Dio Trinità e l’unità della famiglia umana
The International Theological Commission regularly produces documents that aid
academic theologians in discernments with regard to their subject matter. Dio Trinità, unità degli uomini: Il monoteismo cristiano contro la violenza, a document from two-thousand thirteen, is no exception in this regard. It is a
brief treatise of remarkable theological sophistication and conceptual density.
Is Catholic religious belief an endemic source of political division and social
violence in human culture? Principal architects of the Enlightenment era, like
Gotthold Lessing, Immanuel Kant, and John Locke, argued in diverse ways that
various dogmatic truth claims of Catholic Christianity were rationally
unwarranted, politically divisive and constraining on human freedom. In the past
century it become commonplace in some academic venues to argue more radically
that all forms of monotheism, centered on a central absolute truth explanatory
of all, are sources of social division and violence. In a post-modern context a
new definition of polytheism emerged as a way of thinking of truth as
irreducibly diverse and as distributed politically to diverse centers of
representation. In a pluralistic culture a new philosophical polytheism might
gradually displace the monotony and arbitrary homogeneity of Christian
monotheism. It is a short passage from these views to the idea that Christian
monotheism is incompatible with a free society.
The document proceeds in five parts: the defense of monotheism as a source of
political virtue and unity, rather than vice and division; second, the
historical treatment of the emergence of biblical monotheism from the Old to the
New Covenant, third, a Christological treatment of religious violence,
understood in light of the Cross, fourth, a robust defense of the modern
rationality of monotheism, and of intellectual openness to divine revelation,
and, fifth, a consideration of the ethical implications in the Church of a
distinctively Christian notion religious freedom and of freedom from religious
violence, in light of the Trinity and the crucifixion of Christ.
There are many conceptually profound elements of this document. Here I would
like simply to underscore four key ideas that I think are of especial worth.
First, on the Trinity and divine simplicity: Trinitarian monotheism. Christian
theorists who contend with the question of monotheism and public reason can take
the option of claiming that Trinitarian belief is not monotheistic, at least in
the ways that Judaism and Islam are and that the social inter-personal character
of Trinitarian faith is such that it allows us to avoid all potential criticisms
lodged at monotheism as a form of political absolutism by its critics. Our
document does not do that. Instead, the document vibrantly underscores the unity
and the universality of the two testaments of the bible together: older and
newer. The revelation of the one God who is creator, in his transcendence, is
the prelude to the revelation of the inner life of God as relational and
personal, in the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. The Christian Trinitarian faith,
then, is a distinctive form of monotheism. It thus retains the rationality and
openness to question that is proper those who claim there exists one God, the
creator of the heavens and the earth. To affirm this while also giving
theologically significant voice to the mystery of the Trinity as such, the
document appeals to the Traditional Augustinian notion of divine simplicity. All
that God has as God, He also is as God. The properties of the divine
essence, such as wisdom and goodness, are substantial, that is to say identical
with the very nature of God. So if the Father is God and the Son and Spirit are
also God, then they are each the one God in all that they are, and they possess
all that is proper to the divine essence as God. The reason this is important
for our purposes is that this influential patristic idea invites one to
acknowledge the medieval idea found later in Bonaventure and Aquinas of divine
persons as subsistent relations. The Father is Father in all that he is, as the
eternal progenitor of the Son, and so the Son is begotten in all he is, as the
Spirit is spirated in all that he is. Otherwise said, the persons cannot not be
relational in all that they are, and in being related they share eternally in
all that they each are as God, so that they are each the one God. Such abstract
notions may seem far from the field of our ethical concerns. However, what they
signify is that Christians truly affirm both one God who can be known by
reason, and a mystery of the inner life of God as Trinity and as a
communion of persons that does not compromise that perfection of unity.
Simultaneously this vision of person in God as subsistently relational suggests
that the highest measure of personal existence is relational “all the way down”
in a perfectly interior interpersonal communion of truth and love. This
exemplarity of inter-personal Trinitarian truth and love is manifest in the life
of Christ, his passion, death and resurrection and thus it has the first and
last word in Christian metaphysics and ethics on any and every political
question. The Trinity suffers no violence in itself and those who imitate
Trinitarian love cannot do so by appeal to the means of creaturely violence.
Furthermore this approach allows one to affirm a Christian personalism rooted in
God without breaking intellectual ties with Judaism and Islam, who remain
partners in thinking about the political and public nature of religious reason.
Second, the document articulates a specifically Christological approach to the
problem of religious violence, in light of the radical claim of Christianity:
one of the Trinity was crucified. It is in fact God himself who suffered human
death in the crucifixion. The resurrection is in turn a vindication of the
future of humanity redeemed and saved from sin, free from the powers of evil.
Consequently, there are distinctly Christian ways of thinking about a culture
free from religious violence, and about the rational precept of the natural law
regarding religious freedom: that the truth about God must be embraced freely,
and cannot be compelled by violence. If Christ suffered due to religious
violence, and is himself the source of charity in the face of religious
incomprehension, and if his first followers died to proclaim the truth of his
resurrection, then there is no ground whatsoever in Christianity for compelled
conversion or for religiously motivated political violence. The truth of the
natural law finds its correspondent in the deeper truth of the revelation of God
in Jesus, and in Jesus’ own free undertaking of suffering in order to witness to
the truth of the Father, out of a religious sense of the well-being of all
persons.
Third, the document maintains an integral relationship between public reason
stemming from philosophical resources, and theological understanding of divine
revelation, without reducing the two to one another. The fourth part of the
document in particular contains a robust defense of the rationality of human
belief in God. It provides an eloquent portrait of the human spirit open by
nature to questions of divine transcendence, and it articulates well the natural
motivation for interest in divine revelation. If we cannot know God perfectly by
reason, it becomes reasonable in turn to ask the question of whether there exist
supernatural resources to attain to higher and more immediate knowledge of the
mystery of God. At the same time, in a world of ideological pluralism, the
supernatural grace and revelation of the Trinity help to orient human reason
toward its genuine goal, in the wake of inevitable human confusions and
weakness. Here again we see the teaching of Dignitatis Humanae from the
Second Vatican Council rooted in earlier teachings such as that of Dei Filius
from the First Vatican Council. If the human being is capax dei by
nature then there accrues to each person a ius or natural capacity for
the religious truth that provides them with both responsibilities and rights of
religious freedom in the face of civic society.
Fourth and finally, the last part of the document contains a two-fold reflection
on the imago dei, similar to the two-fold reflection on the knowledge of
God. Just as we can know something of God by nature, so too we can know
something by nature of the human person as a being of Logos and Agape, that is
to say of intellectual truth and of volitional love. However, there is also a
deeper Trinitarian relecture of this facet of reality: the human being is
made in the image of the Trinity, so that our capacity for knowledge and love is
an expression of the imprint of the Father, who makes us in the image of his
Word and his spirated Love. The communion that results between created persons
is one that emerges from knowledge and love, and it is one of imperfect and
developmental relationality, not perfect and subsistent relationality, but we
can grow into the image and likeness of God as persons, as a Church, and as a
human community, aided by the grace of the Holy Trinity, and the knowledge of
the mystery of Christ.
These are only some select points of the document in question but they serve to
indicate its profundity and historical timeliness. The Trinity is the most
ultimate mystery of the Christian faith and it illumines all else. By referring
to this mystery is such a profound and sophisticated way the members of the
International Theological Commission have provided a great service to the wider
academic and theological culture of the Catholic Church.
Thomas Joseph White, OP
Rector, University of St. Thomas Angelicum, Rome |