Dr Catherine Pickstock: Reader in Philosophy and Theology, Fellow and Tutor of Emmanuel College, Cambridge
Radical Orthodoxy, A New Theology, edited by John Milbank, Catherine Pickstock, and Graham Ward
[K-mafian kaksi linkkilisäystä klo: 18.10]
*
Tämä teksti on päretetty Suomen teologisen instituutin opiskelijalehti Tractatuksesta [ks. linkki]
1
Teologia myllerryksessä: liberalismin jälkeen uusortodoksia [Timo Eskolan artikkeli]
'Lännen sekulaari filosofia on ollut suoranaista vastateologiaa' [John Milbank]
Luterilaisen perinteen Pohjoismaissa meille on tuttua saksalainen teologinen liberalismi. Uuskantilaisuus pyrki tekemään teologiasta etiikkaa, ja eksistentialismi julisti sitä antropologiana.Valistuksen jälkeisenä ohjelmana – modernin projektina – uskonto sosiologisoitiin.
Suomalainen teologia on nauttinut näitä hedelmiä koko viime vuosisadan. 1900-luvun loppupuolella alkoi kuitenkin liike toiseen suuntaan. Yalen amerikkalainen postliberalismi asetti ensinnäkin tekstistä irtaantuneen eksegeettisen hermeneutiikan kyseenalaiseksi. Kielellinen käänne vaati paluuta narratiiviin. Britanniassa puolestaan keskityttiin sekularismin kritiikkiin. Kristillisen teologian väitettiin jääneen sekularisaatioprosessin uhriksi.
Radikaalin ortodoksian ohjelma
John Milbankin, Catherine Pickstockin ja Graham Wardin toimittama, ohjelmallinen kokoelma Radical Orthodoxy alkaa haastavalla julistuksella, jonka mukaan “sekularismi on määritellyt maailman ja myös tapamme hahmottaa sitä”. Teologia on muutettu kehnoksi sosiologiaksi, joka ei pysty perustelemaan edes omia lähtökohtiaan, saati sitten luomaan kirkolle merkityksellistä teologiaa. Tätä täydentää relativistinen postmodernismi, joka vain julistaa “arvojensa puutetta” ja merkityksen katoamista. “Kyberavaruuksissaan ja teemapuistoissaan se esittelee materialismia, joka on sielutonta, aggressiivista, välinpitämätöntä ja nihilististä.”
Kirjoittajat toteavat haastavasti, että lännen sekulaari filosofia on ollut suoranaista vastateologiaa. Liberalismissa raamattuteologia on pelkistetty yhteiskuntatieteen ja politiikan sosiologiseksi ohjelmaksi. Sekularismin vastateologia on esimerkiksi Milbankin mukaan länsimaisessa historiassa ollut jatkuvasti pelkkä kristillisen teologian puutteellinen ja virheellinen mukaelma. Toiset ovat kuvanneet sitä todelliseksi kristillisen teologian parodiaksi.
Sekularismi perustui sosiologiaan. Weberin sosiologisen hermeneutiikan katsottiin olevan syypää liberaalin protestantismin metakertomukseen. Hän jakoi uskontojen historian kolmeen vaiheeseen. Varhaista maagista vaihetta seurasi suurten pelastususkontojen vaihe, erityisesti kristinusko. Kolmas vaihe on sekulaarin modernin kausi. Pelastususkontojen metafyysisen vaiheen ajateltiin kantilaiseen tapaan ikään kuin valmistaneen esikrittisen vaiheen ihmisiä kriittisen järjen kauteen, jossa epärationaalinen arvojen muodostaminen korvataan järjen tietoisilla toiminnoilla.
Milbankin mukaan tämä hermeneutiikka on liberaalissa protestantismissa heijastettu takaisin ajanlaskun alun todellisuuteen ja kristinuskon syntyä on selitetty tämän dynamiikan avulla. Näin ollen sekulaari hermeneutiikka olisi sisäänrakennettuna ohjannut koko kristillisen kirkon historiaa: “Lännen historia muuttuu jatkuvasti tulollaan olevaksi liberaaliksi protestantismiksi ja sen sekulaariksi jälkivaikutukseksi” (Milbank, Theology and Social Theory).
Teologia oli kriisissä
Jotain on siis tehtävä. Radikaalin ortodoksian kirjoittajien mukaan länsimaisen ajattelun rappioon on tartuttava. Filosofiat eivät kykene tarjoamaan elämänkatsomusta. Postmoderni dekonstruktionismi suorastaan julistaa, että merkitys ei ole edes löydettävissä. Modernin kritiikille on siten suuri tilaus, mutta se ei voi hyödyntää jälkistrukturalistista, derridalaista ohjelmaa. Tilalle tarvitaan uusi lähestymistapa.
Radikaali ortodoksia on Milbankin ja hänen kollegojensa mukaan ortodoksista eli puhdasoppista siksi, että se palaa perinteisten oppikysymysten pariin ja uskontunnustusten ohjaamaan kristillisyyteen (commitment to credal Christianity). Radikaalissa ortodoksiassa haetaan teologian kieltä, vaikka samalla vedetään rajaa barthilaisen dualismin suuntaan.
Uusi teologia ei ole pelkästään uskon kieltä filosofisesti perustellun tarkastelutavan vastakohtana. Sen sijaan kirjoittajat määrittelevät lähestymistapansa pikemminkin välittäväksi (mediating) tarkasteluksi. Teologia on vuoropuhelussa muiden tiedon ja kulttuurin alueiden kanssa. Itse asiassa kirjoittajat hakevat usein juuri sellaista teologiaa, jolla on relevanssia myös yhteiskunnallisessa elämässä.
