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English Pages 102 Year 1982
THE GOD OF FORGIVENESS AND HEALING IN THE THEOLOGY OF KARL RAHNER J. Norman King University of Windsor
UNIVERSITY PRESS OF AMERICA
Copyright © 1982 by University Press of America, Inc. P.O. Box 19101. Washington, D.C. 20036
All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America ISBN (Perfect): 0-8191-2238-6 ISBN (Cloth): 0-8191-2237-8
T�eo \Qr�'\'
i b,ic rry
QLOC,Y S0-KX)L 0� T\-1� NT AT CLA,Rf;MO Co\ifc-rnio
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 81-40932
To my father and mother, George and Emma King
CONTENTS
INTRODUC TION PAR T A: l.
2. 3.
PAR T B:
l.
2. 3.
PAR T C: 1. 2.
l
TH E EXPERI ENC E OF GOD TH E EXPERI ENC E OF INFINI TE MYS T ERY MYS T ERY AS S ELF-B ES TOWIN G: GRAC E GOD AS B E TRAY ED AND FORGIVING: INI TIAL OV ERVI EW
18
TH E GOD B E TRAY ED BY SIN GUIL T AS FUNDAMENTAL OP TION A GAINS T GOD TH E EMBODIM ENT OF GUILT SUFFERING AS IN TRINSIC CONS EQUENC E OF GUIL T
25 36
TH E FORGIVING AND H EALING GOD FOR GIV EN ESS AND CONVERSION OF H EAR T TH E PROCESS OF H EALING
5
23
51
63 74 85
CONCLUSION
V
INTRODUC TION 4-or Kar 1 Rahner God is the inscrutable and holy mystery which we encounter in our deepest human experience. We touch upon God at the most pro found level o f our every human act. Yet we do so only implicitly, as we come into contact with the persons and things around us. This implicit experience o f God is the transcendental dimension o f our everyday experience. While usually remaining in the background, it breaks into the fore front o f our awareness most force fully in the crucial situations, events, and stages o f human li fe/ Among these Rahner mentions solitude, joy , anxiety, responsibility , love, death, gui 1t, truth, and beauty • /such occasions involve our entire sel f and con frori't us with the meaning o f li fe as a whole. ) It is in our re�ponse to them that we stake our whole sel f and shape the funda mental direction o f our li fe. These critical moments provide the basis for understanding what is meant by "God. " From a Christian viewpoint the divine reality mirrored through them shines forth most fully in Jesus o f Nazareth. In the light o f his person, li fe, death, and resurrection, we may portray this mystery as the nearness o f forgiving love. ! In the present study we shall explore one avenue o f this experience o f God: that o f fered by sin and guilt along with the hope o f overcoming them by for giveness and healing. 2 From this perspective God is viewed as that presence which a person ultimately be trays in violating his own or others' sacredness. God is also that presence towards which the guilty person ultimately reaches for a forgiveness and healing which 1
can only be received as gift. Where Rahner deals specifically with the experi ence of God he alludes only briefly to sin and for giveness and their particular contribution to our con
ceptualization of God.
Nor does Rahner fully develop
his treatment of God while discussing various aspects of guilt and its remission.
In this book we shall at
tempt to bring together these two themes of Rahner' s theology and thus to speak and healing.
of the God of forgiveness
Following Rahner' s
guidance
we
may
in
this way arrive at a richer understanding of the mys
tery to which the word "God" points,
an understanding
that is both grounded in experience and clarified by Christianity.
Perhaps too we may contribute a little
to the "mystagogy" or initiation into the experience
of God which Rahner regards as vital for the age in which we live.3 We
shall
begin
with
a
brief
presentation
Rahner's view of the experience of God.
of
Within this
context we shall then elaborate the avenue of this ex perience found in sin and in the forgiveness of sin.
2
NOTES 1Karl Rahner, "The Experience of God Today, " Theological Investigations 11 (London: Darton, Longman and Todd/New York : Seabury Press, 1974), 149165 ; Foundations of Christian Faith (New York : Sea bury Press, 1976), 2 4-43, 51-71, 448-45 9. Fifteen volumes of Rahn er's Theological Investigations (here a!'ter abbreviated as ..!..!) , have been published in Eng lish translation from 1961 to 1979. A brief statement of Rahn er' s basic vision is given in his summary expressions or "short formulas" of the essence of Christian belief. See "The Need for a ' Short Formula' of the Christian Faith, " TI 9, 117126; "Refleet ions on the Problems Involved in Devi sing a Short Formula of the Faith, " I.!. 11, 230-244. An excellent introduction to Rahner' s Foundations and to his overall thought is provided in Leo J. □ ' Donovan, ed., A World of Grace (New York : Seabury Press, 1980). Unless otherwise indicated, the work s of Karl Rahner.
all references are to
2 For a discussion of other avenues of the expe rience of God, see J. Norman King, "The Experience of God in the Theology of Karl Rahner, " Thought 53 (1978), 174-2 02 . A much more extensive and concrete presentation is given in J. Norman King, Experiencing Winston ys and Every � ( Minneapolis: God All Pr e s s , 19 8 2 •
w
5
3on the topic of "mystagogy, " see "Atheism and Implicit Christianity, " U 9, 15 8-160; "Theological Considerations on Secularization and Atheism, " TI 11, 182-184; "Possible Courses for the Theology of the Fu ture, " TI 13, 40-42 ; "Kirchliche und Ausserk irchliche Religiositat, " Schriften zur Theologie 12 (Zurich: Benziger, 1975 ), 5 93-5 96; Foundations, 5 7-61.
3
PART A:
THE EXPERIENCE OF GOD
THE EXPERIENCE OF INFINITE MYSTERY
1.
In his more recent writings, creasingly
stressed
the
flection.
Theology
must
ence,
Karl Rahner has in
importance
both personal and cultural,
speak
draw
of
human
experi
for theological re
upon,
interpret,
and
to modern man' s understanding of himself.
theologian is between
challenged to discover the connections
Christian
understanding,
person
ference.
to
theology
of
whether
doctrines
and
clearly.I
Here,
The
today
and
this
formulate
faces
k eenly
a
�heir
severe
feels
the
modern
self
correlation
challenge.
absence
The
of
God,
the absence evok es sorrow or apparent indif
nological
Nothing in a secular, world
seems
to
pluralistic,
speak
of
God.
and tech
The
world
fashioned by modern hands projects only our own very human
image,
painfully
and
finite
that and
image
is
mortal.
often Yet
for
palpably
and
Rahner,
the
experience of God is precisely the heart and center of doctrinal Christianity and finds therein its clearest 3 and most complete articulation. (Indeed, all reli gions
"consist in the conceptual reflection upon and
God, "
which
social
institutionalization they
Christian theology,
pointing way,
to
this
achieve
of
with
therefore,
basic
this
experience
varying
of 4 adequacy.)
has the urgent task of
experience
in a recognizable
within the context of contemporary life.
Theol
ogy must forge a genuine conceptualization and inter pretation
where
such understanding is lacking,
equate, or erroneous. 5
inad
In Rahner' s vision,
experience
of
man' s
the experience of God is the
radical
orientation
to
mystery.
This human transcendence,
as he terms it,
belongs to
"existentials."
it constitutes the very de
the very structure of man; it is one of his permanent finition
of
In fact,
the
human
This orientation is
human act.
It is,
being:
implicit
as it were,
in
openness and
to
mystery.
underlies every
the frame o-n which is
built and moulded the material of all other human ex perience of persons and things in the world.
Rahner
refers to the element which mak es possible and struc
tures all human experience as its � priori, dental dimension.
transcen
He designates the actual concrete
content of that experience as its � posteriori, his 5 torical dimension. The transcendental orientation
is most clearly discernable,
once again,
in the crit
ical aspects of human existence,
where the person is
cidating
look
most alive to his own spiritual depths. this
position,
let
sense of the absence of God.
us
To begin elu
at
the
modern
The failure to discover God may well result from
a loss of self through thoughtless immersion cares,
task s,
and affairs of everyday life.
in the
This ab
sorption may spring in its turn from an evasion of ul timate
questions,
meaning
to
or
human
from 6 life.
a
despair over any final
However,
the
failure
to
find God may be a step towards a more refined image of God.
A naive theism tends to portray God as one indi
vidual existent being alongside others within the to tality of the world,
a God whom one might come across
during his lifetime somewhat as one meets another per son or thing.
Many today may tacitly recognize that
neither in whole nor in part is the world to be iden tified with God,
that "no image of God can be carved
6
from the wood o f the world. 11 7 I f God is a reality, God must be more in the background, so to speak, im measurably more transcendent, awesome, and ine f fable. Moreover, the perception o f onesel f and every thing within one' s physical and social environment as finite precludes any facile discovery o f God. An a wareness o f the utter contingency o f all that one di rectly encounters and a re finement o f the concept o f God are complementary insights. Certainly, i f the wor 1 d is finite , it is not God . At the same time, Rahner maintains, modern man is acutely sensitive to this finiteness and su f fers because o f it. He is pained because he sees this finiteness in the light o f an in finity, and this in finity is the real goal o f all his strivings. 8 We see and measure every thing that is finite in the light o f an in finity, and we make every finite choice in view o f this in finity. This in finity is the nameless and holy mystery called God. We must brie fly expand this notion. While we are sometimes weighed down by the limits o f our existence, we may at other times be sustained by an unexpected peace or joy which seems to li ft us above these limits. Yet never does our li fe' s journey come to a final standstill. No amount o f knowledge or depth o f understanding puts an end to the questions o f our mind. No ob ject chosen or person loved provides a final stopping place for the longing o f our will. The outreach o f our thought and desire is limitless, ex What, i f any tending beyond any finite reality. 9 thing, is the infinity toward which we reach? Whence does our orientation arise? How may we interpret this thrust and the infinity it touches? The fragility, loneliness, contingency and death 7
life that
human
pervade
which
thi s
infinity may
be
age ,
love ,
meaning.
s p e cter
goodne s s ,
of
sugge sting But
dark nothingne s s.
a
there is al so enough truth ,
the
absurdity ,
and
futility
po s sible
IS
rai s e
do
life
inte grity cour
and joy to summon a bas ic tru st in life's The s e exp erience s sugge st that thi s infinity
may be the ultimate re ality. meaningfulne s s that piece s
to
life
as
together ,
We do y earn for a final
a whole ,
harmonize s ,
a meaningfulne s s
and trans cends
the individual fragments of meaning and absurdity. this longing is not in vain ,
all If
then th e my st erious in
finity is inde ed real , and is the ultimate reality b e yond all finit e objects of thought and d eci sion.
Th e
mystery out of which our hop e for meaning ari s e s and toward which
it r e ache s
The word "God"
de signate s
ground and terminus , 10 tru sting re spons e. it ,
is
what the
is
meant by
sourc e
and
person' s
actual ,
re spons e to thi s mystery consists
trusting
acceptance
scendent
orientation.
plicit ,
a
lived
of
and Thi s
re spons e
concepts or word s.
goal ,
which enabl e s and evok e s A
to
re spons e
may
is
if
the
s uch a implic
preci s ely in a
fidelity
that
"God."
thi s
tran
remain
im
not formulate d in
In Rahn er' s word s , it entail s "an
accepting , hoping openne s s to the total meaning of hu man
existence" ;
11
a
"radical
absolute uncontrollable love. 11 12 Thi s
orientation
transcendence ,
in the
to
the
s elf-commitm ent act of infinite ,
to
the
knowledge
and
or
limitl e s s
is the de epe st structural element ,
most ba sic existential of the human being.
the
It b e longs
to the very "heart" of man , a term which denote s , for Rahner ,
the one inmost dynamic cor e or c ent er of th e
13
person.
It is
a fundamental principle of Rahner' s
thought that the unity of a be ing precede s and grounds 8
its multiplicity or plurality.
Hence the heart is the
one source and original unity
of
the
whole person,
prior to any differentiation into various capacities and activities.
Yet the heart flows into these di
verse aspects and holds them together in a plural or many-dimensional unity. lect and will,
The heart unfolds into intel
into their corporeality af1d their ac
tivity in the world.
It does so in quest of the in
finite to which it is oriented.
This transcendence is
not self-initiated but already given with the dynamic core of the human person and situated at that core. One experiences this outreach, drawn
toward
the infinite,
therefore,
not only as
but also as arising from
and sustained by that very infinite.
In other words,
God may be grasped as that which is at once prior to our heart and beyond our transcendence. We do not experience and know this transcendence from the heart or its infinite term as an object di rectly before us.14 We immediately know and decide about the tangible world of things and persons acces sible to the senses.
The categories of our thought
and language refer primarily to the realities of this world.
At the same time,
as finite and limited, beyond their limits.
if we know these realities
we must somehow have glimpsed
We directly know the finite, but
we do so in the light of an infiniteness which we dis cern as a kind of background.
The infinite is like a
background horizon or screen against which everything is perceived.
Or it is like a light which illuminates
everything else and enables it to be seen,
but which
is not itself directly seen. The
distinction
between
what
is
directly
known
and the horizon or context within which it is known applies
to
all
our
knowledge.
9
There are also many
different horizons or contexts within which we receive our k nowledge. ample,
Each intellectual discipline,
for ex
approaches its subject matter with its own dis
tinct set of questions and its own distinct method. Our
own underlying
fears and
desires
also influence
the way in
which we look at events affecting our per
frames of
reference
sonal lives.
Our horizons are the angles of vision or according
and evaluate the facts,
to
which
situations,
we
interpret
occurrences,
sonal and societal bonds which mak e up our lives. Rahner,
the
final,
absolute
horizon
is
broader
and reveals the finiteness of all things. zon is therefore an infinite horizon.
per
For
than
This hori
It is only when
we perceive the finite objects of the world that we simultaneously discern the infinite horizon.
Yet
we
perceive these objects as finite only because we dis cern the infinite horizon.
Rahner describes our k now
ledge of the finite world,
expressible in concepts and
words,
as objective,
ical.
In contrast,
explicit,
thematic,
he terms our awareness of the in
finite horizon as non-objective,
and transcendental. Moreover,
it
is
whole being tends. ness
evok es
a
and categor
towards
implicit,
this
unthematic,
infinite
that
For if our experience of finite
sense
of
dissatisfaction
and
pleteness, then the fundamental thrust of our
incom
will and
desire must be towards what is more than finite. person
or
thing
we
our
directly
encounter
absorbs
No
the
breadth of our desire or fills the depth of our long
ing.
No finite
quest
and
reality fully answers to our
therefore
none
can
compel
our
inmost
response.
While our orientation to the infinite is not itself free, that
it is thus the basis of our freedom toward all 15 This orientation also impels us is finite.
10
to seek
the
finite choice
infinite in and through the world.
Any
will be made in view of the infinite and
will contain a stance toward the infinite.
A person
will express his response to the infinite mystery that envelops his mind and will through his concrete com
mitments,
decisions,
and actions,
and through the re
sultant direction of his life as a whole. Furthermore,
as noted earlier,
this transcendence
constitutes the very definition of man.
As a result,
the moral acts which either ratify or deny this tran scendence
will be
invariably either an acceptance or
rejection of who a human being really is, self.
of the true
There are thus only two real alternatives un
derlying and present to every free choice:
acceptance
or rejection of self and of the infinite goal of its
outreach.
Freedom is,
essentially the capacity to opt
totally and definitively for one of these two direc
tions,
and so to commit oneself completely and irrev
ocably.
This
idea
of
freedom
contrasts
with
the
endlessly revisable,
and
superficial notion that to be free is to be able to mak e a series of successive, arbitrary choices.16 person
A
may
express
a
negative,
rejecting op
tion by trying to mak e something categorical and fi
nite into an infinite: power,
or pleasure.
tradiction, nite is despair.
judge that
success,
But this attempt involves a con
and to pretend that what we grasp as fi
really A
by deifying wealth,
infinite can only finally issue into
person
life
may
indeed
is absurd,
step
into
that man' s
despair
and
pretension to
infinity touches upon no reality, but borders an abyss of nothingness. ing
use of
The positive alternative lies in mak
things
and responding to persons without
mak ing idols of them and thus closing oneself to the 11
seen and
infinite context in which they are
chosen.
In this case there remains an openness to the infinite a
and
trusting
that
hope
the
which
infinity
silent
surrounds us is the ultimate reality and the source
and goal of unconditional meaning.
Where such a pos
itive response emerges to the level of explicit, consciousness and expression,
full
it becomes total commit
ment in adoring love, in which one falls silent before the immense mystery.17 Hence, the experience of God is the experience of that nameless and holy mystery in the light of which we
k now
thing
or
person
any finite
which we mak e any particular choice.
and
in
view
of
It is the ob
lique experience of that towards which our whole being God is the ultimate point
tends from its very centre.
of reference of this limitless outreach,
yet God is
distinct from this outreach and sustains it from the The point of contact with the in
core of our being.
finite will be this core and outreach.
God is that
which we touch upon in our innermost depths and our
furthest aspirations. form
God which we
Every concept of
falls short
and fails to capture this original experience of mys tery,
for our concepts are fashioned from and immedi
ately apply only to what is accessible to the senses.
The holy mystery is glimpsed only as the back ground
illumination for,
have
and
and
decisions
we
persons,
things,
and
concrete
content
of
goal beyond, mak e
about
situations.
our
the k nowledge
particular
we
finite
Nevertheless,
the
experience
will
categorical
affect how we conceptualize this non-objective, tran 18 Mystery will be articu scendental experience. lated as the horizon that,
and
goal
particular experience.
12
of
this,
rather
than
To put it in more per-
sonalist,
if
anthropomorphic
terms,
summons of the infinite to the human will be borne by the thought forms, cent of the finite persons,
the
language,
cultures,
and
mind and will,
and ac
and environments
through which the infinite is mediated.
sponse,
speech
The human re
both in action and in word, will also be condi
tioned by these same factors. As we shall elaborate, that
the
encounter
with
Rahner comes to emphasize
the
infinite
is
especially
mediated through the permanent universal structures of man and the world,
and through the irreducible unique
ness of each person.
God is thereby seen as the un
derlying ground of the intrinsic worth of the human being.
the
God is similarly viewed as the final term of
summons
to
recognize and
respond to that worth,
both on the more intimate personal level and in wider social contexts.
truly,
fully,
In Christian terms,
the one who most
and definitively expresses and embodies
both call and response is the man Jesus Christ. From what has been said,
it follows that the cat
egorical experiences from which the concept of God may be most adequately derived will be experiences which concern
persons
rather
than
things,
and
those which
affect the deeper rather than the more surface levels
of one' s being.
