Six Questions Toward Emmanuel
When I was teaching at
Georgetown University, I was privileged to direct a physics and philosophy
student on an Ignatian retreat. He was exceptionally bright and good-willed,
and had the capacity to express what was on his mind in a very straightforward
way. At the beginning of our first conference he said, “Could I ask you
something very elementary which has been bothering me for several years? I
don’t have any real problem with the idea of a Creator, because I believe that
finitude is intrinsic to time and the origin of the universe will ultimately
have to have a cause beyond a universal singularity.[3] God is not a question for me. But it’s
this Jesus thing. I’m not sure I see the need for Jesus and I’m not sure I
really get it. Can’t we just stick with a ‘Creator outside of space-time
asymmetry’?”
I thought about it for a
couple of minutes and said to him, “The ‘Jesus thing’ is about the
unconditional Love of God. It is about God wanting to be with us in a perfect
act of empathy; about God wanting to save us unconditionally and to bring us to
His own life of unconditional Love. A Creator alone, indeed, even a Creator
with infinite power, could be tantamount to Aristotle’s God. Once he has
fulfilled His purpose of ultimate, efficient, and final causation, He is
detached from the affairs of rather base and uninteresting human beings. The
God of Jesus Christ is about the desire to be intimately involved in the
affairs of human beings made in His image and destined for His eternity – and
that makes all the difference.”
He said in reply, “This
all seems a bit too good to be true. I would like the Creator to be the God of
Jesus Christ, but do you have any evidence that this is not just wishful
thinking – evidence showing that this is really the way God is? Is there any
reason why we would think that God is loving instead of indifferent?” I
responded by noting that it would be better for him to answer six questions
rather than have me give an extended discourse, because the six questions could
reveal not only what was in his fine mind, but more importantly, what was in
his heart – what he thought about love, life’s purpose, others, and His highest
imaginable state of existence. If he answered these six questions (from his
heart) in a manner commensurate with “the logic of love,” then the
unconditional Love and divinity of Christ (i.e., Jesus being Emmanuel – God
with us) would be self-evident.
I give you, the reader,
these six questions and some points to guide your reflection, so that you might
be able to see more clearly the logic of love and its consequences for an
“unrestricted Creator outside of space-time asymmetry” (God).
1) What is the most
positive and creative power or capacity within me?
At first glance, one might
want to respond that this power is intellect, or artistic creativity, but
further reflection may show that the capacity to apprehend truth or knowledge,
or to create beauty, in and of itself, is not necessarily positive. Knowledge
and beauty can be misused, and therefore be negative, destructive,
manipulative, inauthentic, and thus undermine both the individual and common
good. There is but one human power that contains its own end of “positivity”
within itself, one power that is directed toward the positive of itself, and
therefore one power that directs intellect and artistic creativity to its
proper, positive end. As may by now be evident, that power is love (agapē – see
Section I above). Love’s capacity for empathy, its ability to enter into a
unity with others leading to a natural “giving of self,” forms the fabric of
the common good and the human community, and so seeks as its end the good of
both individuals and that community.
As implied above (Section
I), love by its very nature unifies, seeks the positive, orders things to their
proper end, finds a harmony amidst diversity, and gives of itself in order to
initiate and actualize this unifying purpose. This implies that love is
naturally oriented toward perfect positivity and perfect fulfillment.
Furthermore, love would
seem to be the one virtue that can be an end in itself. Other virtues do not
necessarily culminate in a unity with others whereby doing the good for the
other is just as easy if not easier than doing the good for oneself. Thus, courage,
left to itself, might be mere bravado or might lead to the persecution of the
weak. Self-discipline, left to itself, might lead to a disdain for the weak or
a sense of self-sufficiency which is antithetical to empathy. Even humility can
be overbearing and disdainful if it is not done out of love. Even though these
virtues are necessary means for the actualization of love (i.e., authentic love
cannot exist without courage, self-discipline, and humility), they cannot be
ends in themselves, for they can be the instruments of unlove when they are not
guided by the intrinsic goodness of love. Love seems to be the only virtue that
can be an end in itself and therefore can stand by itself.
Now, if you, the reader,
affirm the existence of this power within yourself and further affirm that it
is the guiding light of both intellect and creativity, that its successful
operation is the only way in which all your other powers can be guided to a
positive end, that it is therefore the only way of guaranteeing positivity for
both yourself and others, and that it therefore holds out the promise of
authentic fulfillment, purpose in life, and happiness, then you will have
acknowledged love to be the highest of all powers. You will then want to
proceed to the next question.