Ohjelmassa on lisäksi kyse radikaalisuudesta siinä sanan perinteisessä merkityksessä, että uuden teologian tekijät haluavat palata teologian juuriin (radix). Radikaalille ortodoksialle on tyypillistä etsiä uutta vuoropuhelua kirkkoisien teologian ja nykypäivän opinmuodostuksen välille. Esikuvana on Augustinuksen käsitys tiedosta jumalallisena illuminaationa. Näin ylitetään tarpeeton uskon ja tiedon tai luonnon ja armon välinen dualismi.
Entä luterilaiset?
Mitä annettavaa on reformaation perillisillä teologian uusille kehityssuunnille? Anglo-katolisten tutkijoiden avaus oli merkittävä, mutta ilmeisesti postmodernismin ohjaamana he hyppäsivät inkarnaation tapahtumasta suoraan kirkon tulkintaan. Raamattu jäi lähes kokonaan väliin. Tämän tilalle tarvitaan neo-reformatorinen tekstihermeneutiikka, joka todellisesti lähestyy kertomusta narratologian avulla ja joka hyödyntää semioottisesti perusteltua merkitysteoriaa.
Milbankin ja Wardin kritisoima teologian sekularisaatioprosessi on rinnakkainen reformaatiota edeltäneen kirkon tilanteeseen. Uskonpuhdistajien kritiikki oli itse asiassa perin saman kaltaista kuin radikaaliortodoksian ohjelma. Se kohdistui väittämään, että kirkon klassisen opin tulkinnan perusteet olivat muuttuneet. Tekstihermeneuttinen opintulkinta oli korvautunut käytännöillä, joita ohjasivat antiikin filosofia ja kirkon sisäiset valtapyrkimykset. Sekularisaation sijaan kirkossa oli tapahtunut vuosisatojen varrella ideologisaatio. Klassinen soteriologinen dogma oli syrjäytetty ja tilalle olivat nousseet aristotelinen ontologia ja sosiologiset hierarkiat.
Eräässä mielessä katolisen kirkon historiassa toteutunut pragmaattinen teologia oli myös parodia klassisesta dogmasta. Esimerkiksi aneoppeineen ja paavin vallan korostamisineen kirkko oli uskonpuhdistajien mielestä rakentanut kilpailevan pelastusopin. Pelastuksen välineet määriteltiin ilman Kristusta. Näin kirkosta ja sen viran hoitajista oli tullut parodinen vaihtoehto evankeliumille ja uskonvanhurskaudelle.
Reformaation ohjelma oli siten radikaaliortodoksiaa, radikaalia juuriin palaamista, ja ortodoksiaa, pyrkimystä kirkon identiteetille luovuttamattoman opin jäsentämiseen. Reformaation muotoperiaate sola scriptura vastasi siten ajan kontekstuaalisia tarpeita. Siksi postliberaalin vastauksen ei tule tänäänkään sivuuttaa tekstejä. Sen sijaan uskonpuhdistuksen raamattuperiaate tarjoaa oivallisen välineen ja perustan tekstihermeneuttiseen työskentelyyn liberaalin hermeneutiikan romahtamisen jälkeen.
Timo Eskola
2
Dosentti Sammeli Juntunen, voiko radikaalin ortodoksian pohjalta kehitellä jotain innostavaa dogmatiikan alueella nyt, kun liberalismin tilalle haetaan kaikkialla uutta teologiaa?
– Radikaalin ortodoksian pohjalta voi ehdottomasti kehitellä vaikka mitä mielenkiintoista. Olennaista kyseisessä otteessa on se, että sekulaarit tieteet kuten sosiologia tai historiallis-kriittinen eksegetiikka haastetaan niiden omalla kentällä ja paljastetaan niiden kätketyt teologis-filosofiset sidonnaisuudet, minkä jälkeen niiden ongelmiin etsitään ratkaisuja tradition valossa luetusta Raamatusta. Näin toimii vaikkapa John Millbankin ehdottomasti lukemisen arvoinen Theology and Social Theory -niminen tiiliskivi [ks. linkki].
– Radikaalissa ortodoksiassa on omat puutteensa, esim. se, että pyrkimyksistään huolimatta se perustuu usein kovin vähän ”kristinuskon omaan raamatulliseen metanarraatioon”, mihin se kuitenkin väittää perustuvansa. Uusplatonistis-augustinolaisesta partisipaatiometafysiikasta uhkaa tulla perusta. Vaarana voi olla myös se, että kirkosta ja sen kulttuurista tulee liian merkittävä suhteessa Jumalan sanaan. Jumalan sana on kuitenkin kirkkoa ”vastapäätä”, sitä arvioimassa, mikä joskus unohtuu kulttuuris-lingvistisessä lähestymistavassa, johon radikaaliortodoksiakin omalla tavallaan kuuluu.
– Olennaisinta radikaalissa ortodoksiassa on kuitenkin se riemu, jolla on löydetty kirkollinen teologia ja pyrkimys etsiä oikeata kirkollista teoriaa ja praksista nimenomaan teologisesti. Näin voi syntyä nykyajalle sen aito teologia eli ”fides quarens intellectum”, ymmärrystä etsivä usko. Jos Suomen kirkolliseen elämään saataisiin edes 1/12 Radikaaliortodoksian teologisen keskustelun ja argumentaation innosta ja osaamisesta, olisimme pelastetut siitä julkisesta diletantismista ja hyssyttelystä, jota kirkollinen teologia nykyisin on.
