DOES OTHER-CETEREDNESS HAVE TO
DO WITH REASONABILITY? 14
JUST WHY ARE WOMEN LESS EGOCENTRIC THAN MEN? 16
WHAT MAKES MAN'S CONTEMPLATION OF BEAUTY EROTIC INSTEAD OF AGAPEIC? 19
DOES A WOMAN LOVE IN A WAY MEN DO NOT KNOW? 24
CAN A WOMAN LOVE A MAN WHOM SHE DOES NOT ADMIRE, OR DOES NOT DEEM WORTHY
OF ANY TRUE LOVE? 28
WHAT MAKES MEN AND WOMEN SO TYPOLOGICALLY DIFFERENT IN MATTERS OF LOVE? 31
MAN--THE SENTIMENTAL SEX--THE STUBBORNLY UNREASONABLE SEX 33
THE "VULGAR" EROS AND THE "HEAVENLY" EROS—A REMARKABLE DISTINCTION 35
IS SEX, AS SUCH, AN EROS PHENOMENON? 36
AGAPE AND EROS-DIFFERENT VIEWS ABOUT ESTHETICS AS WELL 39
AGAPE'S BASIC CHARACTERISTIC: INTENSIVE PERSONALISM 44
A REMARKABLE MODESTY APPARENT IN THE VERY TERM 48
DID CHRISTIANITY CHOOSE THE POORER WORD INSTEAD OF THE RICHER ONE? 53
THE FORMIDABLE REALISM TRIUMPHING IN AGAPE 57
THE PROBLEM OF THE RELIGIOUS MAN IN AN ANTI-RELIGIOUS ERA 59
THE DUALISM OF THE "TWO WORLDS" MADE BY THE SAME GOD. OR SHOULD IT BE BY TWO
DIFFERENT GODS? 61
WHAT IS THE ESSENCE OF NYGREN'S THESIS ABOUT AGAPE AS THE GREAT UNREASONABLE
ONE? 63
IS IT AT ALL POSSIBLE FOR THE TRULY INTELLIGENT TO VALUE THE VALUELESS AND TO
LOVE THE UNLOVABLE? 67
IS AGAPE A SORT OF MAGIC? 68
DOES AGAPE EXPLODE ALL KNOWN BARRIERS OF LAW AND JUSTICE? 72
WHERE EVEN ALMIGHTY CHRISTIAN LOVE COMES SHORT 74
THE LOWLINESS OF AGAPE (ITS DOWN-TO-EARTHNESS)-- HUMILITAS 79
WHERE THE RESEARCHER IS PRETTY KEEN, BUT FAILS TO FOLLOW UP 81
NOT TAKING SIDES MEANS CHOOSING EROS 82
THE RATIONALITY/IRRATIONALITY BATTLE BEGINS IN FULL EARNEST 85
WHICH IS THE MORE IRRATIONAL, AGAPE OR EROS? 89
WHAT CREATION MEANS--DO YOU HAVE AN INKLING? 91
CAN THE MOTHER OF A CHILD CEASE TO BE HIS MOTHER, BECAUSE HE CEASES TO BE A
GOOD CHILD? 94
EROS "REALISM," THE MOST MISERABLE ONE OURWORLD HAS EVER SEEN 96
EXISTENTIALIST LIBERALISM WILL LAND IN THE CHAMBER OF THE NECROMANCER 96
THOU SHALT LOVE THE LORD THEY GOD WITH ALL THINE HEART 98
THOU SHALT LOVE THEY NEIGHBOR AS THYSELF 99
LOVE THY ENEMIES 100
REALISM AS THE FIRM FOUNDATION EVEN FOR THE WONDER OF GRACE OPERATIVE IN
HUMAN LIVES: THE SALVATION FROM SIN 102
1
WHEN DID SELF-LOVE MANAGE TO BECOME THE SAME THING AS LOVE? 106
IS AGAPE AN ORGE--OR A PERSONAL MOTIF OF DIVINE ORIGIN? 110
NYGREN'S GREAT IDEA ABOUT AGAPE, THE SPONTANEOUS ONE. WHAT COULD IT MEAN?
AND IS IT SAFE IN THE POPULAR FORM IN WHICH IT HAS BEEN INTERPRETED? 111
A STRANGE TYPE OF AGAPE: THE BODILESS ONE 115
THE SUBTLE DUALISM OF "FAITH WITHOUT WORKS" AN HISTORIC SOURCE OF PAGAN
CONFUSION 123
THE HUMBLE GOD AND THE PROUD TITAN 130
ANTINOMIANISM IS THE NAME OF THAT EXTREMITY 134
EROS AMY ADOPT VERY DIFFERENT ATTITUDES TOWARD SEX 135
WHAT, THEN, ABOUT MARCION'S ADMIRATION FOR JESUS CHRIST? 139
DOES MARCION'S INCONSISTENCY BECOME NYGREN'S INCONSISTENCY? 140
AGAPE--THE ABSOLUTELY UNCHANGEABLE 143
THE FABLE ABOUT A SEPARATION OF LAW AND GOSPEL 145
A PARABLE BY JESUS THROWN INTO THE FIRE OF THEOLOGICAL DISCUSSION 146
IS JUSTICE TO BE SEPARATED FROM THE TOTALITY OF THE GENUINE AGAPE MOTIF? 149
DOES GOD LIVE SINNERS RATHER THAN RIGHTEOUS MEN? 152
THE RATIONALE BEHIND THE DIFFERENT TREATMENTS GIVEN TO TWO DIFFERENT GROUPS
OF WORKERS 156
GOD HIMSELF IS THE STANDARD OF PERFECT FAIRNESS AND PERFECT TRUTH 161
IS SPONTANEITY, IN ITS RADICAL SENSE, A DANGEROUSLY EGOCENTRIC PHENOMENON? 163
AGAPE SEEN AS THE "NEW LAW" WRITTEN ON THE TABLES OF THE HEART--IS IT BASICALLY
DIFFERENT FROM THE "OLD LAW" OF THE SINAI TABLES? OR IS IT AMAZINGLY SIMILAR
EVEN REGARDING RATIONAL CHARACTER? 167
DID YOU EVER TRY TO MEASURE THE RATIONALITY OF THE "LAW IN THE HEART"? 169
AGAPE--THE ANTI-ROMANTIC AND PRO-DYNAMIC 175
DOES AGAPE HAVE AN OUTWARD BODY? OR IS IT A MONSTER OF BODILESS INTERIORITY?
176
AGAPE--THE TOTAL ONE 179
IS IT TOO CRUEL A STROKE FOR A ROMANTIC SOUL TO BE TOLD BLUNTLY THAT AGAPE IS
JUST A PRINCIPLE? 180
DOES A CERTAIN LONGING FOR NIRVANA EXIST IN NORMAL HUMANS? AND IS THERE ANY
TRACE OF THE SPIRIT OF AGAPE IN IT? 183
THE PART OF THE STORY YOU WERE NEVER TOLD ABOUT THE FAVORITE PHILOSOPHY OF
THE PAGAN WEST, WHICH IS THE SWORN ENEMY OF AGAPE 186
IS PLATONIC IDEALISM A MATER TO WORRY ABOUT? 189
CAN WE SYMPATHIZE WITH PLATO? 191
THE SPIRITUALIST PLATO, AND HIS CONCEPT OF SURVIVAL 193
THE NITTY-GRITTY OF "SURVIVAL" IN A PHILOSOPHER'S THINKING 195
WHAT SURVIVES, THEN, IN THE EROS PARADISE? 203
IS THE MAIN STREAM RELIGIOUSNESS OF THE EAST ANY DIFFERENT FROM THAT OF THE
WEST? 206
INDIFFERENCE AND IMPERSONALISM RAISED TO THE LEVEL OF TOP IDEAL 209
THE SYSTEMATIC ANNIHILATION OF HOLINESS 213
WHAT UNDERSTANDABLE "REASONS" CAN THE SPIRITUALIST HAVE FOR ELUDING
ERSONALISM? 214
THE ROLE OF METANOIA IN THE REALITY OF AGAPE OR FREE GRACE AS A SOURCE OF
SALVATION 219
WHEN WILL METANOIA COME TO AN END? 225
A GRIPPING EPILOGUE CONCLUDING THE LAST CHAPTER OF THE LAST GOSPEL: PETER,
THE EROS-INFATUATED ONE, BECOMES PETER, THE AGAPE-INSPIRED ONE 236
INTRODUCTION
I must here refer briefly to something I boldly state (too boldly some might think) at the close of my
book The Part of the Story You Were Never Told--ABOUT WOMEN. That book is a popular English version
of my French dissertation, Essai sur 1'Alterocentrisme contre 1'Egocentrisme en tant que Motifs Fondamentaux
du Caractere Humain (Universite de Montpellier, France, 1968). My last heading in that popular edition runs:
"Love, Most Unlovingly Ushered into the Defendant's Dock." Few readers, I assume, would suspect that this
announced any challenge to speak of, directed against Anders Nygren or any other student of fundamental
motifs in modern theology or the ultra-modern history of ideas.
2
What I gently wanted to introduce was a remarkable parallel between the peculiar kind of love
characterizing the typical woman on the one hand, and that fabulous new concept of love launched by the New
Testament with the new term, Agape, on the other hand.
I have already shown in my book, ABOUT WOMEN, how a popular tradition has distorted the real
facts about the typical woman's peculiar attitude toward love. The conventional trend has been to accuse
feminine love of indulging in a sentimental wave of excited feelings. Women are believed to be particularly
prone to abandon themselves to a mood of subjective fantasy, defying all sound sense and all sober-minded
objective thinking.
(The "objective thinkers," you see, are supposed to be men.)
The latter part of that book, ABOUT WOMEN, tries to find out whether that reputation, on either side,
is fair or not. The data of the research undertaken demonstrate that it is alarmingly unfair, for sometimes it
comes close to a case of actual libel. How could any researcher in the field of characterology fail to go against
such unfairness? I made it a special point to correct that image of women in the popular mind. I had to
demonstrate something striking regarding that fast-spreading myth about woman's "lack of sound realism." It is
not substantiated by any documented fact produced by differential psychology or by common observation. It is
only one in a whole series of misrepresentations regarding peculiar features of the feminine mind.
Besides, there was another capital reason urging me to give a closer study to those various allegations
of "female inferiority" made in the past. Every one of those accusations against women of a lack of mental
equilibrium seemed to constitute an implicit accusation against something infinitely greater and more far-
reaching than the reputation of a wee human being. It inevitably turned into a case of libel against the greatest
thing in the world. What has here been downrated in a shameful way is not only women's elementary ability to
love without making fools of themselves or do anything whatsoever without betraying their "lower rank,"
intellectually speaking. No, in terms of my inquiry into the nature of a fundamental motif of goodness in God's
world as a whole, it seemed to cry out loud: "The entire Spirit of other-centeredness (alterocentricity) in this
world of ours is bound to reveal itself as definitely inferior in logical respect! It is sadly deficient in realistic
sense!"
And something seemed even worse by far than that negative reputation kept in reserve for
alterocentricity. I had dared, from the beginning, to postulate an identity between that alterocentricity (other-
centeredness) in the history of human culture and the great Agape-- nothing less than that. So whatever
qualities of basic goodness--in heaven and on earth--were heralded as characteristics of alterocentricity, should
also apply to the heavenly love (God's perfect Agape).
On the other hand, if feminine alterocentricity (also called the Spirit of Motherliness) was proved to
distinguish itself as a trend of sheer irrationality, then Agape must here be assumed to manifest the same
features of "distinction."
So don't be surprised if I finished by asking myself this historic question: Did it ever happen in a circle
of Christian theologians, in our modern Western world, with its notoriously increasing boldness, that a
statement like the following was made, quite seriously? "Agape, the great love of God, according to the
Gospel, is a fundamental motif we shall simply have to qualify as irrational; that is contrary to common sense
reason (ratio)." Did you ever hear any contention of that kind? I assume you did.
And now one further question, addressed to you and me: If that historic event ever happened to us,
how did we react? Did we accept that sensational dogma of the utter irrationality of Agape as a tremendous
revelation coming to us straight from heaven? Or did we reject it with forceful conviction?
In my personal case there ought to have been quite particular reasons why I should not have been
immediately spellbound by such a philosophy about Agape. For was not this something dubiously similar to
just that stereotype idea I had found and fought in the average public opinion in our culture about a "lack of
rational grasp" in feminine minds? I am referring to the queer idea that women, as a characterological type--
particularly women in love--are "definitely less rational," "less objective," "less logical" than men.
Still I was fascinated, like so many other historians, by Nygren's revolutionizing concept of Agape as
the great "Irrational One." But at least certain doubts began to bother my mind. They were bound to adopt this
critical form: In our cultural milieu is there a general pattern of traditional thought-forms, turning us away from
realism, a sort of sentimental romanticism making us terribly confused, even regarding the deepest character of
God in heaven? And does an indulgence in that sentimentality drive even our best theologians, sometimes, into
a veritable case of slander, more or less unwittingly launched against the most sublime concept of love ever
known?
I am daring to establish a pattern of comparisons between what happens in the heart of a creature
biologically endowed with the glorious assignment of being a mother, and what happens in the heart of One
whom the Bible calls the eternal Father. So, in my turn, I am daring to pronounce definite things about Agape,
the Incomparable One. But first now, a critical weighing of definite things others have pronounced.
3
One thing is undeniable. The very term "Agape" might seem to elicit notions of a certain enigma.
Learned men down through the ages have observed, with increasing astonishment, the incredible peculiarities of
Agape, the New Testament love concept. And what, precisely, was it that astonished a man like Nygren in his
famous work on Agape? It was what he called Agape's irrational character.
So, without a doubt, this peculiarly biblical concept of love has met with a destiny quite similar to that
of feminine love. Agape too is accused of being unreasonable, contrary to all common human sense. To me
that means unrealistic, and unrealistic means contrary to realism. But what is the Bible's idea about realism?
The Bible too has a term exactly corresponding to that positive attitude we call realism. It is "the love of the
truth." And that is a term of dramatic momentum in New Testament theology. We shall pay closer attention
to it later on.
Now, of course, the ingenious researchers of fundamental motifs in modern theology would hardly
come right out and say that Agape is unrealistic (a category of love not including the love of the truth). That
would sound too negative indeed. It might be interpreted almost as if they were placing Agape deliberately on
the side of empty romanticism and sheer human fancy, rather than on the side of stern human realities. So they
do their best to look at this "irrationality" of Agape in a way as generous and positive as ever possible. In this
they are not unlike some close associates in modern philosophy, namely certain ultra-modern existentialists.
For those too have developed a veritable art of acrobacy by which they manage to see something eminently
positive and basically good in the totally absurd, rather than in what is rational and objective. Only at the
moment when man makes that acrobatic leap right into the absolutely irrational, only then is he supposed to
have a fair chance of reaching the sublime pinnacles of "God's reason."
Anyway, the fact we have to face is this: Some serious men of great erudition and tremendous prestige
in the world of historical theology today tell us bluntly: God's Agape is unreasonable. It is even a downright
anti-reason type of love. In other words, the ideal of Christian love is simply hostile to common-sense
reasoning, as this reasoning is found in ordinary human creatures.
One argument presented by theologians in favor of that theory is the following: The prototypical
Christian concept of love is absolutely "free" from anything you might suggest in terms of intelligent
motivation. God loves what is inherently unloveable. There is no trace of intelligent reason for the fact that He
undertakes to love man, "the absolutely unlovable one."
Is this rumor about the deepest essence of Christ's love true or false? If it is a simple falsehood, then I
can hardly think of any case of humanistic slander, directed against the nature of God, that would be a match for
it. It is concerning this crucial matter that I want to here present a series of facts which might shed some new
light on the topic. There seems to be a constant reappearance of new aspects to the old incredible story about
the Maligned God. Here then I must first show you something of how the fundamental motif I have called
"Other-Centeredness" is related to the more well-known concept of "Agape."
SUMMING UP SOME HUMAN INTEREST ESSENTIALS OF MY WORK: THE PART OF THE STORY
YOU WERE NEVER TOLD--ABOUT WOMEN
4
Before we go to deeper study of the surprising role Agape was destined to play as a sort of "divine
emotion," and the unprecedented drama it was destined to provoke in our peculiar world at large, it would seem
desirable to get one thing clearly established, as regards our own tiny world, a most curious microcosmos. I am
speaking of the incredible creature who distinguishes himself--or herself--as visibly liable to experience life in
terms of emotions.
In my book, ABOUT WOMEN, I have already given a fairly unambiguous answer to the question of
differential psychology. The emotional ones above all others in our company are: the typical child and the
typical women. Together, as it were, they form a type I have termed the "other-centered." The opposite type is
the "self-centered," finding its most extreme representatives in the adult and the male.