They will be the experiences in which
persons are most radically and totally in touch with their own
innermost
depths
and furthest aspirations.
It is on the basis of such k ey experiences that the reality concrete,
designated
by the word "God" will tak e on a
existential meaning.
what was said at the outset:
We may repeat,
God is the mystery we
encounter in our deepest human experience,
most
depths
and
in
our
furthest
in our in
aspirations.
statement holds true in two senses:
13
then,
This
both insofar as
the
transcendental
infinite is
whatever;
the
experience
deepest
of
dimension
orientation of
all
to
the
experience
and insofar as the transcendent element e
merges most clearly and can be most fully expressed in terms of the deepest categorical experiences.
14
NOTES 1 "Theology and Anthropology," TI 9 2 8-45 · "The Second Vatican Counci1 ' s Challenge to T�;ology "' TI 9 3 -2 7; "Die Theologische Dimension der Fr age Nachde� Menschen," Schriften 12 , 3 87-406; See also Anne Carr "Theology and Experience in the Thought of Kari Rahner," Journal Qf Religion, 5 3 (1973) , 3 5 9-3 76. 2 on man' s experience of himself today, see "Christianity and the 'New Man' ," .I.l 5 , 13 5 -15 3 ; "The Man of Today and Religion," T I 6, 3-20; "The Experi ment with Man," .I.l 9, 2 05 -2 24; "Theological Consider ations on Secularization and Atheism," TI 11, 166-184; "Experience of Self and Experience of- God," T I 13, 12 2 -13 2 . 3 "The Experience of God Today," T I 11, 164f; "Thoughts on the Possibility of Be1ie f Today ," .I.l 5 , 3 -11,2 0-2 2 . 4"The Experience of God Today," .!..!. 11, 160. 5 "The Experience of God Today," T I 11, 15 2-160; "Theology and Anthropology," T I 9, 2 8� 3 3 f; Foundations, 14-2 3 , 2 4-43, 51-71. On Rahner' s theology of mystery, see, in addi tion, "The Concept of Mystery in Catholic Theology," .!..!. 4, 3 6-73 ; "Reflections on Methodology in Theology," T I 11, 101-114; "Mystery," Theological Dictionary Thereafter TD) (New York : Herder & Herder, 1965) , 3 00f; "Mystery," Encyclopedia Qf Theology, The Concise Seabury, Sacrament um Mundi, (hereafter ET) (New York : 1975) , 1000-1004; "Thomas Aquinas on the Incomprehen sibility of God," Journal Qf Religion, 5 8/Supplement (1978) , 5107-125. These considerations follow from and are rooted Spirit in the in Rahner ' s early foundational work s: Herder & Herder, World, trans. Wm. Dych (New York : Hearers of the Word, trans M. Richards (New 1968) Both works have been Herder & Herder, 1969) . York : For subject to s1 i ght revision by Johannes B . Metz. the changes made in the former book , see Andrew Rahner' s Karl Matter, Becoming: "Spirit, Tallon, (1�7�) ,_ 48 Schoolman Modern The World," the in Spirit _, 151-165 . A translation of much of the first ed1t1on of Hearers of the Word is found in Gerald McCool, ed., Seabury, 1975) , 1-65. A Rahner Reade:r(New York : 15
6 Foundations, 3 2f; "Thoughts on the Possibility of Belief Today, " .I_! 5 , 3 -9, On Prayer ( New York : Paulist Press, 1968), 7-19. 700 You Believe in God (New York : Paulist Press, 196� 70. On the inadequacy of such a naive form of theism, see "Science as a ' Confession' ?, " .I_! 3, 3 85 -400; "Observations on the Doctrine of God in Catholic Dogmatics, " .I_! 9, 131-13 3 , 13 7-144; Founda tions, 61-65. here:
Two explicit statements of Rahner merit quotation That God really does not exist who operates and functions as an individual existent a longside of other existents. (Foundations, 63 ). If we are not to miss God right from the outset, the question of God must on no ac count be put as a question about an individ ual existent within the perspective of our transcendence and historical experience, but only as a question concerning the very ground sustaining the ' question' which we ourselves 'are ', concerning the origin and future of this question. ( "Observations on the Doctrine of God in Catholic Dogmatics, " .I.! 9, 139).
143 .
8 11 Christianity
and
the
'New
Man', "
TI
5,
140-
v.
9christian at the Crossroads, trans. Green Seabury, 1975 ), 11-20; On Prayer, 31-44.
(New York :
l O "Thoughts o n the Possibility .of Be lief Today, " .!..!. 5 , 3-11, 2 0-2 2 ; "On the Theology of Hope, " I.!. 10, 245 -2 51; "Die Menschliche Sinnfrage var dem Ab soluten Geheimnis Gottes, " Schriften 13, 111-12 8. ll 11 Marxist Utopia and the Christian Future of Man, " ..!l 6, 65 . In Christian at the Crossroads, Rahner speak s in similar terms of hope in an "ultimate meaning" that is "both definitive and blessed, " and of an "ultimate and basic confidence in the total and all-embracing meaning of existence." (2 2). 12 11 0n the Theology of Hope, " 16
D
10, 2 51.
13 on the concept of heart in Rahner' s theology, as well as the notion of a plural unity, see "' Behold This Heart!' ; Preliminaries to a Theology of Devotion to the Sacred Heart, " .!.l 3 , 3 2 1-3 3 0; "The Theology of the Symbol, " .!.l 4, 2 2 1-2 5 2; "The Theological Meaning of Devotion to the Sacred Heart, " .!.l 8, 2 17-2 2 8; "Un ity - Love - Mystery, " .!.l 8, 2 2 9-2 47. The philosophical basis of this view is discussed in greater detail in Spirit !_Q the World, 2 37-2 90. The dynamic orientation of man from the core of his being is also explored in Rahner' s writings on the topic of evolution: Hominisation, trans. W. T. O ' Hara (Freiburg: Herder/Montreal: Palm, 1965 ); "Christ o 1ogy within a n Evo 1ut iona ry W or 1d Vie w, •� T I 5 , 15 7192 ; "The Unity of Spirit and Matter in theChristian Understanding of the Faith, " TI 6, 15 3-177; "The Se cret of Life, " .!.l 6, 141-15 2 ; "Evolution, " ET, 478-488. 14on what follows, see the references to Rahner' s theology of mystery and also to his founda tional work s in note 5 above, as well as "Science as a ' Confession' ?, " T I 3 , 3 85 -400. A short precis of Rahner ' s perspective may be found in Joseph Donceel, "Rahner' s Argument for God, " America, 12 3, 340-3 42 ; and Gerald McCool, "Rahner' s Anthropology, " America
123, 342-344.
15 In addition to the above references, see spe cifically on freedom "Theology of Freedom, " .!..!.. 6, 178196; Grace in Freedom (London: Burns & Oates/New York : Herder& Herder, 1969), 203-264. l6 11 Theology of Freedom, " dations, 3 5 -3 9, 93 -102.
.!.l
6,
183 -187;
Faun-
17 Hearers of the Word, "The Concept of 3 3f; Mystery in CathoTic Theology, " .!..!.. 4, 5 2 -5 4, 61; "The Experience of God Today, " .!.l 1 1, 162 f. 18 Foundations, 5 8-60; Today, " l!. 1 1, 15 7-15 9, 16lf.
17
"The
Experience
of
God
2.
MYST ERY AS S E L F BESTO WIN G :
Before
healing,
we
theology
of
tial. 11
turning shall
the
briefly
grace
Man's
1
to
and
God
of
forgiveness
consider
the
GRA CE Rahner's
"supernatural
transcendence
from
the
and
unique
existen
heart,
he
holds, contains within itself the hope of nearness to and union
with
the
force which the itself . .
infinite
mystery.
"This dynamic
spiritual subject experiences
with in
. includes within itself the powerful hope
of achieving a state of ultimate proximity and immedi acy to
goal. 11
that
2
There
is
an inner tendency
hope that ones deepest longing
to
(however implicit) is
not futile, but that a more immediate encounter with its infinite goal, in k nowing and loving, is possi ble.
Since this hope reaches beyond the finite, it is necessarily a reaching for what is beyond one's capac
ity.
It is a reaching to receive, an openness for a
gift ;
it
is
a
one's grasp.
receptivity
for
a
completion
beyond
In addition, this dynamism is always al
ready present, and experienced as initiated and sus tained
by
it s
goal.
The
tendency
to
trusting
out
reach, therefore, contains the assurance that the gift indeed
has
been
offered.
The
very
presence
of
hope itself attests to the actuality of the gift.
the
The
experience of the infinite is thus the experience that what one reaches for is already given, in one's heart and in one's
hope.
A freely given gift, present at
one's inmost core, connotes a bestowing love which is near.
Hence, one does not merely experience the in
finite as a distant horizon mak ing possible our k now ledge of the world, nor as a remote term far off be
yond
the
finite
freedom deals.
persons Rather,
and this 18
things nameless
with and
which holy
our mys-
t ery , w h i c h g r o u n d s a l l t r uth a nd v a l ue , i s an i n e ffab l e nearness and can be described i n terms of love . 3 Ac c o r d i n g t o · R a h n e r , t h i s e x p e r i e n c e c o r r e s p o n d s e x a c t l y ( i n a m u t u a l l y i l l u m i n a t i n g w a y ) t o t h e v e ry e s s e n c e o f Ch r i s t i a n i t y . I n fa c t , e x p l i c i t Ch r i s tianity enabl e s u s to d i fferent iat e the element s o f thi s experience more c learly . T h e centra l tenet o f Ch r i s t i a n i t y i s t h e s e l f -b e s t o w a l o f G o d a s t h e n e a r ness of forg i v i ng l o ve . Th i s c o n v i c t i on l i es behind the doctrines of the Trinity and the Incarnation . The a b s o l u t e m y s t e r y ( F a t h e r ) b e s t o w s i t s e l f i mm e d i a t e l y i n a fr e e a c t o f l o v e c o n f e r r i n g f o r g i v e n e s s , h e a l i n g , a n d f u l n e s s o f l i f e . T h i s s e l f- b e s t o w a l e x t en d s i n t o t h e mo s t i n t e r i o r doma i n o f the human perso n , the core ( S p i r i t ) , a n d i n t o t h e d o m a i n o f h u m an h i s t o ry ( I n c a r n a t i o n ) . That which i s absolutely transcenden t t o man ( F a t h e r ) h a s fr e e l y b e c o m e t h a t w h i c h i s m o s t i m m a n e n t ( Spirit ) . Th i s presenc e w i t h i n of t o t a l o thernes s i s ma n i f e s t h i s t o r i c a l l y i n t h e m a n Je s u s , t h e i n c a r n a t e Log o s . W i t h i n t h e h e a rt of man is the l o v i ng nearnes s o f t h e t o t a l l y o t h e r , t r a n s c e n d e n t m y s t e ry , w h i c h l s a l s o e m b o d i e d i n Ch r i s t . 4 T h i s s e l f- b e s t o w a l o f G o d i s t h e o r i g i n a l a n d b a s i c meani ng of grac e . I t s p r i n g s fr o m w h a t Ra h n e r c a l l s t h e u n i v e r s a l s a l v i f i c w i l l o f G o d , 5 t h e fr e e l y g i v e n v o c a t i o n t o i n t i m a c y with G o d . Th i s u n m e r i t e d g r a c e a f f ec t s t h e v e r y t r a n s c e n d e n c e o f t h e h u m a n b e i n g , t h e o r i e n t a t i o n t o m y s t e ry , a n d t h e r e b y l e a v e s i t s i m pr i n t u p o n w h a t i s d e e p e s t i n t h e p e r son . The mo s t pro found truth abou t t h e a c t u a l human be i ng in t he c oncret e , d e facto graced o r d er , is t h e o r i e n t a t i o n t o t h e n e a r n e s s o f t h e s e l f -b e s t o w i ng m y s t ery . " Th e c apac i t y for . • • the l ong ing for . . . 19
the
orientation
personal of
man
to
.
.
the God of self-bestowing
l ove is the central
as
he
real l y
is .
11
and abiding " In
6
existential
this sel f-bestowal,
God, while remaining the absolute transcendent, thel ess becomes the innermost principle,
never
the innermost
basis, and in the truest sense the goal of 'spiritual' creation.
11 7
The
deepest
human
graced transcendence,
intimacy
with
the
experience,
therefore,
is
the orientation and vocation to
triune God .
In
experiencing
this
transcendence (in and through categorical experience), a person lik ewise experiences its origin and goal , gracious
God
a$
absol utely
near .
Onl y
with the aid of expl icit Christianity,
to differentiate within
the
transcendental gions,
expl icit stage the
"natural " and "graced" elements 8 This transcendental experience .
experience
incl uding
is
the
awareness
and
Christianity .
of
subsequentl y
does one come
the
global
the
Judaeo-Christian tradition,
heart of
It
is
all
brought
reli
to an
sel f-realization
in
which is regarded
as
the history of sal vation in its narrower rather than more
universal
sense .
In
doctrinal
and
liturgical
Christianity this transcendental experience is grasped as interior grace made definitivel y manifest and vic
torious in history with Christ . 9
Yet Rahner insists that Christianity is precisely an
articulation
mystery .
of
the
transcendental
experience
of
Christianity is the articul ation of the ex
perience of a profound longing, sustained by a gratui tousl y bestowed hope .
It is the experience of a gift
which enables and a call which summons to a hope for a meaning and
compl etion
which
exceed
our
grasp .
unfathomabl e and hol y mystery which we touch our
hope,
the
mystery
conferring 20
and
The
upon in
evok ing
that
h o p e , i s w h a t i s m e an t b y t h e t e r m " Go d . "
21
NOT ES lon Rahner' s theology of grace, s ee es pecially "Concerning Relations hip between Nature and the Grace," TI 1, 2 97-3 17; "The Scholas tic Concept of Un created Grace," TI 1, 3 19-3 46 ; "Reflections on the E x perience of Grace, " T I 3 , 8 6-9 0 ; "Nature and Gr ace, " TI 4, 16 5 - 188; "His tory of the World and Salvation His tory," l! 5 , 97-1 14; "Obs ervations on the Concept of Revelation," in K. Rahner and J . Ratzinger, Revela tion and Tradition, ( New York : Herder & Herder, 196 6 ),9- 2 5 ; "The Exis tential," E T, 492 f; "Grace," E T, 5 87-6 01; Foundations , 1 16 -13 7. See als o William C. Shepherd, Man' s Condition: God and the World Proces s , ( New York : Herder & Herder, 196 9). - 2 " The E xperience of God Today," l! 1 1, 15 3 . 3 11 Thoughts on the Theology of Chris tmas ," T I 3 , 24-3 4; "The Concept of Mys tery in Catholic Theology," TI 4, 5 4-5 6 ; "Immanent and Trans cendent Cons ummation of the World," .!l 10, 2 79-2 82 ; Foundations , 13lf. 4 In addition to the "Short Formula of Faith" articles cited in the Introduction, note 1, s ee als o "The Concept of Mys tery in Catholic Theology," T I 4, 6 4-73 ; "Reflections on Methodology in Theology,.. - TI 11, 103 -11 1; "The E s s ence of Chris tianity," E T, 196 199; Chris tian at the Cros s roads , 3 1-3 6 . 5 11 Univers al Salvifie Will," E T, 1499-15 04. 6 "Concerning the and Grace," .!l 1, 3 12f. 7 11 Immanent and World," .!l 10, 2 83.
Relations hip
Trans cendent
between
Cons ummation
Nature of
the
8 11 The E xperience of God Today," T I 1 1, 15 4; "Obs ervations on the Doctrine of God in Cat holic Dog matics ," .!l 9, 13 1f; Foundations , 129-13 3 . 9 11 Reflections o n Methodology i n Theology," 11, 91-101; s ee als o Foundations , 13 8-175.
22
TI
3.
GOD AS BETRAYED A ND FORGIVING :
INITIAL OVERVIEW
Within this perspective of the experience of God, we shall explore the fundamental experience of sin and guilt
overcome
light
of
by
the
forgiveness
preceding
and
healing.
discussion,
we
may
In
the
already
sketch a brief outline concept � God jects.
is God
scendent trayed
that is
yet
by
a
which--or
experienced
utterly
whom--sin ultimately as
immanent
re
the infinitely tran mystery
which
is
be
negative free act of the human person.
This rejection occurs through a inmost essence, takes
place
moral
d e man d,
one ' s true self.
through
the
The negation itself
deliberate
violation
of
a
d eman d imposed
primarily by the in
trinsic worth of human persons,
both individually and
in
social
a
denial of one ' s own
contexts.
In
brief,
Go d
is
that
tran
scendent presence at the core of our being which in sinning we ultimately reject through denying our own inmost self an d violating other persons in the con crete deeds an d tenor of our life. Conversely, following upon the experience of this betrayal an d out
for
a
its consequences, forgiveness,
we may come to reach
healing
and
reconciliation.
That toward which our aspiration ultimately reaches is what is m eant by " God. "
God
is the one who enables
and sum mons to a hope for forgiveness in our heart, for a healing which repairs and makes whole our inner brokenness, our
an d
damaged and
for
a
reconciliation which
restores
distorted social bonds an d relation
ships. God is thus the mystery of love which is at once offend ed by,
yet forgiving of our sin, 23
at once prior
to a nd beyond our wrongnes s .
God
is
thus
to be un
ders tood within the very experience of guilt:
ly,
as
tha t whom s in betra ys ,
a nd s o a s
whom we a re ultima tely res pons ible ; tha t
towa rd
whom
we
our being.
as
hea ling in a ll dimens ions
of
for
a
forgivenes s
We proceed now to explore a nd
ceptua liza tion
of
God
After a few words
tha t before
a nd s econdly,
rea ch
core of our being a nd a
firs t
a fforded
by
develop this
a t the
the con
experience.
to cla rify the terms s in a nd guilt
a nd s ituate them in a context, we s ha ll focus upon the theologica l notion of guilt a s
the core of one' s a ctions
fering
contra ry
as
its
being,
to
funda menta l option a t
cons ider its
huma n dignity,
intrins ic
a nd
cons equence.
s ha ll then turn to the proces s
embodiment in exa mine s uf
(Pa rt
B) .
of forgivenes s ,
We
firs t
cons idering the pos s ibility a nd na ture of contrition a nd convers ion from the hea rt, a nd next look ing a t its
embodiment in a ctions which hea l the pers on a nd extend the proces s of reconcilia tion to his interpers ona l a nd s ocia l environment.
(Pa rt C) .