3
Dosentti Olli-Pekka Vainio, radikaali ortodoksia ja postliberalismi ovat yrittäneet hakea uutta suuntaa dogmatiikalle. Mitä postliberalismin jälkeen?
– Ns. kielellinen käänne, johon postliberalismikin liittyy, on mahdollistanut uudella tavalla lähestyä Raamatun tekstejä ja tulkita niitä ne synnyttäneen yhteisön eli kirkon ja sen uskon näkökulmasta. Kuitenkin postliberalismia on kritisoitu gettoutumisesta: teologia on vain tekstin ja käsitteiden kuvausta, jossa kysymys teologisten väitteiden yleispätevästä totuudesta uhkaa jäädä sivuun. Postliberaalin teologian keinoin voidaan luoda hyviä kuvauksia kristillisten yhteisöjen uskosta ja käytännöistä niiden omilla ehdoilla, mutta miksi pitäisi sitoutua niihin? Postmodernismihan sallii kyllä teologialle sen oman äänen, mutta vain sillä ehdolla, että se suostuu olemaan yksi ääni muiden joukossa ilman absoluuttisuuden vaatimusta.
– Postliberaalin teologian jälkeläisiä ovat Karl Barthin ajattelua seurailevat dogmaatikot kuten Robert Jenson ja Bruce Marshall. Heidän mukaansa teologian tulee aloittaa kirkon omasta uskosta, pyrkiä ymmärtämään sitä mahdollisimman hyvin ja ryhtyä tästä käsin keskustelemaan muiden uskomusjärjestelmien kanssa. Toisaalta postliberaalia gettoa on pyritty purkamaan hyödyntämällä viimeaikaista tieteenfilosofista keskustelua ja erityisesti kriittistä realismia. Tästä on esimerkkinä esimerkiksi Alister McGrathin Scientific Theology -ohjelma, jossa pyritään löytämään yhteyksiä luonnontieteen ja teologian metodien välille.
– Molemmissa malleissa lähdetään liikkeelle kirkon uskosta, josta käsin pyritään ymmärtämään muita ajattelutapoja sekä löytämään yhteyksiä muihin traditioihin. Kun rationaalisuus ja se mitä pidetään uskottavana on sidottu aina johonkin traditioon, eri traditiot eivät voi noin vain omaksua puheenjohtajan paikkaa. Sen sijaan vaaditaan ankaraa työskentelyä ja selkeää oman identiteetin tiedostamista. Juuri identiteetti on pitkään ollut teologiassa kateissa, kun se on pyrkinyt hieman kritiikittömästi liittoutumaan sille vieraiden ideologioiden kanssa. Kysymys teologisesta identiteetistä ja kirkon uskon sekä perinteen hyvästä hallinnasta nousee jälleen keskipisteeseen.
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http://www.teolinst.fi/julkaisut/tractatus/s.pdf
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radical_Orthodoxy
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_Pickstock
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graham_Ward_(theologian)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Milbank
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Theology-Social-Theory-Political-Profiles/dp/1405136847/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1298649361&sr=8-2
http://fi.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alister_McGrath
http://www.teolinst.fi/j/index.php?option=com_contact&view=contact&id=5%3Atimo-eskola&catid=51%3Asti&Itemid=63
http://www.howardguest.co.uk/Dr_Catherine_Pickstock.htm
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Radical-Orthodoxy-Suspending-John-Milbank/dp/0415196981/ref=sr_1_6?ie=UTF8&qid=1298585055&sr=8-6
http://polycarp.divinity.cam.ac.uk/faculty/pickstock.html
Olen perehtynyt melkein kaikkiin asioihin ja ymmärrän niitä, jos vain haluan. Ainoastaan omat tekoni, tunteeni ja naisen logiikka ovat jääneet minulle mysteereiksi.
Showing posts with label radikaali-ortodoksinen liike. Show all posts
Showing posts with label radikaali-ortodoksinen liike. Show all posts
February 25, 2011
February 24, 2011
POLITICS OF PARADOX [by John Milbank]
John Milbank katsoo dollari-epäjumalaan naulattua Kristusta. Jo Milbankin ilmeestä voi päätellä, että hän on saanut tarpeekseen Jeesuksen halventamisesta markkina-liberaalisella arvotyhjiöllä eli vapaalla rahalla ja vulgaarilla sekularismilla.
I
Tämä päre Milbank-sitaatteineen on suoraa jatkoa edelliseen päreeseeni, jonka lukeminen saattaa hieman auttaa Milbankin puheen taustojen ymmärtämistä. Kyseinen puhe pidettiin vuotta aiemmin kuin edellisessä päreessäni siteerattu haastattelu tehtiin, mutta se kiteyttää ja selkiyttää aatehistoriallisesti valaisevalla tavalla radikaali-ortodoksisen politiikan taustoja - sen teologiaa ja filosofiaa.
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Milbank tekee puheessaan kolmikohtaisen katsauksen sitaatissa esitettyihin teologis-poliittis-aatteellisiin maksiimeihinsa:
As Phillip Blond has suggested, there are now three crucial global forces in the world: capitalist rationality, Islam, and Christianity. And of the latter two, the global reach of Christianity is far more serious and far more likely to prevail in the long term. This means that the anomaly pointed out almost a century ago by Hilaire Belloc is likely to pose its cultural contradiction ever more strongly upon the world stage. This is the manifest gap between the teachings of Christianity which still undergird Western morality, on the one hand, and the theory and practice of capitalism, on the other.