It was the fundamental motif of other-centeredness (altercentricity) which formed the particular object
of my investigation. So I there concentrated my attention around the pattern of behavior particularly observed
in children and women.
As everybody knows, the child's mind is simply overflowing with emotions. And one thing never fails
to verify itself in the lives of genuine children. Their emotions hardly ever tend to be something they are
secretive about. Children just are not ashamed of their emotions. On the contrary, they express them with great
freedom and frankness. This is, in fact, an integrating part of the "incurably" childlike one, irrespective of age
or sex.
Of course, individual men may have emotions too, and even abandon themselves to them quite openly,
but we are not speaking about individuals, we are speaking about types. There is no denying that it is
preeminently women and children who appear overwhelmed by this dynamic urge outward, which is the
dramatic result of their openness and the visible outlet of their alterocentric souls.
And what connection have I found then between other-centeredness and totality, harmonious
wholeness in human life?
A main point in my thesis, as I have propounded it from the beginning, has been that this exuberant
openness toward the surrounding world, the world of the "other ones," simply constitutes the medium--the only
medium--through which totality and inner harmony can realize themselves in personal life. Without this elan
alterocentrique, this turning outward to the values around you, you just cannot experience the marvel of
becoming whole. This is, of course, also bound to apply as a prerequisite for the particular wonder the Bible
refers to when it speaks about men being made whole again. (Whole here means safe and sound.)
Now you have every right to expect that I myself should give evidence of some elementary
"wholeness" and "harmony" in the way I deal with these various aspects composing human life at its best. I, in
my turn, must be balanced and all-embracing in my presentation. Accordingly, on the one hand I must
wholeheartedly accept the strong feelings as something which might be assumed to find room in the generous
heart of Agape. At the same time I must watch myself lest I commit an act of sabotage against the values
inherent in logical reason, that other side of a whole man's mind. Only a consistent realism of that impartial
kind can safeguard the interests of perfect integrity, basing itself on conscientious efforts of objectivity and firm
principle--qualities so indispensable for genuine research.
I am speaking about an objectivity and a firmness of principle which never feel in duty bound to
sacrifice everything that is most human in our lives, including personal emotion. No, this must be an
attachment to principle which announces, simply and joyfully, that now the ring of totality has been
harmoniously closed; everything is in its right place.
Here we must not fear to go contrary to men's opinions. We should know that the living depths of
sensitive human hearts the philosophizing theorist does not usually for one moment expect any intelligently
controlled current of stern realism to emerge. But he may be disruptedly one-sided in his judgment. Deep
feelings and keen thoughts may find the possibility of a perfect co-existence after all.
5
Here is evidently one of the things we Western heirs of a pagan environment have more difficulty in
swallowing than anything else. Let me warn you that you must count with one thing as fairly inevitable: The
romantic-humanistic spirit of our pagan Occidental culture has accomplished a master stroke. Our vainglorious
pride in a false erudition has played an incredible trick upon our modern human minds. It has conjured up the
disruptive notion in our minds that life itself, as it were, has provided some sharp and unsurpassable border-line
between what theoretical research deals with, and--on the other side of the water-tight bulkheads-- a realm of
reality having to do with man's practical life only. Stern logical reason, one seems to pretend, should be
reserved for the world of theoretical science. In man's personal life as a religious being we think we have a
right to assume the accommodating philosophy claiming that capricious feelings and all kinds of subjective
moods should be permitted to have their sway. "So, at any cost, let us keep the realms strictly apart," says
modern man. "No promiscuity please!"
This philosophy of separate realms is in full accordance, as I shall later show, with the tradition of Eros
idealism.
HOW COULD LOVE EVER BE REASONABLE? OR: WHAT DOES OTHER-CENTEREDNESS HAVE
TO DO WITH REASONABILITY?
Let us try to face unflinchingly the full reality of a full world. That simply means: We must resolutely
and radically turn our gaze toward the Heart above all hearts, the Center above all centers, the Spirituality above
all spiritualities in human existence--nay, in existence as a whole--namely, Agape.
If Agape is not the clue to a way out from our predicament and the fulfillment of our hopes for true
enlightenment, then I do not know where to look for it. But if Agape is the great light, then the way to gain true
knowledge about it must be the one valid for all responsible research. The researcher must proceed humbly and
intelligently, conscientiously laying down one stone at a time.
But in my case then, it seems reasonable that I base my further study on the foundation I have found to
be most firm in my previous studies regarding the emotions of the human heart and regarding the emotion
above all emotions--that of love.
Quite briefly I must then sum up the findings of my original piece of investigation regarding other-
centeredness versus self-centeredness in the daily lives of common human beings like you and me. For
statistical evidence, and for any details, the reader would have to go back to the mentioned work on WOMEN.
Here I shall only make some general statements about the main results of my study. Males are seen to
be noticeably more egocentric in their all-around attitudes in life. Females are significantly more alterocentric.
I have endeavored to explain, naturally and intelligently, why this had to be expected. I have established
without a shadow of ambiguity the following phenomenon of simply biology: The irresistible forces of simple
MOTHERLINESS exert a transforming influence on all aspects of a woman's love. This transformation then is
not limited to her affection for her child. Such a limitation would be simply impracticable. The out-stretched
arms of alterocentricity are bound to reach out much farther than that. Her love for her mate, as well, is seen to
adopt an amazingly alterocentric form. The same applies to her love for any object in that curious world she
knows as her own.
The transformation of sexual love I am here speaking about is nothing short of a triumphant victory--
in the wider world of fundamental motifs, spiritually considered--over what is typically superficial and
ephemeral in any domain of human existence. It means a decisive victory over any "laisser-aller" mentality that
would turn out to be catastrophic if it were not held in check, on the arena of life, by the controlling forces of
true alterocentric love.
Any indulgence in self means, in the last analysis, a simple disaster, biologically as well as spiritually.
The Christian Agape teachings penetrating the entire
Bible, never tire of warning man against the cataclysmic downhill coasting inherent in all Eros trends.
6
Then we also better understand how it comes to pass that over-excitement, and the natural tendency to
indulge in such excitement, which certainly is not a lesser temptation in women than in men, here suddenly find
an efficient corrective. They find it in women, not so easily in men. Men have a demonstrably greater tendency
to indulge in such excitements. Abandoning oneself to excitements is a phenomenon of passivity. It is a
passion. The passive and the passionate are closely related. Even in quite linguistic respect that is evident.
"Pati" is the Latin verb at the basis of both of them. That means to suffer; that is, to suffer things to be done to
you, by others; in other words, refraining from activity yourself. The introvert, egocentric type of person has
always had that tendency. Activity is a typically alterocentric characteristic, and therefore more a feminine than
a masculine trend; the very opposite of what is commonly assumed!
But what I here particularly want to point out is the fact that the unfortunate effects of that
supersensitivity to which women are more prone than men, mentally as well as physically, finds an efficient
corrective in the very fact that they are so significantly more other-centered, and therefore tend to turn so easily
outward, finding their natural outlet in activity. Thus they also have more of a natural protection against
irrealism. That lack of well-balanced realism is always a greater temptation to the introvert than to the extrovert
person. In fact, we are all, of course, more or less inclined sometimes toward ideas of illusionism during
periods of inactivity and stagnation. And now, what would be the natural influence of exuberant emotions?
Under otherwise equal circumstances, women's definitely greater sensitivity ought to make it particularly
difficult for them to be realistic. But what happens? Now that natural inclination is significantly held in check
by something else--precisely that incredible degree of other-centeredness inherent in the feminine mind.
Is this congenital gift of the "corrective" something important in the household of human minds? Yes,
for the woman who is blessed with it, that "pilot," or "homing instinct," is not only important; it is an imperious
need, a necessity. It gives her a moral balance she depends on desperately as a good mother. Eros, if he had his
way, would destroy women's ability to be good mothers, thus preventing them from having an immense share in
the salvation of mankind.
From the general history of ideas, as well as from the lives of human individuals, we know only too
well the dangers of introversion, the tendency to lose oneself in oneself. That unfortunate trend is an indwelling
element in the classical Eros, Agape's mortal enemy. Eros, you see, is the anti-life trend of shying away from
all active endeavor and from every concrete sense of moral duty. Eros has a pronounced negative attitude
toward everything that is really sober-minded and affirmative in life, everything that is realistic and truth-
loving.
7
Again I must remind you, there is no ground for boasting here. A woman would be foolish to become
personally proud of that buoyant extrovert trend which comes to her rescue right in the midst of her natural
super-sensitivity. Alterocentricity, with her, is an inborn endowment. She was created to be a mother. This
biological fact is, in itself, capable of holding in check considerable drives of light-minded passion.
It is not through sophisticated training in some super-academic institution of modern learning that
women have acquired the wisdom of those anti-Eros attitudes. No, it is by inspiration and grace they have
learnt to place the center of their lives outside themselves, thus riveting their values firmly in something greater
than themselves.
Here is the great law of life for any person: He will experience wholeness and harmony, fulfillment
and true felicity in the same degree as he is able to find his main values outside himself. That rule, by the way,
holds good, regardless of sex or age. The only condition is that the person be willing to give up himself as the
great center. He must submit to the great elan alterocentrique, the mysterious spirit of motherliness, or, as we
might as well say, the great Spirit of Fatherliness! For true alterocentricity corresponds exactly to the heavenly
Agape in every respect. We may, of course, distinguish here, saying:
Other-centeredness is, on the biological plane, a faithful type of what Agape is on the religious plane.
But what is Bios? Life is simply Jesus Christ. This applies to true life, wherever you turn. He is the Way, the
Truth, and the Life. There is no life outside of Him.
What criterion is there then, testifying with certainty that the Spirit of Agape is operative in a human
being? The practical proof is to be found in the active outreach for the other ones; so the very opposite of
sentimental introversion, passive rumination of mystic self-absorption. The elan alterocentrique means a
dynamic launching out for new shores of exciting reality. And it is not merely the person's literal arms that
stretch themselves out. It is his (or her!) deepest being, the reasoning mind as well as the longing heart. It is
man as an integrating whole who manifests, in deed and docility, his firm determination to orient his life in the
direction of the "other ones." Above all, his orientation will be toward the great OTHER ONE. That is God.
Here is the Center above all centers. When Christ becomes the governing reality outside man, irresistibly, he is
pulled toward that greatest of all outside realities. At the same time, the miracle above all miracles takes place.
Disrupted man is made whole. How? By the very fact of turning outward; that is, by obtaining a new Center
for his life. The great MAGNET of the uplifted cross (John 12:32) is what makes the ensuing movement, not
only a movement outward, but also a movement upward.
This general pattern of behavior manifested in the alterocentric unfolding of love, just could not be
limited to the potentials inherent in one single sex. It could not possibly be limited to the potentials inherent in
a certain age either. Alterocentricity is bound to be a universal force.
I am convinced that this is also the only force endowed with sufficient dynamic outburst to pull the
arche-typical humanist away from the blind alley in which his onesidedness has too often left him. I am
referring again to that onesided contemplation of "pure beauty," in the typical Eros sense, disengaged and
disrupted. I do not hesitate to call that a "blind alley." It is the deadend street in which a human person tends to
get stuck. For this infatuated contemplation of "pure" beauty is in reality nothing but a blind stare at utter
vanity, a nonentity that is ten times worse than nothing, accurately speaking, because it boasts of being
something.
Here again is a manifestation of the fata morgana of spiritualism in its most insidious form. It is the
mirage of an empty Oriental nirvana dream, appearing today in an Occidental disguise. It is a non-stop seance
of "transcendental meditation," establishing its present center in the Western World, after having filled Eastern
hearts with nothingness for millennia.
I shall soon demonstrate, on a firm ground of conscientious research backing, what essential features
TM has in common with Eros. But, so far, we must first have a firmer ground to stand on regarding
the relationship between other-centeredness, as a biological core quality, and the New Testament Agape.
CAN A WOMAN LOVE A MAN WHOM SHE DOES NOT ADMIRE, OR DOES NOT DEEM WORTHY
OF ANY TRUE LOVE?
How different from this unrealistic trend is not the response of the motherly heart! The typical woman
surprises us by doing the very opposite of what an old myth accuses her of doing. As Signora Gina Lombroso
says, she loves the man whom she is able to respect:
A woman cannot love a man whom she does not esteem and admire (sic!). True, she may very well
fall in love with a contemptible man. But that is simply because she sees in him a poor victim of unjust
calumny or some kind of unfortunate circumstances. To save him from such injustice and misfortune, that is
just the mission she feels called upon to perform. As soon as she becomes really convinced that he is worthy of
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contempt, she will cease to love him. To a man the very opposite may easily happen. Many men love women--
even to the extreme of suicide and murder--women they despise or believe completely unworthy.
That was an outstandingly intelligent woman's testimony. I go into captivating details in the argument
here developed in my book, ABOUT WOMEN. I believe Signore Lombroso has thrown important light upon
something strange and enigmatic here. For women do constitute an enigma to most men's traditional thinking.
They turn out to be a standing problem to the usual calculus an average man will traditionally tend to make in
his love life. In his boundless desire for total "freedom" that man will make plans he thinks entirely acceptable.
But what attitude does his little mistress take to those plans? She suddenly astonishes him by responding in
ways cutting radically across all his planning and all his "reasonable" expectations. She surprises him--and
frustrates him--by suddenly manifesting a "whim" he had never thought possible. She boldly declares that she
is on the side of realism, to put it in the terms of the historian of ideas. She insists on having an intelligent
foundation for her love. That is the sensational turn matters are taking in an unsuspecting lover's love drama.
The woman whom he had come to think of as the model of perfect irrationality, suddenly comes up with a claim
for what she calls "rational principles in matters of love." How could you blame him if he is somewhat non-
plussed at the unexpected "new caprice" of this incredible female. She peremptorily declares that she is on the
side of stern realism. In matters of love he himself is rather the born "idealist." Ironically I might say: He loves
for love's sake, without any "petty regard" for things "beyond the realms of the love experience itself." In other
words, however much that typical male would otherwise insist on producing logical reasons for anything he
does or thinks, here in the precious "kingdom of pure love," he would almost consider it as a kind of "sacrilege"
to apply the tenets of just simple everyday logic.
This is evidently quite different with the prototypical woman. She just does not have the ability-- this
she openly admits--to go on loving without any intelligent reason behind her love. She just cannot love at all
without assuming some reasonable motivation for that love. Evidently she does not manage the ingenious feat
of loving "spontaneously," as the phrase goes among Agape researchers.*
It is, no doubt, this "inability" ("lack of genius") that makes it practically unfeasible for her to love--
really love--a man whom she just cannot contrive to mobilize any respect for. Before she can abandon herself
to feelings of deep love for the man of her choice, she would at least have to find some means of rationalization.
In other words, she would have to convince herself, in some way or other, that, after all, he does have qualities
in his factual being which make him worthy of being loved. She has to appreciate him by virtue of his own
inherent qualities, some kind of objective value.
-----------------------------------
*Please keep in mind, as we proceed, Nygren's claim about Agape as the absolutely "unmotivated" and
"spontaneous" type of love.
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This is evident and undeniable. Even the typical woman, is not, eo ipso, necessarily the perfectly
reasonable one in practical reality. But one thing can still safely be said about her: In an astonishing degree she
has the honest willingness to realize that ideal of true reasonability in her choice and in her general pattern of
behavior. She does not stubbornly go contrary to the voice whispering into her ear so insistingly, "Remember
now, little girl, you cannot separate this serious event of your love choice from your life as a whole. For don't
forget--that life of yours is the life of a mother."
Those are words of plain reasonability. And it is essential to state that women have in them a profound
respect for every element of the reasonable--even when they do not manage the wisdom to direct their lives
accordingly.
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Be reasonable now, and remember what Agape stands for. It represents the total essence of God's
character, and accordingly His entire plan and counsel. Consequently everything--note it down: everything--
that is basically good, basically in accordance with God's plan for the world, is simply bound to find its place in
Agape!
That, by the way, as we shall abundantly see later, also applies to justice, including absolutely every
aspect involved in it, just to mention one matter which has been subjected to terrible doubt in the on-going
Agape debate.
Now then, what about sex? Was that according to God's original plan? Of course it was. "Man and
woman created He them." To create a "spirituality" more spiritual than the Spirit of God, that has always been
the machination of the pagan Eros. And the result is evident in spiritualism, the philosophical type as well as
the vulgar type.
Plato, like all the other spiritualities who have followed after him, did not want to have anything to do
with creation as an essential part of God's plan. Of course not. To Plato, matter, including all kinds of bodies,
constitutes the great deplorable evil. So anything having to do with such bodies (including sex) must be looked
upon as a most despicable and damnable thing. That is the fairly consistent pattern of thought in all
spiritualism. I say fairly consistent. You shall soon see why. I do not want to exaggerate in the way I use my
terms.