On this ba s is ,
we hope
to deepen our unders ta nding of the God dis clos ed
in
the crucia l huma n experience of guilt a nd forgivenes s .
24
PAR T B :
1.
G U I L T AS FUNDAMENT A L O PTION AGAINST GOD
Rahner guilt, 1 way.
T H E GOD BE TRAYED B Y S I N
and
often does
Guilt
interchanges not
always
( Schuld )
which goes counter
to
use
the
terms
them
in
sin a
and
unifo rm
refers
chiefly to a free act a mor al value. It is viewed
p r imarily as an act : an act which flows from conscious freedom and for
which a person is therefo re
respon
sible, and an act wh ich is ex p ressive of a moral dis value.
act.
In short,
it is a free,
responsible, culpable
Sin ( Sunde ) denotes this same act insofar as it
is a free decision which ultimately goes against the ground
and
term
of
man ' s
tr anscendence,
and is ex
p ressed in the violation of a moral demand.
In tradi
tional language,
( the will
of ) and
God.
sin is an offence against
The notion of guilt emphasizes the freedom
responsibility
b rings out
of
the
act ;
the
notion
of
sin
its affront to the infinite mystery.
In
its deepest theological sense, guilt is defined as : a free no to God which basically amounts to destroying the relationshi p of man to him self, to his fellow man, and to the things of the wo rld . ( which ) strives in isolation to its own finality and ir revocability. 2 Hence, the theological meaning of guilt coincides with that of sin .
Both terms may likewise designate not
only the initial free culpable act,
but also the re
sultant state of enduring o p position or contr adiction to God, self, othe r s.
Since Rahner himself ex hibits a
slight p r eference for the term guilt, we shall follow his usage. The specifically theological concept of guilt at 25
once presupposes, dif fers from, and re fines the every day, legal, and psychological notions. 3 This is in keeping with Rahn er' s view that theology, following revelation, does not make statements about a realm totally outside human experience. Rather, theology clari fies and judges the concrete world in which man lives out his existence. It provides a fuller context and more pro found meaning for the concepts by which he interprets that existence. In the socio-political sphere, guilt re fers, widely, to any breach o f accepted customs, mores, laws or conventions. More narrowly, it denotes an external action contrary to the penal laws o f a society. In the case o f a verdict o f culpability, the civil judge ment or sentence assumes or attempts to establish that the culprit was free and responsible for his actions. Hence, both action contrary to civil order and free responsibility are essential constituents in the legal instance o f guilt. A theological interpretation would further insist that the civic transgression is a mor ally wrong action only i f it does actually run counter to the dignity o f the human person, and does not mere ly disobey an un just law. 5 The re quirement o f freedom as a condition for liability points, beyond objective wrongness, to a more internal sphere o f guilt. This sphere is sus ceptible in some degree to psychological analysis. Bes ides the limits imposed by the very structures o f human nature, there is the pervasive conditioning ex ercised by further physiological, psychological and sociological factors. These include genetic and hereditary factors, natural endowments, characteristics of upbringing, social milieu, public opinion, coercive social pressures, and the like. 26
The s e
influenc e s
p sychic
mak e -up .
fr e e dom
and
p enetrate
The y
provide
limit
the
far
and
into s hape
context
for
a
p e r son' s
hi s
its
or
he r
exe rci s e .
Whe r e they ar e ne gativ e , they can inflict such ps ychic pain and illne s s as to impel a pe r son towa rd wrong ac tions
with
physically
ha rmful effects . ne s s , and
and
s ocially
Inn e r conflict ,
suffe ring ,
which may lead to be havior othe r s ,
guilt .
compr i s e
H enc e ,
or in part ,
the
di sturbing
and
and ill-
de s tructiv e to s elf
ps ychological
s ens e
of
morally wrong actions may b e , in whole
the unfr e e r e sult of such influenc e s , and
the r efo r e not culpabl e . 6 Rahne r
maintains ,
plo r ed by the
s ocial
howeve r , s ci ence s
that doe s
the
r ealm
ex
not penetrate to
the inne rmost co r e of the pe r s on , the one root centr e of awar ene s s and f r e edom . 7 Th e s e di scipline s deal with levels exte rio r to that cor e . outwar d
l ev e ls
as
acce s sible
Rahne r s e e s the s e
both
to
influence s
brought to b e a r from without and also to the imprint of fr e e
d e ci sion from th e inn e r
conflict and exte rnal one's
suff e ring may
influence s ,
mili eu .
from
cor e
inde ed oth e r
They may als o b e
its elf .
Inne r
spring from undue pe r s ons ,
the
and
from
cons e quence and
expr e s sion of a fr e e and r e s ponsibl e p e r s onal act ,
a
r e sult of guilt in the theological s ens e . C e rtainly , the impact upon fr e edom of facto r s un cove r ed by the
s ocial
s cience s
is
pe r haps
far - r eaching than pr e viously imagined . too ,
much mo r e
If w e ob s e r ve ,
the s e emingly s ens ele s s prodigality , fe rocity and
te r rible catastrophe s of the natural world , a s well a s t h e ignoranc e ,
cruelty ,
viole nc e ,
ro r o f so much of human hi sto ry ,
slaughte r , w e may be
and ho r utte rly
ove rwhelm ed by
the
existenc e .
may well be inclined to hold that the
We
mi s e ry and appa rent absurdity of
27
guilt of human beings, of inner
conflict ,
whether of wrongful action or
is something unfree.
This guilt
appears to be t he expression of man as victim ra ther t han as aut hor of his own life. a Yet, i f t he human psyche and behavior are totally determined,
t he human person is reduced to the level
of a mere animal and any special dignity is negat ed. This dignity is inseparable from human freedom, t he orien tat ion of t hat freedom to
t he infinit e,
from its capacity for commit ment,
choice,
To protest against
t he
history as an affron t
from and
and love.
"monst rousness" of nature and to human worth is in fact
to
protest against factors which limit and negate human freedom and in t hat way deny human dignity.
Unless we
are to discount man as a distinctly human and personal being, we must allow for t he possibility of a negative as well as a positive free act at t he very core of t he person.
Such guilt would, of course, find expression
in an inner state of suffering and/or wrong outward 9 act ions. Since t he core is orien ted t oward t hat which is called God, guilt in its deepest sense is a violation of t his orient ation and of t he God t owards which
it
tends.
This
is
the
t heological
sense
of
guilt. Wit hin
this contex t ,
we shall now consider
the
theological sense of guilt , first in its core act , and then in its embodiment and consequences. is guilt in the transcendent al sense, categorical
expression.
Since
t he
The former
t he lat ter its
t ranscendent al
reflexively grasped through t he cat egorical,
is
we shall
confine ourselves here to a basic perspective on guilt as a free act at t he core of one ' s being.
More con
cret eness and detail will emerge in examining t he cat e gorical expression of guilt . 28
As previously stated, fre edom, for Rahner, con c erns most basically man' s fundamental disposition o f hims e l f as ori ented to absolute mystery , not only as d istant horizon but also as nearness o f forgiving love . Y et this s el f-disposition occurs in and through moral choices regarding the persons and things o f on e's physical and cultural environment . Such fr e edom implies accountability for s el f, s e eks an obj ect o f commitment, and has a gi ft character . Th es e aspects h elp to clari fy the m eaning o f guilt and th e God i t be trays . I f human beings ar e fr e e, th ey ar e accountable for what they do . In situations where on e ' s fre edom is most d e eply involved, one becomes more fully awar e, if only implicitly, that this fre edom and responsibil ity do not just concern this or that d ecision or ac tion tak en in isolation, but on e's whole s elf . Such an occasion may occur, for example, when an individual und erstands a particular action as being uncondition ally d emand ed o f him, or s e es a d ecision as having crucial importance and a lasting validity, or as d e termining th e shape and dir ection o f his entir e li fe . In experi encing such accountability for his very s elf, the person experi ences implicitly its ultimate reason or ground and that b e fore which h e is finally respon s ibl e . H e exp eri ences what is m eant by "God . 11 1 0 Inso far as fre edom concerns on e ' s very s el f, it can b e r egard ed as the capacity for th e total and ir r evocable gi ft o f ones el f from the heart, that is, the capacity for love . In th e final analysis, responsible fre edom concerns the qu estion o f that to which or to whom on e can and should so commit on es el f . That ul timate valu e which is worth th e staking o f on e ' s en tire li fe, and which summons th e total gi ft o f s elf 29
also indicat es what is m ean t by " God . " ll Freedom is also e x perienced as gift , and e mpowered by in t he
its absolute
horizon, "
mysterious ground and goal
countability freedom
as
and
of
self-commit ment .
gif t,
one
also
In
" borne
as roo t ed
t his
fre e
ac
e x periencing
e xpe riences
ground or source of t his gift,
as
12
the
ultimate
and indeed of oneself
as a free being endowed with an intrinsic wort h .
This,
too, denotes " God . " Thus t hat
fro m which we flow as fre e be ings of
innate dignity, accountable
that
for
our
before
which we
whole
se lves,
are
and
ul timately
that
toward
which we are drawn to reach and confide ourselves en tirely, is what is designated by the t erm " God . " This, once
again,
is
the
infinit e ,
se lf-bestowing
mystery
which "speaks " t hrough t he concre te moral de mand of a particular categorical situat ion .
Our answer t o t his
de mand like wise e x pre sses our response t o the myst ery . As a ne gative act of freedom, guil t , at its de e p es t,
t ranscendental le v el,
that
in
finit e, self-bestowing mystery from which we flow
as
precious gift,
is a re fusal of
before which we s tand accoun table , and
toward which our whole being t ends and is sum m oned to fre ely respond . t he
shirking
call,
Such guilt is t he spurning of a gift ,
of accountabilit y,
the
the se t t ing aside of a goal .
dismissal
of
a
I t is a reject ion
of self in its graced transcendence and a reject ion of the infinite myst ery which is the source and goal of self .
Guilt is " t he total and definitive decision of
man against God . in
the
will
de pth of
take
shape
.
. which man can inde ed e x perience 1 his conscience . " 3 This ac t , t oo, in
the
contravention
moral de mand . 30
of
a
concre t e
As a refusal of the self-bestowing infinite on to which one ' s transcendence opens, guilt entails a stop ping short of that infinite.
It is a placing of one
self or of something else that is finite as the stop 14 This is a setting up ping point of one ' s freedom • of " idols . • on the altar of one ' s heart " , 1 5 an attempt to finite.
make a finite reality into something in
At
served,
the
same time,
as
we
have already
ob
this finite object remains something seen and
chosen
in
terms
of
the
infinite
horizon.
will
It
still be somehow grasped as finite and experienced as failing to fulfill one ' s yearning. The
guilty
person
thereby
chooses
a
falsehood
which leads to disappointment and despair, im prisons himself within the confining loneliness of the finite, and
refuses
that
openness
to
the
true
infinite
which his whole being tends from its centre. doing,
whatever
ences
a
sense
of
self.
the
concrete
violation of himself betraying
betrayal of an
he
and
concomitant
has
much
a
vaster
however obscure,
infinite presence,
Rahner
more
an
experi
than
him
of personal
infinite near
ness.
When
( which
he
tions ) ,
he speaks of man ' s culpable desire to be God
finds
uses
In so
expression,
something
He has a sense,
to
congenial
personal
with
certain
terminology qualifica
and to emancipate himself from the will of God who al ways wants man to be open to the infinite.
The sinner
thereby engages in a rejection of the free, love of God. 1 6
personal
Rahner insists that if the core act of guilt is to be free, be
no
it must somehow be conscious.
unconscious,
involuntary
guilt.
There can Only
where
someone sins knowingly against God can there be guilt in
the
theological
sense.
31
This,
of
course,
in
Rahner' s theological anthropology,
non-objective,
can be an implicit,
t ranscendental awareness and
decisio n.
It need not tak e the form of an objective reflexive a
wareness of saying no to God conceived explicitly in categorical terms.
We k now but can never fully ob
jectify what is in our heart.
Our
freedom as
total
self-disposition before God is transcendentally expe
rienced.
It is not an individually experienced datum
alongside other objects,
but is interior to and under lies all such experience.17 The transcendental act of freedom at the core of
one' s being does,
however,
terior
actions
and
outer
express itself in the in
of
the
person
physical surroundings and social milieu.
is
also
person.
susceptible Hence,
to
influences
from
and
in
his
outside
the
This sphere
every expression of the ori ginal act
of freedom remains not only an incomplete objectifica
tion but also an ambiguous one.
As a result,
a person
can never k now with absolute reflexive certainty his 18 Moreover, besides be or her core act of freedom. ing given little or no conceptualization,
such
guilt
before God can also be forgotten, dissimulated, excus
ed,
or suppressed.
moral
blindness
as
Rahner regards self-deception and consequences
of
free
guilt.
goes so far as to say that guilt can really
be
He
ac
k nowledged only where there is an awareness of its be
ing disarmed by forgiveness. trayal
of
self,
others,
Otherwise,
the utter be
and ultimately
the inf inite mystery would be too devastating to contemplate.19 When a person does find in himself the capacity to be honest with himself,
to let fall his illusions,
to admit his possible personal guilt,
to fully assume
responsibility for himself, and to do so without fall ing
into
despair,
he
experiences 32
this
response
as
something he has been enabled to make, as gift.
That
from which this gift comes to him is what is meant by " God " .
Fro m this standpoint,
God may be conceived as
that which sounds, unveils, and judges what is in the heart of man.
As we shall explain below, this disclo
sure is precisely in view o f fo rgiveness. In more guarded language,
one may say that the
reco gnition o f theological guilt as a personal possi b ility or actuality implies the experience of a tran scendent source which makes possible this recognition and simultaneously gro unds the hope f or forgiveness. God is that infinite presence within which man ' s guilt is encompassed,
transcended and f o rgiven.
The human
experience that what is at the core of one ' s being is at o nce known,
weighed,
the experience of God. ceptualized,
God
will
and,
if guilty,
forgiven,
H owever God comes to
be con
be experienced as an infinite
nearness which precedes and grounds one ' s freedo m, vo kes
its
total
is
c ommitment,
and
e
yet transcends and
f orgives its most destructive use. In order t o clarify and expand these notions, we must now lo o k more closely at · the catego rical emb odi ment of guilt, the fundamental o ption against God .
33
N OT E S l For Rahn er ' s use of the terms " sin " and "guilt, " see especially " Guilt and Its Remission : The Borderland between Theology and Psychology, " .ll 2, 2 6 5- 2 6 7 ; " Does Traditional Theology Represent Guilt as Innocuous as a Factor in Human Life?, " T I 1 3, 1 3 6f ; Spiritual Exercises, trans. Kenneth Baker ( New York : Herder & Herder, 1 9 6 5 ) , 34-4 2 ; Meditations .Q.!J. the Sa craments ( New York : Seabury, 1 9 7 7) , 4 2-4 8, " Guilt, " TD, 1 9 8 ; " Sin, " TD, 4 3 6f. 2 Meditations on the Sacraments, 4 2. Note also the definition presented in " Guilt - Responsibility Punishment, " .ll 6, 2 1 0, which may be cited here : Guilt regarded theologically is primarily in its most essential ground the total and de finitive decision of man against God, the self-understanding of the subject in the ' no ' against his supporting ground, and this vis-a-vis the horizon within which it is ac complished in ' yes ' or ' no ' ; guilt in this sense is theological and metaphysical sui cide, but one which does not thereby allow the subject to escape from itself into no thingness. 1 9 7f.
3 11 Guilt
-
Responsibility
-
Punishment, "
TI
6,
4 11 Revelation" is here understood both in the transcendental sense, as the graced horizon in the light and view of which man conceives of and decides about the persons and things of the world ; and in the categorical sense, as the authentic articulation of this self-bestowing source and term in explicit doc trinal, liturgical, and institutional Christianity. On this twofold sense of revelation, see Revelation and Tradition, 9-2 5. 5 11 Guilt - Responsibility Punishment, " T I 6, 21 1 - 2 14 ; " The Dignity and Freedom of Man, " I..!. 2 ,--2 3 526 3, esp. 2 5 5- 2 5 8. 6 11 Gui lt and Its Remission, " T I 2, 2 6 5- 2 6 7, 2 7 22 7 8 ; " Does Traditional Theology Represent Guilt as In nocuous as a Factor in Human Life? , " T I 1 3, 1 3 7 - 1 3 9 ; Meditations on the Sacraments, 44 -4 7; Foundations, 26- 31 . 34
7 11 Guilt and Its Remission, " Prayer, 2 5 -28; Foundations, 2 8-31.
TI
2,
277;
On
8Foundations, 91f; Meditations on the Sacraments, 45 . A particularly vivid portrayal or-the neg ative elements which strew the course of nature and human history is found in "Unity - Love - Mystery, " .!.!_ 8, 236-2 40. 9Meditations on the Sacraments, 42f; "The Dig nity and Freedom ofM a� .!.!.. 2 , 2 5 4f; Foundations, 9lf. 10 "The Man of Today and Religion, " T I 6, 14f; ,- 2 01-2 04; "Guilt - Responsibility - Punishment, " l!. 6Tl 9, 15 5 -15 7. "Atheism and Implicit Christianity", See also "Theology of Freedom, " l!. 6, 178-190; Foundations, 35 -39; 93-102. ll r bid. 12 11 Theology of Freedom, " .!.!. 6, 193. 210.
13 11 Guilt - Responsibility - Punishment, " .!.!. 6, See also Meditations on the Sacraments, 42 -44.
14 Hearers of the Word, 33f; mission, " l!. 2 , 269-271 �4f. 15 11 The Scandal of Death, "
ll
"Gul lt and
Its Re-
7, 142 .
l6 11 Guilt and Its Remission, " T I 2 ,
270,
279.
17 11 Guilt and Its Remission, " .!.!. 2 , 2 67, 275 Punishment, " T I 6, 2 78; "Guilt Responsibility 211-214; Foundations, 96f, 184f. 18 Ibid. 19Foundations, 93; "Guilt Responsibility Punishment, " .!..!. 6, 210f; "Guilt and Its Remission, " TI 2, 2 66f; On Prayer, 93-97.
35
T H E EMBODIMENT OF GU I L T
2. The
core
of
spiritual -personal
the
person,
nucl eus,
in
its
origina l
unfolds itself in a p l u
rality of powers and acts in the wor l d in order to realize itse lf.
Man is a being in the wor ld who be
comes conscious of himse lf and decides about himsel f onl y by becoming conscious of and deciding about an object other than himse lf.