I believe, along with Radical Orthodoxy in general, that only the Church has the theoretical and practical power to challenge the global hegemony of capital and to create a viable politico-economic alternative. I stand thereby in a long tradition of Anglican and Catholic Christian socialism, which has always insisted on the necessity of the "Christian" component for the "Socialist" one. In that sense I have always stood proudly amongst those who see themselves as "conservative theologically, radical politically."
But over the years I have become more aware of the potential for smugness and inertia in that perspective. One can gently challenge it in three ways.
*
First, there is a dimension that I have already hinted at. Can Christians really, fundamentally, categorize themselves as either left or right?
[...]
The second reason for questioning an overly glib "conservative in theology/radical in politics" equation is that one has to integrate one's politics with one's ecclesiology.
[...]
The third reason for questioning a facile Christian leftism is circumstantial. In the face of the ever-increasing triumph of capitalism in our times, secular socialism has all but vanished and the left increasingly understands itself as liberal, and frequently, in addition, as atheist and anti-religious.
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Kolmannen kysymyksen ja koko puheen lopetuskappaleet ilmaisevat Milbankin eetoksen suoraan ja ehkä hieman provokatiivisestikin. Ne eivät jätä epäselviksi ainakaan sitä tosiasiaa, että tämä mies ei ole mikään postmoderni ajattelija, jolle uskonto, metafysiikka, kristillisyys ja politiikka olisivat pelkkää sanoilla leikittelevää game-ability-peliä.
Milbank ei leiki näillä asioilla ja seisoo sanojensa takana sata kertaa vankemmin ja totuudellisemmin kuin joku sekopäinen John Shelby Spong markkina-pelleksi muutetun 'realistisemman' Jeesuksensa sponsorina - [palaan tuohon modernin liberaali-teologian pohjanoteeraukseen eli Spongiin myöhemmässä päreessäni Milbank ja D. B. Hart 'gorilloinani'].
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It should be added here that it is possibly only religion that can provide the element of tacit binding ethos that prevents both distributism and corporatism from drifting back toward the twin dominance of the State and monopoly capitalism. More specifically, one needs the Church as an organization in continuous excess of the State to coordinate without suppressing the diverse activities of intermediate associations. (Lack of this, as William Cavanaugh has argued, has often led to the perversion of Christian Democratic projects in Latin America.[4]) And when one asks, as one must, how is one initially to bring a radical distribution about, then the answer can only be through the bringing about of a new mass-cultural ethos, which will empower a new sort of elite who will win self-respect for their social generosity rather than their wealth (this will then be their "self-interest" and so will be able to ensure that governments will encourage through new legislation, tax structures, and regulation of banking that a radical distribution will occur. But perhaps it is only the Church that has the capacity to inspire and coordinate such a switch in ethos.
This ethos would be radically Catholic rather than radically Protestant. An aspect of the deadlock in British and American politics today is the way in which the hinterland of the left's assumptions remains determinatively Protestant. Indeed its subjectivism, emotionalism, restrictive puritanism, iconoclasm, and opposition to high culture owe more in the end to the Reformation than they do to the Enlightenment. These attitudes are all powerless to resist capitalism and bureaucracy, because both are profoundly promoted by the mainstream Protestant legacy. Even the radical Protestant legacy is in the end unable to think beyond individualism, sectarian isolation, and collectivism—which is but individualism dialectically inverted or else writ large. Anabaptism also is usually mired in the social metaphysics of the via moderna, or else its anti-metaphysical perpetuation—though one can allow that certain British dissenting radicals, like Williams Blake (as Peter Ackroyd has suggested), were strangely echoing, in a newly creative way, the suppressed British Catholic past.
By contrast, it is only a "Catholic center" more extreme than either of the extremes, because it points metacritically to a different plane, that can think and act its way out of our current heretical, immoral, and neopagan political morass.
II
Provokatiivinen huomautus
Luulenpa, että esimerkiksi rakkaita derivaattojaan säännöllisesti masuunittava Ironmistress ei ymmärrä Milbankin ideahistoriallisesta katsauksesta sekä hänen innovoimastaan teologiasta ja filosofiasta paljon mitään, sillä niin täysin toisenlaista on 'oikean ja syvällisen ajattelijan' luovuus matruunan kalkylointeihin verrattuna. - Milbank siis jäänee rautarouvalle artefaktaksi ja nonsenseksi [voi miten paljon nonsensea matruuna-parka sinun maailmassasi onkaan - ja kaiken lisäksi maailman fiksuimpien ihmisten lausumaa nonsensea!]
Sammalkielellekin saattaa tulla vaikeuksia mahduttaa tämänkaltainen teorisointi marxilaiseen antropologiaansa. Onhan Milbankin vokabulaari täynnään kerrassaan metafyysista kamaa, jonka antropologi mieluusti selittää joko funktionalistisesti tai strukturalistisesti pois kuleksimasta aaveen lailla tutkijan metodisesti tarkoin kehystetyistä ajatuksista [puhumattakaan Milbankin epäillyttävän 'sinisestä' sosialismista].