Spiritualism goes on manifesting some kind of consistency in its deep contempt for everything that is
bodily, until the crucial moment when something fatal-- and apparently inevitable--happens: Spiritualism
develops into pantheism. Then suddenly the hitherto "unlawful" and "inadmissible" bodily things become
lawful and admissible, even to the extreme of licentiousness. This is the remarkable trick of the "heavenly"
Eros, shamelessly pushing forward his scabby head, this time as the "vulgar" one.
Thus you will easily understand what I mean when I say that pagan idealism tends to despite what is
original and good in human sex, and condone what is derivative and evil in it. Again you can see that there is a
poor amount of true logical consistency in spiritualism, the Eros philosophy par excellence.
Perhaps now we are all better prepared to grasp the predicament of the self-centered lover as a
candidate for marriage, and the reason for it. There is in his mind a willful determination not to curb his
unreasonable passion, whatever the ethos of his environment, or the good sense of his own mind tries to bring
home to his heart. He had rather abandon himself, thoughtlessly and playboy-like to the unbridled pleasures of
his super-excited ego. This is Eros taking possession of the person who was from the beginning made for
freedom, not for slavery.
Some critics of stern Christian standards in the field of sex ethics ask with wonder how a Christian
teacher can speak about the "beastly passion." Does not this remind too much of the original platonic
spiritualist's unrealistic and rather pharisaic attitude toward natural bodies and natural sex?
No, not necessarily, by no means! If a person created on the high level of a human being places
himself on the lower level of a beast, just a radically self-centered male, not considering for one moment what
the female's good interest may happen to be, you do realize that "beastliness" in this case must adopt a bastard-
like character, entirely different from that of a real beast behaving like a beast. A tom-cat behaving like a tom-
cat may not be considered objectionable from the viewpoint of human sex ethics. But the case of a man
behaving like a tom-cat would, of course, have to be relegated into quite a different category, ethically
speaking. We are here speaking about the definitely vulgar Eros playboy's reactions in terms of sex ethics.
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Do not misunderstand me. I am not saying one single disparaging word about the natural beauty in a
woman's body. It certainly is not Eros who has had anything to do with creating that. The Creator's name is
Jesus Christ, and He is Agape. It is not Eros who has made sex a pleasant experience, any more than he has
made strawberries taste delicious. It is God, and God only, who has prepared all things that are good--really
good. It is He who has invented feminine beauty. Accordingly, there could be nothing whatsoever wrong with
that beauty; that is--and here is the important point--as part and parcel of the woman possessing that beauty.
And when I am speaking about a "woman," I am again speaking about a totality, including an endless number of
realities, such as her God-dependence as a creature, her rights and responsibilities as a person endowed with
freedom of will, etc., etc.
In fact, there need not be anything wrong at all about that woman as the gorgeously beautiful one, in
terms of a real object, reasonably seen. On the other hand, there may be something terribly wrong with the eyes
that see. For an eye that stares its eyeballs out at torn-off (that is, bleedingly lacerated) particles of an original
totality, or at sheer emptiness, that eye is bound to become torn and empty itself. That is where the tragedy
comes in.
The objectives facts, inherent in the loved one, as a person, mean next to nothing in such a lover's
evaluation. Hence, such qualities as true respect and admiration for the girl he "loves," are realities unknown to
him. His love is not the sum total of a reasonable evaluation of her as a human being.
In one way this may sound downright incredible. For otherwise in life's practical business, that same
man may have a wonderfully keen sense of evaluating things objectively. Look at him sitting at his office desk
for instance. Or observe him as he makes his minute experiments in a laboratory, or as he prepares an inventory
of his pieces of merchandise in a storage hall. There he is sober-minded enough. But then, suddenly, when he
comes to matters of love, the greatest thing in the world, his sober-mindedness and his objectivity have
vanished into thin air.
Why do people cut up their lives in this way? Do we humans have, at the back of our minds, some
kind of automatic disruption mania, driving us to such dichotomies in our lives? Is there some kind of
distribution machine saying arbitrarily: "In this field here sober reason is still supposed to prevail; in that one
over there, however, sentimentality and light-minded romanticism are entitled to have their sway." What an
incredible philosophy. And how can we find out about its secret "rationale?"
Evidently, in the obscure cabinets of romantic half-light there is no room for any sound esteem and
admiration for the other one. In the Dionysian temple of ecstatic super-tension, no true rationality or serious
concern for persons or things outside of oneself have any chance of survival.
The Eros playboy's leaning is naturally toward the spectacular and the romantic, to the dreamlike and
illusory values. Our "values" are too often something we find exclusively in ourselves. We call them values,
but what are they? They are the emptiness we tear out of our own breasts. And what valuable content could
you ever expect from such a mega-zero? What durability could you expect from something whose main
property consists in being nothing? We men may stand ever spellbound in front of that nothingness. But as
soon as the fury of our passion (called love) is spent, the spell is broken. Our emptiness has realized its
potentials to the full. And what has, by that time, really happened to the "lover's" "love?" It has blown away
with the chilling gust of the first morning breeze of sterner realities.
But the main project of our study has never been Eros. It has never been self-centeredness. The
positive angles are so much more encouraging and also more promising. So, in the first place, what we must
get better acquainted with is not the Eros "values" with all their spectacular display of sham glories. What we
need to concentrate on is Agape. It is Agape, as unobtrusive other-centeredness, spurning all outward display.
Right in a world of vainglorious splendor we must get sight of new aspects to those "more tedious" qualities we
have found to survive at least in the potential mother. I have called it true respect and realistic esteem for the
other one. It so happens--and this is a most significant historic fact, although it is almost never mentioned--that
the word "Agape" in the Greek language of classical times had a sense corresponding fairly well to those
"tedious ones." It was not Love, the "many-splendored thing." No, its splendor did not go one single step
farther than to the modest concept of "respect" or "esteem." So you see how inconspicuous and (considered
from an Eros angle) downright tedious Agape is, even in its literal linguistic extraction.
For a realistic understanding of Agape's nature, it may be more to the point than most men might tend
to believe to listen once more to the anxious cry of that human female, confronted with her "this-worldly" love:
"I do not dare to skip realism in my choice of a love partner. I must choose, as an object for my great, great
love experience in life, a person whom I can truly respect and realistically esteem. As a prospective mother I
have moral obligations which I cannot betray. That is what forbids me to be unrealistic in the way I choose my
loved one."
Now, is the God of the Bible heard to say something similar to this? Or would what He says, through
the witness of His eternal Agape, be the diametrically opposite?
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If I were to express with one single world what I have found to be the fundamental quality
characterizing Agape as opposed to Eros, I would say personalism. But for practical purposes I would then
immediately have to add: I cannot get along with that one word at all in my present milieu. For here it is
imperative to indicate precisely what I mean by "personalism." And that takes many words. What does it
imply, essentially, to be a person?
I have a synonym or two for the concept of personalism. This may help to emphasize the peculiar
aspects of the terms which I consider most neglected--and most fatal to neglect.
1. To be made a person is exactly the same as to be created on the tremendously high level peculiar to
those creatures who have been granted the exceptional endowment of a free will (such as angels and men).
2. Second point to be held fast: The Bible describes that category of privileged beings as having been
created in God's image. This indicates that it is God, the Creator, who must be considered as the Person par
excellence. Some theologians have had the erroneous viewpoint that it is a case of naive "anthropomorphism"
that fools us into speaking about God as a Person. We think of God in human terms, as being one who has an
"arm," a "mouth," an "eye," etc., and even a personal mind, "just like men." But in reality, the sophisticated
scholar says, that is childish nonsense.
Fortunately Brunner puts them straight about this matter. He says it is they who suffer from a case of
theo-morphism (or theo-pathism). God is the only original Person. When we human beings consider ourselves
as the persons par excellence, then we are very much mistaken. We figure ourselves in the form of God, the
only truly personal One. When we say that we are persons, that may be right, but only parabolically so.
I am confident that we may go even farther than Brunner here. We may say that we are persons, and
most realistically so. But this is a fact for which we must be just thankful. It is--again--nothing to be proud of;
that would be nonsensical. It is in Him we have all our pride. But then it is a reasonable and legitimate pride.
What I mainly wanted to arrive at here, however, is this realistic equation:
PERSONALISM = WILL FREEDOM = GOD'S IMAGE
Now, what I further want to point out firmly and decisively is this: Personalism constitutes the essence
and the sine qua non of the peculiar religion which bases itself on Agape.
Here some will say: "That sound like a truism, something self-evident and therefore rather dull. Have
you got nothing more important to say about Christianity and about Agape? Where do you find a philosophy or
a religion in this world which would care to put up a serious fight with you on the basis of a statement as
tedious and non-controversial as that? Do they not all admit tacitly that being a person is a tolerably good
thing? Where would you expect to come across one single humanistic movement which would assume
personalism to be something negative?"
Is this right? Is humanism, whether Christian or pagan, consistently in favor of personalism?
For several years I have had the serious task of conveying basic truths regarding fundamental motifs in
the Western history of ideas to my students of philosophy and religion. Unfailingly I have then always had to
spend considerable time trying to bring home, to their hearts and to their heads, a momentous fact which
spiritualistically-oriented teachers have always tended to cover up: Whereas the God of the Bible has never, in
one single passage of His Word to man, intimated anything which might suggest that He gives prestige to
impersonalism of any degree or any kind, it happens again and again that the wise ones of this world make it a
capital point in their implicit teaching that there is some tremendous virtue in being a non-person. You would
never believe it, but this weird gospel of "salvation and eternal bliss" through downright impersonalism has
invariably asserted itself as a capital feature of every religious and philosophical movement through which the
Eros motif has managed to propagate its ways and its views.
The wisdom-seeker who is bent on arriving at the full truth about Agape cannot today have any
legitimate hope of reaching this goal without also having a look into the lugubrious abyss of that negative
gospel which for so many thousands of years has spread its darkness over the continents of both Eastern and
Western lands. The great sermon that is being preached openly and without shame to millions of attentively
listening souls has one aim exclusively: It is to convince the world that the peak of all spirituality is simple
impassivity Salvation must be found in perfect indifference and non-intervention.
If there is any concept of God at all in this barren humanism, then it is the ideal of a God who has the
"tactfulness" not to intervene in any way or at any time in the individual creature's life.
The distance between that "god" of all spiritualist philosophy and the Living God of the Bible is simply
endless in all respects. You must get to know their respective attitudes toward both intelligent thought and
living emotion.
Until we have given thorough study to these basic differences between the opposing motifs, we cannot
flatter ourselves that we have a tenable outlook on life and on the world. It is our failure to practice that kind of
thoroughness which has left us with a concept of Agape that is nonsensical and fatal to our Christian creed and
the very source of our disarray today, our polarization crisis.
The facts modern motif researchers have added to our knowledge about Agape are praiseworthy and
indispensable achievements. But those which they have failed to reveal are equally indispensable. How can
one account in a plausible way for that failure? I think the explanation is partly to be sought in one fact about
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Agape which is more easily overlooked than anything else. I do not know whether I shall call it
unobtrusiveness, modesty, humility, or by some other name.
15
This question would appear the more reasonable in my case, as I have repeatedly dared to speak with
the boldness of Biblical anthropomorphism about the "emotional God," the "humanly warm and tenderhearted
God."
Now let us note one semantic fact emphatically asserted about the corresponding verb "philein": It
means precisely to consider another person with feelings of the warmest imaginable human affection. So one
might seriously inquire: Why then, was not "philein" regarded as fully worthy of expressing the highest
concept of Christian Love, and of presenting it as the supreme New Testament revelation of God?
Well, it would be very wrong indeed, to pretend that love in the gospel literature is not expressed by
that word for it occurs some fifty times in the New Testament.
For instance, when the most friendly affection of Jesus for a man like Lazarus is to be described, we
know that "philein" is the word chosen (John 11:36). And the same word is used to express His attitude toward
John--the "disciple whom Jesus loved." Here it is the apostle John himself who finds that word adequate to
express the wonderful emotion of warmth and tenderness binding him and the Saviour together (John 21:7).
Nevertheless, we also know the historical fact: With the triumphant surging up of the Christian
religion as a world movement, a new word was destined to establish itself as the term par excellence, a term
denoting the most active, outward-reaching, alterocentric type of love our world had ever known; at the same
time the most elevated type of love any human formulation for divine things could ever manage to hold fast.
The noun "agape" is used approximately 120 times in the Greek Testament, and the verb "agapao" is used more
than 130 times.
But how does this extraordinary concept distinguish itself then? What light can it throw over the
nature of God? How does it delineate the nature of Christian spirituality as opposed to pagan spiritualism?
Does it have any secrets to disclose regarding the peculiar traits of pagan theology? I am, of course, particularly
interested in the "theology of Eros." So many important questions still need to be answered about Agape and
Eros. And they are not all so easy to tackle. So we must proceed with circumspection and care, as well as with
thoroughness, if we are to arrive at safe and meaningful answers to them.
DID CHRISTIANITY CHOOSE THE POORER WORD INSTEAD OF THE RICHER ONE?
Salom illustrates the distinction between "agapan" and "philein" by quoting a striking remark from
Anthony's famous speech about Caesar, as reported by Dio Cassius:
"You loved him ("philein" is the verb used) as a father and cherished him ("agapan") as a benefactor."
From an emotional point of view (and in the former case the emotion should lack nothing in human
depth and tenderness) you might reasonably assume that the strongest word available would be the one used to
describe a son's warm feelings of affection for his father. But in this case of secular literature, what do we see?
Strange enough, the verb "agapan," to us the really famous one today, is reserved for the "smaller" or "more
prosaic" task of describing just a protege's respect for his benefactor. In other words, "agapan" here does not
impress us at all as being the richer one, the "heart-felt" one.
If this case is characteristic, what shall we then say? Has the gospel intentionally chosen, as its
favorite, the "poorer" term, the more "down-to-earth" term, to render God's attribute par excellence, since it is
said that He is Agape?
On thing is indisputable: in the case referred to above--and the same may be shown to apply in other
passages of profane Greek--the verb "phileo," not "agapao," is used to describe the richest wave of human
emotion. Should not then that same word for love be the appropriate one to reveal God to us poor children of
an Occidental world culture, a Greek culture? In fact, is not Christ the One who supremely reveals God to us?
And does He not do it in no place better than in the New Testament records about His matchless love? And
how did that love there manifest itself? Was it not precisely as a swelling wave of infinite tenderness? Is not
Christ's love diametrically opposed to all that is frigidly stern and rationalistic? Is it not cordially responsive to
the modest values of the childlike heart, things consistently despised by sagacious philosophers and by mighty
politicians alike?
So should there not be reasons enough to go ahead just crowning, unanimously, that divine Christian
love with the most sympathetic of all Greek names: Philia?
To this most understandable human question an answer must be given, of course. And it must not only
be an answer held in delicate terms (that is tactful terms; for, according to Paul's song of praise to the honor of
Christian love in First Corinthians 13, love is also this: it is full of tact); but it must also be a clear answer, a
relentlessly truthful one. That answer must here evidently contain some absolutely reliable, additional pieces of
information straight to the point.
And frankly, if what I call the theology of Christian realism, is not the elect one to provide us with that
indispensable addition to our common knowledge about Agape, then I just do not see who could ever manage it
for us.
There are some serious dangers always lying in wait for the student of theology, particularly when
such delicate topics as "different levels of love" are being analyzed and categorized. On the one hand, sheer
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scholarly sophistication may get the upper hand. Result: the love which happens to be the object of observation
in the laboratory is atomized. On the other hand, trends or romantic humanism may be prevailing. Hence,
sentimentality rather than sound human sentiment may succeed to the throne. Then we find ourselves in the
realm where the danger is more fatal for the study of Agape than anything else. We have entered the weird
kingdom of magic, in which the divine spirituality, proclaimed by the Biblical Agape, has radically been
replaced by something having more to do with the peculiar philosophy of Eros than anything else I have ever
come across. Our capricious research vessel is about to lose its sound bearings completely, sailing right into the
rock-strewn straits of pagan spiritualism rather than Christian spirituality.
For a long time I used to imagine that the diametrical opposite of spirituality was the blatantly
unspiritual. I have now had to admit that it is something very different, namely the spiritualistic. I can no
longer make any serious effort toward unravelling the mystery of Demigod Eros as a living spirit in our world
without laying bare a tremendously significant historical fact: The philosophy of Eros is the philosophy of
spiritualism, nothing but that! The non-spiritual has never been the worst enemy to the truly spiritual. No, not
even the openly anti-spiritual. The mortal enemy to the Spirit is the pseudo-spiritual. Eros never militantly
denied the existence of the spirit. On the contrary, he always defended the spirit as "the only existing thing."