2) If love is the one
power that seeks the positive in itself, and we are made to find our purpose in
life through love, could God (perfect Being), who created us with this loving
nature, be devoid of love?
If the Creator were devoid
of love, why would that Creator create human beings not only with the capacity
for love, but to be fulfilled only when they are loving? If the Creator is
devoid of love, why make love the actualization of all human powers and
desires, and therefore of human nature? If the Creator is not loving, then the
creation of “beings meant for love” seems absurd. However, if the Creator is
love, then creating a loving creature (i.e., sharing His loving nature) would
seem to be both intrinsically and extrinsically consistent with what (or perhaps
better, “who”) He is. Could the Creator be any less loving than the “loving
nature” He has created? Furthermore, if a Creator were perfect Being, wouldn’t
that perfect Being also be capable of the one power and virtue which can be an
end in itself, that is, Love?
If you, the reader, can
reasonably affirm the love of the Creator from the above, then you may want to
proceed to the third question.
3) Is my desire to love
and to be loved conditional or unconditional?
It may do well to pause
for a moment here and give some background about our desire for love which has
occupied the writings of many philosophers since the time of Plato.
We appear to have a desire
for perfect and unconditional Love. Not only do we have the power to love
(i.e., the power to be naturally connected to another human being in profound
empathy, care, self-gift, concern, and acceptance), we have a “sense” of what
this profound interpersonal connection would be like if it were perfect. This
sense of perfect love has the positive effect of inciting us to pursue ever
more perfect forms of love. However, it has the drawback of inciting us to
expect ever more perfect love from other human beings. This generally leads to
frustrated expectations of others and consequently to a decline of relationships
that can never grow fast enough to match this expectation of perfect and
unconditional Love.
The evidence of this
desire for perfect and unconditional Love manifests itself in our frustrated
expectations within relationships. Have you ever had this experience – where
you thought a relationship (or friendship) with another was going quite well
until little imperfections began to manifest themselves? In situations like
these, there might be slight irritation, but one has hopes that the ideal will soon
be recaptured. But as the fallibility of the beloved begins to be more acutely
manifest (the other is not perfectly humble, gentle, kind, forgiving,
self-giving, and concerned with me) the irritation becomes frustration, which,
in turn, becomes dashed expectation: “I can’t believe I thought she was really
the One.” Of course, she wasn’t the One, because she is not perfect and
unconditioned.
This gives rise to the
question, “Why do we all too frequently expect our beloveds to be perfect and
expect ourselves to be perfect to our beloveds if we did not have a desire for
perfect and unconditional Love in the first place?” The reader must now apply
this question to him or herself. If you did not have a desire for perfect and
unconditional Love, why would you be so dissatisfied with imperfect and
conditioned manifestations of love in others (even from the time of childhood)?
If you sense within yourself an incapacity to be ultimately satisfied by any
form of conditioned or finite love, then you will have also affirmed within
yourself the intrinsic desire for unconditional Love, which leads to the next
question.
4) If my desire for love
can only be ultimately satisfied by unconditional Love, then could the Creator
of this desire be anything less than Unconditional Love?
A simple response to this
question might run as follows: if we assume that the Creator does not intend to
frustrate this desire for unconditional Love within all of us, it would seem
that His creation of the desire would imply an intention to fulfill it, which
would, in turn, imply the very presence of this quality within Him. This would
mean that the Creator of the desire for unconditional Love is (as the only
possible fulfillment of that desire) Himself Unconditional Love. The reader
here is only affirming the inconsistency of a “Creator incapable of
unconditional Love” creating a being with the desire for perfect and
unconditional Love. This is sufficient for affirming the presence of
unconditional Love in the Creator.
A more complete
explanation might begin with the origin of the desire for perfect and
unconditional Love. The awareness of unconditional Love (which arouses the
desire for unconditional Love) seems to be beyond any specifically known or
concretely experienced love, for it seems to cause dissatisfaction with every
conditioned love we have known or experienced. How can we have an awareness of
love that we have neither known nor experienced? How can we even extrapolate to
it if we do not know where we are going? The inability of philosophers to give
a purely naturalistic answer to these questions has led them to associate the
“tacit awareness of unconditional Love” with the “felt presence of
Unconditional Love Itself.” Unconditional Love Itself would therefore seem to
be the cause of our awareness of It and also our desire for It. Inasmuch as
Unconditional Love Itself transcends all conditioned (and human) manifestations
of love, it might fairly be associated with the Creator. The Creator would then
be associated with our human awareness of and desire for unconditional Love.