Finnsanity'lle milbankilainen moniselitteisyys ja paradoksaalisuus voi muodostua jopa fyysisesti vaaralliseksi kokemukseksi, sillä mitä ilmeisimmin hän saa epileptisen sätkyn tajutessaan [tosin hyvin hämärästi], että tämä teologi - vaikka onkin vasemmistolainen - on samalla myös katolisuuteen kallellaan oleva konservatiivi, joka vastustaa liberalismia.
Finnsanityn kaltaiset, vapauden kaipuuta yliannoksen impanneet ja sen vuoksi ikuiselle matkalle jääneet jälki-hipit kun eivät voi tajuta, että nykyajan liberalismi [myös vasemmistolainen] on perimmältään [arvotyhjää] markkina-liberalismia [jota valtion kontrolli yhä suuremmassa määrin tukee], ja että kaikenlaínen vouhkaaminen täysin auktoriteetittoman vapauden perään on itse asiassa kapitalismin oravanpyörässä juoksemista.
III
Politics of Paradox
This talk was presented at the 2009 Telos Conference [Friday · March 13, 2009]
In what follows, I summarize a fragmentary political theology, written from a British perspective, but one that opens itself out to Continental and North American intellectual influences, as well as to global concerns.
It was once said to me, by the late Texan theologian John Clayton, in Lancaster, that he had finally worked out what was "weird" about me: "Most of us, John, are trying to combine German theology with Anglo-Saxon philosophy. A few trendy people go for Continental philosophy as well. But you're doing the opposite—with utter perversity you're trying to combine British theology (of all things!) with Continental philosophy—and what is worse, with French stuff!"
This is by no means altogether true. But it contains a grain of truth. I have been consistently interested in the "minority report" of British intellectual history which resists reductive empiricism and utility in the name of what Coleridge called "the old, spiritual, Platonic England" as well as in the name of a more radical empiricism, open to the arrival of the strange and the unexpected. This is by no means simplistically linked to an "anti-science" stance. In the late seventeenth century, there was much fashionable discussion about the Scottish Highlands phenomenon of "second sight." But the skeptics and the scoffers here were the "wits," who were equally disdainful of the curious new things being revealed by natural philosophical "experiment." The Royal Society, by contrast, remained rather agnostic, and took so seriously the initial interest of Robert Boyle in this phenomenon that the far north of Britain became for it for a while, as Michael Hunter puts it, "an occult laboratory." Of course this was to confuse what may be experienced with what can be reliably measured and repeated—but the instance does reveal a non-dogmatic dimension to the British empirical temperament which is not confined to an induction to conclusions from "atomic" items of sensory information. In the case of the nineteenth-century "sages" Coleridge, Newman, and Ruskin, whose perspectives figure strongly in what follows, one sees a particular insular blending of "the empirical" with "the Platonic."
And though I have said that they represent "a minority report," it is nonetheless the case that Anglicanism itself, from Hooker onward, remained closer in its "Toryism" and "metaphysical bent" to this "report" on English and British culture than the "mainline" Whig-utilitarian tradition, which was in reality of course the voice of aristocratic and bourgeois dissent, usurping this theoretically official one. Yet the latter, as the voices of William Cobbett, William Wordsworth, and John Clare reveal, is also the deepest tradition of the British populace and its various regional expressions.
My main concern, though, is with how this diffuse cultural current, at once theological and philosophical, as well as literary, has informed political thought and practice. Here I engage with a tradition of British political reflection, largely Anglo-Catholic and Catholic, which has a great deal in common with that of Catholic Social Teaching on the continent, and which, like that tradition, has been in continuous debate with secular socialism and Hegelianism-Marxism. I try to carry forward the thinking of both traditions in response to the circumstances of recent times. The scope of my theopolitical analyses extends to matters of culture and cultural pluralism, government, economics, history, ecclesiology, and pedagogy. My own thinking appears to combine opposite tendencies. There is both subtlety and brutality, just as there is both radicalism and conservatism. Only the "middle" of an anemic liberalism is consistently and relentlessly refused. I suspect that there will be many who will like the "subtle and radical," on the one hand, but not the "brutal and conservative," on the other, while there will be many others with exactly the reverse set of discriminations. However, for my own part, I consider that I am only understood and agreed with when the reader is prepared to endorse a "subtle brutality" that is a "brutal subtlety," and a "radical conservatism" which is a "conservative radicalism."
This paradoxicality, I believe, makes my political theology greatly relevant to the global juncture at which we now stand.
As Phillip Blond has suggested, there are now three crucial global forces in the world: capitalist rationality, Islam, and Christianity. And of the latter two, the global reach of Christianity is far more serious and far more likely to prevail in the long term. This means that the anomaly pointed out almost a century ago by Hilaire Belloc is likely to pose its cultural contradiction ever more strongly upon the world stage. This is the manifest gap between the teachings of Christianity which still undergird Western morality, on the one hand, and the theory and practice of capitalism, on the other.
I believe, along with Radical Orthodoxy in general, that only the Church has the theoretical and practical power to challenge the global hegemony of capital and to create a viable politico-economic alternative. I stand thereby in a long tradition of Anglican and Catholic Christian socialism, which has always insisted on the necessity of the "Christian" component for the "Socialist" one. In that sense I have always stood proudly amongst those who see themselves as "conservative theologically, radical politically."
