“For Christian theology, all the questions come to a centre in christology. As a human being, God become man, Jesus of Nazareth shares in the structures, and that includes the fallen structures, of the created order. He is tempted to turn stones into bread, and indeed does multiply loaves and fishes, in the one miracle recorded in all four gospels. He stills the wind and the waves, and cures sickness. Yet to what end? Human salvation alone? It has been argued that when the New Testament speaks of ‘new creation’ — and that includes the apparently cosmic language of Romans 8 — it is speaking only of the remaking of human life. But that begs the question of what is involved in human salvation. Here we reach one necessary complication in our approach to a resolution of the problem, if such can be expected. For ‘salvation’ may appear to centre on the human — and why should it not, for we are the problem? — but we still have to ask the questions of, first, what is the nature of that salvation, and, second, how it involves us in the material world. After all, war, sex and abortion all concern action towards the created world, and specifically towards the image of God embodied in that world; and Christian conversion has always involved a change of attitude and bearing towards these realities.
“The real weakness of the Western tradition is that neglect of the trinitarian mediation of the doctrine of creation enabled gnostic elements to enter the bloodstream of theology. After the achievement of Irenaeus, no mainstream Christian theologian has entirely succumbed to the heresy he repudiated in so splendid and thoroughgoing a manner. The creator of the whole world, material and spiritual alike, is the one God and Father of the Lord Jesus Christ. Jesus’ recapitulation, in the flesh, of the human story is also a recapitulation of the cosmic story, and at once reverses the fall and re-inaugurates the project of creation. However, since that time Irenaeus’ affirmation of the goodness of the material world has come to be qualified in a number of ways inimical to his wholeheartedness. Origen’s teaching that the material world is essentially a secondary purpose of God, produced in order to provide a place of education for the fallen spirits, was succeeded by Augustine’s less damaging but none the less problematic teaching that the material world was less real and important than the spiritual. The rather gnosticising outcome is to be found in the tendency Feuerbach exaggerates: to see salvation as being out of this world rather than in and with it.
“In his study of The Travail of Nature Paul Santmire spoke of an ambivalence: that there are in many theologians of the tradition competing pulls, so that even those mediaeval theologies most affirmative of the glories of nature cannot in the end avoid using it as a ladder, to be kicked away when the summit is reached, of human ascent to the spiritual realm. Only one real exception is found in Santmire’s review of the Middle Ages, and it is St Francis. As he says, there is much romanticising of St Francis, and it is important to see whence the heart of his difference from his age derived. It is, according to this author, to be found in his christology:
Francis . . . became the Christ-like servant of nature. He impoverished himself in order that he might give himself to others, both to human and to natural creatures. So in his life and thought . . . he, in effect, united two grand theological schemes: on the one hand, the vision of the descending goodness of God, which makes all things good and worthy of respect, in their own right . . . on the other hand, the vision of the descending love of God in Christ, the self-giving . . . Savior, who, in turn, mandated sacrificial love for the world.
“Christology, then, is our first key, because it is Jesus Christ, the incarnate, crucified, risen and ascended Lord, who must be at the centre of any satisfactory construing of the relation of creation and redemption. According to the New Testament he is, after all, the agent of both creation and redemption, the one through whom, in the text that was one of Irenaeus’ great inspirations, God proposes to reconcile all things, things in heaven and things on earth: not merely, that is to say, the human species (Ephesians 1:10). Here, if we are to take seriously the radical nature of the evil that impedes the end of creation, the centre of the story in the crucifixion of Jesus must never be underplayed.
“This means in turn that the shape of a christology depends upon what can be called its trinitarian placing: how do we understand the work of Christ in the world in relation to the work of the Father and the Spirit? As the history of the tradition shows, an apparently orthodox christology can co-exist with a view of the creation, according to which it exists mainly to provide a place for a spatial ascent of the human spirit beyond and outside the material order to a higher spiritual realm. We meet again the crucial question of how we construe the work of the Spirit. In so far as modernity has a conception of the Spirit, it is a secularised version of the Christian. Spirit becomes, as in Hegel’s definitive execution of the modern project, an inner force propelling human culture to its eschatological perfection. Ultimately, this is the most thoroughgoing spiritualising of all, and certainly leaves far behind the human, fleshly, Jesus. But although its centre is completely wrong, for there is no divine Spirit who is not the Spirit of Jesus of Nazareth, it is looking in the right place, and in two respects.