Therefore, it seems that the Creator would have to be at least capable of
unconditional Love.[4]
5) If the Creator is Unconditional
Love, would He want to enter into a relationship with us of intense empathy,
that is, would He want to be Emmanuel (“God with us”)?
If one did not attribute
unconditional Love to God, then the idea of God wanting to be with us, or God
being with us, would be preposterous. A God of stoic indifference would not
want to bother with creatures, let alone actually be among them and enter into
empathetic relationship with them. However, in the logic of love, or rather, in
the logic of unconditional Love, all this changes.
If we attribute the
various parts of the definition of agapē (given above in Section I) to an
unconditionally loving Creator, we might obtain the following result: God (as
Unconditional Agapē) would be unconditional empathy and care for others (even
to the point of self-sacrificial care). As such, God would expect neither
repayment for this care, nor any of the affective benefits of the other three
kinds of love. Hence, God would not need the affection of storge in order to
love us, though He would have unconditional affection for us; He would not need
the mutual commitment and caring of philia, though He would be unconditionally
committed to us in friendship; and He would not have need of our romantic
feelings, even though He would grace such feelings in the human endeavor toward
exclusive love. God would seek unconditionally to protect, defend, maintain,
and enhance the intrinsic dignity, worth, lovability, unique goodness,
transcendental mystery, and intrinsic eternity of every one of us.
Recall that love is
empathizing with the other and entering into a unity with that other whereby
doing the good for the other is just as easy, if not easier, than doing the
good for oneself. This kind of love has the non-egocentricity, humility,
self-gift, deep affection, and care which would make infinite power into
infinite gentleness, and would incite an infinitely powerful Being to enter
into a restrictive condition to empathize more fully with His beloveds. In this
logic, “Emmanuel” would be typical of an unconditionally loving God. This would
characterize the way that Unconditional Love would act – not being
egocentrically conscious of the infinite distance between Creator and creature,
but rather being infinitely desirous of bridging this gap in a perfect unity of
perfect empathy and perfect care. It would be just like the unconditionally
loving God to be “God with us.”
The following
consideration might help to clarify this. If God is truly Unconditional Love,
then it would not be unreasonable to suspect that He would be unconditional
empathy; and if He were unconditional empathy, it would not be unreasonable to
suspect that He would want to enter into an empathetic relationship with us
“face-to-face” (“peer-to-peer”) where the Lover and beloved would have a
parallel access to the uniquely good and lovable personhood and mystery of the
other (through empathy). A truly unconditionally loving Being would want to
give complete empathetic access to His heart and interior life in a way which
was proportionate to the receiving apparatus of the weaker (creaturely) being.
It would seem reasonable (according to the reasonings of the heart), then, that
an unconditionally loving Creator would want to be Emmanuel in order to give us
complete empathetic access to that unconditional Love through voice, face,
touch, action, concrete relationship, and in every other way that love, care,
affection, home, and felt response can be concretely manifest and appropriated
by us. If God really is Unconditional Love, then we might be presumptuous
enough to expect that He might be Emmanuel; and if Emmanuel, then concretely
manifest in history. If this resonates with the reader’s thoughts and feelings,
you will want to proceed to the next question.
6) If it would be typical
of the unconditionally loving God to want to be fully with us, then is Jesus
the One?
As reasonable and
responsible as the answers to the above questions might be, they can be
considerably strengthened through historical corroboration, that is, through
experienceable data which concretizes the reasoning given immediately above.
What kind of experienceable data could accomplish this corroboration? Data
which at once manifests (1) God in our midst (Emmanuel) and (2) God as
Unconditional Love. It so happens that a remarkably powerful experienceable
event did at once manifest and synthesize these two corroborating data, and
showed the above reasoning about the unconditional Love of God to be both
reasonable and experienceable, and to be mutually corroboratable through concrete
experience and the logic of love. This remarkable experienceable event is Jesus
Christ.
So can this incredibly
good news, this historical corroboration of our reasoning, this complete access
to the heart of God be brought into focus so that it can be seen clearly to be
at once the truth about God and our destiny? I believe it can, because the life
of Jesus and the Church He initiated is filled with clues that synergistically
connect the mind to the heart and the heart to the mind.
The rest of this book will
be devoted to showing the remarkable similarity between the above reasoning
about God’s unconditional Love and Jesus’ appearance in our midst. The reader
will then have a background to better answer the question, “Is Jesus the One?
Is Jesus Emmanuel – the Unconditional Love of God with us?”
for more detail: http://magisgodwiki.org/index.php?title=Reason_and_Revelation
for more detail: http://magisgodwiki.org/index.php?title=Reason_and_Revelation
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