But over the years I have become more aware of the potential for smugness and inertia in that perspective. One can gently challenge it in three ways. First, there is a dimension that I have already hinted at. Can Christians really, fundamentally, categorize themselves as either left or right? Surely, as André de Muralt has argued, both the ideas of "the rule of One," of the sovereign center, and of the "rule of the Many," of individuals either in contracted dispersion or collective unity, are equally "nominalist"—both genealogically and ontologically?[3] For both deny primary real relation, the real universal that is "the common good" and the role of "the few," whether that of the guiding virtuous elite or of the mediating institutions of civil society. But "right" and "left" define themselves variously in terms of either "the One" or the "the Many," both nominalistically construed.
Today, of course, what we really have is two versions of a "left" celebration of the "Many" either as individuals or as a democratically voting mass. For reasons still not yet sufficiently accounted for by historians and social theorists, we have a "liberal right," stressing economic negative liberty, and a "liberal left," stressing cultural and sexual negative liberty. In reality, of course, the two liberalisms are triumphing both at once and in secretly collusive harmony. So perhaps what still sustains party conflict is alternating anxieties among the populace about the inevitable insecurities generated by now economic and now cultural "freedom" in different temporal phases.
It follows that the very division of left and right assumes a nominalist social ontology, which of course I would reject. And it is also critically important to remind oneself that this division only postdates the French Revolution. This has created a curious historical delusion from which almost no one is really free. For we suppose that the premodern is somehow allied with "the right," just as barbarous journalists frequently imagine that the divine right of kings was a medieval theory, when it was in reality an early modern one. But pre-nominalist modernity was neither left nor right, neither "progressivist" nor "reactionary"—it was simply "other" to most of our assumed sociopolitical categories.
There is a further point to be made here. When the French revolutionaries invented "left" and "right," they arguably took us back to paganism and indeed they often explicitly supposed that they were doing so. For characteristically, the ancient Greeks lined up philosophies of the spirit and of "ideal forms" with aristocracy and philosophies of matter with democracy. It is as if they assumed that the latter was always a matter of lowest common denominator and not of highest common factor. But as I have already suggested, the Christian revolution cuts right across this categorization. Instead of siding with "the noble" over against "the base," or inversely "the base" over against "the noble," it paradoxically democratizes the noble: hence Paul addresses his interlocutors as "all kings." Yet at the same time, if there is now a new possibility of the spread of virtue (virtue being redefined as the more generally possible attitudes of love and trust, immune to the instance of "moral luck" as usually understood), there is still a political place for the superior role of the more virtuous and of those appointed to be the "guardians" of virtue, the virtuosos of charisma.
But unlike those paradigms of virtue hitherto, "the heroes," these Christian "pastors" (who are "shepherds" like Plato's guardians) will frequently remain both mocked and invisible, since they may lack the glamour of obvious "honor," and may need to retain a hidden "outlaw" status in order both to escape the need to appease the masses, upon whose adulation manifest power depends, and to directly execute a summary justice which the procedures of inevitably inflexible law might foil. This is the theme brilliantly explored in Christopher Nolan's Batman film The Dark Knight, with its explicit Platonic resonances concerning the noble lie and so forth. But the film leaves us with the Platonic aporia of a division between the ignoble hero-ruler (a John F. Kennedy figure) whom the people must believe to be noble if they are to have any ideals and the genuinely noble outlaw-guardian who must pursue virtue in uncorrupted secrecy (thereby passing the test of Gyges ring).
The only dimension that can in part resolve this aporetic tension is the Christian one of sacramental ordination and anointed monarchy. The ideal symbolic dimension of the pastoral role implicitly corrects, with its equitable outlawry, any abuse of legal authority—it also to an extent permits the enactment of such equity to the degree that awe at sacred charisma can override the blandishments of popular concession to which mere democracy must remain prone. And yet—save for the example of Lear on the heath in the storm, or Walter Scott's Richard the Lionheart in Sherwood Forest—the bishop-as-apostle rather than the monarch surpasses even this possibility of visible purity by stepping, like Paul, in and out of visibility, in alternation of command and vagabondage. Thus, likewise, there is still a monarch at the summit of the ecclesia—but it is the crucified, resurrected, ascended, and so apparently absent Jesus, who died as a king but had nowhere on earth to lay his head, and it is this pattern that is followed by the Church hierarchy which mediates his authority.
The politic-ecclesial pattern suggested by the New Testament therefore remains classically democratic/aristocratic/monarchic. Following the norms of antique political thought, this has often in Christian history implied that one or the other stress should dominate according to the prevalence or otherwise of virtue. One could nonetheless validly say that the ultimate bias of Christianity is democratic, because its aim is that all should love and trust, all should become virtuous. In this sense it has a populist bias "to the left." But this is not exactly "the modern left," because Christianity (unlike Bush and Blair) sees no automatic merit in democracy in all circumstances, nor any validity in the notion that the will of the majority should always prevail. Its reasons for favoring democracy are rather that the entire truth of Christianity exists in harmonious dispersal among the body of Christ (eschatologically the entire human race and the entire cosmos) and that agreement in the truth requires ideally a free consensus.
The post-revolutionary "left," however, tends to revive a pagan sense of democracy as lowest common denominator: it links democracy to naturalistic materialism and to a sophistic individualism. I constantly contrast this with Ruskin's genuinely Christian and explicitly at once "Tory" and "communist" desire to extend norms of nobility, of self-regulation of standards of behavior, work, outcomes, and protection of members from the "liberal" professions also to mercantile and artisanal pursuits.
It is mainly for this reason that "a Christian left" is not really situated within the same spectrum as the secular left—for it both aspires to democratize excellence and to grant an educative and political role to the exponents of excellence in order to balance out the verdict of the many. But this requirement does not compromise democracy—rather it enables it. For democracy is not an infinite regress—no one finally votes on the dominant options presented to people, and if these are not the work of disciplined elites, educated toward virtue as well as knowledge, then they will be the work of propagandists, of a corrupted elite, as now prevails.