He comes to explicit sel f
possession in knowledge and
love
onl y
by ex pressing " On l y himself in what is other than his core self. 1 by passing out of the depths of his being into the world
can man enter
where
he
stands
into
before
the depths of the person 2 Consequentl y, man ' s God. 11
definitive sel f-disposition against body itsel f in a
material
and
God seeks to em
environment distinct,
yet unseparated from, the rea l spiritual centre of the person. The person himself,
in the l evels of his makeup
exterior to the originating semina l centre, is the in itial
environment upon which this fundamental
is impressed. mated
bodily
option
These levels incl ude one ' s who le ani reality,
with
its thoughts,
attitudes,
its who le psychic contents, as we l l as its physio logi cal constitution. act
spread
These objectifications of the core
outwardl y
into
actions
in
the
external
wor ld of persons and things, with its corporeal ity and
history.
( Everything
in this rea l m is,
for
Rahner,
connected with and united to the wor l d as a who le, a world which he sees as a differentiated unity. )
This
se lf-ex pression in the " otherness" of one ' s o u ter di mensions and of one ' s wor ld is the "symbo l " or " con stitutive sign " of the person ' s core and of its act. Hence,
it is in this
"intermediary real ity" 36
in which
the seminal person achieves himsel f that guilt is ex pressed and embodied . 3 The a bsolute d e finitive ' no ' o f the whole existence toward God takes place for re flex consciousness in per fectly determined con crete acts o f li fe. Sin takes place in sins. Sin does not take place in a merely transcen dental interiority o f the noumenal sub ject, but in the works o f the flesh which are obvi ous and tangible. 4 The question now arises as to which concrete acts o f li fe are constitutive signs or symbols em bodying a self-destructive revolt against the in finite presence, and as to how these acts might be determined . In treating this issue, we must keep in mind certain quali fications to which we shall later return. No em bodiment can fully contain or absorb the core act o f freedom and each em bodiment is also susceptible to un free in fluences from without. At the same time, once posited, the constitutive sign does become somewhat independent o f the originating act and may exert its in fluence even when that act is withdrawn. Even i f one regrets injuring another, for example, the damage Not in flicted may continue to handicap the victim. withstanding these reservations, the connatural sign o f guilt is an action which violates the ob jective moral d emand o f a particular categorical situation. This violation may occur in two way s, inso far as each o f us is at once a human being sharing a common nature with all others and an irreducea bly unique person dis tinct from all others. A concrete moral demand may a rise from a universal moral norm or from an individual moral imperative. For Rah ner, the nature o f a being comprises the permanent essential structures which precede and make possible the activity o f that being . For every na37
ture,
such structures have t heir own laws,
development, and limits.
modes ·of
The structures of the human
being are especially those features which enable con scious, free activit y .
These do not exhaustively de
fine a human being, who is more t han a mere example of t he species.
The human struct ures belong in each case
to
free
a
unique
through and upon limits.
Hence,
center,
them,
who
freely
acts
while remaining
in
within
and
t heir
Rahner distinguishes between t he com
mon elements and the unique center t o which they be long.
The
" person. 11
5
former
he calls
" na ture "
and
as
lat ter
" Man is na ture insofar as he has cert ain He is person
essential structures of his being. insofar
the
he
freely
disposes
of
himself
by
his
decision. 11 6 One might say t hat nature denotes the raw m a t eri al of man and person refers to t he sculpt or who freely While na-
works to shape and fashion t hat mat erial. ture is for the sake of the person,
t he free decision
of the person must respect the laws of his own nature, just as the sculptor must respect his materials.
The
decision of man at the core of his being should be in accordance with t he permanen t structures, or negate them.
not violat e
One form o f morally wrong act , there
fore, is an action which does violat e t hese structures. In Rahner ' s view, man
beings
are
the features com mon t o all hu
transcendental
elements
which
only
gradually and incompletely emerge in to reflexive con sciousness.
They do so as they find expression in a
given historical culture and com muni t y .
In an age in
which genet ic and social engineering are ga1 n 1 ng pro m inence,
t he differen tiat ion of t he permanent from t he
hist orically
contingen t
Perhaps less belongs
in
man
is far
frp m
obvious.
t o the underlying human essence 38
Elements o f this perma than previously thought . 7 nent human nature would include spirituality, intel lectuality, freedom, unique individ uality, communita rian and so cial being, masculinit y and femininity, corporeality, histori city, orientation to the mystery called God, and in the � facto order o f grace, ori entation to dire ct personal intimac y and communion with this m yster y, in Christ and the Spirit . a The articulation o f these structures constitutes a formulation o f basic moral norms . Rahner sees such norms as comprising the natural moral law as modi fied by the supernatural existential, the gra ced orienta tion to the sel f-bestowing God . 9 Morality thus en tails the discovery and ac ceptance o f and response to the multidimensional nature o f the human being, in self and in others, individually and in social group ings . The plurality o f moral values is based upon the many -sided nature o f man, whose facets only gradually emerge into explicit consciousness . These values can be spelled out in terms o f con crete actions whi ch respect or violate the structures o f man . I O The imperative to act a c cording to these objecti fied moral norms is, however, founded upon the intrin sic dignity o f the human person . This dignity, while bound up with the nature o f man as a spiritual and free being oriented to mystery, belongs to ea ch unique person as su ch, who must not be regarded as a mere instance o f the human spe cies . The intr insic worth o f the human person is the root moral value and basis o f all others . The fundamental moral experience, for Rahner, is pre cisely the experien ce o f this human dignity as something absolute and unconditional, hence as capable o f grounding an unconditional demand . It is because o f this intrinsi c worth that one must 39
respec t the structures of human nature.
t:. a c n
mora1
norm is an expressi on of the response due the under ly ing person.
The d i fferent mora l
val ues to be put
i nto actions
are real l y expressi ons of what ponds to that worth. l l
corres
Whi le there are a great many norms respecting the dignity of the human person in his or her many d i men si ons,
i n the final ana lysis, these form a response to
one being.
The mul t i pl i c ity of the human bei ng, as we
have seen,
i s ne ither a sc attered, unc onnec ted diver
sity,
nor a mere juxtaposi t i on of parts.
It forms a
plura l unity i n whi ch al l f l ows from and i s hel d to gether in the heart or core. facet of the
person
A response to any one
should respect that uni ty.
It
shou l d be di rected to the person as a who l e,
not i so 2 l ated from or contrad i c tory to that total i ty.1 Yet
it must not be watered down to a vague i neffec tual at ti tude whi ch neg lects the concrete demands of particu l ar
persons, whether, for examp l e, for food or frater
nal correction.
A moral l y good act vis-a-v i s another
person is, therefore, a spec i f i e action benefi cia l to one facet of the person ' s struc ture,
i n response to
the uni que sacredness of that person as a tota l human bei ng .
A
mora l l y wrong action,
converse ly,
v i o lates
human d i gn i ty by its refusal to respond to a spec if i c moral demand or by i ts response to one aspec t of the person in defiance of the whol e. In
add i t ion,
the
spec i f i c
action
does
from and embody the one core act of the agent.
proceed As one
being, the agent attempts to i mpress h i s or her funda menta l option i nto every ac tion and to integrate every acti on i nto that one central dec ision. of
i ndi vidua l
pleteness
on l y
mora l to
values
the
and
norms
The pl ural ity ac hieves
com
extent that these va l ues and 40
norms are incorporated into one ' s fundamental option from the heart and express that option .
Again,
this
is a question of integrating many values, not negating or replacing them . presents task .
a
very
As we shall later discuss, gradual
and
never
fully
it re
achieved
In this sense, a person ' s whole life becomes an
ever more complete realization of a fundamental yes or no to the infinite mystery . 1 3 Hence,
from the standpoint of its agent and re
cipient, its human origin and term, each concrete mor ally good action is,
finally and fully,
the gift of
one ' s whole self from the heart to another human being in
his or
her uniqueness and totality .
Now this is
what is meant by love, regarded by Rahner as the basic good moral act, which underlies and sums up every par ticular
m oral demand .
Similarly,
involves a failure of love, of indifference,
neglect,
the
guilty
action
taking the concrete shape
refusal,
and in its strong
est form, h atred of another person or persons in their total humanity and radical uniqueness . 14 To relate the above more specifically to the ex perience of God, unconditional
we may first note that,
worth
can
only
have
the
for Rahner, character
gift when it is found in something finite . beings,
of
As finite
we cannot procure for ourselves or others an
unconditional
worth .
We can only discover,
acknowl
edge, and live according to a worth that precedes and is deeper than our recognition and response . experiencing a concrete moral demand as such, perience not only the intrinsic worth whic h
founds
this
demand,
ground of that worth, absolute
worth .
meant by
" God" •
15
This
but
also
Thus, in we ex
of the person the
source
and
the reason w hy th ere is such an is
an
Conversely,
41
experience
of
what
is
the experience of re-
jection of self or another in a concrete action in
cludes the implicit experience of violating human sa credness,
as well as the ground upon which it rests.
This too is an experience of God.
This dignity goes with being a human person ;
is rooted in and belongs to the very
sonhood of each
human being.
it
nature and per
The gift character
of
this sacredness thus implies and is inseparable from the gift character of human existence itself.
It has
already been noted in discussing freedom that the hu
man person as such is a precious gift.
One' s reply to
this gift contains within itself the experience of the giver and one' s positive or negative response to that
source. value,
The ultimate ground and goal of the
structures,
multiplicity in unity,
and dynamic
orientation of the human person is what is "God."
Hence,
being,
meant by
the one concrete human action contains,
first, the posing of a specific deed but secondly, taking of a stance toward human structures,
nity,
human dig
and the self-bestowing infinite mystery.
two aspects are inseparable. We must not,
however,
the
These
interpret this perspective
in too individualistic a fashion.
The response to an
other as a whole person must embrace all dimensions of human existence, cal.
well.
and
histori
situations,
but
in
which
the of
personal
individual dimensions growth
in
his
and
made
individual persons as such, of
possible
contexts
as
her is
and
uniqueness, respected, 16 fostered.
comes not only through
but also through the de
one' s social situation. 42
or
wholeness
The "voice" of God, as it were, mands
social
It includes the struggle to fashion a society
plurality
and
social,
This response must tak e place not only within
interpersonal in
physiological,
The
abdication
of
social responsibility is a fundamental expression of guilt. The permanent structures of human nature , tion of which entails theological guilt , each case to the
viola
do belong in
irreducibly unique person.
Each u
nique self may as such be the recipient of a personal moral
falls
demand. to
one
One may experience a moral task which
precisely
as
solely as a human being.
a
unique
person ,
and not
Such a demand also summons
the gift from the heart of one' s whole self.
Yet it
is addressed to one personally , and involves more than
the mere application of universal norms.
We shall ex
plore this dimension briefly and suggest some of its implications for the conceptualization of God. Rahner
holds that such personal demands may not
run counter to any genuine universal norms rooted in the structures of man and his world (structures not so easily determined as was once thought) . these norms , concrete
however,
He does see
as inadequate to determine every
action of the individual.
There are situa
tions in which ma ny possible actions would be conso
nant with general moral principles ,
as well as other
situations in which these norms appear to be in insur mountable conflict.
Besides such instances,
there is
more to the concrete moral decision than the applica tion of such norms.
Insofar as each person is unique ,
so too are his actions unique and not merely examples
or cases of general norms. ties
ples ,
may
remain
W hile certain possibili
open when judged by
general princi
the choice of one rather than another possible
course of action may be of critical significance for a particular individual.
At the same time ,
crete choice may be seen ,
such a con
not as a mere arbitrary se
lection from legitimate options,
43
but as the coming to
light o f one' s own ine f fable moral ind iv i duali ty. 1 7 The structures o f the intrinsi cally valuable per son are certa inly to be respected. At the same t ime, they should be integrated into and express the free de c ision at the core o f the person in his or her con crete response to other persons. They are to be c o ord inated into the growth and development o f the spe c i f i c person as "this" rather than "a" human bei ng. In th is l i ght, there ar ises the possibil i ty o f a u ni quely personal moral demand over and above universal Th i s demand may be seen as a summons to norms. 1 8 develop as this spec i f i c person through the order o f love whi ch one constructs out o f concrete dec isions. The study o f the process by whi ch one d iscerns the u ni que demand o f cons istent personal development, Rahner calls "formal existential eth i cs", and he underl ines its importance. The exper ience o f moral respons ibility as a call to act in this way and no other, even though many pos sibilities would seem leg it imate, is the exper i ence o f a demand addressed to me in my solitary uni queness. It is the exper ience o f the ground and term o f my own inescapable responsibility. I experience mysel f as addressed and summoned personally at the core o f my own irreduc ible un i queness. This i s, so to speak, the exper ience o f be ing called by name. As noted earl ier, the moral call is also a call to an action wh i ch i s f inally to be incorporated into and express i ve o f love. Hence, such a moral exper ience is one o f bei ng summoned by name to love in a un i que manner. As such, it includes, however impl i c itly and obscurely, the ex per ience o f be ing known in the core o f one' s un i que being. For one can only be called by name i f one is known by name. Thi s is also an experi ence o f be i �g 44
v alued and loved, since this sum mons is one which en ables and calls to respect and lov e. In
this
context,
God
may be portr ayed as that
from which I ( and all others) flow as known and loved in my very uniqueness as a precious gift,
fr eely re
sponsible for the final shaping of that gift .
God is
similarly that to which and before which I am sum moned to
reply th rough categor ical,
embody the
response of
concrete actions which
my own unique life .
The in
finite ground and ho rizon of my knowing and lo ving is thus at least implicitly grasped as the ground and ho rizon by which I am known and loved in my radical u niqueness,
and the reby enabled and sum moned to inti
m acy with this infinite presence. At least in his actions, man is really also ( not only ) individuum ineffabilis, whom God has called by his name, a name which is and can only be unique, so that it really is worthwhile for this unigue being as such to exist for all eternity. 1 9 In this light as well, will
entail
much
nor ms and of their
more
than
the experience of guilt violation
of
universal
ultimate ground and goal .
Guilt
will be more intimately exper i enced as the betrayal of an utterly personal responsibility, a contradiction of one ' s
own
t ruest
self.
It
will
be
in
some
sense
gr asped as the betrayal of the sou rce of one ' s own u nique being,
m eaning,
worth,
and vocation ;
a refusal
of friendship and lov e ; a personal rejection of a more personally glimpsed infinity.
It will be a denial of
the voice which creatively utters and speaks to that unique word of meaning and lo ve which each human being is. In more traditional language,
45
Rahne r states that
sin is not solely an offence against a universal d i vine norm.
"Sin • . . is also and just as much an of
fence against an utterly ind ivid ual imperative of the ind ivid ual will of God which is the basis of unique
ness."
It is a "failure of personal-ind ivid ual love
of God " ;
a turning asid e from the "immed iate personal
encounter 20 self". sion,
with
In
the
terms
personal
of
our
God
as
previous
he
mod e
is
of
in
him
expres
guilt is a betrayal of an utterly personal re
sponsibility and of its source, finite mystery.
the self-bestowing in
We may here summarize our inquiry to this point. Guilt is the free, "no" to and yet
culpable,
personal betrayal of the infinitely near
transcend ent
ground
loved
and
human
and of itself d efinitive
term,
meaning and
self-bestowing of oneself and
beings
and
d ignity.
unique
source
and
goal,
others as k nown and
persons
Guilt is embodied
end owed
with
in the
vio
lation of a moral imperative expressing the d emand s of
the fund amental grace-transformed tery,
the
structures
of
one' s personal vocation .
one' s
orientation to m ys
common
humanity,
and
It tak es the concrete shape
of refusing the response d ue to another person or per sons at the interpersonal or social level.
the
contrad iction
d isposal and
between
a
person' s
Guilt is
embod ied
the true reality of others,
self,
self God .
It is the "contrad ic tion between that in him which is free" and that which "he is intend ed to be and inalienably is. 11 21
. •
The experience of this contrad iction is painful. Rahner sees suffering in this context as the intrinsic consequence and
constitutive sign of guilt.
He sees
therein as well the essential meaning of the notion of
46
punishment for sin .
We shall now examine the conse
quences of sin and guilt and their implications for the concept of God .
47
NOTES ln Guil t and Its Remission, " T I 2 , Theol ogy of the Symbol , " .!.!. 4, 2 2 1-25 2 ; - Mystery, " I! 8, 2 30-2 3 5 .
2 69 -2 75 ; "The "Unity - Love
2 "Guil t and Its Remission, " .!..! 2 , 2 73. 3 s ee references und er note 1 above. 2 11.
4 n Guil t
Responsibil ity
Pu nishment, " .!..!.-
6,
5 "The Theol ogical 1, 360-369.
Concept of
Concupiscence, "
TI
6 11 The 1, 3 6 2 .
Concept of
Concupiscence, "
TI
Theol ogical
7 11 The Experiment with Man, " TI 9 , 2 05 -2 2 4 ; Probl em of Genetic Manipul ation, " TT 9, 2 2 5 -25 2 . 2 46.
8 11 The
Dignity
and
Freed om
of
Man, " I!
2,
"The 2 35-
9 11 Guil t and Its Remission, " TI 2 , 2 74f ; "Na tural Moral Law, " TD, 3 05f. On the- question of uni versal moral norms, see al so "The 'Command ment' of Love in Rel ation to the Other Command ments, " TI 5 , 43 9-45 9 ; "The Dignity and Freed om of Man, " T I 2 , -2 3 5263 ; and the references under note 17 bel ow. See as wel l the two articl es by James Bresnahan, "Rahner's Christian Ethics, " America, 12 3 ( 1970) , 3 5 13 5 4 and "Rahner's Ethics: Critical Natural Law in Re l ation to Contemporary Ethical Methodol ogy, " Journal .Q.f Rel igion, 5 6 (19 76) , 3 6-60, as wel l as his essay in � Worl d of Grace, 169 -184. l O "The 'Command ment' of Love in Rel ation to the Other Command ments, " I.!. 5, 43 9-444. 11 11 The 'Command ment' of Love in Rel ation to the Other Command ments, " .!.l 5 , 440 et passim ; "The Dignity and Freed om of Man, " TI 6, 2 45f ; "Ethics, " TD 15 l f ; "Christian Humanism, " TI 9 , 18 8-19 1, 2 00f. 12 11 The 'Command ment' of Love in Rel ation to the Other Command ments, " .!.l 5, 440-457. 48
13 11 The ' Commandment' of Love in Relation to the Other Commandments, " l!. 5 , 4 40-4 57. 14 11 Reflections on the Unity Neighbor and the Love Of God, " 239-2 4 6 .