That is where he constantly had his severest clash with true realism. For realism is the philosophy of totality. It
is total enough--and humble enough!--to include matter, downright humus (earth), as part and parcel of all
human reality. And man's reality is embraced one hundred percent by God's reality. The God of Agape is the
HUMBLE God. He is the DOWN-TO-EARTH God. This is the first thing modern Agape research failed to
realize; and, therefore, also to point out in indisputable terms. It was too engrossed in simple MARCIONIST
philosophy to manage its first hurdle. So it was doomed also to make its ethics a realistic totality. For ethics
cannot exist without ethical acts, the down-to-earth substance that was traditionally despised by all spiritualist
philosophies.
CJ AGA page 0057 paragraph 1 Of course Christian realism would not be realistic at all if it did not include
the ethical reality the Bible maintains from cover to cover; that is a consistent discipline of the human will, the
God-given principles of right action in practical everyday life. To genuine Judaism, and to genuine Christianity
alike, love is inseparable from a wholehearted obedience to God's commandments, the well-ordered willingness
of the alterocentric person to do something--to do the right thing, the thing about which one knows that it will
give pleasure to the others, to the great Other One. This was Christ's constant concern. Through His example
in that respect He revealed the first law of Agape to us. He never fell a victim to the miserable onesidedness of
"human ethics." He never got so busy caring for the other ones that he lost sight of the Other One.
This is the wonderful realism of Agapeic totality: A remarkable thing happens to the Christian
"agapan": It becomes so versatile and all-encompassing a verb that it may, with perfect naturalness (and with
the best of reasons), be placed even in the imperative: "Love God!" "Love they neighbor!" "Love thy enemy!"
This would never happen logically to a verb expressing exclusively, or even mainly, a "feeling," in the common
subjective sense of that word. But "agapan" is first and foremost a dynamic deed, not a subjective feeling.
Here I have experience enough with serious students to foresee some degree of battle already. The
logician and the realist--just the persons to whom I am now making my most pointed appeal, and whom I would
hate to exclude from my eager discussion--may have some definite objections to make at this juncture. They
will immediately exclaim: "Is it not somewhat exaggerated, after all, to speak so much about objectivity,
reasonability, and sober-mindedness even in connection with the Christian Agape? For instance, how can you
love a person who, in himself, is not loveable at all? How can you love him "objectively" and "reasonably";
that is, with an unshakable basis in logical reality?
You certainly sound, my dear friend, as if you have read Nygren. For exactly that question was the
one he felt so seriously confronted with. And of course the same question was the one Kierkegaard and the
whole long procession of philosopher-theologians after him felt bound to face unflinchingly.
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the mortal sin of denying the supreme gift granted to us all by a gracious God: freedom of the will and our
simple common sense, making us responsible for the way we use that freedom.
If this is the historical fact, then how could we stoop down to accepting the non-sense cult, insinuating
its subtle dogma about something "infinitely more spiritual" in unreason than in reason?
WHAT IS THE ESSENCE OF NYGREN'S THESIS ABOUT AGAPE AS THE GREAT UNREASONABLE
ONE?
We shall now face Nygren's motif research fairly and squarely. In it we must humbly accept what is
great and truthful. But we must also courageously reject any elements for which he does not have realistic
arguments.
First it would be good to know whether his main idea in this realm is very much the same as
Kierkegaard's.
Nygren blames reasoning theologians for having tried to solve the riddle of Agape by applying the
usual means which their rationalization batteries have always disposed of. Their question and his question is
the same: Why did God, in His boundless love, choose to concentrate His affection precisely upon the sinner?
For a long time this has been a question students of the New Testament have obviously felt that they could not
help facing. What does God find in that sinner that causes Him to regard the sinner as "so much worthier of His
love" than the "righteous" person. Would it perhaps be the sinner's "greater sincerity," a stronger awareness of
his own unworthiness, a humble recognition of how totally he depends on a saving Omnipotence?
The religious thinker, says Nygren, is so entirely wrapped up in the sophistries of the old theme: Love
must have an intelligent reason. It must have some logical connection with some kind of "value," or
"worthiness" inherent in the very object that is being loved.
No, says the famous author of "Agape and Eros." It is vain to try to find such intelligent reasons for
God's dealings. According to Nygren, there is one basic fact about Agape which such human reasoners do not
grasp: The phenomenon of love we here have to do with is something absolutely spontaneous, something
perfectly unmotivated.
If God's love for you and me were to base itself on any kind of lovableness in us then how could He
have any possibility whatsoever of falling in love with us at any time? No-no, the fundamental fact about
Agape is an entirely different one: it is the love that loves man in spite of his unlovableness, even in spite of his
bottomless depravity.
Is this the full truth? Is it a partial truth? Or is it false altogether?
One thing has to be admitted to begin with: That radical formulation of Nygren's seems to have some
definite advantages for the sake of argument. I would most willingly admit that its hyperbolical form helps me
wonderfully to find a spectacular way of pointing out the vast difference existing between the God of the Bible
and the other well-known gods of the Western World, such as Zeus, Jupiter, Wotan, etc.
Or let us just as well compare Him to Plato's god. I am particularly concerned with Plato's god of
Love; that is, the incredible sorcerer, Eros.
Nygren has taken careful note of what Plato states about a specifically intelligent attitude toward love:
One loves what one does not have (i. e., what one painfully lacks, and feel a passionate need of possessing).
"For who would ever desire what he has already?" says Plato.
That is very characteristic of what I have called the motif of Autarkeia, or Self-Sufficiency. The real
god of Plato's world--that is, the god of the Idea--has all he wants. He is the perfectly self-sufficient one, the
one hundred percent autarkes, the only one who has attained the great goal of all pagan idealism. This is the
plausible reason, I should think, why that "god" does not ever care to entertain any true relations with human
persons. Why should he? He is self-contained. He could not derive any satisfaction from anything outside
himself. No wonder that Plato can say, even: God has no friends. He just does not need them. So why should
he have them?
To the idealist philosopher then, love, humanly speaking (or divinely speaking for that matter), is in a
way a negligible thing, to express it mildly. In fact, in his secret heart, he is rather bound to look upon it as
definitely negative. To Plato all love is passion. So it is what characterizes the inferior ones, those who are in
need, those who suffer terrible lack. Love is the passion of possession, the passion of greed.
This is the basic ideology of spiritualism in all epochs and in all lands. Love is, to this cold
intellectualistic philosophy, nothing less than a dangerous sidetrack. It is the thought-perverter above all
thought-perverters, the passion above all passions. It is what makes seeing people blind and reasonable people
unreasonable.
This is what every man should know about the classical West. And do not believe that things are so
different in super-philosophical circles of the classical East. Budd'ha developed a spiritualistic idealism of an
astonishingly corresponding type. But let us now keep to the cradle of Western culture, Greece, so far. The
great Eros whom Plato speaks about in the Symposion (the Banquet) is a category of "love" human beings today
can easily understand and appreciate (See Plato's Symposion, section 200). It has to do with a hectic hunt for
values.
19
No, I should not say a hunt for values. For that might suggest that I accept Nygren's argument. And I
certainly do not. I rather ought to formulate it as follows: What the typical Eros man keeps hunting for, is what
he, as the pagan he really is, assumes to be a value. It is not a true value in any respect.
The dangerous thing about Nygren's formulation is this: He makes it appear as if that sham value of
the Eros hunt has something in it that is really valuable, something a logically reasoning human mind can accept
as true value. It has not!
In other words, Nygren virtually declares that Eros takes its stand in favor of what is reasonable. It
does not! Eros is said to love the truly loveable. It never did.
IS IT AT ALL POSSIBLE FOR THE TRULY INTELLIGENT TO VALUE THE VALUELESS AND TO
LOVE THE UNLOVEABLE?
While Agape, according to Nygren, loves what there is no true or logical foundation for loving (for
instance, man, who is alleged to be, in himself, absolutely unloveable), Eros is said to have the opposite attitude,
the rational one: Eros loves the loveable. It must have a reasonable foundation for its love. It can only love
what is found to be, in itself, worthy of love. This is what Nygren calls a motivated love. Agape has no such
rational motivation for its love, he claims. It loves "spontaneously." It loves the absolutely unloveable. Thus,
according to Nygren, an absolutely valueless human being becomes the most natural candidate for, or recipient
of, Christ's love. For he is not only the helpless one, but the absolutely worthless one. Of course then, to
Nygren as to Marcion of old, the only God who could ever fall in love with such a wretch must be the irrational
God who takes stock in absolute worthlessness. What you and I needed, evidently, was a God who has thrown
all value scales of sound common logic overboard, a God of what I would have to call the anti-intellect kind. A
God who defies all commonsense reason. Such a God is Jesus Christ.
This sounds novel and exciting, doesn't it? But is it also true?
According to Nygren, we are here confronted with exactly the great characteristic making the God of
the Bible--or rather the God of the New Testament--a God so totally different from the smart reason-oriented
deity of Platonic philosophy. (Nygren seems convinced then that Eros is smart and reason-oriented.)
According to this view, Agape is not the type of love that searches far and wide for the inherent values. No,
Agape is the love the creates the values. Out of what? Out of nothing. Or would it not be more correct to say:
Out of worse than nothing, out of evil. I just wonder. For if man is the absolutely unloveable one, there is
nothing but evil left in him, then the creation here happening must be a creation of good out of evil, mustn't it?
According to Nygren, further, Agape does not desire the inherently loveable. It is not amor
concupiscendi, as Augustin might have expressed it. And the reason alleged for its being without any desire of
the trivial, commonplace kind is that our Christian God has done away with all cheap this-worldly logic. That
is why He is envisioned as turning "spontaneously" just toward those who have nothing loveable about them,
those who suffer lack of all worth and all worthiness. And then suddenly the incredible thing happens. The
totally unwarranted thing happens: Agape, the creative force, causes the entirely unloveable one to become
loveable.
20
It is only in the devil's own philosophy, the philosophy of pagan spiritualism, that the totally wicked
and depraved is changed, by the mere waving of a magic wand, into an ocean of goodness and perfect integrity.
God could never do that. For he is simply incapable of bypassing with total disrespect the inalienable laws of
basic goodness and justice, constituting the expression of His very nature. If we attribute to Him the ability to
do such a thing, then we are propagating the most dangerous falsehood of a spurious gospel.
One thing, you see, is to create a world of perfectly good things out of the "material" we* call absolute
nothingness. Quite another thing would be to turn black into white, ethically speaking.
One most crucial fact should here be kept in mind: God, the great Governor of the universe, just
because of His essence as the perfect One (that also implies the perfectly just One), has a terrible trouble with
some things which are already there. For example, created persons who have turned evil because they used
their personalism (their freedom of will) in a wrong way. His own spotless justice, which is part of His realism,
simply forces Agape to go into no end of sacrifice in order to cope with that problem justly and realistically. He
cannot say to the moral evil which has thus come into real existence like the magician does: "Vanish!" Or:
"Be changed into your very opposite! Hocus Pocus!"
-----------------------------------
*By the way, is not this "ex nihilo" creation, philosophizing theologians speak about, rather a misnomer? Nihil
means nothing. But is it intelligent to speak about the tremendous forces, the unlimited resources of the
Almighty One as "nothing?"
Oh no. This is not the way God can deal with what already exists in a world of personal ethics. It is
magic that deals with evil in that arbitrary way.
To blot out sin, the indisputable anti-value existing in our world, by means of that cheap system would
be in the highest degree unrealistic and unjust. And this is dangerous teaching in theology, I assure you. For it
would be tantamount to saying that salvation from sin may happen without any confession of sin--without the
least trace of any obligation on the sinner's part to receive what the New Testament calls Metanoia, true
repentance of sin. That kind of "salvation" is vain. Man must actively accept the offer of salvation. And that
fundamental attitude of acceptance can be practically realized in one way only: Metanoia (in Greek),
Poenitentia (in Latin), Penitence (in English). Man must simply permit God to reduce him to "nothing in
himself."
Notice what a reduction to nothing here really means: Man must surrender his big, proud self. Only
then can the wonder of re-creation and redemption take place. We should be realistic enough in our thinking to
know how much better a good round zero (0) is, after all, than the minus infinite ( - 00 ) which Eros insists on
presenting as his passport to heaven.
26
endowed with freedom of will. Modern science today rather believes in determinism; so no realistic personal
freedom in either God or man.
Modernism has failed to accept the axiomatic fact that GOD CREATED. In this failure there always
was a heavy risk implied. The harmonious image of a concrete Agape ran the risk of being vitiated and entirely
disfigured. And the learned elite certainly are not the only guilty ones. We, all of us, constantly tended to
forget the tremendous historical fact that man was created by God, in His image. Therefore, and obviously for
no other "more important" reason, we have also constantly failed to see why He could love us and still remain
perfectly intelligent. After all, he had some realistic foundation to base His love on.
The fact that man is God's own creature is reason enough for Him to love that man. In fact, it is not
only an intelligent reason. It is an absolutely inevitable reason. As long as creation is a fact--and I do not see
who could manage to change it into a non-fact; for even God cannot reverse history, or make done things
undone--you are the Creator's creature. You yourself could not, even with the most obstinate efforts of your
will power, move one single inch from the unshakable fact that He is your Maker, the Generator of your life, the
constant Upholder of your existence.
This rock-bottom realism is bound to remain rock-bottom realistic, whether you consider it from a
divine or a human view-point, or any matter-of-fact angle you might want to apply.
THOU SHALT LOVE THE LORD THY GOD WITH ALL THINE HEART
The first commandment is an illustration, as good as you could ever desire to have it, of the
reasonability inherent in Agape. Tell me, does the Bible sermonize, solemnly enjoining upon us: now we must
take care and see to it that we love God "spontaneously," or "unmotivatedly?" Are we sternly warned lest we
abandon ourselves to the evil course of loving Him intelligently, for sensible reasons, humanly speaking? On
the contrary. The gospel itself plainly stresses the reason, and it is one which any child can understand:
"because He loved us first." It is a highly rational motivation that is here suggested.
And then the second commandment:
REALISM AS THE FIRM FOUNDATION EVEN FOR THE WONDER OF GRACE OPERATIVE IN
HUMAN LIVES: THE SALVATION FROM SIN
Of course the freedom of man's will is not for one moment unrealistically skipped (suspended) in that
co-operation between God and man, taking place as soon as man has accepted to be saved. Man actually retains
his strange autonomy right in the midst of his surrender. In fact, he strengthens his own will power, his self-
government, at the moment of self-surrender. That is not so strange or self-contradictory as it may sound. For
God has never wanted to curb man's will. He has always wanted to strengthen his will. In order that man
should be liberated from his slavery under sin, it is indispensable that he should all the time voluntarily yield,
"granting God permission" to realize His divine wonder in the human heart, the human life. The creative
miracle is entirely dependent upon this cooperation. Only on this condition will the sinner be enabled to be
obedient to the commandments of God. The power of God's grace (in its dynamic aspect) and man's voluntary
acceptance of that power--those two realities must go together. At the moment when they do not coincide any
longer, man automatically falls back into his natural condition of disobedience and enmity against God, with the
whole misery of impotence accompanying that tragic state of man's life.
Realistically seen, there is no room for any "problem" here, either theoretically or practically. Agape is
the real power that creates and maintains all things in the universe of God. And please do not commit the
inconsistency of splitting up the universe here into a "spiritual part" and a "physical part." All men have free
access to that power (spiritual and physical at the same time).
Our strained relationship to God will turn normal when we let Agape do her work of power transfer in
our lives. Nothing could be more real and problem-free than this. We have seen that even our most strained
relationships with any other person around us does not raise any problem of "this-worldly logic." However
negative that person may happen to be at any given moment, he will always be, to you, a realistic object for
reasonable respect and love (Agape), on your part. You are perfectly consistent when you consider him,
wholeheartedly, as a positive person of eternal value. Why? For the simple reason that Christ has sacrificed
everything, even His very life, for this creature of His. He gave it all for him some two thousand years ago on
Calvary Hill, nay from everlasting. And notice: Everlastingness is not here a non-time, a non-history
abstraction. By no means. Because of that historic act, Jesus Christ, in the first place, is bound to be the great
realistic object of your most reasonable respect and love (Agape). Everything Christ performs is respectable
and loveable; so absolutely worthy of intelligent admiration. In other words, the logical order has been well
taken care of by Him. Have no fears, either intellectually or otherwise.
There is even one further reflection making it extra clear that I should not hesitate to love actively any
fellow-man I come across, and particularly the least attractive one: My Agape--which, of course, is nothing but
a mere reflection of Christ's Agape--might very well become the explosive power, used as an instrument in
God's hand to transform the life of that very fellow creature, exactly the same way my life was transformed.
Small wonder, under such circumstances, that it becomes a sacred obligation of one man to love another man.
