Historical transcendence and the reality of God: a christological critique
dc.contributor.author
Anderson, Ray Sherman
en
dc.date.accessioned
2019-02-15T14:14:35Z
dc.date.available
2019-02-15T14:14:35Z
dc.date.issued
1973
dc.description.abstract
en
dc.description.abstract
This thesis maintains that the reality of God can be known as an act
of divine self-transcendence, with one pole of that self-transcendence considered to be an act from the side of the creature toward the Creator by the
Son of God. Thus, the 'historical transcendence' of God is an 'intra-divine'
act which takes place in absolute solidarity with man through the life and
person of the Incarnate Logos—Jesus Christ. The 'inner logic' of historical
transcendence exposes itself to us through the Incarnation as the rationale
which unites Creator and creation in a unity of relation, a rationale possessing a real epistemic content in the form of a problematic. The reality of God
is held to be problematical to any abstraction from participation in that act
of historical transcendence. This participation, called 'lived transcendence',
unites the Word and Spirit of God in one action of faith, by which creaturely
existence is given its completion in the life of God, which is its eschaton.
en
dc.description.abstract
The thesis takes up, first of all, the crisis of the reality of God
in the form of a 'crisis of transcendence.' This crisis is radicalized in
order to expose the reality of God as totally 'other' to all creaturely existence. In doing this, the language of transcendence and immanence, in its traditional form, is shown to be inadequate to express the correlation between a
created reality and a reality totally 'other' to it. For the purpose of this
thesis, transcendence is now conceived to be the action of the Other concretizing himself in relation. Because this relation is problematical when one
abstracts from the Other (i.e., from action into reflection), the action of
the Other in relation (transcending his own immanent existence) is at the same
time the transcendence of the Other (his freedom) and his bond with the reality of concrete existence. In this way, transcendence, and not immanence, is
taken to be the bond between the concrete and the absolute. With this metaphysical framework assumed as an axiological point of departure, the Incarnation is then explored with the intent of laying bare the intrinsic structure
of divine transcendence as the act and the action of the Creator in relation
with his creation.
en
dc.description.abstract
In the relation of God to Israel, the 'inner logic' of Incarnation is
shown to point us, on the one hand, back to the covenant of creation with its
covenant response grounded in the transcendence of God as Creator, and, on the
other hand, forward to the Incarnation itself, in which the eternal Logos completes the covenant response from the furthest side of human estrangement.
The Incarnation can now be known as the historical transcendence of God because it is God's act of utter solidarity with the world through the assumption
of a complete humanity, while at the same time, it is the act of the Son of God
toward the Father and the Father toward the Son within the perfect unity of
divine love. The transcendence of God can thus be said to 'originate' an historical act of God in a non-mythological sense. What we call kenosis, because
it appears as an act of utter condescension and even humiliation on the part of
the Son of God, is actually revealed to be the depth of divine transcendence
experienced as an intra-divine relation into which man is taken with his full
humanity. Historical transcendence, then, is God, as 'totally Other', in
relationship with himself through the solidarity of the Logos with humanity in
the life of the Spirit. This utter solidarity of God with man is also the
absolute 'difference' between God and man (because the solidarity is an act of
transcendence), and it is this 'difference' which makes possible a real and
rational relation. For the rationality is given as an intrinsic reality of
the relation through the transcendence of God.
en
dc.description.abstract
The argument of the thesis turns on the hinge of historical transcendence and swings forward into the life of lived transcendence. The reality of
God places man between the 'two poles of divine transcendence.' The life of
the Spirit, as one pole of transcendence, relates man to God through the Spirit's own unity with the Father and the Son. However, the transcendent ground
for the reality of Spirit is the historical life of the Incarnate Word—Jesus
Christ. The Scripture, as the 'pole' of historical transcendence which testifies to man's place in the life of God through a common humanity with the Incarnate Son, becomes the channel through which the Spirit reaches to ground
faith in the rationale of historical transcendence. Historical transcendence,
then, creates the 'kenotic' bond of community between man and God; lived transcendence, through the power of the Spirit, creates the 'ek-static' bond of
communion between creaturely existence and the life of the triune God.
en
dc.description.abstract
The 'kenotic community' and the 'ek-static community', as a schematized
way of tracing out the inner logic of the Incarnation, suggest, finally, the
ways in which the transcendence (and, therefore, the reality) of God can be
located in concrete 'thresholds' of historical existence, in such a way that
God, as the eschaton of creation, gives each penultimate moment ultimate significance.
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/33340
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2019 Block 22
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dc.relation.isreferencedby
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dc.title
Historical transcendence and the reality of God: a christological critique
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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