I.!
of 6,
the Love of 231-2 4 9 , esp.
15 11 Christian Humanism, " l!. 9 , 188, 201; "Athe ism and Implicit Christianity, " T I 9 , 153f; "The Work s of Mercy and Their Reward, " I.!. 1 ;----2 68-2 74 . 16 on this theme, see "Christian Humanism, " TI 9 , 187-204; "Practical Theology and Social Work in the Chu rch, " T I 1 O , 3 4 9 -3 7O ; "The Pe ace of God and the Peace o f the Wor 1d , " T I 1O , 3 71-38 8; "The Chu rch' s Commission to Bring Salva tion and the Humanization of the World, " l!. 14 , 2 95 -313; "On the Theology of Revo lution, " I.!. 14 , 314 -330 . 1711 0n the Q uestion of a Formal Existential Eth ics, " T I 2 , 2 17-234 . On the topic of the uniquely personaT moral demand and choice, see also "Situ ation Ethics in an Ecumenical Perspective, " The Christian of the Future ( Ne w York : Herder & Herde�l9 67) , 39-48; "The Individual in the Church, " and "The Appea 1 to Conscience, " in Nature and Grace ( London: Sheed and Ward, 1976) , 9 -38, 3 9 -63; "Existential Ethics, Per sonal Ethics, " TD, l60f; The Dynamic Element in the Herder & Herder, 19 64) . See, too, Church ( Ne w York : the references under note 9 above. ics,
II
l811 on the Question of a Formal Existential EthI.!. 2 ' 2 2 5 , 230 .
19 11 0n t he Question of a Formal Existential EthI.!. 2 ' 2 2 6f . ics, II
2011 0n Question the Ethics, " I.!. 2 , 232 . 10,
2 1 11 A 153 .
of
a
Formal
Brief Theological Study on
49
Existential
Indulgence, " ..!..!.
3.
SUFFERING AS INTRINSIC CONSEQUENC E OF GUI LT
We have seen that man' s fundamental option is ex ercised in the rest of his personal mak e-up deavors to imprint itself upon his material,
and social environment as ally wrong action,
of
world.
self
As
such,
and
way which con
orientation and personal vo
others
the
personal
a person' s core
decision seek s to objectify itself in a cation
en
In the case of a mo r
wel l .
discussed earlier,
tradicts the structures,
and
within
attempted
their
embodiment
external
distorts,
wounds, and damages the outer levels of the person and his environment.
It violates the � priori and,
there
fore,
ineradicable elements and these resist and pro
test,
as it were,
against this distortion.
This con
tradiction is experienced by the culpable agent and is necessarily
painful.
"It
is
the
painful
protest of
the reality which God has fashioned against the false decision
of
man.11
Insofar
1
as
this
embodim ent
the expression of the core act of freedom,
is
it is the
constitutive sign of that act.
Hence,
tive· sign of guilt is suffering,
understood theologi
cally
as 2 guilt.11 The
the
painful
painful
"clash
between
contradiction
intrinsic consequence
of
the constitu
is
guilt.
thus Only
reality a
in
and
connatural this
sense
can we speak of suffering as punishme nt for sin.
It
is not to be regarded as an additional arbitrary pen
alty imposed from without .
In this vein,
statements
about "heaven" and "hell" are images which express the absolute seriousness of present human decision in its two alternatives.
Whether
enduring reality for anyone,
or
not
"hell"
becomes
an
it brings out the possi
bility of suffering as the intrinsic consequence of an 50
irrevocably chosen contradiction. The radical contradicti on between the per manent supernatural existential , the per manent offer of God ' s self-communication in love , and the definitive , obdurate refusal opposed to it by the free act will be ex perienced as the ' poena damni • . 3 In addition , once the originating act is impress ed upon one ' s own make-up and surround ing world ,
its
embodiment
may
becomes
relatively
independent.
It
continue in existence and make itself felt , even when the original
act ceases or
through conversion.
is
radi cally
transformed
Ingrai ned attitudes and d isposi
tions within oneself as well as the effects of a phys ical ,
emotional or other injury to another person may
persist , These
even if the initial guilty act is withdrawn.
enduring
inflict
expressions of
suffering
upon
the
guilt may continue to
culprit
and
others.
In
this connatural sense , they may also be termed punish ment for
sin.
They
l i k ew i s e
provide the context or
situation out of which subsequent new acts of freedom must operate. 4 These
reflections
help
to
shed
li ght
upon
the
concept of God as judge of sin and as forgivi ng heal er.
At the same time ,
they serve as a corrective to
all -too-common naive , excessively anthropomorphic , and even destructive images of God.
Within the experience
of personal betrayal discussed earlier ,
for which he
is personally accountable in his heart , a person also implicitly experiences himself as judged and summoned to conversion.
The ground and term of this judgment
and conversion is what
is meant
by the term
" God. "
The judgment and call to conversion are not extrinsic but contained within the very experience of the guilty contradiction and its attendant suffering.
51
The i mage o f j ud gment a n d p u n i s hment w h i c h i s d e r i v e d from pena l t i e s i mpos e d f o r o f fences a g ai n s t the civil order does not apply here . Such an i mage w o u l d t e n d t o d e p i c t God a s a n e x t e r n a l j u d g e w h o i n t e r v e n e s v i n d i c t i v e l y f r o m w i tho u t t o p u n i s h p eo p l e w ho d i s ob e y h i s a r b i t r a r y c o m m a n d s . 5 Th i s v i e w r e a d i l y s e e s Go d as mer e l y one p a rt i c u l a r bei n g a n d c a u s e a l o n g s i de others w i thi n t he wor l d . Go d m u s t r a t h e r b e u n d e r s t o o d a s t h e t r a n s c e n d e n t o r i g i n , g r o u n d , a n d g o a l o f t h e wo r l d i n i t s t o t a l i t y , yet at the same t ime as a s i lent l y and ine ffab l y n e a r presence . If o n e i s t o r e g a r d Go d s o c o n c e i v e d a s judge and pun i s her o f s i n , it i s not as a r b i tr ary i n tervene r , but as ul timate ground o f the s tructures and or i e n t a t i o n o f m a n a n d t h e w o r l d . 6 In s e t t i n g h i m s e l f against t he s e rea l i t i e s a n d t h e re fore a g a i n s t h i s own true s e l f , a p e r s o n e x p e r i enc es t h e p a i n f u l c o n trad i ct i o n . H e exper i en c e s the p a i n o f be tray i ng h i s o w n i nmost s e l f w h i c h i s o r der e d t o the s e l f-b e s to w i n g i n fi n i t e my s t ery . S i n i mp l i e s j udgment prec i s e l y i n s o f a r a s i t i s i n tr i n s i c a l l y s e l f- d e s t r u c t i v e . That before whom t h e person s t and s unve i l ed , account a bl e , and a ssessed i n thi s c ontra d i c t i on i s what i s m eant by " Go d . " Moreove r , the v e ry s u f feri ng i t s e l f t e s t i f i e s t o t h e cont i nu i n g pres e nc e o f o n e ' s o ri en t at i o n t o t h e my s t e r y , a n o r i e n t a t i o n w h i c h i s g r a c e d y e t i n e r a d i c a b l e . T h e s u f fe r i n g p e r s i s t s a s a c a l l o r u rg i n g t o heed and respond t o this graced ori entat ion and i t s i n fi n i t e t e rm . T h e v e r y s u f f e r i n g o r p u n i s hm e n t i s thus a summons t o r e p e n t an c e a n d c o n ve rs i on , a n d h a s a He n c e , Go d m a y b e c on c e i v e d med i c i na l c h a r a c t er . 7 a s that be f o re whom m e n or women s t a n d accu s e d b y t he v e ry p a i n fu l n e s s o f t h e i r b e t r a y a l , y e t a l s o t h a t 52
by whom they are summoned to pai nful mi ght
contradicti on
r eceive
convers i on so that the
m i ght
f o rg i veness
be
and
dissolved
the
and
heali ng
of
they thei r
r avaged nature . At thi s p o i nt, be made so
some
further
clar i f icati ons must
as to avo id the possi ble
all personal su f fer i ng spr i ngs The cla r i f i cati ons may also
i mpressi on that
f r om one ' s own guilt .
serve to
furthe r
en r i ch
that
transcendental
the conceptuali zat i on o f God. We
previ ously
observed
the
act o f f reedom at o ne ' s c o r e seeks to express o r o b ject i fy
i tsel f
i n the
one ' s envi r onment .
rest
of
one ' s make-up and
in
Yet the o r i gi nating act never ful
ly embodi es i tsel f, and the o bjecti f i cati ons do become relatively i ndependent o f that act.
At the same ti m e ,
the o utward layers o f the person and the env i r onment ar e equally accessi ble to other i n fluences fr o m w i th out.
As a result, the same objecti f i cati on may spr i ng
f r o m a var i ety o f causes. ter n o f behavi o r,
A character trait o r a pat
f o r example,
the i mpact o f other persons '
may stem un f reely f r om
gui lt,
fr o m the pressure
o f o ne ' s soc i al mi li eu, o r f r om the wei ght o f past hu man h i sto ry.
The
outward express i on may
also
ar i se
f r om an earl i er f ree act o f the perso n, now renounced, whose e f fects continue t o may
i ndeed
be
a
i mpose themselves.
consti tut ive
s i gn
Or
i ndicati ng
it
one ' s
present o r continu i ng guilt. The
same
act i on,
then,
may
f r om with i n o r un f ree conditi o n i ng
be
somethi ng undergone,
one o f Rahner ' s examples,
act i on
or
expressi on
f r om wi thout,
st itut ive si gn o r external i mposi ti on, or
free
con
something done
passi o n.
To
cite
the same pattern o f associ a
t i ons and psychi c mechani sms c ould be set up both by 53
vol u n t a ry
tra ining
a nd
by
brain
r e f l e x ! v e k now l e d g e t a k es p l a c e by j e c t i v a t ions ,
t h e re
ou r
t h e mat i c
k now l e d g e
ac t
of
fr e e dom .
i s a l w a ys a We
of
m e a ns o f su c h o b
c e r t a i n a mb i gu i t y
ou r
c a n not
Si nce our
w ash i n g .
i nmost
be
in
t r a n sc e n d e n t a l
re flex i v e ly
c er t a i n
w he t h e r i t i s a n a c t o f g u i l t or o f g r a c e . a Ne v e r t h e l ess , fa c t
to
viol a t e on e ' s
voc a t ion , tr i ns i c
a c t io n
does
in and
t h a t ac t ion w i l l i m p l y su f fe r i n g as a n
in
Indeed
as
any
or i e n t at i on ,
shor t l y see , ac t ,
e x te n t
t r u e s t r u c t ur es ,
conse qu e n c e
sou r c e .
the
r e g a r d l ess o f i ts fr e e. o r u n fr e e
t his
very
su f f e r i n g ,
as
we
s ha l l
poses a c h a l l e n g e t o on e ' s p r ese n t
does
the
amb i g u i t y
of
al l
ou r
fre e
t h em a t i c
know l e d g e i n t h i s r e g a r d . As
a
conse q u e n c e
of
t h is s i t u a t i on
man
e xperi
enc es h imse l f as a t onc e responsi b l e for ,
y e t not e x
p l i c i t l y c e r t a i n o f w h a t i s i n h i s h e a rt .
On the one
h an d ,
he
d isc e r ns
possi b l e but
guilt
a lso h is
w e i gh e d ,
that
h is
mor a l
e m b r a c e not on l y v ery
not b y
j e c t i f i c a t ions ,
core
r e sponsi b i l i t y
h i s e x t er n a l He
se l f .
senses
a p p e a r a n c es or e v en by but
by
the
v er y
and
a c t ions
h i mse l f
as
a m b i g uo u s ob
d e c i sion
of
h is
he a r t .
On t h e ot h e r h a n d , h e a lso e x p e r i en c es t h e a m
b iguity
i nso f a r a s h e
c a n not
be
t h em a t i c a l l y
c e rt a i n
o f t h e cor e a c t o f h i s fr e e dom . In t h is cont e x t God m a y b e g r asp e d as t h a t b e fo r e w hom o n e st an ds not on l y as fi n a l l y a c cou n t ab l e , a s u n v e i l e d a n d w e i g h e d i n on e ' s v e ry h e a rt .
but
I n mor e
color fu l l a n g u a g e , o n e m i g h t sp e a k o f t h e God w ho s e e s a n d j u d g es t h e ob j e c t i v e occ asion
heart of man .
unc erta inty t r ust
or
a bou t
anx iety ,
for m e r i nst anc e , one
(at
At
t h e sa11 e t i m e ,
one ' s hop e
or
actual
d esp a i r .
l e ast i m p l i c i t l y ) 54
st a t e In
the m ay the
t r ust f u l l y
co nfi d e s
o n e s elf to that b efore whi ch o n e stands ac
c o u ntable , as to an ult i mate ly tru stwo rthy and forg i v 9 The term "God" here po i nts to that i ng r e al i ty . pre s e nce wh i ch at o nce gro u n ds and demands total s elf re s po n s ibi l i ty , fi e s
total
y e t als o
e nabl e s ,
s e lf-s u rre nder
e v ok e s ,
de spite
the
and j u sti
amb i gu ity
and
u ncerta i nty . F urthe r co n s i derati o n o f the s i tuati o n whi ch pr e cede s for
the
its
ti v e . the
pers o n's
exerc i s e Thi s
fr e e
fre edom and
s er v e s
s itu ati o n ,
hi story
plays a r o l e .
of
to
acc e ntuate
s ays
Rahn e r ,
other s ,
Inde e d ,
pro v i de s is
i ncludi n g
the
co ntext
th i s
per spec
one
i n whi ch
the i r
i t i s o n e whi ch i s
gu i lt ,
i n variably
affl icted by gu i lt a n d its atte ndant s uffer i n g . Man gl i mps e s w i thi n h ims e lf the s upernatural ex i s te n t i al and other s tructur e s of hi s own be i ng and of the world .
The s e u rge him to po s it i v e m oral beha v i o r ,
pr i or t o h i s actual per s o nal d ec i s i o n . tio n
i ncurs
s uffer i n g as
Y et man al s o
its
Th e i r v i ola
co n natural co n s e q u e nce .
exper i e nc e s a c o u nter thru st ,
a re v er s e
u rg i n g , b o th w i thi n the eleme nts o f hi s mak e -up exter nal
to
Thi s
the
core
dri v e ,
and
to o ,
i n th e
precede s
s urro u n di n g e n v ir o nme nt . and
i nflu e nce s
hi s
fre e
deci s i o n . A pers o n f i nds sion,
that e v e n where
so far a s he can ascertai n ,
hi s ba s ic deci
accords po s i ti v ely
wi th hi s n ature a n d per s o n , he i s s t ill u nabl e to i n t e grate f ully a nd clearly i nto dime n s i o n s ters
of
force s
hi s
w i thi n
exi ste nce . as
th i s deci s i o n all the He
well a s
co nti n ually
o uts i d e
e nco u n
hims e lf wh i ch
r e s i st hi s deci s i o n , affect him co ntrary to i t , and s o cau s e Rahn er
him
to
s uff e r .
u n d er s tands
as
Thi s
co nfl i ct , whi ch 10 i s felt by c o nc up i s ce nce ,
55
pa i nful
man to be something wrong, something which should not be, and is even more pain ful for that reason. Yet man also experiences himsel f as powerless to overcome ful ly this con flict. The true in terpre tation o f this condition is found, says Rahner, in Christianity. The human situa tion is always at least par tially determined by the objecti fica tions o f guilt. As some thing universal, this guilt must go back to the beginning o f the human race. 11 In explanation, Rahner states that man is insepa rably and in a mutually conditioning way bo th a per sonal and communal being. The human race is also a u nity in its origin, essence, interdependence and goal. Fur thermore, the overall si tuation, which pre cedes the free human act as i ts condi tion and material and which provides the con text in which i t is exer cised, is a sphere which is common to all persons. The decision o f any one person impinges upon that o f all the others. Man thus springs from and continues in historical dependence upon that form which humanity had at the origin of its own his tory. This biological and historical unity means that man ' s situation here and now is determined by the beginnings o f man, not merely as a chronological moment, but also as a unique basis upon which all subsequent history rests. 12 The present situation o f man, as attested to by experience and revela tion, is not solely determined by an orien tation to mys tery as nearness. It is also a f fected by a thrust to ward personal guilt, a thrust which is universal and sensed as something that should not be. This negative modi fication o f the human situ ation must, there fore, go back to the beginning o f the 56
human
r ace.
If
man ' s
situation is always at least
partially determined by the objectifications of sin, then, argues Rahner , act
of
personal
there must have been an original
gul l t which
infected the which subsequent freedom is exercised. 1 3
sphe re
in
This is what is meant by o riginal sin, or the sin of Adam, whethe r " Adam" is understood as an individual o r as a term for the originating humanity, monogenist or polygenist. 1 4 " Original sin " , therefore, and the "consupiscence "
consequent
existential
every
exists
in
of
dialectical
existential,
the
upon
human
it,
being.
tension
orientation
with to
fo rm
a
This
existential
the
gr ace
concrete
supernatural in
Ch rist.
Whether one opts for guilt or grace, the opposite ex istential
remains and is the occasion of suffering.
The positive decision meets with the resistance cal led concupiscence.
The
negative decision encounters
the
resistance of the human structu res which it violates but cannot annul . Antecedent to the decision . • . man ' s sit uation . in relation to salvation is dialec ticall y determined : he is in original sin through Adam and redeemed as o riented to wards Ch r ist. In personal free decision, the dialectical situation of freedom is an nulled in one or other direction. . • • By either decision the existential against which the decision has been made is not sim ply suppressed, for man in this life a lw a y s remains in the situation of concupiscence and death and in that of having been re deemed. 1 5 The human situation is thus one in which a person not only lacks a fully ce rtain objective awa reness of his
or
her
own
inner
state,
and so must choose to
trust or to despair, but is also drawn in two opposing directions.
He o r she is al ways in a state of con-
57
fl i ct and sufferi ng, whi ch can never be f ully resolved duri ng life on ear t h. As g u i lt,
t he object i ficat ion sufferi ng
of others '
is never merely
or
one ' s own
neu tral.
S ufferi ng
can not be regarded i n purely phys iolog i cal or psycho log ical
terms
as
a
personally
si mply to be deplored. ed i n to i t.
the
pli es a react ion. responded t o i n
happen i ng
I t must be seen as i ncorpora t
tot a1 li v i n g of
S u fferi ng provokes,
i nd! fferen t
the person
challen ges,
exper i e n_c i n g
demands,
and i m
S u fferi ng is a lw a y s u nderstood a n d
t hi s way or t hat, a nd i t thereby be
comes ei t her t he express ion of one ' s own gu i l t or t he material for just ify i ng fai th. case of suffer i ng tha t red.