But the piety which is to transform lives must always be practical, realistic, and of vigorous reason.
The Bible would be the most inconsistent of all books if it taught the absurdity doctrines of modern theology on
this point. Tell me, have you ever come across any passage in the Scriptures that could duly be interpreted to
this effect: "Here you must do violence to your human reason, for this is the domain of the spirit; this is the
domain of un-reason!"
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There is a plausible argument presented by plain Biblicism against that incredible un-reason doctrine
which keeps undermining our simple confidence in all sound sense. The Bible's tacit assumption is: there is no
secret battle, no subtle incongruity between the nature of the present world as observed by truly sharpsighted
human science on the one hand, and the higher inscrutable wisdom of the Eternal One on the other hand; that is,
the spiritual truths spiritually revealed in the Bible. There is perfect harmony. The reason for that is also
simple: The same God is the author of both. So they must agree. If it is the same Creator who has called into
existence the world of the spirit and this temporal world, then it would be foolish to imagine that He keeps
operating with two manners of truth (two systems of logic), as it were; one having validity for the world of the
spirit only, the other for the world of natural science only. What true science in one field of God's creation
reveals cannot be at enmity with what true science in the other field reveals. Again, the old truth asserts itself.
It is a firm faith in the Biblical fact of CREATION that decides the issue.
An outlook on life and on the world, based on the staunchest faith in the plain word of the Bible is not
a philosophy of interior disruption or of timid vacillation, intellectually speaking. Oh no, it has plausible
arguments in store for any emergency. So it is apt to defy every point of the classical unreasonability dogma
forming the poor basis of liberal theology.
NYGREN'S GREAT IDEA ABOUT AGAPE, THE SPONTANEOUS ONE. WHAT COULD IT MEAN?
AND IS IT SAFE IN THE POPULAR FORM IN WHICH IT HAS BEEN INTERPRETED?
I want to start this part of my investigation with a word about the notorious heretic Marcion, a most
fascinating figure emerging on the scene of Christendom in the second century A.D.
In fact, one question used to worry me quite a lot for a long time. How could such a staunch Christian
historian as Nygren manage to sympathize with Marcion as much as he did? As if that man should be a likely
candidate for grasping the deepest essence of the divine Agape! Marcion was a philosophizing theologian who
had a supreme contempt of bodies and all concretely created forms. His aversion against matter is even much
greater than Plato's.
Could it be that Nygren's mind, too, was somewhat biased by that classical Greek idealism which
constitutes the latent cultural heritage of most of us? I am afraid so. In fact, why should modern theologians of
our day be expected to come out less prone than others to succumb, in part, to the trends of philosophical
spiritualism?
Remember: what we here have to do with is humanism at its highest, and on its most learned level.
We know what particular philosophical ailment Marcion suffered from. That was the dualism of the pagan
idealist, causing him to make a subtle dichotomy between spirit and matter. So my curious question is the
following: Is it a similar "neo-platonism" that now causes Nygren, in his turn, to compare the religion of the
Old Testament to that of the New? You should note down what that Protestant theologian states as his
conclusion drawn from that comparison:
Christianity, in spite of its historical connection with Judaism, and in spite of any bonds and affinities
between them, is a fundamentally different thing from Judaism (Agape and Eros, 1969, p. 68, Italics mine.)
As I feel bound to look upon it, this is a statement of an almost Marcionistic radicalness. Marcion saw
the two Testaments in contrasts of black and white. To him the Old was tinted in black. The New was tinted in
white.
Is this "fundamental difference" between the Old Testament and the New a fact or a simple fiction?
My assumption from the gospel itself is that the two form a basic totality we can rely on as harmonious one
hundred percent. The New Testament view regarding that same matter is as consistent as anyone could wish it
to be. No New Testament author seems to doubt for one single moment that the two Covenants form one
31
coherent line. And evidently it is about the Old Testament that Peter states that "all Scripture is inspired by
God." It is this divinely inspired totality Marcion permits himself to tear as under.
Some will fail completely to see that Marcion was a disrupter of totalities. Above all, they fail to
realize that the essence of this disruption was spiritualistic in the sense of platonic idealism. That, however, is
manifest. Marcion persists in down-grading the reality of any concrete world of the senses. He stubbornly
refuses to accept any literal things, literally created, by a literal God--a God who is also good. Not that Marcion
is a match for modern evolutionist biology in absurd denial of that kind. He never denies that a Creator was
needed in order to have the miserable material things of this world come into existence. Oh no, Marcion has
implicit faith in the record of Genesis about the creative acts of Yahweh. What he refuses to believe is only the
claim according to which this Yahweh should be identical with Jesus Christ, the great God of heaven, and of the
true Agape. That stern God of the Old Testament who demands implicit obedience, cannot be the God of
Agape. Marcion fights a bitter battle against that reality.
Nevertheless, reality itself is invincible. Throughout the Bible, from Genesis to Revelation, a one
hundred percent realistic Creator-God is placed in front of us with the ringing call to give Him implicit
obedience. And the New Testament is not one bit less insisting in its categorical claim of obedience than the
Old Testament.
The serious question we have to ask here is this: What is meant by this "fundamental difference"
which Nygren assumes to exist between the two Testaments? Does he lean toward the Marcionist tradition? Or
does he believe, candidly like Paul, that all Scripture is given by inspiration (2 Tim. 3:16), and that the "Lord"
who, in minute details, helped Moses to write and legislate and to lead God's chosen people through the
wilderness, was the same Jesus Christ who revealed Himself to Paul on the road to Damascus?
"Moreover, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant how that all our fathers were under the
cloud, and all passed through the sea, and did all eat the same spiritual meat, and did all drink the same spiritual
drink: for they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them: and that Rock was Christ." I Cor. 10:4.
What, now, does the modern theologian hold as he weighs the historic facts surrounding the
fundamental motifs of Agape versus Eros? Does he, too, arrive at the conclusion that the Old Testament, even
in its basic structure, must, somehow, and to no little extent, have been vitiated--or at least obscured--by some
tinge of "Demiurge" inferiority? "Demiurgus" is the name Plato gives to that inferior creator-god in his
fantastic book Timaios*. And Marcion tried to introduce very much the same concept into Christian theology.
Before we can compare Marcion and Nygren in this important respect, we must honestly find out, first,
what Marcion deemed to be inferior about the Old Testament. Second, with the same honesty, we must find out
what Nygren deems inferior there.
-----------------------------------
*I have tried to come to grips with this incredible piece of literature in my book, Man, the Indivisible, in a
chapter entitled, "The Genius of Platonism."
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What he is famous for is his tireless battle against legalism on the one hand (i.e. law thralldom) and riotous
living on the other hand.
Let us take that "law thralldom" first. We all agree with Paul, of course, in his epistle to the Galatians.
Legalism is the worst pest any church can be contaminated with. But please tell me: Where in the Scriptures
do you read that legalism is identical with law-abidingness?
And now to the rather delicate facts of our context: Marcion is the character whom I have boldly
chosen, or whom Nygren has boldly chosen, in order to shed a particular light on the phenomenon of an anti-
legalist (and anti-debauch) motif called Agape. So frankly to the inevitable matter: Is that man a fit image of
the true Agape, as this great spirit manifests itself in the Early Christian Church? Is he a relevant model for the
Reformation with it's triumphant message of gratia gratis data?
When you hear Marcion, a man haughtily raising his head in the air and pouring his contumely over
the Lawgiver whose law he arrogantly tramples down with his heretical feet, do you imagine you have had a
vision of the ideal fighter against Jewish legalism?
What I am here bent on applying to the case of Marcion, as a possible "Agape revealer," is precisely
my mentioned ego-altero test, as my special criterion. Let us be reasonable on all sides: It goes without saying
that legalism could not be expected to be on the side of genuine other-centeredness. The mentioned Galatian
law-righteousness is rather an arche-typical self-centered manifestation. What the whole system here aims at is
self-salvation. The narrow-minded ego-orientation is exactly what all the time causes legalism to excel in the
kingdom of the bluntly unrealistic. For self-salvation is, of course, bound to be sham salvation. And sham
salvation means nothing short of total perdition. In fact, it is the most tragic form perdition could ever adopt.
For here man flatters himself that he has salvation.
In contrast to this, look at the spirit of the law-abiding heart. In what direction does it turn? Not
inward toward self, but outward toward a real Savior. How different from the kind of "obedience" contained in
legalism! Legalism is sheer vanity. And vain here means two things: It means absolutely empty (ghost-like,
specter-like); and at the same time vain-glorious (that is: proud) accordingly, foolishly egocentric. The only
true specimen of obedience is invariably that of the lowly heart. This is Christ's characteristic. Therefore, it is
also the great characteristic of Agape:
"Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest
unto your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light." Matthew 11:29, 30.
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So, we know exactly Marcion's main purpose, then, for being so extremely "moral," teaching men to
abstain from all sexuality. It was simply to demonstrate his own deep contempt and defiance of that "sordid
world-framer" of old. He seems to be hurling right into Yahweh's face a defiant protest like this: "You
abominable brute. I do know that you have created me like this. You think I am going to accept your turpitude
and be just as base as you are. You are mistaken. Thanks to the help of that New God of mine, Jesus Christ,
the Bodiless One, I am going to annihilate your vile plans for my life by simply refusing to give you any
cooperation whatsoever. And I shall see to it that my dear parishioners do the same."
As a matter of historical fact, his followers did obey his orders to the letter. But did that make the
Marcionist church a paragon of virtue? Did they become so infinitely virtuous for the reason that they did their
best to annoy Yahweh, provoke His anger and defy His orders, thus proclaiming brazenly to the entire world:
"We are no longer in that God's service; we definitely belong to another Lord. We shall brazenly defy the Old
Testament God who invented sex, in favor of the New Testament sexless God."
The witness could not be stronger: To Marcion and his church, Yahweh is the bottom of all
bottomlessness. To me, this shows one thing only, namely a bottomlessness in Marcion's own philosophy,
which demonstrates several aspects of the abysmal depths in the Eros spirit itself. Our usual trend has,
unfortunately, been just to think of the sham religion of pagan spiritualism as something merely passive or
neutral, a Nirvana spook of glaring emptiness. But here some entirely different phenomena suddenly enter the
arena. Spiritualism may amaze us by, all of a sudden, revealing itself as the tireless demon waging a most
determined and inhumanly cruel war against the bold adherents to Christian realism. So there is a militant
variety of the Eros spirit which constitutes the bottom level of all blasphemy.
According to Epiphanus (Haer., 42,3), the Marcionites also had a very rigid fasting system that made
no exception for the Sabbath. This, too, was, allegedly, in order to "defy the Lawgiver." In fact, food or drink,
or any other created thing you could touch with your body, or perceive with your senses, was to be ignored as
far as humanly feasible. And all was done "ad destruenda et contemnenda et abominanda opera creatoris."
What an ideal: to destroy and cover with supreme contempt the work of the Creator!
But here again we must then openly admit something in Marcion's defence; he certainly does not show
anything in all this reminding of that "butterfly lightness" we have previously assumed as an inseparable epithet
of the typical Eros worshiper. In Marcion's genuinely ascetic life style, there definitely was not any room for
any volatile fluttering from flower to flower in the particularly well-known Eros garden of carnal indulgences.
By no means.
But at the same time another fact must be kept in mind. Different people seek their sensations, their
extravagances, in widely different fields. They satisfy their passion for novelty and ecstasy through a variety of
ways. And why should not Marcion's favorite type of indulgence be one peculiar to him? His type was just that
of saying his say right in the face of time-honored canonical authority. In this special pattern of eccentric
behavior he found his special satisfaction.
The Eros (or anti-Agape) spirit has its own archetypical pattern of conduct. The very essence of its
indulgence consists in denying God obedience, obstinately challenging the clearly expressed will of man's
Generator and Re-generator. Therefore, Marcion's attitude toward things spiritual could still properly be
described as an act of "lasciviousness," without offending the true spirit of the matter. For if we take the term
"lascivious" in it's widest sense, Marcion is not only lascivious; He is blasphemously lascivious!
His pagan dualism, too, is of a unique character. It has the titanic vehemence of the renegade.
Therefore, it is not only pagan, it is worse. Marcion does not content himself with being an ordinary dualist,
considering matter as just evil. His religiously impassioned dualism actually turns into a cruel accusation
against God Himself.
38
Here, at least, Marcion is fairly consistent. Yet generally I have to agree with Burkitt that Marcion's
view are a "jumble of inconsistencies." (F.C. Burkitt: Church and Gnosis). They are even inconsistent on a
most serious point, namely in their attitude toward this historical Jesus. That is disastrous to one who professes
to base his religion upon the same Jesus. Small wonder that his theology becomes the object of formidable
attacks from such polemical experts as Irenaeus. Marcion's inconsistencies were taken well care of by critics,
both contemporary and subsequent ones. But now this critical question from the field of modern Agape
research:
42
The main reason why we must wage a relentless war against this non-reasonability cult is evident: It is
cruelly unfair to God. It is a terrible denigration of His character. His maligned name must be washed clean
again; and common sense has a significant part to play in that act of vindication!
God is the entirely fair, the entirely reasonable One. That is the ringing message all men must get to
hear. He is the loving Father who keeps doing all He possibly can do, both for His repentant and for His
impenitent children. This was also the great rule applied when He turned to the workers who worked in His
vineyard throughout the whole day. It was the basic principle applied to the workers of the eleventh hour as
well. Let us look again at the two categories.
THE RATIONALE BEHIND THE DIFFERENT TREATMENTS GIVEN TO TWO DIFFERENT GROUPS
OF WORKERS
Those jealous, self-seeking first-comers were not worthy of any extra pay. So they did not get it. But
there was one reason still more important, from an Agape viewpoint, why they should not get any additional
remuneration? If they had got it, what would the result have been? It would have caused them direct harm. It
would have rendered them still more jealous and self-seeking. It would have perpetuated in their hearts the
erroneous idea that, in spite of their jealousy and self-centeredness, they were perfectly just.
The true Agape, however, could never yield to that subjective idea of self-righteousness, man's proud
insistence on an ever increasing salary, regardless of his personal attitude toward the work, toward right and
wrong.
And now, what about the late-comers, the eleventh hour workers? They were not given any promise or
contract, apart from the plain statement that they would receive their due reward. Evidently they did not
demand anything more than that. Why? They were obviously conscious of their own lateness, their manifest
insufficiency. Therefore, they were humble and thankful for an opportunity to work in a good vineyard. They
recognized that they were given a worthy task in spite of their own unworthiness. Do we realize what such
recognition or self-criticism actually means for the outcome? I mean, for the factual quality of the work
performed? Workers having this spirit will inevitably tend to do a better job than those who start out bargaining
about their "rights." Can that be denied?
And now, please think of the manager for a brief moment. Think of him as a person, a man
surrounded by personal problems, a man like you and me. Does it mean something to him personally whether
he gets employees like those late-comers into his workshop. Such workers do not waste the manager's time and
nerve power quarreling with him about their rights "according to the contract," do they? Probably they don't,
while others certainly do.
So tell me then, was the work of those eleventh-hour workers worth something real to their employer?
Obviously yes! Maybe even more--quite materially speaking-- than that of the long-term employees.
It means something, I can assure you, to the quality of the work in a plain, practical way, that the spirit
of Agape is found in the worker's heart. To the Master, this is essential. You and I may be ever so unworthy of
the call to work for Him at the time when He calls us. But his attitude toward us is that of the creative Agape.
The incredible reward of a cooperation with Him produces in us the value we originally lacked. That is: if we
permit Him to change us, like nobody else can. By the time we are through, and are due to receive our "pay
check," we will be transformed men. This is God's creation, which changes everything. In the outcome of that
creative act, there is no lack of realistic value, no absence, of justice, no want of reason. Who would dare to
challenge God's creation in the name of either justice or reasonability? That would itself be both terribly unjust
and terribly unreasonable.
The residual value and worthiness God, Himself, is able to discern, even today, in creatures who have
gone wantonly astray, is something He must be fully entitled to find valuable, of course. To Him, the Creator
and legitimate Father, that is value enough to make them worthwhile candidates for a thorough recreation; that
is, redemption. He who has realistically sacrificed His life for you and me has every realistic right to look upon
us in the perspective of that tremendous work already accomplished on Calvary's Hill in our behalf.
Well, you insist, but the realization of that new creation in the life of Mr. So-and-So may not yet be an
accomplished fact in the same complete sense; so what just reason or intelligent right does God actually have, at
this early stage, to love him?