“First, it stresses the time dimension rather than the merely spatial, recalling us to our theology of creation as project and the eschatological dimensions of the doctrine. We are created not to ascend through the material to the spiritual, but to be perfected in time, through Christ and the Spirit, in and with the created order as a whole. Second, there is throughout the Bible, and nowhere more than in characterisations of the resurrection, a clear relation between the Holy Spirit and God’s presence to the creation in perfecting power. Hegel’s mistake was thus to secularise the Spirit, bringing him out of eternity and out of perichoretic relation with the Son and Father into what is in effect a complete or unqualified and immanent involvement in time. The divine Spirit becomes almost a function of the created order, not its lord. But if the Spirit is first of all the eternal Spirit of the one triune God, his relation to the created order can only be from ‘outside’, however much he works towards and within the structures of created reality. Here, the resurrection serves as the model for an understanding of the action of the Spirit, the eschatological action par excellence. Like the wind in Ezekiel’s vision of the bones, the Spirit blows upon the crucified Jesus — as ‘the coming God’ of Moltmann’s characterisation. And that ‘outsideness’ must not be understood merely spatially, because as eternal the Spirit transcends both our space and our time: indeed, the whole space-time universe which it is his function to perfect by relating it to the Father through the Son, the one through whom it came to be and in whom it holds together.
“The introduction of a theology of the Spirit, as the one who brings the creation to God through the Son who became incarnate, also makes possible a more integrated account of the place of human action in relation to the natural world. It is sometimes taken as an implication of Irenaeus’ theology that the human creature is the one through whom the remainder of the created world is enabled to become articulate. He centred his account of this human calling in the church’s use of the bread and wine of the Lord’s Supper, thus reminding us that the project of creation, as both creation and providence, is not finally complete without the rescue, through Christ and the Spirit, of all things from their bondage to decay and dissolution. This produces the apparently anthropocentric conclusion that the perfection of the creation comes about only by means of what some New Testament writers call the new creation, the recreating action of God realised through the Spirit’s formation in the womb of Mary of a body for the Son, through the same Spirit’s enablement of the incarnate Son’s obedience until the cross, his raising him from the tomb on the third day, and his calling of a people to embody that redemption in the world. But it is only anthropocentric in a limited sense, and certainly far from Feuerbach’s charge that the Christian is interested only in the salvation of the soul. For the birth, ministry, death, resurrection and ascension of Jesus are all functions of his full humanity, just as the water, bread and wine are material. The Christian gospel bears upon the whole embodied person, and along with that the whole created world which is the context of that embodied life. The Spirit’s redemptive action is similarly eschatological in that it brings about the perfection of this particular sector of the created order — the humanity of Jesus Christ — as the guarantee and first fruits of the reconciliation of all things. This is the work of the Lord who is the Spirit. Redemption means the completion of the whole project of creation, not the saving of a few souls from hell.”
— from Colin E. Gunton, The Triune Creator: A Historical and Systematic Study (William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1998)
Lives of generosity — Jonathan Wilson distinguishes between two fundamental ways of viewing Creation: a true Christian account of the world and a “survival of the fittest” one. (21 minutes)
What we can know about God’s nature — Bruce McCormack outlines the history of the development of the doctrine of the Trinity. He shows how early Christians’ understanding of the nature of God moved from a focus on His oneness to a more full apprehension of His Triune nature. (66 minutes)
What is means to be a creature — Fred Sanders offers a Trinitarian analysis of the doctrinal significance of the biblical Adam, explaining how his creaturehood is paradigmatic for human beings and their relationship with the Triune God. (46 minutes)
The recovery of an integrated ecology — In this essay, Michael Hanby unpacks the summons of Laudato si’ to an ecological way of life based on a proper understanding of creation in its fullness and integrity. (57 minutes)
Speaking the word in love — In this lecture, D. C. Schindler examines core insights from Ferdinand Ulrich on the central vocation of man and the meaning of being. (32 minutes)
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 164 — FEATURED GUESTS: Dana Gioia, Brady Stiller, Robert Royal, Richard DeClue, Tiffany Schubert, and Joonas Sildre
Music, silence, and the order of Creation — In this lecture, Ken Myers explains how it is that our participation in harmonic beauty in music is a kind of participation in the life of God, in Whom all order and beauty coheres and is sustained. (61 minutes)
The gift of liturgical time — In this lecture, Gregory Wilbur explains how liturgy and liturgical time align us to the rhythms and order of Creation, forming us as disciples. (45 minutes)
A metaphysics of realism, relationality, and personalism — John Milbank gives a survey and critique of the efforts of 20th and 21st century theologians to articulate a Trinitarian ontology that reflects reality and counters secularization. (61 minutes)
Festivity and the goodness of Creation — Drawing on Josef Pieper’s ideas, Ken Myers explains why the spirit of festivity is the spirit of worship, and that “entertainment” is ultimately an artificial, contrived, and empty effort to achieve festivity. (25 minutes)