To the ex ten t
Th i s i s so even i n the
i s i mposed rather
tha n
i ncu r
t ha t o ne ' s react i on t o sufferi ng
is free and from t he heart ,
this reac t i o n i s a f u nda
men tal way i n whi ch one expresses one ' s core response to or reject ion of the self ' s orien t at ion
to t he ab
solu tely
and
near
mystery.
However
i mplici t
a nony
mous, this response wi ll be ei ther rat i f i cat ion of t he si n of Adam or a shari ng i n t he passi on of Chr i s t . 1 6 Once aga i n , exten t
afflicted
i nducemen t opt ion :
i n a human si t uat i on that i s t o some by
to g u l l t ,
amb i g u i ty,
pa i nf ulness,
a nd
t he
we are faced wi th a f u n dame n t al
ult i mat ely ei ther
hope or despai r.
We may
despai r over t he fi nal absurdi t y of human exi stence i n the face of such evi l and sufferi ng.
Or we may affirm
t hat t here is a bas is for mean i ng and hope desp i t e t he pai n of l i fe,
and tha t t he accept an ce of u navo i dable
sufferi ng somehow has an endu r i ng worth and val i d i ty. In
this case,
the fi nal grou nd whi ch e n ables and s u m
mon s to pri mordi al trust i n t he mean i ngfulness of l i fe is what
is mean t by " God. "
To bel i eve i n
God is t o
assert that somehow, despi te the trag i c tale of nat u re 58
and history,
the ultimate source and term of all
re ality may be ultimately described in terms of love.17 Suffering,
then,
is
an intrinsic consequence of
embodied guilt. It is theologically understood as the
painful contradiction between the culpable free deci
sion and the true reality of self,
their
ground,
the
self-bestowing
is also universal, al l
others,
mystery.
world,
Suffering
permeating in some degree the over
situation in which human freedom operates.
this perspective, that
core
stands unveiled and assessed,
sence which continua lly summons to conversion,
a
basic
trust
From
God may be conceived as that tran
scendent presence at the core of one's being, whom
and
in
life's
meaning
despite
before
a
pre
and to
evi l
and
suffering. We have explored Rahner's understanding of guilt as a fundamental option at the core of one's being,
an
option which seeks embodiment in acts contrary to hu
man
dignity
also
and
examined
thereby
the
implies
suffering.
reverse
side
have
implications of this understanding
for the conceptualization of God. the
We
of
this
We may now explore
dynamism:
conversion at the core of self,
forgiveness and
the extension of that
conversion into the rest of one's person and world in the process of healing,
and the hope for a total in-
tegration overcoming all contradiction. we
shall
again
focus
upon
perience and concept of God.
59
im plications
In so doing, for
the
ex-
NOTES l 11 A 10, 15 3.
Brief
Theological
Study
on
Indulgence, "
TI
2 11 Guilt Responsibility Punishment, " .!.! 6, 216. On the notion of suffering as punishment for sin, see "Guilt and Its Remission, " TI 2, 2 7 2 -2 7 8; "Guilt - Responsibility - Punishment, " TI 6, 214-217 ; "A Brief Theological Study on Indulgence, " 15 0-15 8; "Punishment of Sins, " ET. 15 86-15 88. 3 11 Punishment Sins, " ET 15 8 7 . of "Hell, 11 ET, 602 -604; Foundations, -102 -104.
See
also
411 Guilt and Its Remission, 11 .!.! 2 , 2 7 3 -2 7 5 ; "A Brief Theological Study on Indulgence, " .!.! 10, 15115 3 ; "Punishment of Sin, " ET, 15 86f. 5 11 Guilt Responsibility Punishment, " TI 214-217 ; "Remark s on the Theo1o gy of Indu1 gence s,'' 2, 194.
6, TI
6Ibid.; "Punishment of Sins, " ET, 15 8 7f. 7 11 Punishment of Sins, " ET, 15 8 8. 8 11 Punishment of Sins, " Its Remission, " TI 2, 2 7 5 -2 7 8; - Punishment, " TI 6, 204-2 06; the Same Time, " TI 6, 2 2 3 -2 3 0;
ET, l5 86f. "Guilt and "Guilt - Responsibility "Justified and Sinner at Foundations, 96f, 104f.
9 11 Guilt and Its Remission, " TI 2 , 2 7 6; "Justi fied and Sinner at the Same Time, " IT 6, 2 2 4, 2 2 9f. lO on Rahner' s understanding of concupiscence, see "The Theological Concept of Concupiscence, " TI 1, 347-3 8 2; "J ustified and Sinner at the Same Time7' TI 6, 2 2 5 -2 3 0; "The Theology of Power, " .Il 4, 3 93 -3 95; "Theological Reflections on the Problem of Secularisa tion, " .!l 10, 3 42-3 48. llon Rahner' s interpretation of see Foundations, 104-115 ; "The Sin of 247-2 6 2 ; "Original Sin, " ET, 1148-115 5 ; Original Sin, " in J . B . Metz, ed., The and Theology, Concilium, No. 2 6 (New Press, 1967) , 61-7 3 .
60
original sin, Adam, " TI 11, "Evolution and Evolving World York : Paulist
-
12 11 Th e Sin of Adam ' " TI 11 ' 2 5 3 f,• "Evolution and O riginal Sin, " Concilium No . 2 6, 66-73 ; See also "One Mediator and Many Mediations, " Il 10, 169-184.
'
'
13 11 Th e Sin of Adam " TI 11 15 5 -2 62 ,· "Original Sin, " ET 115 2 -115 5 ; "Evolution and O riginal Sin, " ConciliumNo. 26, 6 8-71 ; Foundations, 109-115 .
-
14on th e question of monogenism, see "Th eological Reflections on Monogenism, " l!. 1, 2 2 9-2 96 ; "Mono genism, " ET, 974-977 ; "Evolution and Original Sin, " C oncilium No . 2 6, 61-73 . 15 11 original Sin, " ET 115 4. l6 11 Guilt and Its Remission, " T I 2 , "Th e Euch arist and Suffering, " Il 3, 161-170 ; ing, " TD, 449f .
277-2 81 ; "Suffer
17 11 Unity Love Mystery, " l! 8, 2 3 5-2 41 ; "Th ough ts on th e Possibi1 ity of Be1 ief Today , " !l 5 , 3-11 .
61
PAR T C :
THE FO RG I V I NG AND HEAL I NG G O D
FOR GIVENESS AND CONVERS ION O F HEART
1. fr om one's
a su mmons
embodied gu ilt is of itself
and th er e
or ientation of man to th e infinite myster y,
man' s r e
to th e continu ing self-bestowal wh ich does
jection
to
Th e su ffer in g testifies to th e continu ing
conver sion.
for e
ar ising
exper ience of su ffer ing
th e
Rah ner ,
For
th u s be
Th is myster y may
not abolish .
descr ibed not only in ter ms of love, bu t of love deep er
th an
and
encompassing
man's
of
for giving
gu ilt:
Despite th e th r eat and even actu ality of gu ilt,
love.
it is possible to entr u st oneself to th e absolu te mys O ne may r ecognize th e ter r ibleness of gu il t and
ter y. sonal
In mor e per
for giveness and h ealing.
sti l l h ope for
th e
lang u age,
love of God is gr eater
th an th e
h atr ed of man, and so finds expr ession in for giveness. ness,
To 1
r eally as
Rah ner
su per ficial
ive,
wr itten off.
th e
appr eciate of
for give
gu ilt
as
someth ing
easily
We mu st r ecognize its h or r endou s depth s,
r adical inescapabili ty,
and h opeless ness.
derlines th e ir r emovability of gu ilt.
as spr inging
of
we mu st go beyond a na
ter ms it, view
"mir acle"
Rah n er
He r egards it
fr om th e ver y natu r e of h u man
fr om th e dialogical ch ar acter
of gu ilt,
u n
fr eedom,
and fr om th e
endu r ing consequ ences of one' s past fr ee commit 2 We sh all br iefly consider each of th ese in ments. tu r n. ter ly.
Th e fr ee act of man pr oceeds fr om h is inmost cen
and str ives to inclu de h is wh ole self ir r evocab Th e
gu ilty
act is an attempt "to integr ate th e
wh ole of life into a no to God . •
63
. th e most ter r ible
The remova l o f gui lt wou ld thing a man can do. 11 3 demand a free repudiation and reversa l of one' s basic option. Yet, i f the origina l act has sought to incor porate the who le se l f de finitively, it is not easy to explain how su ch a total trans formation is possib le. Such a reversa l can on ly oc cur to the extent that the attempted integration does not fu l ly suc ceed. The pain fu l resistance o f the structures o f one' s being and wor ld, inc luding the supernatura l existenti� l, prevent a tota l negative integration. Whi le one may persist against these structures, they remain as a re fusal o f man' s decision, a summons to become aware o f and turn away from that decision, a cal l to repentance and change of heart. 4 Neverthe less, it remains true that the freely cu lpab le core decision has striven for fina lity. Hence (al lowing for the re f lexive uncertainty in such matters ) , the impetus to change o f heart, and the ac tual change where it o c curs, wi l l be experienced as something which happens. They wi l l be fe lt as gi ft, as surprise, as something miraculous. That from which this inconceivab le gi ft flows is what is meant by "God." God is that which we touch upon in the experi ence of being enab led and summoned to recognize and turn from our gui lt, and to open ourse lves to the gi ft of forgiveness and a new heart. The responsive act o f distancing onese l f from the earlier sin fu l attitude and action is the e lement in the conversion pro cess whi ch Rahner ca l ls contri tion. 5 This is not to be understood as an emotiona l reaction based on psy cho logical or socia l factors, such as depression from loss o f prestige. Rather, contrition is a free rejection o f the mora l worth lessness o f the past action and attitude. It is not a 64
fleei n g or repressin g o f the past, but a facing, ac knowled gin g, and assumi n g o f responsibility for that past. 6 This repudiation may assume a variety o f concrete forms. It may be immediately motivated or occasioned by the prior violation o f any one o f the multiple mor al values which express the ma ny facets o f ma n and which are rooted i n his i ntri nsic worth. This multiplicity constitutes a unity grounded in the one source o f all values, the absolute holiness called God. In repudiatin g any co ncrete immoral act, a perso n im plicitly re nounces the prior betrayal o f God. 7 As a distanci n g from an earlier decisio n, co ntri tion implies or is itsel f co ntained withi n a new fu n damental optio n. This new option is the positive as pect o f conversion. It is the tra nscendentally con scious and free, reli giously and morally good, fu nda mental decision toward the i n finite mystery. This de cision, too, may remain anonymous and implicit. 8 Rahner gives a striki n g summary o f such conversio n as an expression o f a perso n ' s experience o f and response to God. Where a man is detached from sel f, loves his neighbor u nsel fishly, trustingly accepts his existence in its i ncomprehe nsibility and ultimate u nchangeableness as u ncomprehensib ly meani n g ful, without claimin g to determine this ultimate meani n g himsel f or to have i t under his control ; where he succeeds in re nounci n g the idols o f hi s mortal fear and hu n ger for li fe, there the Ki n gdom o f God, God himsel f ( as the ultimate ground o f such acts ) is accepted and k now n, even i f this occurs quite unre flectingly. 9 We spoke earlier o f medicinal punishment which e vokes a respo nse o f contrition and conversion to the mystery whose voice echoes, so to speak, throu gh the 65
violated structures of reality. more
basic
heart does not bring about a cancellation of
guilt.
It
must
guilty
intimated,
itself,
a
change
of
forgiveness from that whom the 1O Of course, as already betrayed.
has
where a true change of fundamental option
are
ground.
Of
with
does tak e place, version
irremovability
character.
meet
act
the
suggests a guilt:
dialogical
for
view
of
its
reason
This
the gift of forgiveness and of con
already
It
latently
present
as
enabl ing
is a question here of attempting to un
ravel the various strands of one global expe rience. Every human act of freedom is essentially a re
sponse to a call, rientation name.
to
a call implanted in one' s graced o
mystery,
This summoning,
one' s
categorical
a
call
addressed
to
one
by
mediated by a moral demand of
situation,
and
especially
one' s
"neighbor",
ult imately comes from the sel f-communicat
that call,
the resulting situation cannot be altered
ing
mystery.
Where
there
is
a
guilty
rejection
of
unless either a new call is uttered or the original call persists and remains in effect, inviting to a new dialogue.11 Where a person does recognize his betrayal,
tances himself from it, sion,
and alters his nuclear deci-
he experiences the gift character of this con-
version.
But
he also senses
must meet with a forgiveness, upon,
dis-
compel,
that
his
turning
back
which he cannot presume
or give to himself.
He experiences the
need and longing for a forgiveness which can only come from beyond himself, as a gift from the mystery whose summons
he
has
spurned.
He
reaches
out
to
receive
what can only be called a love which is deeper than
and encompasses the wrongness which he himself cannot
override.
That
"nearness
66
of
forgiving
love"
12
to-
ward which he r eaches with the hope of for g iveness is w hat is m eant by the ter m
" God. "
The experience of God is the exper ience that one is somehow accepted ,
valued, loved and fo r g iven at the co re of one ' s being , all the
w hi l e
continuing
to be
responsible and sum
moned to total commitment. It r emains to consider the third element of the ir removability of g uilt : the continuance of the freely chosen past act into the present and future. the
factor
w hich can
person to despair.
per haps
most
easily
This is
provoke a
A m an or woman can esteem that the
dawning awa reness of guilt comes too late , for g iveness does not alter
that even
w hat w ent before.
He or
she may fea r being crushed by the over whelming burden of the past.
The long ing for for g iveness entails what
at fir st sight seems an impossibility :
a longing for
the tr ansfor mation of the ne gative past ,
rather than
its total loss or its continuing poisoning of the pre sent.13 When
a
person
posits
a
fundamental
option,
he
seeks to embody that di rection definitively in all le vels of his being and in his physical and social environment. pendent.
These embodiments become relatively inde Hence ,
even i n conversion ,
the past behind as something
he cannot leave
no longer
cancelled out by a will to the contrary.
real ,
sim ply
Without be
ing w holly dete r mined , the present act does em erge out of the past , both one ' s own personal past and the past roots of the physical and histo rical situation.
One ' s
present act is at once a gathering up of one ' s past and a reaching
into the futu re in vie w of the final
14
act contains one ' s whole past " preserved in concentrated fo r m as 15 The knowthe gathered experience of his life. 11 completion
of
one ' s
person.
67
This
ledge gained through e f fort or su f fering, the exis tential depth, the intensity, the freely acquired per sonal characteristics, the revolutions o f one' s li fe, the joys and sorro ws--all o f these enter as intrinsic elements into the present action and give that acti on its direction, depth and resonance. Even when someone freely undertakes conversion, or change o f heart, he d oes so out o f what he permanently is as a result o f what he has been in the past. This is precisely the pro blem where g uilt has put its stamp on the existential realization o f man. Even the present repudiati on o f past guilt still faces the continuance o f that past into the present, as well as the repercussions and results o f that act which cann ot now be und one . A vividly real a wareness o f this pre dicament can provoke a pro found sense o f h opeless ness. Even forgiveness seems a mere writing o f f o f what can n o longer be und one. This awareness is heightened even m ore i f we recall that the c ontext f or personal decisi on is always and unavoida bly c o-deter mined by guilt, by the senseless brutality o f human hist ory as well as by the mindless cruelty o f nature. In the face o f this experience, there is a very real possibility o f despair. There always remains, says Rahner, "the terri ble temptati on" to believe that "something primitively - evil, s omething dark and a bys mal, belongs to the very heart o f the essence • . . in us, or even in G od. " One is apt to regard and af firm light and darkness, guilt and grace, "as p olar and mu tually conditioning opposites, and to consider as na ive any one who d oes not think s o. 11 1 6 Despite this condition, and even implicit in its very pain fulness for us, there is a pro f ou nd y earning 68
of the human heart for a seeming l y im p ossib le forgive ness whic h n o t on l y disregards but truly redeems the A person asks ex istential l y whether it is p os
past.
sibl e to go beyond a sad rec o gnition that the greatest of
part
the
person wonders if there is a fo rgiveness of
A
l ost.
life is
fruits o f his o r her
p otential
s i n wh i c h or
been
" effe c ts w hat we rea 1 1 y are o r· c o u 1 d have 17 If o ne trusts this bec o me without sin. 11 one
l onging for a fo rgiveness which redeems the past , ex periences and be lieves in gives a name to
God ,
whether
or not one
this source and sum m o ns to
ho pe for
an ul timate forgiveness. G od wo ul d , therefore , have to be p ostul ated as he w h o can in so me sense rem ove an ir rem ovab le and inescapab l e gui l t of this kind In rec o g desp ite its irremovabil ity. nizing the pheno men on o f gui lt and in ho ping that it can in sp ite of al l be rem oved , we must n o t sim p l y take God for granted , but ' him ' rather as the factor reach out to which m akes it p ossibl e to have such a ho pe at a 1 1 . l 8 God , then , is that which we touch up on in the ex perience
of h o pe for a forgiveness that so mehow re
deems and heals the past. the am biguity grac e ,
There remains , nonethel ess ,
of the refl ex ive awareness of guil t or
the c ontinuing threat o f gui lt p osed by c oncu
piscence and a sin-affl icted wor l d , as wel l as the ge neral c ontinuance o f the past into the present. resul t ,
our awareness
As a
o f and trust in the source
redeeming f orgiveness is al ways a rising
out
of
of sin
In this sense , even the justified man 19 His is "simu l .justus et pec cator " .
and into grace. remains
ever
always a c ondition of reaching out of a certain inner p overty and vu l nerabi l ity f o r a grace and merc y that transcends his understanding and
c ontro l.