This objection is not valid in the case of God as the great Lover. For, in His very capacity as the
eternal One, the only Self-Existent One (that is, the Non-Created One), He is not limited by the time borders
that limit you and me, the creaturely ones. Even the dead "live unto Him," as Christ Himself expresses it about
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, still in their graves. To God's mind, we are eternally present in our final form; that
is, in the way we shall come out in the end, whether it is as those who have chosen to obey or those who have
refused, in the willfulness of their rebellion. If we, at the decisive moment, accept His salvation, He sees us as
saved ones. This is the undeniable merit and the inalienable reality of His new creation act, His re-creative
Agape. Should not Christ have the full right of perfect reasonability to love the produce of His own creative
wonder, and that even any number of years before it visibly, historically takes place? His plan of concrete
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creation was a reality in His mind from everlasting, wasn't it? What we all fail to fathom is the tremendous
realism of that divine creation as an ideal plan, and as an historical act.
Some theologians and philosophers seem to think that Christ's Agape is so devoid of all reason and
realism that He would have died willingly, even if there had been no prospect of one single man accepting His
sacrifice or deriving any practical and reasonable benefit from it. That kind of idealism is not a part of true
Christian philosophy. On the contrary, it might turn into a downright calumny against God. For it would be a
meaningless statement about Him. And there is no room for any meaninglessness in God, blessed be His name.
More orthodox teachers may, it is true, have had radical ways of expressing the tremendous
individualism inherent in God's logic. For instance this: Even if there had been just one single person lost to
sin, and Christ saw it possible to save him, He would have died for that person. That, you see, is a radicalism
which does not get involved in the unreasonable. It is not meaningless. It does not go into absurdity. It simply
shows the value God places on each single individual. Such a truth enhances the meaningfulness of human life.
Notice the difference between those two cases: There is an infinite distance between one individual and no
individual. One is the minimum number, according to common sense logic. And Christ is a common sense
logician. To die for anything less than one would fail absolutely to make good sense. So God would never do
it.
The confusing thing is that modern theology makes such an ado about a certain "deeper sense," even
right in the midst of utter nonsense. And so does modern philosophy. Since Kant, this world seems to have lost
its senses completely. Reason, as something based on objective facts, independent of subjective moods, is
looked upon as an utter impossibility. It is often assumed that there is no absolute norm for the reasonable.
What would appear reasonable to one being, for instance man, just cannot be accepted as reasonable to another,
for instance God. And this discrepancy is believed to apply regardless of how enlightened that man may be in
his perception of objective truths. In fact, the more realistic a grasp he has of the objective facts of everyday
life, the more man is assumed to be "out of tune" with God. Of course, what is really proclaimed by those
epistemological pessimists is simply that there are no objective facts accessible to man in this world.
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Or let me put it in other terms so that you may understand exactly what I am driving at in connection
with modern theology's traditional interpretation of Agape: Is that new law, written in the hearts of human
beings, something "blessed" with the "sacredness of the irrational"? In other words, must we do our utmost to
"transcend" the profane realms of our common-sense intellect in order to grasp its "utopic reality"? Is that
sacred "internal" writing of the law (whatever this specification stands for), something that is bound to take us
by surprise once more? And does it surprise us so shockingly because it has what Nygren presents to us as the
great surprise of Agape, something that "makes mockery of all attempts at rational motivation"? Those are his
very words about Agape as a general surprise shocker.
What I want to know with as great accuracy as possible, is whether the concept of the law written on
the "fleshly tables of the human heart" is bound to be considered in terms of that same "sacred absurdity" we
hear so much about today in existentialist circles of philosophy and theology. To have the law in one's heart--
does that mean the necessity of saying definitely good-bye to all reasonability and to abandon oneself
unreservedly and relentlessly to the mercy of certain moods in man that cannot under any circumstances be
governed by plain this-worldly reason? I refuse to believe this until I have clear evidence to that effect.
So far I may as well give you an illustration which might indicate that the opposite is true.
First, I must confess that I believe wholeheartedly in Agape as that tremendous renewal, a "law written
in the heart." But what has not yet been proved is the theory that the "new" has nothing to do with the "old." A
capital question here would be: What was the "old law" like? Did the Decalogue distinguish itself as having
nothing whatsoever to do with the Spirit of Agape? We do read, at least, that the ten commandments were
written "with God's own finger." This is a solemn declaration made about those "ten words" of God, and, apart
from them, no other passage in all Holy Writ.
Still there is no getting away from the fact that Jesus Christ speaks about a "new commandment."
Does this mean that the "old ones," those He gave under so impressive circumstances at Mount Sinai, are
henceforth outdated and declared non-valid? In order to pass an objective judgment regarding the true
relationship between the "two laws," we must, of course, particularly have some definite knowledge about the
peculiar Agape nature of the "new commandment," the one "in the heart." Is that "ideal" law a fact which
automatically downrates the "rational" and allegedly "less cordial" law system of the Old Testament, committed
to verbal formulation during the exodus events of Jewish history? In other words, is the Sinai law some kind of
downright Eros phenomenon of narrow-minded legalism and self-salvation, so a spirit for which there is no
place any longer at the moment when Agape has triumphantly won the battle? Is the new law bound to fight the
old one indiscriminately and relentlessly?
DID YOU EVER TRY TO MEASURE THE RATIONALITY OF THE "LAW IN THE HEART"?
In his matchless little book on the sanctuary service, Ransom and Reunion, W.D. Frazee has given an
illuminating and most intelligent illustration of what it really means to have the law written in one's heart. I am
referring particularly to chapter 9 in the book: "When it is Easy to do Right."
The inner motive making it so "easy"--and I would say: intelligent--to follow the written
commandment is, of course, precisely Agape. No other power on earth, either in the Old Covenant Era or in the
New, could manage that master stroke.
And now, find out for yourself whether it is a power stripped of all sound human reason. You should,
in the following, make it a point to check exactly where reason and un-reason have their respective places in
this little incident:
In accordance with Frazee's scheme, I accept the role here of meeting a mother who happens to be
visibly embarrassed at the moment by the fact that her little child keeps whimpering or crying all the time.
Then I pluck up my "courage" saying to her (I am making myself somewhat worse, it may appear, than average
human beings would like to have the reputation of being. I apologize for the hyperbole):
"Say, madame, why don't you kill that embarrassing child of yours?"
What will that mother answer me? Shall we, for the experiment's sake, make her just as inhuman, with
regard to both heart and head, as I have just proved to be in my question? Good. Suppose her answer would go
approximately like this:
"Sir, I am afraid I do not quite get your idea. Do you really suggest that I should take the boy's life
here and now? I just do not see how you could make a suggestion like that under the present conditions. Don't
you realize, sir, that there does exist, in this land, a written law directed against such killing? You should go to
the office where the law codes are kept and you will get to know about all the awful punishment they threaten
against those who kill babies. Now, if I yielded to the thing you are speaking about, what would happen? The
police would be there right on the spot, and I would be taken to prison. I might have to spend the rest of my life
in jail. Do you understand that there are hard-core laws in the land that keep me from doing what you so
temptingly suggest? I think I have some good reasons, after all, why I treat the little fellow the way I do. You
must be careful these days about the way you treat kids. Of course, there are moments when I wonder if I shall
manage to control myself. But when I think of that life-long imprisonment, I just don't dare to give in to my
feelings. You understand me, sir?"
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Now what do you think about that answer? Does it sound intelligent to you? Of course not. Why not?
You know something essential about mothers and their feelings toward their children. They have a certain law
of love written in their hearts. So they are infinitely more intelligent than all that, aren't they? A mother would
not spoil the reputation of her heart with an answer of that kind. If my question should be ever so foolish in the
direction I have intimated, that mother would never respond to my wicked suggestion with a corresponding
foolishness. She is simply too reasonable for such nonsense.
Let us continue to roam about in the kingdom of incredible imagination. We assume the presence of
the same mother, the same boy. Even my own question to her remains the same. Only her answer this time
varies slightly, according to the setting of the theme. We imagine her as a lady having some theoretical
knowledge of the world of theology. Otherwise her response is very much the same:
"You don't seem to be in your right mind, sir. Do you really propose that I should commit murder
against this child of mine because he keeps crying all the time? You seem to be ignorant about the law written
with God's own finger on tables of stone at Mount Sinai of old. You should also know that those very
commandments remain written on tables in the heavenly sanctuary. One of them says: Thou shalt not kill!
Now, if I did kill, what would happen to me? Do you quite realize what the result would be to me if I yielded to
the temptation in this case? I would risk burning in the lake of fire. Of course, I do not want that. If you are
intelligent, sir, you can't blame me, can you? I have some valid reason for not putting that boy to death. Do
you get me? The temptation to transgress is certainly there, but as soon as I start thinking of the flames in that
lake, I become sensible and behave myself."
Did you ever hear such madness from the mouth of a mother? Hardly. But what is it that makes us
think this reaction just as splittingly mad as the challenge to which she reacted? It simply is the absolutely
intelligent assumption that a normal mother does have a certain law written in a certain place. Where? In her
heart. She loves her child. She loves him with a kind of love having more in common with Agape than
anything else we human beings on this earth happen to know: maternal love.
And what then about the relationship between true reason and true love? Is it a strained one? Do you
arrive at the conclusion that there is bound to be a bitter strife between the two? No, at least not intelligently so.
There must be something wrong with your own mind if you think that a mother's love for her child will tend to
make her less intelligent because intelligence is "supposed to have a standing conflict with genuine heartfelt
love." Parents who are under the influence of the spirit of Agape, will in this very fact have an excellent guide
for their sound behavior in life's most precarious situations. And that Spirit of Agape is none but the Holy
Spirit.
Here some may say to me: "You are not so naive as to think that it is the Holy Spirit influencing and
directing all those parents, most of them completely wordly in their ways and views, are you?" I am. In other
words, I do not happen to be among the many who believe that Christians have a "monopoly" of the Holy Spirit
and His gentle influence on human hearts. On the contrary, I am convinced that every person having a generous
feeling of any kind in his heart, is thus influenced and guided, a wisdom-creating influence and guidance,
directly from God. Not a single one among us would, in ourselves today, produce one single good feeling or
practical deed of love. It is the Spirit's doing in every case. So the "law written in the heart" is a phenomenon
you may observe every day in all kinds of environments. This is the only thing making our world tolerable and
habitable at this late hour. It is Agape that keeps us all from turning mad, and committing the most awful
crimes. Agape makes life tolerably easy for every one of us. Frazee writes: You see, if parents love their
children, it is not hard to keep from killing them. When husbands love their wives, it is not hard to keep from
committing adultery, either in outward act or in inward thought. And children who love their parents don't find
it hard to obey them. The Scriptures tell us, "Love is the fulfilling of the law." (Romands 13:10) How strange
that anyone concluded that, if he had enough love, he didn't need to keep the commandments." (John 14:15,
RSV).
Frazee has certainly hit the mark. Just think more deeply of this phrase: "If only I had enough love, I
would not need to obey the law." Could any formulation be more unintelligent than that? Only illusion-
haunted theologians could make statements as illogical as that. The main intention seems to be: Love should
be kept so completely enclosed in the depths of the heart that no bit of it would "go to waste." According to
such a philosophy, the person must feel elevated above every necessity of letting that love express itself in the
form of concrete acts of love. Only spiritualist philosophers could invent anything as foolish as that.
"Spirit of love without acts of love." What a strange specimen of the species. That is a love remaining
at the stage of pure abstraction, needing no realization whatsoever in terms of a practical unfolding in real life.
Pagan spiritualism has again, for a while, conquered Christian realism. Eros has defeated Agape. But that
defeat is only apparent or temporary. In the end, Agape is going to conquer triumphantly.
Of course, there is a love--so-called--which is nothing but intoxication, an empty surge of feelings, a
flood of vain phrases. The real name given by inspiration to this category of "love" is infatuation. It reminds
me of what one shepherd of the flock writes warningly to a mother who keeps spoiling her child: "What you
feel for your child, dear sister, is not love at all. You are just infatuated."
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That means: fooled by vanity, indulgence in human pride and utter emptiness (those two always meet
in the concept of being "vain"). The result is nothing but self-centeredness, so self-love rather than love for the
others. "He that loveth his child chasteneth him." Proverbs 13:24. Here again the inexorable realism of Agape
comes to the forefront. Of course this is a side of the Agape motif which most people had rather avoid. And
the same holds good for the inclination we must always except from the lofty heights of super-academic
theology, which is particularly high on vanity. I say "high on vanity," just as people today say "high on
heroine," "high on LSD," etc.
IS IT TOO CRUEL A STROKE FOR A ROMANTIC SOUL TO BE TOLD BLUNTLY THAT AGAPE IS
JUST A PRINCIPLE?
Let us speak our mind freely. Let us express ourselves plainly and fearlessly in the sacred name of
Christian realism. We should do this even at the risk of shocking some incurable romanticists: Love is mainly
a principle!
Does that mean a mere theoretical abstraction? Is it what the so-called nominalists, a fairly realistic
group within the precincts of medieval philosophy, used to call flatus vocis; that is, something as empty as a
mere breath of the voice? No, not at all. Agape is not emptiness in terms of some mere abstraction. But how
could that be avoided in the present case, you might inquire? Do not all principles have something in common
with Plato's pure Idea? To some thinkers, yes, that would appear inevitable, because the principle to them
means nothing but a generally valid rule, regardless of particular circumstances--so, after all, a certain type of
"barren abstraction."
Our question seems to take on a most serious tone. If Agape is mainly a principle, then is not she, as
well, something purely verbal (flatus vocis) without any concrete substance in the tough world of contingent
realities?
God forbid! Who would dare to claim that Christ's Agape is hardly more real than Plato's pure Idea?
That would amount to making Agape just as pagan as Eros. Such claims could never be validated in the case of
Agape.
But how can we make these things to rhyme then? If Agape is first and foremost a principle, does not
that reduce love to something purely general and purely theoretical, something just as barren and heartless as
the common lot of platonic abstractions?
Well, let us see. One thing we do know about principles is this--and it is not a fact we always find too
pleasant: They are implacable. Their validity is absolutely inexorable. So let the question be formulated boldly
and unequivocally: Is Agape inexorable? Is it more or less inhuman?
The answer to that question would depend largely on the answer to another question: Is an absolutely
irrevocable principle--eo ipso--necessarily inhuman? I would have to admit that the principles maintained by
some philosophical and religious movements definitely are. For instance, I would state without any hesitation
that the philosophy of pagan idealism maintains principles which are downright inhuman in the sense of utter
heartlessness. Of course then, the duty would incumb on me to give valid evidence of that statement. And this
would have to be done first of all. Afterwards I would have to prove--if I can (I so far accept the legitimacy of
your doubts)--that the principles Christianity (that is, the philosophy of Agape) deals in, are basically different
in this very respect: They are not inhuman. The general validities inherent in Agape, in terms of law and
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righteousness, are human in the sense of humane, that is filled to the brim with such delicate heart qualities as
mercy and compassion right in the midst of the sternest justice.
But, for the purpose of grasping that wonderful many-sidedness of Agape, we must now first take the
time necessary to enter into the main tenets of the Eros philosophy par excellence, a philosophy I have dared to
characterize as the most inhuman--or inhumane--ever known in the history of our world. It is not I who have
posted the label of "Eros" on that philosophy. It is a tradition as old as the philosophy itself. And modern motif
research has adopted the term as part of its nomenclature.
DOES A CERTAIN LONGING FOR NIRVANA EXIST IN NORMAL HUMANS? AND IS THERE ANY
TRACE OF THE SPIRIT OF AGAPE IN IT?
It must be permissible to assume that people in our Western World, so thoroughly haunted by Eastern
Meditation philosophies, as has been the case of recent date, do have some familiarity with the concept of
Nirvana. Anyway, it is nothing more and nothing less than the incredible urge in personal beings that makes
them desire, for some reason or other, to become non-persons; that is, to lose their individual identity. Man
seems to think that personality is, at best, a superfluous quality. He would have every advantage in letting it go
down the drain. In its place he would like some kind of impersonal collectivism of universal consciousness to
take hold of his life. It is, above all, a certain type of meditation exercises that are supposed to help man
become totally absorbed by the universal consciousness of the "World Soul," or whatever this absolutely
impersonal deity is called. Sometimes it is entirely in a setting of Hinduism, called Brahman. My topical
question at this time, however, is the following: Is that strange urge to have one's personal being swallowed up
by an ocean of impersonalism an Agape phenomenon or an Eros phenomenon?
Let us first take our point of departure in something comfortingly human. I am thinking of every
normal human person's desire to find sympathy and personal warmth at the bosom of some compassionate
fellow being. That is the normal reaction with all normal men toward their suffering and sorrow in a yet
comparatively normal, or at least fairly human world.
We all know the Negro Spiritual: "I often feel like a motherless child a long ways from home." That
is how poor human creatures express their sadness and suffering along the merciless path of their pilgrimage
through this valley of shadows. Sometimes they find real comfort only in the God whom the Bible speaks about
as the pitying Savior. He is so blessedly personal and therefore hearty in his mercy. He knows the individual's
destiny. He is perfectly acquainted with man's various hardships, and shares every single one of them.