Forms as portals to reality — Ken Myers explains the ancient classical and Christian view that music embodies an order and forms that correspond to the whole of created reality, in its transcendence and materiality. (54 minutes)
Farming and our primal vocation — Shawn and Beth Dougherty make a theological case for biomimicry, or fulfilling our original vocation of tending the earth by working according to the nature of Nature. (68 minutes)
Popular innovator and speaker on farming practices Joel Salatin talks about the challenges of caring for Creation within an agricultural and food system that pays little attention to the purposes and inclinations of Creation. (25 minutes)
Our bodies, our selves — Douglas Farrow on the insistence of St. Irenaeus that the Ascension of Christ means that our bodies — not just our souls — are beneficiaries of redemption
St. Irenaeus against the Gnostics — In this reading of an essay by theologian Khaled Anatolios, St. Irenaeus is remembered for his synthesis of faith and reason. (52 minutes)
What does it mean to be a creature? — Canon-theologian Simon Oliver explains how and why the doctrine of Creation is cardinal and must frame all theology. (62 minutes)
“Reading Lewis with blinders on” — Chris Armstrong explains how C. S. Lewis’s work is grounded deeply in the Christian humanist tradition. (45 minutes)
David Bentley Hart describes how the Christian understanding of Creation as beauty and gift, as the outward expression of the delight the Trinity has in itself, reveals a vision of reality different from the pagan or fatalist vision of reality. (12 minutes)
The Life was the Light of men — In a lecture from 2018, Ken Myers contrasts the Enlightenment’s understanding of reason with the Christocentric conception of reason. (57 minutes)
Discerning an alternative modernity — In a lecture from 2019, Simon Oliver presents a summary of the cultural consequences of the comprehensiveness of the work of Christ. (28 minutes)
Lessons from Leviticus — The book of Leviticus may be assumed to be irrelevant for charting a way through the challenges of modernity. Theologian Peter J. Leithart disagrees. (22 minutes)
A theology of active beauty — In a 2010 lecture, George Marsden examines a few ways in which the distorting effects of Enlightenment rationalism were resisted in the work of Jonathan Edwards.(64 minutes)
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 161 — FEATURED GUESTS: Andrew Wilson, Kyle Edward Williams, Andrew James Spencer, Landon Loftin, Esther Lightcap Meek, Andrew Davison
Christology and human relationality — Joseph Ratzinger on how the longing for eternity expressed in human love is an analogue of Trinitarian love
Theologian and priest Andrew Davison believes that retrieving the historic doctrine of participation is vital to help Christians escape from the default philosophy of the age. (32 minutes)
Hans Boersma — author of Heavenly Participation: The Weaving of a Sacramental Tapestry — explains why Christians should reject the modern separation of Heaven and Earth and recover a “sacramental ontology.” (26 minutes)
Making peace with the land — Fred Bahnson challenges us to consider how we might honor our created and redeemed relationship with the earth as God’s stewards. (48 minutes)
Culture in trinitarian perspective — An article by theologian Tracey Rowland titled “Joseph Ratzinger’s Trinitarian Theology of Culture” summarizes the ramifications of Ratzinger’s confidence that a recognition of the Trinity is the foundation of any reliable and faithful account of the relationship between faith and culture. (65 minutes)
This world is now my home — Belden Lane describes several approaches to understanding how we experience the sacredness of earthly places and how we learn to see God manifest in His Creation. (48 minutes)
Living in a meshwork world — Theologian Norma Wirzba believes that Creation is the “material manifestation of God’s love” and that this fundamental teaching affects everything, especially our understanding of the meaning of modern environmental crises and climate change. (17 minutes)
For the beauty of the earth — Dietrich von Hildebrand on how the love of God deepens our love for the beauty found in Creation
In the house of Tom Bombadil — C. R. Wiley explores the mysterious, “allusive” figure of Tom Bombadil in J. R. R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings. (17 minutes)
Sneaking past watchful dragons — Junius Johnson describes how Hans Urs von Balthasar’s understanding of Creation resonates with that of C. S. Lewis and Bonaventure, all three of whom served as mentors in his thinking about beauty. (18 minutes)
Faith born of wonder — Theologian Andrew Davison echoes a theme in the work of G. K. Chesterton, describing the work of apologetics as awakening a sense of wonder in the reality of Creation as a beautiful gift. (23 minutes)
Why “Creation” is more than “origins” — In this archive interview from Volume 121 of the Journal, Michael Hanby talks about why we shouldn’t assume that science can ever be philosophically and theologically neutral. (32 minutes)
Creation, natural law, and ecological concerns — Christopher Thompson discusses our need to grow in wisdom and humility, that we might flourish in this ordered cosmos in which we live. (16 minutes)
St. Thomas and the wisdom of Creation — Christopher Thompson offers a renewed vision of “the human person [as] an embodied, spiritual creature dwelling in a cosmos of created natures, intelligently ordered by God and capable of being intelligibly grasped by human reason.” (16 minutes)
Hans Boersma on For the Life of the World — Drawing from Alexander Schmemann’s book, Hans Boersma asserts that a recovered understanding of the relationship between God and Creation is essential to addressing a host of modern cultural crises. (17 minutes)
Mars Hill Audio Journal, Volume 139 — FEATURED GUESTS:
W. Bradford Littlejohn, Simon Oliver, Matthew Levering, Esther Lightcap Meek, Paul Tyson, and David Fagerberg