" Over and
over again this l ife ( o f gra c e ) rises out of the dark
69
dep t h s of one ' s own powerles snes s and in to t h e ult i2 Con t r 1. t 1. 0n and mate ligh t of merc i. ful grace. "
°
convers ion are never once-and-for -all mat ter s, ongoing
proce s s .
bu t an
That upon which t h ey are bas ed and
toward which t hey reach is what is mean t by " God " . Rahner does s p ell out his own t h eological in t er pretat ion of how t he pas t can be redeemed, and we may 21 briefly no te it h ere. One ' s pas t, which does re main, can be taken out of it s ob s tructing negat ion and transformed and incorporated into a comprehensive framework.
bet ter
and more
This is not a way of jus t i
fying sin as a neces sary s t age in human maturat ion, or as an es sential part of evolution, or as pert aining to t he hidden meaning of creat ion.
v i e w s sin as
" somet h ing
les s ,
somet hing 22 Sin killing. 11
radically evil
merely can
Rahner unmis takably
t errifying,
exis t
only
and meaning
pet rifying
because i t
is
and con
tained in somet hing more and bet t er t h an s in, for o t h erwise sin would be s heer not hingnes s. The gull ty act
doe s
at temp t
to actualize one ' s
pos sibilit ies and int egrate one ' s wh ole s elf and life into a negat ive and false decision. one
does
actualize
t hese
In
p os sibilities
t he
proces s
and
realize
ones elf in some degree, even if in a negative direc tion.
The more t he guilt y act involves t h e dep t h and
breadt h of t he self, realizat ion.
A
t he more complete is
gat hering,
int egrat ion,
t hat
and
self
gift
of
self is achieved which could and s hould have become a reality wi t hout gul l t .
Yet
t he achievement does re
main and can be incorporated into a righ t
decis ion.
In t his way, one ' s pas t is not oblit erat ed, but trans
formed and elevat ed into t he new fundamental op t ion.
The pas t can be redeemed by including t h e in te-
70
g r ation achieved in guilt within a new positive option which ratifies one ' s orientation to the self-bestowing infinite mystery.
Once again,
that which enables and
grounds this hope for redemptive forgiveness and which summons to repentance,
conver sion,
gration of self--that forgiving,
and creative inte
transfo rming,
eleva
ting and healing pr esence is what is meant by " God . " Contrition and con versio n, cision
of the heart in
the n,
constitute a new de
response to a forgiving love
which is able to redeem and inco rporate the past . We tur n n ow to the process of healing, which is the extension
of that core decision to the
one ' s being and world .
rest of
This matter par allels the pro
cess of integration of on e ' s fundamental option dis cussed with
regard to the embodiment of guilt .
Our
treatment shall thus be a summa ry one, and highlight a few matters not previously stressed .
71
NOT ES lMeditations .Q.!l the Sacraments , 5 2 . 2 on this "irremovability" of guilt, s ee "Guilt and Its Remis s ion, " TI 2 , 278f ; "Does Traditional The ology Repres ent Guilt as Innocuous as a Factor in Hu man Life?, " TI 13, 145-151 ; Meditatio ns on the Sacra ments , 48-5 2 .3 11 The Comfort of Time, "
ll
3 , 15 4.
4 11 Guilt and Its Remis s ion, " T I 2 , 278f ; "Orig i nal Sin, " ET 115 4 ; "A B rief Theological Study on In dulgence, " TI 10, 151-15 5 ; "Theology of Freedom, " .!.! 6, 183 -186. S on contrition and convers ion, s ee es pecially "Contrition, " ET, 2 88-2 91 ; "Convers ion, " ET, 2 88-2 91 ; "V irtue of Penance, " ET, 1187-1189 ; and als o "Reflec tions on the Problem oT the Gradual As cent to Chris ti an Perfection, " l.!. 3, 3-2 3 ; "A Brief Theological Study on Indulgence, " .!.! 10, 151-15 8 ; On Prayer, 83 -97. 6 11 contrition, " ET 289. 7 11 Contrition, " ET 2 89f. 8 11 convers ion, " ET 29lf. 9 11 convers ion, " ET 2 92. 10 11 G uilt and Its Remis s ion, " T I tions on the Sacraments , 49f.
2,
2 79 ;
Medita
ll i bid ; "Theology of Freedom, " T I 6, 186-190. 12 11 Thoughts Today, " l.!. 5 , 2 0.
on
the
Pos s ibility
of
B elief
13 11 Contrition, " ET 2 88f ; "The _ Immaculate ception in our Spiritual Life, " .!.! 3 , 13 4-140.
Con-
14 11 The Comfort of Time, " T I perience of Self and Experience of 13 2 ; On Prayer, 71-79.
"Ex -
lS on Prayer, 71.
72
145 -148 ; 3, God, " I.!. 1 3 ,
12 9-
l 6 11 The I m maculate Li fe ' " TI 3 ' 13 8 f.
-
Conception
in
our
Spiritual
17 11 The I m maculate Conception in our Spiritual Li fe ," 11 3 , 13 5 f. l 8 11 ooes Traditional Theology Represent Guilt as Innocuous as as Factor in Human Li fe? ," l! 13 , 14 6.
19 n Justified and Sinner at the Sa me Time ," TI , 186 2 2 30. 2 0 11 The Meaning o f Fre quent Con fession o f De votion , " ll 3 , 17 8.
21This view is expressed chie fly in "The Im maculate Conception in our Spiritual Li fe ," l! 3 , 134140 , and "The Co m fort o f Ti me ," I.! 3 , 14 7-1 5 7.
2 211 The I m maculate Li fe ," ll 3 , 134.
Conception
73
in
our
Spiritual
2.
T HE PROCESS OF HEA LING
Both the forgiving grace of the mystery and the
responding conversion
of man
occur
spiritual nucleus of the person,
of his being.
at the
centre
or
at the deepest roots
The challenge and task of an authentic
conversion is to progressively extend that core deci
sion
to
every
sphere and
layer
of
one's
existence.
One must integrate more and more all that one has · and
all that one is into a total yes to that freely for giving presence which we call God.
Indeed ,
the radi
cal decision of conversion involves by its very nature the will Rahner,
to
achieve
this
integration.
According
to
the gift of conversion is intended to draw in
to its sphere of influence the whole nature of man in cluding its physical side, healed and sanctified.
in order that all might be
Conversion
should also
leave
its impact upon the whole physical and social environ ment.l The fundamental unifying force in this process by which man is matured is love.
As we have seen,
is a failure and refusal to love.
guilt
It is a rejection
in some fashion of the intrinsic worth of one' s neigh
bor which implicitly contains a betrayal of the self giving mystery.
The reversal of this process can only
be achieved through love.
This love, however,
to be understood as a 'mere sentiment' , mind,
but
as
a
power which
"is not
an attitude of
gradually permeates
the
whole reality of man in his concupiscent and hitherto 2 sinful nature, and orients him to God. 11 The very process of integration constitutes the mode in which love grows and develops in the direction of fulness. The process
of
integration
74
is
usually
slow
and
painful and never complete during one' s lifetime.
In
seek ing to embody itself in the m ore outer levels of one' s
person
and in one' s environment,
the original,
central act of freedom meets with painful resistance. It meets with concupiscence and original sin, as
with
gative
the
lingering
courses
heart,
of
behavior:
pharisaism,
positions .
after-effects
cowardice,
this
remain
previous
egotism,
ne
h ardness
of
and other ingrained dis
conversion level of integration attained within guilt.3 the
These
of
as well
despite
or
the
From this point of view,
God may be conceived as
infinite
enables
presence
integrating
struggle
toward
task ,
a
which
love
to
the
which
and
summons
purifyingly
accepts,
gives itself fully and definitively,
to
painful
gathers,
and
and which does so
without falling into despair at the incompleteness and painfulness of the task. This precisely is a fundamental facet of asceti cism,
"the long period of ascetical striving" to over
come
"all the
secret roots and impulses of his sin"
which remain even though repented.
These include not
only "those which simply belong to his lot, cumstances
in
which
birth
onwards,
their
existence
but to
man also his
finds those own
himself which
fault. 11
4
placed
from
effectively owe We
point out here a few aspects of the task tion,
the cir
may
simply
of integra
not previously mentioned,
which Rahner notes in his ascetical and spiritual writings. 5 As one' s
than
a
gradual
lifetime,
associating
whatever
readily
struggle,
this a
never
integration
vague
entails
thought or pious
a person may be doing.
divorced
complete
from a person' s
75
during
much
more
wish with
Such velleities are real life and have
little
or
no
e ffect
upon the actual motivation and
per formance of the concrete action .
Nor should a pe r
son unduly dwell upon self, attempting to analyse and dissect
his
or
Rahner,
" it
is
he r
own
better
motivations .
to
try
to
Rather,
pu rify
and
says re fine
one ' s motives by looking away from onesel f to things, and by letting onesel f be occupied by life, and their needs .
11
6
other s,
He gr eatly str esses the ascetic
al and pu ri fing role of human li fe itself, both in i ts crucial moments, and in the humdr um o f daily existence . People should give themselves to the multiplicity o f the demands, li fe
in
the
tasks,
wor ld,
and challenges o f their daily
in
acco rdance
with
valid
mor al
norms and their unique personal situation, even though they cannot
seem to ha rmonize
but must bear it in hope . pond to and live this
fully this diversity,
They must attempt to res
"secula r li fe"
with integrity,
constancy and fidelity, and be guided and educated by the inner motivation contained within the tasks them selves . terest,
They may be borne up on occasion by zest, in enthusiasm,
they are doing .
and a sense o f the value o f what
At other times, they will be tr ied in
the crucible o f aridity,
boredom,
weariness,
and fu
tility, be
through which their complexity o f motives may 7 Rahner sums up this task tested and refined .
and relates it to the question of God in the following way . He who responds to the wo rld with genuine love ( whose ) li fe in the world is lived j oyfully, eagerly, earnestly, and bravely . • . with un reserved honesty . • . even without any explicit r e ference to re l i g i on • . . encoun te r s i n it the Cr oss of Ch r ist and the inconceivability o f God . • If he practices the virtues of the world and suf fers himself to be educated by it in j oyfulness, courage, devotion to duty and
76
love . . . such worldly virtues will one day open to him the innermost mY, stery which they contain, namely God himself.a the
At
of
depths
any
therefore, one finds God.
of
virtues
the
of
life,
God is present behind the
moral responsibility inherent in the task s of everyday p erson will grasp this matter more clearly,
A
life.
affirms Rahner, if he or she engages in solitude, si 9 lence, serious reflection and p rayer. The blending
of
activity
withdrawal,
and
of
speech
silence,
and
which we only mention here, does reflect the discovery
of God both in one' s own inwardness and in the histor
ical
the
dimen sion;
discovery
of
God,
terms, as Spirit and as incarnate Word. Besides attention
Christian
the realm of the everyday, Rahn er draws the fundamental
to
critical moments,
which
situations of conversion.
a
in
profession,
the
he
phases of life and its
sees as so many forms or
Puberty, marriage, entering
beginning
of
old
age,
a
profound
friendship, proximity to death, and the lik e, all p ro vide sp ecial occasions for deep ening one' s conversion or positive fundamental option and integrating it more 10 These are the k ey moments, fully into one' s life.
spoken of earlier, in which
the underlying transcen
dental experience of God presses more irresistibly in to one' s awareness. special
to
grow
Both in the ordinary and in the
moments of life, we are enabled and summoned in
the
integration
and
healing
process,
by
acting from the core of o ur being with a greater in tensity
and
existential
depth,
and
by
(or
better
through) responding fully and appropriately to the de mands of each situation.
This response to the moral demands of life is not merely a patient and passive acceptance or endurance
77
of the circumstan ces, isten ce.
even ts, and trials o f o ne ' s ex
The ascet icism of t oday,
in
the service of
in tegrat ive l ove, in c ludes ac tive so cial respo nsibi l i ty,
"an
in creasing l y effec tive respo nsibil ity within a so ciety as such. 11
individua l
11
of
t he
One c harac
teristic of c o n t empo rary man is the c apacity t o exer cise a greater
mast ery
and even over himse lf,
over
his
natural
e nviro n men t
through the remarkable devel o p
men ts in t he natura l and so cial scien ces.
He has t he
oppo rtunity,
t he task and t he respo nsibi l i t y o f more 12 Ac c ording shaping his o wn earth l y fut ure.
ful ly to
his
or
her situat io n
should participate in
and
c o nditio n,
the at tempt
each perso n bui ld . a bet ter
to
and freer wo rld that is more worthy of man kind,
more
expressive of and respo nsive t o perso nal dign ity, more c o nduc ive
to
st ric tive
peace,
of
jus tice,
arbitrary
This is a fundamental
and
po wer
way in
l ove,
and more re expl oitatio n .1 3
and
whi ch people
t oday are
cal led t o embody their respo nse t o myst ery and extend its healing power i n t o their environmen t . This exercise o f so cial
respo nsibil ity is,
again, a n expressio n of l ove of neighbo r. must
be
open
physic al,
to
al l
perso na l,
dimensions
so cia l ,
of
nity of mankind and its hist ory.
Such l ove
human
hist orical,
o nce
exist en c e,
within
t he u
I t must thus assume,
t o the degree of individual possibi l ity and o ppo rt unity,
the 14 earth.
task
of
F or
bui lding
Rahner,
every
the
human
guil ty ac t
future in
some way
vio lat es o n e ' s neighbo r,
if n o t direc t l y, at
the
the
sense
of
infec ting
which al l perso ns ac t . versi o n
to
God
is
o n ly
c o mmo n
C o n versel y, possib l e
in
human
l east i n
sphere
"every true t he
on
in
c o n-
measure
in
which a man overc omes t he guil t t hat he has c ommi t t ed against his neighbor. 11 1 s The c o nversi o n a nd heal ing
78
pro cess must strive to reach from one' s core to one ' s whole being and li fe and to one' s community, extending in some fashion as far as the entire human community. Indeed, from his studies on the history o f the sacrament o f penance, Rahner maintains that, in the explicit practice and understanding o f the early Christian Church, it is specifically through their re conciliation with the Church that persons are freed fro m sin and reconciled with God. 1 6 The forgiving and healing presence whi ch we call God is encountered and responded to in and through the graced community. In a similar vein, Rahner interprets the so called temporal punishment due to sin as the pain ful resistance to the attempted integration o f conversion and its continuing incompleteness . The blotting out o f this "punishment" by the Church must not be under stood as the cancelling o f a fine arbitrarily imposed from without nor the dispensing o f a person from the pro cess o f a maturing integrative love. The Church' s granting o f indulgences must be interpreted, in this light, as the prayer o f the Church that the individual may achieve this trans formation more surely, e f fe c tively, and quickly. 1 7 Through the as ceticis m o f li fe, there fore, with its everyday duties, crucial moments, and specifically social tasks, the contrite and converted sinner exer cises moral responsibility, realizes love o f neighbor, and expresses a hope in the future. He or she thereby dis covers and responds more fully, i f implicitly, to the ultimate ground and term o f su ch responsibility, love and hope. More pointedly, he or she experiences the basis upon whi ch God is conceived as that which enables and sum mons to the healing and fulness of per79
sonal and communal li fe. Yet, as we ha ve already obser ved, con vers ion i s a continuo us str uggle, the integration o f sel f i s always incomplete, the threat o f gu ilt from forces w i th i n and outs ide the person pers ists, and any society one bu ilds is always shadowed by finiteness and s in. De s pite so many ad vances, "l i fe today still continues myster iously to be the pass ion", 18 a f fli cted . by pain, su ffer ing, anxiety, fear and death. We are thus led to the explic itly Chr istian notion o f asceti c ism as the "shari ng in the death o f Christ on the A few cons i derat i ons o n th i s m atter m ay Cro ss • " 19 ser ve to round o f f o ur re flect ion upon the con vers ion and healing process, and lead to the q uest ion o f hope for a total healing, wholeness, and o vercomi ng o f pa in ful contrad ict ion. Both in death and in illness as the threat o f death, man i s con fronted by "pass ion". Pass ion i s here understood to be the necessity and inev i tab i l i ty o f death as something imposed from w i thout, so to speak, and con fronting one' s free decision from w i th . 20 In the face o f death, the awareness o f wh ich 1n. in some fashion permeates the whole o f li fe, one is forced to dec ide who one is and the mean ing or lack o f mean ing o f one' s li fe. Here agai n, the stark alterna ti ves are hope and despa ir: despa ir at the ult imate futility o f a li fe that ends in death ; hope for an en during meani ng and valid ity o f l i fe despite death. The ground and goal o f s uch hope for end uring valid ity is what is meant by "God. 11 21 Rahner points to certa in trends in a consumer so ciety which do tend to express and push one in the d i rection o f futility and despa ir. Where one is e xces80
sively we i ghe d down by anx iety over death, o ne is prone to excesses such as immoderate gree d an d acquis it iveness, i nsatiable he don ism, a n d lust for power. These, too, prevent the capac ity for renu nciation a n d concern for others i n a pract ical down-to-earth way wh ich is esse ntial to the exercise o f social respons i bility. 22 On the other ha n d, a hope fo� en duri ng mea n i n g desp ite death does fi n d expressio n in a genu i ne soc ial co ncer n. Such hope both reco g n i zes the non -ult imacy o f any soc ial structures an d so is free to let them pass. It is also necessar ily embod ied i n a love o f ne i ghbor i n all d imensions o f existence i n clu d i n g the socia1. 23 Yet the reality a n d pai n fulness o f death vivi dly br i n g home the fact that li fe is i ncomplete a n d that one is unable to abolish all sorrow. The mortality o f sel f, others, every culture, an d the phys ical un iverse itsel f makes clear the ir f i n iteness, as does the pa i n ful contrad iction arisi n g from guilt which one can not fully overcome even when forg iven an d converted . Th is fi n iteness, colored by guilt a n d death, is nonetheless a fi n iteness wh ich is grasped i n the li ght o f the i n fi n i te towar ds wh ich the human person ten d s. We are thus brought back to the first section o f th is study. The essence o f man i s orientation to the i n fi n i te. It is ope n ness to the sel f-bestowal o f the i n f i n ite mystery. The deepest element in man is his graced or ientation a n d vocati on to i nt imacy with God . I n the l i ght o f our subsequent cons i derations, we have been able t o sketch further aspects o f th is human transcen dence o f ma n. Man is li able to betray his vocation through gu ilt at the core o f his bei n g, is unable to i nte grate 81
a positive decision o r conve rsion ful l y into his whole being and wor l d, is aff l icted by the sins of humanity , and is subject to suffering and death. from the heart is thus a
reaching,
His outr each
in pa rt,
out of
wrongness, woundedness, and incompl eteness, for a for giveness,
heal ing,
wholeness,
and
which can on l y come as a gift.
ful ness
of
l ife
( This, of cou rse,
is
an outreach that must come from a se lf which strives to gather and give itse lf individual l y and social l y ; an outreach
in and
th roug h
and
beyond
th e
finite. )
That which sustains this hope and that toward which it reaches is what is meant by " God. "
God is the ground
and goa l of a meaning and hope and love that is deeper and greater than guilt,
death,
and suffering,
finite presence from which f l ows forgiveness,
an in h ealing,
and fulness of life. This, anity .
too,
is the essential teaching of C h risti
The infinite myste r y ,
the Father, is abso l ute
l y near in the heart of man th rough the gift of his Spirit,
and visibl y
manifest in
the
man
Jesus,
who
died for our sins and rose that we might have the ful ness of l ife.