The diametrically opposite of this is what I feel expressed so vividly in another Negro Spiritual: "Old
Man River." Did it ever occur to you that this is the desperate individual's touching description of what we all
encounter sooner or later, in this frenetically merciless culture of ours, in the form of a philosophy of complete
impassivity: "Old Man River!"
Old Man River. To the courage-forsaken black person, Mississippi here, the way I feel about it,
becomes a mighty symbol of that massive insensitiveness emanating from all things around him. Maybe you,
today, do not at all see any monster in that gigantic river. And I do not blame you. I do not accuse you of
insensitivity on that score; for in actual reality, a normal river, however large, does not harbor in its ceaselessly
running masses of water any conscious malice or unsympathetic qualities of any kind. In fact, so far, the
Mississippi is a thousand times better than the human slave-drivers; for the latter seem to have no real humanity
left in them. They are the ones who have turned actively inhuman.
But notice: active inhumanity is not here the problem. Worse than positive hate and active ill-will is
that solid impassibility (impassivity) which seems to penetrate nature itself today, thus constituting a violent
onslaught, not so much against man's body and his physical life, but against his mind and heart, his very vision
of meaningfulness. Active wickedness would be something you could cope with, to some extent. Or at least
you imagine you could, either by reciprocating wickedness or by rendering good for evil. But with total
indifference there is hardly anything you can do. Now, "Old Man River" is just that totally indifferent fellow
creature, a hopelessly impersonal element in the suffering Negro's existence. "He just keeps rollin' along."
Again the great question is that of meaning or no meaning. Emptiness and despair, henceforth, seems
to be the only visible reality in the life of the abandoned human child. How could anyone cope with that? Man
seems doomed to the fate of just standing there. Where shall he turn for help? As far as human conditions go,
he can only waver desperately between the devil and the deep sea. He is "tired of livin' and scared of dyin',"
and meanwhile the Old Man River "just keeps rollin' along."
Never ever have I come across a more tragically gripping expression for that monster of comfortless
impersonalism which is Eros stripped of all his usual beautiful garbs.
In order to appreciate more fully the character of the Christian Agape, it will be good to get to know
something in further detail about the abysmal depths of the Platonic Eros with its icy message of systematic
unconcern as the great philosophical ideal; that is, what pagan Western thought calls "idealism."
THE PART OF THE STORY YOU WERE NEVER TOLD ABOUT THE FAVORITE PHILOSOPHY OF
THE PAGAN WEST, WHICH IS THE SWORN ENEMY OF AGAPE
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What is the truth about that "heavenly Eros" which was destined to become the philosophy and the
religion of our Western World after Christianity had first tried to gain a foot-hold there, but had been stubbornly
rejected? I am here speaking about the spectacular Victor, the great Throne Usurper of Western Lands. I
become the essential "spiritual heritage" of our culture, the vain message of self-salvation, which, today more
than ever, we see spreading like a prairie fire across super-civilized lands.
The demon (Greek: daimon) who keeps spreading that fire (the flame of spiritualism) has one goal in
mind: to make it impossible for Agape to have any impact worth mentioning on the hearts of Western men.
Since the thing happening at a furious pace in our world today is of such an epoch-making nature, and
foreboding still greater drama in the near future, you will permit me to go back in history for a while to give you
an overview of the whole matter from the dawn of western history. That means: I must draw a sketch of Plato's
doctrine of the Idea, as I see it.
Well, you may object with a sigh of reluctance, I feel I can get along just as well without any deeper
penetration into theories as deadly boring as Platonic philosophy. I am fed up with that stuff from certain
classes in ancient history.
I sympathize with you. Evidently, what you have already been exposed to in this field of the spirit, has
not impressed you as particularly entertaining. To you, it is just another specimen of the "tedious stuff" school
books on philosophy abound in. But stop a little. The main reason why you have found it so tedious may be
this common one: Essential elements have been left out of the story. I would like to include them. Philosophy
teachers, you see, have their own way of cutting the record short, exactly at the spot where it might begin to be
thrilling and just teeming with human interest angles.
I am not speaking about a positive thriller, but a negative one. Toward such a thing in your life you
must adopt an adequate attitude. Suppose a close relative of yours is fighting his last battle in a hospital's
intensive care department. And then you say: "This is a funny case. But it leaves me unimpressed and mainly
bored." Would than be an adequate reaction? No. In order to say that, you would have to be either an
insensitive brute or a totally misinformed ignoramus.
Would it be equally inadequate to say about Plato's philosophy that it is just "funny?" I admit that it
may appear as a weird game of the imagination, something incredible, but otherwise harmless. What Plato
seems to tell us is approximately the following: You must not attach yourselves to those five beautiful pansies
you have in your garden. They will soon be withered and gone. So they cannot constitute reality. The true
reality is only one thing: the idea behind those pansies, a pure abstraction, "pansy-hood," if you can accept that
term. What is real is not that beautiful flower, but rather beauty as such, beauty in itself. That will never die. It
will exist forever. So attach yourself to the idea of beauty exclusively. Then you will never be disappointed.
You may be surprised at a man who can fall in love with a world as barren as that of a purely
abstracting mind. What a drear specimen of love! But do you feel there is any direct harm in this "funny game"
of the pure intellect? "Dull" and "boring" may be the worst adjectives you would be inclined to use about a
loner who gives himself up to ideas of that kind. You would not see anything so sensationally wicked, or any
"threat of life," in Platonic idealism. How could ideas of that purely theoretical kind constitute a real threat,
except indeed to the happiness of the man himself, in case he should turn entirely crazy as a result of his mono-
mania?
Above all, it would never enter your mind to bear any actual grudge against the fellow, as long as he--
or your teacher of ancient philosophy--would have the gracious considerateness to leave you alone, that is, not
insisting on imposing his weird ideas upon you, at least not beyond the realms of some class assignment, as
imposition you feel you would have to bear patiently for a little while. But nothing beyond that!
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Yes indeed, that is a linguistic nicety. But if you imagine that this stands for idealism in the modern
popular sense of the term, then you are again dangerously deluded. You naturally think: Plato is praised as the
great idealist. So, in him, we have a man of unsurpassed ideals.
This is a common pitfall. Plato's philosophy should never have received the name of "idealism." That
term leads us completely astray. It ought to have been called idea-ism. For it is the doctrine of the Idea, barely
that, not the faintest notion of true ideals. And what kind of "idea" is it that here enters upon the scene? It is the
"pure" idea. Beware of that "purity." It is pure nonsense. It means spirit without one bit of matter to go along
with it and endow it with sensible reality. It is "pure soul" without one bit of tangible visible body to realize
itself in. A more spooky thing than that was never machinated by men.
Ghosts and apparitions have started invading the land of sturdy realism. A theory more destructive to
the sense of reality and to the cause of meaningfulness in human life was never forged by the father of lies.
From now on, it is a quite bodiless soul that is imagined as going on to live in the human being after
the body has been visibly destroyed and disintegrated. This is platonic fancy-monger business, not Judeo-
Christian sense of human totality.
IS THE MAIN STREAM RELIGIOUSNESS OF THE EAST ANY DIFFERENT FROM THAT OF THE
WEST?
And then let us take a rapid mind trip to the Far East. Not so very far in time from Plato's era in the
West, there appeared a man in the East teaching a spiritualism of an astonishingly similar type, and even laying
the foundation for a religion which was destined to become the strongest, numerically speaking, in the whole
world. I am referring to Buddha and Buddhism. By the way, would you expect man-made philosophies to
differ so significantly from each other? When man gives himself up to manufacturing religions, there is just
one alternative available. That is to reproduce, over and over again, the religion of Eros.
Of course, it may be admitted that Buddha was an idealist, impressive enough in his own way. He has
actually become famous for a certain idealism in the most popular sense of the term. Here is a man, many
would say, who harbored true ideals of heartfelt humanity in his sublime soul.
I do not doubt for a moment that Buddha's heart may have been filled with genuine pity at the sight of
India's famishing millions. What could he do for these crowds of suffering people? What hope could he give
them? To him this became a searching question. Reaching to them a helping hand was his honest aspiration. I
do not doubt it. But what did he actually do for those desperate millions of starving creatures?
He did give them something. And it is a gift reaching through the centuries, all the way down to you
and me in this Modern Western World of ours. He gave us all a philosophy constituting nothing but a
confirmation of what our own sage Plato has machinated for us in his special type of pagan idealism, custom-
made to meet the peculiar needs of our god-forsaken West. The two have worked admirably together to give
Eros a decisive victory, in our world at large, over Agape; that is, an impressive one, numerically speaking once
more. Spiritualistic idealism has only unessential variations from land to land, from hemisphere to hemisphere,
from epoch to epoch. Eros remains identical with himself, always and everywhere.
Was it true optimism and the courage of realistic salvation Buddha offered to the multitudes of
suffering and dying men in his immediate environment? Let us see:
What does Buddhism say about suffering? It is the one great evil in the lives of conscious beings.
Notice one thing here, distinguishing Eros theology from Agape theology. It is an all-important distinction.
And it also does have something to do with illogical versus logical thinking: According to Eros, sin is not
mentioned at all as the basic evil. No, suffering is the evil par excellence. To the higher logic of Biblical
philosophy the perspective is entirely different. Suffering is nothing but the automatic consequence of sin. So
sin, not suffering, is the root of all evils. That is Christian philosophy.
With this we have already laid bare the first erroneous conclusions all along the line. We have
pinpointed the first serious deviation from rational thought, not only in Buddhist philosophy, but in all Eros
thinking. This is an irrationality that could not be avoided for one simple reason. Why? It is due to one capital
fact, one fatal deficiency: There is no trace of the concept of Metanoia in Eros. I am speaking of the decisive
and most precious concept in Biblical theology, called man's realistic awareness of the sinfulness of sin, and
hence the repentance of sin. According to Holy Writ, this Metanoia is the primary condition, in the world of
human lostness, for the great divine rescue maneuver: the salvation of our lives through Jesus Christ.
What, now, is the inevitable result of this wrong point of departure in Buddhist philosophy, and in the
tradition of Eros-thought as a whole? I mean the idea that suffering is the great evil. The result is an immediate
and perpetual fleeing away from suffering, the imagined big bugbear of human existence. And now how is that
flight to be realized? How does man efficiently escape from suffering? He is supposed to manage this on one
condition only: He must abolish the will.
Do you see the traditional Eros assault against what constitutes, at the same time, nothing less than
God's image in man, and the basis of all personalism: the freedom of the will, God's most precious gift to
creatures on the human level.
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But now we must then also accept the inevitable corollary, the serious thing always going along with
will-freedom. Together with his personalism, every man must also accept the fact of personal responsibility.
This is, however, what men, weighed down heavily by a guilty conscience, just cannot take. Responsibility is
something that ought to be avoided almost at any price.
Of course, another alternative was present in your life and mine all the time: We might have shown
ourselves really worthy of that responsibility, assuming its full weight in terms of an impeccable behavior. But
you know what we are like. We tend to hate giving up our own way, the way of continued indulgence in sin.
And to some extent we are, even in a condition of impenitence, pretty well aware of our record of sinful acts
during a life-time.
So that haunting idea of inevitable punishment is there, at the back of our minds, all the time.
How, then, is this awkward matter to be put straight? The "awkward matter" here referred to by sinful
man is still just one thing: the punishment. And what is his idea of "putting it straight?"
If you do not know it perfectly well already, I shall give you first-hand information about the usual
way we tend to manage it. In current practice, it all seems to be a matter of finding the "trick." What "trick"? I
am speaking about the magic that is supposed to work wonders. It is to simply cut out the punishment, that's
all! But in order to have the punishment "cut out," something else has to be cut out first. You will understand
that, if you have an elementary bit of intelligence left in you: Personality itself, nothing less, will also have to
go as a self-evident prerequisite.
Obviously man realizes, vaguely at least, what it is that causes him to be on the level of existence
where he is held absolutely responsible. That is inseparably connected with the fact that he remains a person.
So, logically enough, in order to be relieved from responsibility, he must be relieved from personalism. Only
persons can justly be punished by a personal God. This, then, is evidently why the thoroughly absurd idea
arises in the hearts of men that personality is a negative thing. Personality, on the contrary, is a most positive
thing, a most meaningful thing. That applies to the inexorable philosophy I have called Christian realism. Do
you see once more the infinite distance there must be between that realism and pagan spiritualism with its
lightminded passing into the illusory relief of systematic unconcern, and its fatal flight into the system of living
death, a way of escape we call impersonalism; that is the systematic attempt to reduce both man and God to
non-persons.
You will easily grasp the reason why the Christian Agape could not, under any circumstances,
accommodate herself to the easy escape into the pagan habit of jacking oneself down to a much lower level of
consciousness, even to the extreme of Nirvana un-consciousness (falsely called universal consciousness, or the
consciousness of the "world soul.") The reason is to be found in the part played, in Agape's unchangeable
philosophy, by the concept of sanctification. Sanctification is consistently shown, by the Bible, to be the
diametrical opposite of impersonalization. Sanctification means an ever increasing intensification of the
intelligent creature's consciousness, his awareness of his own insufficiency and imperfection. At the same time,
it means intensive awareness of God's absolute sufficiency and wonderful perfection. It is through an ever
increasing nearness to God, and by beholding Him as He is, in terms of the true Agape vision, that man himself
is changed in that process called sanctification. You can see, can't you, how catastrophic a lowering of the level
of personal consciousness, according to the traditional Eros pattern, is bound to become. You can also see the
valid reason I have for saying that Eros' nature is to hate one thing more than all others: holiness!
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Well, the special topic I am still most crucially concerned about is that of Metanoia. Would it be
wrong to say that Metanoia is the form Christian humility adopts in the case of man? Let us turn to two of our
greatest reformers, Luther and Calvin. What was the role of this great Penitentia (repentance or penitence)
according to them?
To the uncompromising mind of Martin Luther, the case of a Christian converts was bound to remain
on a level that most men would call the paradoxical. Man was from the day of his justification through Jesus
Christ, until the day of his death: simul justus et peccator, at the same time just and a sinner. And it should be
duly noted that Luther, unlike Augustine, does not try to modify this, or make it "more logically
understandable," by adding: ex quadam parte justus, ex quadam parte peccator; that is, partly just and partly a
sinner. No, to Luther man is all the time totaliter justus, totaliter peccator; that is, totally just and at the same
time totally a sinner.
Is there any way at all then to reconcile those apparent opposites? I believe Luther and Calvin did see
a certain way of reconciliation. I was astonished to discover something the historians fail to tell you here as
well. Both Luther and Calvin did find a solution that satisfied them. For they both have an addition to that
"simul justus, simul peccator." It was another "simul," and a decisive one. The Christian is: simul justus, simul
peccator, simul penitens. So penitenia (metanoia) is the conditio sine qua non, as far as man's attitude is
concerned. But how then can this fact of a constanter justus (in spite of the fact of a constanter peccator) be an
unfailing reality in man's life? That state of a constantly valid justification of the human sinner can only happen
on one condition: The additional ingredient, the reconciliating attitude of repentance in man (metanoia) is
bound to be an equally constant state of the human heart. It means having a contrite heart all the time, bowing
down to the ground in a state of absolute brokenness and humiliation all the time. It means going around in a
constant attitude of prayer. For prayer is the indispensable expression of Metanoia.
It is by demanding of man this strange constancy, that God reveals to him what He Himself is like. He
is the Agape that goes all the way down, all the time.
Unfortunately, the English word penitence (or penance, German: Busse) has acquired a certain
connotation of "punishment" or "self-punishment," so something rather negative. But how could man's
reflection of God's Agape be something negative? How could a change of mind (Metanoia), which constitutes a
unifying principle, be negative? Only pagan perversion can present the matter in such distorting light.
Repentance is the one condition made, as far as man's part in the process is concerned. But that means
a spirit of subjection, and subjection is all the cooperation that is needed on the part of man. This is the human
side of the covenant. It is a modest but indispensable side.
I say Metanoia is the only condition, the only thing demanded of man. But what an endless variety of
elements that Metanoia encompasses! An analysis may be a rather imperfect mode of approach. But let us still
consider some of the ingredients contained in Metanoia:
First, repentance means a total abandonment to Christ's mercy, and to Christ's doing. Second, it means
a resolute enterprise of active submission, which is nothing but implicit obedience to God's will, expressed in
His law. Of course it is not a vain-glorious "nomos" type of obedience. That would be pride, and not at all
humility. Humilitas is here exactly what the word says. It is the positive and actively engaged bowing down
toward "humus," the earth. It could never be the servile, passive, or reluctant type of bowing down. It must be
the wholehearted bending of knees and head and heart, so of man as a totality. It is a submission that enjoys to
submit. It deliberately plans to place the other person higher than oneself. And it is love that inspires this
positive preference, this deliberate plan.