The second reason for questioning an overly glib "conservative in theology/radical in politics" equation is that one has to integrate one's politics with one's ecclesiology. The Lamennaisian combination of hierarchy in metaphysical truth, democracy in pragmatic politics, will not quite do. Of course it is by no means entirely false: in Church affairs what matters is truth, not opinion, and so hierarchy must prevail. In secular affairs, though, a second-best pragmatic peace may usually be the priority, and therefore consensus must prevail at the cost otherwise of unacceptable violence and outright inhumanity.
Yet in the end there can be, for Christianity, no such absolute contrast. The earthly city is valid insofar as it serves the heavenly and from the outset Christianity has modified the role of the political ruler in a "pastoral" direction (sometimes for ill as well as good). He becomes more a kind of ecclesial pastor of material affairs—which always have an implication for our salvation.
Here we need to balance Western with Eastern Christian perspectives: the "monarch" may be properly subordinate to "the priest," and his dealing in law and coercive violence is now (uniquely by Christianity) desacralized because of its ambivalence—and yet the "kingly" role remains Christological insofar as it foreshadows the integrity of the resurrected body, when the material will fully shine with the glory of the spiritual. In the end Christ's priesthood fades, and his kingship remains. Perhaps, therefore, something authentically "Byzantine" has shone out in the Anglican stress upon the "incarnational" aspect of sociopolitical transformation—even if this has often been perverted by support for the modern absolutely sovereign and disciplinary State.
The sense that the secular arm is "within" as well as "outside" the Church accords then with the need also for secular hierarchy, for the reasons which I have explained. But inversely, one can also argue that we need more participatory (not formally representative) democracy inside the Church. This is because, as Newman pointed out, the "correctness" of doctrine must finally be tested in practice by the assent of all. For Christian truth abides more fundamentally in the entirety of liturgical and pastoral life than it does in abstract reflection.
Political theory and ecclesiology must finally then be of one piece. Both involve a classical mixture of democracy, aristocracy, and kingship, even if the Christian demos is paradoxically anointed and Christian "kingship" is paradoxically kenotic.
The third reason for questioning a facile Christian leftism is circumstantial. In the face of the ever-increasing triumph of capitalism in our times, secular socialism has all but vanished and the left increasingly understands itself as liberal, and frequently, in addition, as atheist and anti-religious. The minority who have continued seriously to question the free market have increasingly begun to realize that in some measure an opposition to this can only be "conservative"—and indeed I argue below (in an essay that dates from the 1980's) that originally in France socialism itself was somewhat "counter-enlightenment" in character. This is because only what is "sacred," what possesses a value that reason cannot fully fathom—that which, therefore, is validated only by modes of usually religious tradition—is truly immune from commodification. Equally, a non-nominalist politics, stressing the role of "the Few" both in the mode of mediating associations and of virtuous elites, must perforce appeal back to the Middle Ages and seek to re-commence what Belloc referred to as its unfinished project of freeing people from antique slavery by assuring the widest possible distribution of land and capital which will allow both individual creativity and collective sharing and conviviality. (The latter being something that Belloc's overly modern liberal perspective—despite everything—failed properly to emphasize. It is for this reason that one can correct his "distributism" with the articulation of a "distributist socialism.")
It is also the case that a secular liberal left is unable metaphysically to validate even its own liberalism, because its abandonment of any belief in the spiritual reality of "mind" or "soul" leaves it with only a sham belief in either freedom or ideals worth struggling for. Inevitably it plays more and more lip service to "scientific" diagnoses of human behavior and more and more favors a utilitarian state-plus-market control of human beings designed to facilitate their maximally efficient collective functioning. The danger of the current financial crisis is that the Keynesian measures to which we should properly for the moment return (and may have to return) will mutate into a new blending of market monopoly and state oligarchy, merely further politicizing the power of the very rich.
In the long term, to exit the Hayekian/Keynesian cycles that capitalism objectively imposes (as Marxists have correctly understood), we require the more stable dynamism of a genuinely collectivist (and so socialist) distributist/corporatist economy. This would be built upon a socially judged recognition of the inherent relative value of natural and produced things and the inherent relative needs and deserts of all human beings as all workers as well as consumers. Of course, only the general embrace of a realist metaphysics of transcendence can render this possible. The way forward, therefore, has to be thoroughly "paradoxical."
With the above provisos, I stand on the whole within that tradition of non-statist Christian Socialism, which regards modern statism as involving the support of the very rich, a guarantee of their finances and an enabling additional support through "welfare" of their dispossessed workforce. However, one needs also to recognize a wider family resemblance with many variants of Christian social teaching that characteristically stress subsidiarity (the distribution of money and power to appropriate levels, not necessarily the lowest) and the break-up of central sovereignty through the operation of intermediary associations. These theories can appear as relatively more "left" or "right," yet all in reality question the left/right distinction in its secular form. In relation to the latter, Christians must pursue a politics of seeming paradox from apparently "opposite" vantage points. Thus, some within Radical Orthodoxy may follow Phillip Blond in his espousal of a new British form of "Red Toryism." Others, currently the majority, will follow my own brand of "Blue Socialism"—socialism with a Burkean tinge, now common to many of the more reflective on the left, including some within the center-left (anti–New Labour) British Labour party "Compass Group."