To maintain and l ive this h ope i s to
be lieve in the Father,
receive the Spirit, and parti-
cipate in the death and resur rection of the Son. genuine
Ch ristian attitude prescr ibes that .
" The •
we
reach out of hope toward that future which is consti tuted by the compassion of God. 11
82
24
NOT ES lon the process of integration, see especially "A Brief Theological Study on Indulgence," T I 10, 15 0165 ; and, in addition, "Remark s on the Theology of In dulgence," .!.!. 196-199 ; "The Commandment of Love in Re lation to the Other Commandments," .!.!. 5, 43 9-459 ; "On the Official Teaching of the Church Today on the Sub ject of Indulgences," .!.!. 10, 184-198. 2 11 0n the Official Teaching of the Church Today on the Subject of Indulgences," .!.!. 10, 190.
3 n A Brief 10, 151-15 8.
Theological
Study
on
Indulgence,"
TI
4 11 A 10, 15 6.
Theological
Study
on
Indulgence,"
TI
Brief
5 Major collections of Rahner' s spiritual writ ings include .Il 3, 7, and 8 ; Opportunities for Faith, Elements Qf � Modern s irituality, trans. E. Quinn (New York : Seabury, 1974 ; and Spiritual Exercises.
1
6 11 s ome Thoughts on ' a Good Intention' ," 12 8. See the entire article, 105 -12 8.
TI
3,
7 11 s ome 125 -12 8.
Intention' ,"
TI
3,
and
TI
7,
9 11 Christian Living Formerly and Today," T I 3 -2 4 ; "Thoughts on the Theology of Christmas," 24-2 9, Christian at the Crossroads, 48-61.
7, 3,
17.
Thoughts
8 11 Christian
on
Living
'a
Good
Formerly
Today,"
Tr
l0 11 Reflections on the Problem of the Gradual Ascent to Christian Perfection," .!.l. 3, 3 -2 3 , esp. 15 2 3 ; "Conversion," I.!_ 2 92 -2 94. llchristian at the Crossroads, 80. On the relation of penance, -contrition, conversion, and asceti cism, to social responsibility, see especially 75 -83 ; "Christian Living Formerly and Today .Il 7, 16-2 4. l2 on this mastery of nature, see "C hristianity and the ' New Man' ," .Il 5, 13 5 -15 3 ; "The Man of Today and Religion," .!l 6, 3-20 ; "The Experiment with Man," 83
TI 9, 205 -2 2 4 ; TT 2 2 5 -25 2 .
"The Problem of Genetic Manipulation, "
l3 on the question o f social responsibility self, see the references under Part B, 2, note 16.
it
14 "Christian 188-190 ; Humanism, " TI 9, "The Church's Commission to Bring Salvation and the Humani zation of the World, " TI 14, 308-313 ; "On the Theology of Revolution, " ll 14, 31 6f. 15 Meditations on the Sacraments, 5 5 . See also 5 3-5 9 ; Christian at the--rrossroads, 7 5-7 7 ; "On the Of ficial Teaching of the Church Today on the Subject of Indulgences, " ll 10, 186- 190. l6 11 Penance as an Additional Act of Reconcilia tion with Church, " TI 10, 12 5 - 14 9 ; "Forgotten Truths Concern ing the Sacrament of Penance, " .!l 2 , 13 5 -17 4 ; "Penance, " E T, 1189-12 04' and the entire Schriften 11. 17 11A Brief Theological Study on Indulgence, " 11 158-165 ; "Remark s on the Theology of Indulgence, " TI 194-198 ; "On the Offical Teaching of the Church Today on the subject of I ndulgences, " ..!1. 10, 186-198.
21 .
l8 11 Christian Living
Formerly
and
Today, "
TI
7,
19 11 Christian Living Formerly and Today, " T I 7 , 21. On this dimension of asceticism, see "Reflections on the Theology of Renunciation, " T I 3 , 47 -5 7 ; "The Passion and Asceticism, " TI 3, 5 8-85 ; "Self-Realiza tion and Tak ing Up One's Cross, " 11 9, 2 5 3-25 7 ; "Nachfolge des Gek reuzigten, " Schriften 13 , 188-2 03 . 2 0"The Passion and Asceticism, " 11 3 , 69-7 3 . 2l "The Passion and Asceticism, " T I 3 , 7 4-8 2 . On Rahner's treatment of death, see especially On the Death, trans. C. Henk ey (Freiberg : Theology Qf Herder/Montreal : Palm, 1961) ; "Dogmatic Questions on Easter, " .!l 4, 12 7 -13 3 ; "The Li fe of the Dead, " T·I 4, 3 47 -3 5 4 ; "The Scandal of Death, " ll 17 , 140-144; "0n Christian Dying, " ll 7 , 2 85 -2 93 ; "Theological Consid erations Concerning the Moment of Death, " T I 1 1, 3 093 21 ; "I deas for a Theology of Death, " 11 13, 169-186 ; "Das Christliche Sterben, " Schriften 13 , 2 69-3 04 ; "Death, " g, 3 2 9-3 3 3.
84
On Rahner' s treatment o f illness as anticipatio n o f death, and as afflictio n fro m witho ut which pro vo k es a free attitude fro m within; and o n the healing pro cess, which is to extend to all dimensio ns o f o ne' s being and wo rld, see: " The Saving Fo rce and Healing Po wer o f Faith, " .I.l 5 , 4 6 0 - 4 6 7 ; " Pro ving Oneself in Time o f Sick ness, " T I 7 , 2 7 5 - 2 8 4 ; " Die Freiheit des Krank en in Theo lo gischer Sicht, " Schriften 1 2 , 4 3 9 4 5 4 ; Meditatio ns o n the Sacraments, 7 9 - 9 3 . 2 2 11 Christian Living Fo rmerly and To day, " TI 7, 20- 22 . See also " The Theo lo gy o f Po verty, " TI 8 ,-1 6 8 21 4 ; " The Unreadiness o f the Church' s Members to Ac cept Po verty, " .I.l 1 4 , 2 7 0 - 2 7 9 .
,
-
'
2 3 11 Christianity and the ' New Man' " TI 5 1351 5 3 ; " On the Theo lo gy o f Ho pe, " .I.l 1 0 , 2 4 2 - 2 5 9 ; Christian at the Cro ssro ads, 8 7 -9 3 . See also the refer ences un der Part B, 2, no te 1 6 . 2 4 11 oo es Traditio nal Theo lo gy Represent Guilt as Inno cuo us as a Facto r in Human Life?, " T I 1 3 , 1 3 9 . On the essential co re o f Christianity, seer eferences un der Part A, 2 , no te 4.
85
CONC LUS ION T h r o u g h t he many w ri ting s o f Kar l Rah ne r , o c casio ne d
by
have p u r s u e d gy :
his
p e r ce p t io n
o ne o f t he
of
c e nt r al
c r u c ia l
l ar g e l y
i s s ue s ,
we
te ne t s o f his t h e o l o
G o d i s t he i n finite m y s t e r y be s t o w e d as
t he near
ne s s o f f o r givi ng l o ve ; and man is o pe nne s s and o rie n tat io n t o t his m y s t e r y . tical in
p o larit y
o ne
g uil t
of
of
t he
and
d ivine
By
b e s t o wa l
c ritical
s u f fe ring
heal ing .
We have e x amine d t his dial e c
way
areas
b e f o re
of
and
of
e x pe rie nce :
d ivine
c o nc l u s io n ,
h u man re s p o n se h u man
f o r g ive ne s s
we
s hal l
ad d
and
a
fe w
w o r d s o f ap p rai s a l and c o m me nt . Rah ne r is at t e m p t i ng t o b ri ng pe rie n ce
and
c o nne c ti o ns f o u nd
in
C h ris t ian b e t wee n
his
d o c t r i ne
t he m .
t he o l o g y
t o ge t he r and
The
to
h u man e x
dis ce r n
f u ndame nta l
o f m y s tery .
The
t he
link
is
d ee p e s t
h u man
e x p e rie nce is ma n ' s o rie ntat i o n t o t he i n finite .
T his
e x pe rie nce o f m y s t e r y re ceive s i t s f u l l e s t int e r p re ta ti o n and
c l eare s t a r t i c u latio n in e x p li c i t
it y .
t he
At
see n as te r y .
re fe r ring God
h u man
s ame
is
t he
e x p e rie nc e .
Fat he r He nc e ,
of
Je s u s
t ime ,
Ch ri s tian
e x p l i c it C h ris t ianit y m u s t b e
p re c i s e l y m y s te r y T he
to
e nc o u nt e re d i n o u r
Go d
C h ris t
t ha t e x p e rie nce d
so
and
d o c t rine and e x pe rie nce
e nc o u nte re d
my s
dee pe s t is
t he
Give r
of
the
S pirit .
s hould
be
m u t ual l y i l
l u mina t ing and c o r re c t ing . Ra h ne r ap p r o ac he s
t hi s
t h e o l o g ical
tas k
with
t he
tools
o f w h at he t e r m s hi s t r an s c e nde ntal t he o l o gical 1 ant h r o p o l o g y . He s e e k s t o e x p l o re t h e c o nditio ns of
p o s s i b il i t y
mit s
t ha t
an age
of
o f e x pe rie nce
t hi s i s
o ne
p l u ra l i s m i n
s p h e re s o f l i fe .
and
o f many
reve l atio n .
He
ad
p o s s ib l e ap p r oac h e s i n
t he o l o g y
as
we l l a s
i n o t he r
Ye t h e s t re s s e s t hat o ne m u s t f o l l o w 87
s ome method, apply
tions .
that
and mus t attempt to jus tify, method
Rahner
s ees
cons is tently
particularly fruitful.
who would differ is
the
in
clarify,
one' s
trans cendental
and
inves tiga
approach
as
The challenge to a theologian
to offer another approach
which
would at once s hed more light on the s ubject cons id ered and prove more true to reality. Behind Rahner's attempts to link Chris tianity and
experience lies
a
in the
vis ion
cons is tency.
light
of
a
of
great depth,
This
overarching
trans cendental method, comprehens ivenes s vis ion
is
and
pres uppos ed
and brought to bear on any topic he is
cons idering,
and the particular topic in its turn s erves to further illuminate that bas ic pers pective. Yet this plicity.
vis ion is
Rahner
s tates
of an almos t incredible s im in effect that the heart of
man is a hunger for the infinite, and that this hunger
is not in vain.
We might put it in terms more s pecif
ic to the topic we have been cons idering. s ible to live in hope des pite evil:
gift:
It is pos
s uch h ope is
a
its s ource is what is meant by "God." Rahner look s to the human experience reflected in
s o much of religion, art, and literature. experience
of ques t,
of longing,
This is the
of reaching out,
a
res tles s nes s that tak es us beyond all we encounter and choos e towards
s omething infinite.
a meaning that is from the
heart,
the
hope or des pair. what
is
meant
ultimate.
by
only
To
This this
alternatives
ques t is
for
human outreach are,
finally,
The s ource and goal of this hope is "God."
God
is
the
ground
out
of
which this hope aris es and the horiz on toward which it reaches .
The ques tion of God is
not a cas ual intel
lectual inquiry about a pos s ible exis tent. 88
It
is
a
life and death quest that arises out of the depths of one' s being.
Rahner' s in
tremes
reality.
perience.
interpretation also avoids the two ex usually
is
God
which
consigned
to
non-
One view divorces God totally from human exIt is found in certain naive forms of the
where God is portrayed as one object
ism and atheism,
or item among many others whom a person may or may not his or her journey through life.
in
come across
the other extreme view, man
experience, y iew,
Rahner ' s
preserved.
he
immanence
both
is
and
a
tally other.
The
contact,
projection.
transcendence
As the mystics have said,
In
are
God is at the
But what is at the core is to
core of one' s being. points of
God is totally reduced to hu
which
of
In
deepest human experiences as
were,
it
with God.
are our
But what
these experiences touch upon is utterly transcendent,
and evok es adoring silence.
Rahner' s vision of a near yet transcendent source
of meaning and hope is lik ewise far removed from a su perficial or sentimental view which neglects the hor of existence.
rifying elements
This fact
clear from the whole preceding presentation.
earliest writings, areness
of
the
should be
From his
Rahner exhibits a very strong aw
elements
of
dark ness,
suffering
and
evil in human life.
He faces these squarely without
falling into despair,
while recognizing this as a dis
tinct possibility.
Rahner concentrates upon the experience and image
of man as a being who reaches beyond himself from the core,
and correspondingly presents God as ground and
term of that transcendence.
This focus allows for a
nuanced interpretation of a variety of human experi-
89
ence s and o f t he c o nce p t o f G o d t h e y s u g ge s t . man ' s reac hing be y o nd him se l f s p ring s tio n t hat i s al read y man e x pe rie nc e s
Be c au s e
f r o m a n o r ie nta
t he re in t h e c o re o f h i s b eing ,
him s e l f as at
o nc e gi f t e d and c a l l e d ,
as e nab l e d and s u m m o ne d , as e n d o we d w i t h a dig ni t y a n d wit h a vo catio n .
H e is
t he re b y ab l e
to
c o nc e p t u a l i z e
G o d b o t h as s o u rce o f g i f t a n d a s g oa l o f s u m m o ns ,
as
t hat f r o m w h ic h a n d t o w h ic h he reac he s . M o re
s pe c i fical l y ,
man e x p e rie nc e s
g i f t o f int rinsic val ue ,
ye t
him s e l f
give n int o
his
as
a
o w n hand s
as raw mate rial f o r w hi c h he is ac c o u n t ab l e , and c a l l e d b y name t o fas hio n t hat se l f int o an e nd u ri ng o f ar t b y
re s p o nding
ly .
Ye t at
t his
tas k ,
o t he r s . s o me
t he to
In
e x t e nt
t o o t he r s p e r s o nal l y and s o cial
same
t ime
dis t o r t
o t he r as
t he
w o rd s ,
gi f te d ,
f o r give n and hea le d .
work
man i s
inc l i ne d
mate rial and man
to
re f u se
re j e c t
e x pe rie nce s
re s p o nsib le ,
to
him s e l f
j u d ge d ,
the to
g ui l t y ,
T his e x p e rie nce im p lie s a s o u r c e
and t e r m o f t he g i f t and c al l .
T hi s i s w hat i s meant
by " G o d . " T he s peak s
ab ove
term s
o f G o d in pe r s o nal
lang uage o f t he Go d
as
cou rse ,
of
T hat
fr o m
meant
by
of
pe r s o na l
Ch ris tian t r ad i t io n .
Ye t
being
" God . "
t he
in
fac t
g i f te d
c o n tac t
w h ic h
is
term s ,
and
d oe s
t he e x p e rie nce
p o int
al l
as
se l f - b e s t owing ,
e x pe rie nc e t he
are
of a
and
Pe r hap s
and o ne
much
of
and ,
s um m o ns .
t he
h u man
cal l
c o me no r
t he
t o s peak o f
a d d re s s e d
canno t
Rah ne r
a r t ic u lat e
s o u r c e and
re mai ns gi f t
to
so
t he of Ye t
e x pe rie nce . is
w ha t
is
ne e d
no t
say
m o re . Rah ne r
fac e s
t h is
par t i c u l ar
t hat G o d is e x pe rie nc e d o n l y as re c t o b j e c t ,
p o int ,
and
as s e r t s
g r o u nd and no t a s d i
o n l y as h o ri z o n a n d n o t as t h at w h ic h i s 90
se en within th e horizon . H e adds, too, that man ex perienc es God as ground o f himsel f precisely as con scious and fr e e p ersonal b eing . While one must not attribute to God the limitations found in finite sub j ectivity , n evertheless, that which grounds th e p erson cannot be less than personal . God cannot be portray ed in mod els taken from the impersonal world of things as a kind o f unconscious and impersonal cosmic law . Rahn er makes the final observation that the mor e con cr ete m eaning o f the concept o f God as person must be d etermined through personal experi ence in the d epths o f on e' s conscienc e, through the historical experience o f the human race, and in particular through the his tory o f the Christian revelation . 2 This may well b e the case. Yet with th e quali fi cations drawn to avoid a naive th eism ( or ath eism ) , with the recognition that on e's experienc e does touch a r eality distinct from that experi enc e, and in t erms o f it, one may also d e monstrate a great d eal of r e serv e in speaking o f God as � person, in too anthropo morphic a fashion . On e may also state, as at least intimated in Rahn er' s view o f th e relationship between doctrine and experi enc e, that mor e is involved than filling out the content o f the in finitely near mystery by the explicit Christian tradition . In a correspond ing manner, the stat e m ents o f the Christian tradition may the ms elv es even be clari fied and their interpr eta tion re fin ed precisely by th e pro found experience o f and disciplined re flection upon the dim ension o f th e in finite mystery . In any event, Rahner rais es th e fundam ental human question: is hope possible in spit e o f evil? And h e provid es a positive answer that is at onc e simple and 91
pro found , comprehens i v e and uni fled , austere and a t t r a c t i v e , r e a l i s t i c a n d c om p a s s i o n a t e . On e c a n n o t a s k more o f any theolog i an .
92
NOTES lon Rahner' s theological method, see especially "Theology and Anthropology, " TI 9, 2 8-45 ; "Reflections on Methodology in Theology, " TI 11, 68-114; "Pluralism in Theology and the Unity of the Creed in the Church, " .!.!. 11, 3-23; "Possible Courses for the Theology of the Future, " TI 13 , 32-60; "The Current Relationship be tween PhiIosophy and Theology, " TI 13, 61-7 9; "Formal and Fundamenta1 Theology, 11 ET, 5 2 4f; "Philosophy and Theology, " Q, 12 2 8-12 33; "Th eology, " ET, 1686-1701; "Transcendental Theology, " ET, 1748-17 51; Foundations, 3-2 5 . See also Anne Carr, The Theological Method of Karl Rahner (Missoula, MT: Scholar' s Press, 19771; Louis Roberts, The Achievement of Karl Rahner ( New York : Herder and Herder, 1966), esp, 7-51; and William Dych, "Theology in a New Key ' II A World .Q.f. Grace, 1-16. 2 Foundations, 71-75 .