The early Church was intensely aware of the simple fact that it is the goodness (the kindness: "to
chreston") of God that "leadeth to repentance" (Romans 2:4). Our hope as Christians is that the One who loves
us will give us repentance (2 Tim. 2:25).
Metanoia has this in common with Agape. It is a source of rejoicing and sadness at the same time. It
is a smile through tears. To be "sorrowed to repentance" is to be "made sorry after a godly manner." (2 Cor.
7:9) But that "godly sorrow worketh repentance to salvation not to be repented of" (verse 10), so rather a
gladness-producing kind.
Metanoia is simply bound to have an undercurrent of joy even right in the middle of its intensest
sadness, of hope right in the midst of its intensest fear (which is nothing but the fear of God; for it constantly
bears a sense of fulfillment; it is totally penetrated by meaningfulness. Whether we envisage it as a mournful
jubilation or a jubilant mourning, makes little difference. The Metanoia change of orientation in a human mind
is a real one and a thorough one. It is not a matter of capricious mood. It is bound to be something durable.
Christ's perfect redemption can become a saving reality for each individual sinner only on condition that this
individual person consents to make Metanoia the constant attitude of his conscious life. In this and in all other
respects, repentance coincides with faith. Both faith and penitence (pistis and metanoia) are simply the fitting
forms Agape is bound to take in the case of man, the fallen one, in front of Jesus Christ. But remember: he is
supposed to be in front of Christ from now on and forevermore. So everyone in the universe will forever and
ever see man in the peculiar light of Metanoia.
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Of course, it is nothing but sheer realism that causes Agape to present herself in this context in our
exceptional world. But that is a realism which will remain real for this world through all eternity. How do I
dare to make a statement as bold as that about Metanoia (the total bending down) as the only reasonable form
Agape can adopt in the case of human beings?
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But why should there remain an element of "sorrow" in something that is, in itself, joyful and good?
To this we might answer with a more specific question: Do we imagine that we shall ever completely
forget that we--you and I--were the ones who actually crucified Jesus Christ, our best Friend, our Lord and
Saviour?
Now please do not reason here in the spirit of the oblivion experts, or should I say, the oblivion
worshipers, Plato and Buddha.
We have betrayed Christ like Peter did. We have crucified him like the Roman soldiers did. How
could you think that our plain knowledge of this historical fact, that we have done those things, is ever to vanish
from our realistic minds? On the other hand, if that knowledge remains in us, as a firm historic recollection,
how then could we ever manage still to stay unaffected by it? How could we here avoid some state of mind
bearing a definite affinity to the concept of "sorrow"? Could the saved ones contemplate the realistically human
form of their beloved Saviour, week after week, millennium after millennium, including the print of the nails in
His hands and the sore in His side, without any feeling having the slightest resemblance to what sturdy
everyday language calls SORROW?
That would be impossible--and undesirable! For it is precisely the awareness of something profoundly
sorrowful, in the past, that here lends its peculiar profoundness also to man's gladness in the present, and his
hope for the future, his joy triumphant forever in Jesus Christ.
It is Eros who machinates to take away from man both his joy and his sorrow. Agape has a bosom
wide enough and generous enough, total enough, to carry them both. Nothing, in fact, could be more forceful
than Agape to convince us that repentance, from the beginning of our lives, and forevermore, is bound to be
something entirely laudable, something thoroughly good. So we can only repeat the apostle's strangely
qualifying statement about that repentance: It is a "repentance not to be repented of." In other words, we need
not be so anxious to throw it away at "a moment when we need it no more." Be assured, there will never be a
time when redeemed creatures will repent of having adopted that repenting attitude. That is what the text
plainly says. And what else would you expect? Metanoia is the attitude of coming back to God, of re-
submitting to Him, of resting again, and forever in the arms of His mercy. There is no virtue of denying the
realities of one's past history.
I have here described Metanoia as the Christian child's smile through tears. But mark you: those tears
have no trace of the negativity inherent in either sentimentality or despair. If they had, then, to be sure, they
would be really bad. But how could tears be bad if they are of the peculiar kind that turn into pearls, real gems
of creaturely experience? In human lives there are precious jewels of such translucent material that God's
reality is able to appear through them in a vision, only a thousand times more glorious than ever before. The
usual and original human eyesight evidently does not permit the greatest marvels of our God to transpire
immediately. That is a simple fact of creaturely limitation.
By the way, must it not be logically assumed that it would hardly serve any useful purpose for any
creature to close his eyes to such a fact as sorrow, as long as sorrow forms part and parcel of his plainest
reality? To refuse to see is downright irrealism. It is anti-realism of a guilty kind. The redeemed and the entire
universe will have to see a lot of things that are not precisely joyful during the thousand years when the books
are being opened for sentence to be passed on the lives of fellow creatures who may have been near and dear to
the hearts of the on-lookers.
Nothing but sheer realism causes Agape to present herself in the form of heart-rending sorrow
sometimes. I have tried to show how absolutely different Agape's peculiar religion, Christianity, is from the
man-made pseudo-religion of Eros, dominating the world today, both numerically and virtually; that is, Platonic
spiritualism in the West and Buddhist nirvana-faith in the East. And we could not fail to realize that the greatest
difference lay in their respective attitudes toward just suffering and sorrow.
Christ would step into the path of endless pain once more--if the terrible thing were to happen again.
Of course, that "if" sentence of mine is just another case of hypothetical subjunctive, but it is still logical enough
in its own proper setting. We should know one precious fact: It is the eternal presence of Metanoia, in the
world of tomorrow, that will constitute the warranty, as far as creatures are concerned, that there will be no
more repetition of the lugubrious past, no more need for Christ to have another experience of hell agony.
So don't let us regret Metanoia. The fact of the case is that the realism of God just does not have any
possibility of entirely obliterating from our intelligent human minds the sad drama into which our closest
relatives, perhaps, and our dearest friends, in this land of an alluring Eros, and at the same time the fact of
personal responsibility, have permitted themselves to be involved. There is a day when the books shall be
opened and the tragic result of every wicked choice has to be faced by the entire universe. That is the day of
God's final vindication. Everybody must get to know for sure that God is the One who judges with perfect
righteousness. And everybody must realize that His righteousness is an integrating part of His holy Agape.
That is the very reason why His redeemed ones are solemnly requested to be His "co-judges" during the final
judgment scene (I Corinthians 6:2). It is to be made definitely clear to the minds and hearts of all living
creatures endowed with normal wit and personal responsibility, precisely what the great rebellion against God
was all about.
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If you think of the dire disclosures of evil deeds produced by the minute inquiries of that particular
judicial court as something "thrilling," I may at once say that this is a kind of "thriller" the saved ones do not at
all enjoy. For the spirit they have come to develop in their hearts has nothing in common with the sensation-
craving spirit developed in the hearts of theater-goers in this world, by and large. It is a satanic quality to enjoy
the sight of another creature's death and disaster. There is nothing destined to survive eternally in that spirit. It
is a spirit that revels in scenes of catastrophe. On this earth of ours, there seems to be a strange satisfaction in
knowing that the cruel waves engulfing the lives of others will "never reach me." Man today enjoys being
purely an on-looker. He enjoys the thrill of disasters he can watch at a distance, from the safe heights of his
royal theater seat in the gallery. But let us remember one thing. There are no "pure on-lookers" in the theater of
heaven.
It is not "for pleasure's sake" that those scenes of the past are reproduced "on the screen" in the
heavenly courts. The holy ones on the walls of the New Jerusalem just are not people of that "balcony hero"
type. For the human actors observed on the stage of God's flashing film strips of a drama-filled past down
below happen to be their own loved ones. And you just do not enjoy the sight of your father or son having
made the fateful choice that leads him inevitably downstream, ever closer to the roaring cataract, the abyss of
eternal annihilation.
No, indeed, even that late hour is still bound to be a time of deepest sorrow. On the other hand,
certainly no element of morbid bitterness will be permitted to live on in that sorrow of the deeply sensitive ones.
The endless solicitude of a tender Father is ample guarantee that no single sting of downright negativity will be
permitted to embitter the lives of His children at any moment of their passage through the pearly gates. Hence,
the firm assurance of Revelation 7:17: "God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes."
But this is not tantamount to saying that Metanoia, which has never had anything negative in it, is
destined to die out in the depths of human hearts. On the contrary, Metanoia is the core of our realism. It is the
fearless and undying realism inherent in the minds of changed men, the realism that unshakingly knows the
sweet presence of God right in the midst of all the trials that creatures of this unique kind have to pass through.
It just could not occur that this true realism would ever see a day when it was declared unfit for further
existence. Whatever ages of endless time redeemed men are destined to lay behind them, whatever new shores
of blessed adventure and boundless glory they reach, there will be no day for the enraptured traveller when he
shall finally say: "Metanoia is dead in my heart. I do not recall that I have ever done one single thing that could
sadden the heart of my Lord and Master."
No, as long as Jesus Christ, the Son of Man, dwells among men, men are bound to have a constant
awareness of certain past historic events, events that can never be denied: There will always be, at the back of
human minds, the remembrance of Bethlehem, and the remembrance of Calvary! Remember: After the
destruction of evil, nothing but sheer historic realism causes Agape, in the case of man, to be received into his
heart in the form of Metanoia. Therefore, Metanoia is a realism which will remain real for all worlds and for all
eternity. Metanoia gives infinite courage. It means God-dependence. And only the God-dependent child can
reasonably be courageous--at the same time humble--bending down.
If our theologians would speak about the "nomos aspect" of Agape in this way, I doubt that the
traditional antinomians could reasonably accuse them of entertaining the idea that people can make themselves
worthy of salvation. For Metanoia is not only the spirit of obedience, and so of active penance, but at the same
time a personal and incessantly active consciousness of the sinfulness of one's sins. So there is no room left for
any vain-glorious pride, or self-righteousness, or sense of "deserving" anything whatsoever. The very
thankfulness Metanoia inspires will manifest itself precisely in man's urging willingness to do the will of God.
The great question troubling Luther's intelligent mind was certainly this: How can man be "totaliter
justus" in spite of the fact that he is also "totaliter peccator." The only answer presenting itself to him (and also
to Calvin) was the one we have here dwelt upon at great length: "This happens when man is penitent
(repentant)." And we have seen the meaning of that penitence, penance, repentance. It is nothing but the
attitude of totally bending down; that is, of implicit humble obedience. Obedience to what and to whom? You
need no repetition of this basic practical matter. You know what makes Metanoia substantial and real, what
gives it a true body.
There is so much altercation among theologians over certain "problems" relative to sanctification; for
instance, this question popping up again and again: the obligation to become perfect in this life. It might be
wholesome, then, for our theology to keep in mind one pertinent point: The highest summit of perfection any
man can evidently reach on this earth is just the perfection of Penitentia, Metanoia, with all that this implies.
But this repentance, or penitence, or penance, is the attitude that never loses sight of Dei sola gratia. So it
immediately becomes a constant safeguard against man's greatest peril, in discussions on sanctification: self-
aggrandizement and self-delusion.
Exactly to the same degree that man is granted the precious realism to despair of his own forces, his
chance exists in hoping for, and submitting unconditionally to God, the eternally Faithful One, as Luther calls
Him (Opera, Weimar edition, 1883, p. 428).
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Metanoia is that despair and that hope meeting together, an infinite despair and an infinite hope. But if
man's unworthiness is bound to remain the same all his life, the profound awareness of that unworthiness must
be equally lifelong.
A GRIPPING EPILOGUE CONCLUDING THE LAST CHAPTER OF THE LAST GOSPEL: PETER, THE
EROS-INFATUATED ONE, BECOMES PETER, THE AGAPE-INSPIRED ONE
The 21st chapter of John culminates with a most remarkable and a most heart-touching incident. You
might call it an Agape-Eros drama of the intimate ones. The chords it touches, however, are not those of
shallow romanticism. It is rather those of profound realism. The historical setting is not uncertain: Not only
the crucifixion, but also the resurrection of the Lord is an accomplished fact. The scene is the shore of the Sea
of Tiberias. The persons facing each other are Jesus Christ, the Agape Realist, and Simon Peter, the would-be
realist. The last dialogue between those two men is remarkable. The disciples have just dined with their risen
Lord on the fish they have caught. The mood is rather one of few words and tense expectations. Then suddenly
Jesus says to Peter: "Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me more than these?"
(John 21:15). Peter answer: "Yea, Lord, thou knowest that I love thee."
Bible students have often found it striking here that the question and the answer have different words
for the idea of love in the original text. Christ's searching question has the verb agapao, whereas Peter's
eschewing answer has the other Biblical verb, phileo.
Is this difference a casual happening? Or is it providential in terms of a deeper significance coming
out in the sense of the dialogue? We have, from the beginning, called attention to the historical fact that Philia
is not the epoch-making new term for love in the New Testament times. Agape is. Peter's answer then might
seem somewhat "out of date." It does not have the verb corresponding to that famous noun, Agape. Not a
single one of the three consecutive times he is prodded on to give his answer, does the inspired record render his
response in terms of Agape. It is rather Christ who appears to condescend, as it were, the third time when He
asks His question to Peter's term of phileo. You might almost imagine Him saying, with a suspicion of
resignation in His voice: "Peter, two times now have I asked you if you have the love for me which has priority
with God. Do you love me more than these? Is your love something going infinitely beyond a mortal human
being's natural affection for members of his earthly family? You must know, Peter, that this is not enough.
Philia is not the kind of love that will carry you through to salvation. Not that it doesn't have its legitimate place
in human life. But at the same time, it represents a certain danger. It so easily falls down to the level of Eros,
love in terms of sheer infatuation, of romantic sentimentality. What you cannot do without in any way is the
radical love that builds a character for heaven. That is also the only love making it absolutely certain, in a time
of crisis, that you will realistically feed my lambs! Frankly, Peter, you fling out your traditional phileo, but are
you quite sure that you love me even with that kind of earthbound human love? With an instability of feelings
like yours, Peter, how long will that last? When will it be engulfed by the mediocrity, or even the cuddly-
muddly sentimentalism of downright Eros?"
At this point the plain record goes on: "Peter was grieved . . ." That seems indicative of a change for
the better. That man has definitely begun to realize that he is desperately in need of a new kind of love. What
he must catch hold of is the precious gift only One Person can bestow upon him. He needs something stern and
steady; otherwise his slender vessel will go down. He must lay hold on a realism strong enough to overcome
the direst deficiencies of his own volatile sanguine temperament. That frivolous dance on the capricious wave
crests of purely human emotions is a humanism that will never save him.
To me, it is reminiscent of the love pattern of a modern pagan like Goethe ("the arch-pagan of German
literature"). What did love mean in his life? What source of reliable happiness did he find in it?
Freudvoll und leidvoll, gedankenvoll sein, Langen und bangen in schwenberder Pein, Himmelhoch
jauchzend, zum Tode betrubt, Glucklich allein ist die Seele, die liebt.
A free prose translation of this might be:
Full of joy and full of sorrow, full of heavy thoughts as well,
Painfully wavering between longings and fears. Rejoicing in heaven-bound ecstasies, then suddenly
saddened unto death, Happy alone is the soul that loves.
What a sad mistake: That human indulgence in emotional extremes has nothing to do with true love,
nor with true happiness. What man needs is the love that saves. And how in the world could Eros, the
absolutely bottomless value, be a structure firm enough for salvation?
What Peter needed was a total transformation of his sentimental life. Only Christ's Agape could
provide that, and it did. Jesus points out to him, in most significant terms, exactly what had been the matter
with his life so far, and what a tremendous alteration would take place at the moment of a total surrender:
"Verily, verily, I say unto thee, When thou wast young, thou girdedst thyself and walkedst whither
thou wouldest, but when thou shalt be old, thou shalt stretch forth thy hands, and another shall gird thee, and
carry thee whither thou wouldest not." John 21:18.
What does this signify in terms of stern Agapeic realism? Let us try to paraphrase it as it might be
expressed, addressing itself to you and me; that is, people in an epoch of lightminded hippies:
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"Now it is high time, Peter, that you be thoroughly transformed by the still, strong virtues of my grace.
Up until now, you have largely insisted on "doing your own thing." You have been self-willed, self-dependent,
self-seeking, self-planning. But now this self-centeredness must finally come to an end. If you let me take over
at the helm, you shall henceforth be going where you would never go all by yourself, that is for sure. But it is
the safest place in the whole world. It is a step-to-step walk in the midst of the most gracious rainbow bridge of
the heavenly Agape, across the bottomless gulf of Eros perdition."
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