But these differences may not be what matters. In either case the debate is about how one would bring about an "initially" just distribution that would render reactive State "re-distribution" mostly redundant and how this would be sustained. These debates concern the role of nuclear and extended families, of cooperatives, of trade guilds, of mutual banks, housing associations, and credit unions, and of the law in setting firewalls between business practices, defining the acceptable limit of usury and interest and the principles that must govern the fair setting of wages and prices. Above all perhaps they concern how we can turn all people into owners and joint-owners, abolishing the chasm between the mass who only earn or receive welfare and so are dependent and the minority who own in excess.
This abolition will then allow a more genuine, multi-stepped, and educationally dynamic hierarchy of virtue to operate. For in the economic sphere also there needs to be a mixture of the democratic and the paternalistically guided: some enterprises are adapted to the cooperative, others require more hierarchical corporations. But the corporation based upon Christian principles must, like the units of "feudalism" (though that is a mis-description) in the Middle Ages, combine political and economic functions, since the engineered indifference of these to each other is not a division of spheres preserving liberty, but rather an abuse that permits both "the purely economic" and the "purely political" to enjoy a nihilistic sway. For defined in purity apart from each other, they both cease to involve moral concern and oversight and instead come to have an exclusive regard for the positive power of money as such or the positive power of law as such. By contrast, exchange for the social good must also be "political" in character, while legislation for the social good has to have regard to the economic in all its aspects.
This mention of a "corporatist" aspect is bound of course to raise charges of fascism as are those paradoxical titles that seem to invoke a crossover of left and right. But this is ahistorical—the Christian Democratic parties at the end of the Second World War for a short time (before they succumbed to the lure of liberalism) sought to recapture from fascism principles of Catholic social teaching that it had perverted. For fascism involves a secular cult of state, race, or military power that really lines up with modern political nominalism: it is bound in reality (as experience has always proved) increasingly to eradicate the role of the few and so both to exalt the One at the sovereign center and to disguise, through ersatz paternalistic pretense, the market manipulation of the Many at the margins.
It should be added here that it is possibly only religion that can provide the element of tacit binding ethos that prevents both distributism and corporatism from drifting back toward the twin dominance of the State and monopoly capitalism. More specifically, one needs the Church as an organization in continuous excess of the State to coordinate without suppressing the diverse activities of intermediate associations. (Lack of this, as William Cavanaugh has argued, has often led to the perversion of Christian Democratic projects in Latin America.[4]) And when one asks, as one must, how is one initially to bring a radical distribution about, then the answer can only be through the bringing about of a new mass-cultural ethos, which will empower a new sort of elite who will win self-respect for their social generosity rather than their wealth (this will then be their "self-interest" and so will be able to ensure that governments will encourage through new legislation, tax structures, and regulation of banking that a radical distribution will occur. But perhaps it is only the Church that has the capacity to inspire and coordinate such a switch in ethos.
This ethos would be radically Catholic rather than radically Protestant. An aspect of the deadlock in British and American politics today is the way in which the hinterland of the left's assumptions remains determinatively Protestant. Indeed its subjectivism, emotionalism, restrictive puritanism, iconoclasm, and opposition to high culture owe more in the end to the Reformation than they do to the Enlightenment. These attitudes are all powerless to resist capitalism and bureaucracy, because both are profoundly promoted by the mainstream Protestant legacy. Even the radical Protestant legacy is in the end unable to think beyond individualism, sectarian isolation, and collectivism—which is but individualism dialectically inverted or else writ large. Anabaptism also is usually mired in the social metaphysics of the via moderna, or else its anti-metaphysical perpetuation—though one can allow that certain British dissenting radicals, like Williams Blake (as Peter Ackroyd has suggested), were strangely echoing, in a newly creative way, the suppressed British Catholic past.
By contrast, it is only a "Catholic center" more extreme than either of the extremes, because it points metacritically to a different plane, that can think and act its way out of our current heretical, immoral, and neopagan political morass.
*
http://www.telospress.com/main/index.php?main_page=news_article&article_id=302
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Milbank
http://www.examiner.com/lutheran-in-cleveland/is-jesus-a-socialist
http://andrewgoddard.squarespace.com/john-milbank/
http://takkirauta.blogspot.com/
http://sammalkieli.blogspot.com/
http://finnsanity.blogspot.com/
I
Tämä päre Milbank-sitaatteineen on suoraa jatkoa edelliseen päreeseeni, jonka lukeminen saattaa hieman auttaa Milbankin puheen taustojen ymmärtämistä. Kyseinen puhe pidettiin vuotta aiemmin kuin edellisessä päreessäni siteerattu haastattelu tehtiin, mutta se kiteyttää ja selkiyttää aatehistoriallisesti valaisevalla tavalla radikaali-ortodoksisen politiikan taustoja - sen teologiaa ja filosofiaa.
*
Milbank tekee puheessaan kolmikohtaisen katsauksen sitaatissa esitettyihin teologis-poliittis-aatteellisiin maksiimeihinsa:
As Phillip Blond has suggested, there are now three crucial global forces in the world: capitalist rationality, Islam, and Christianity. And of the latter two, the global reach of Christianity is far more serious and far more likely to prevail in the long term. This means that the anomaly pointed out almost a century ago by Hilaire Belloc is likely to pose its cultural contradiction ever more strongly upon the world stage. This is the manifest gap between the teachings of Christianity which still undergird Western morality, on the one hand, and the theory and practice of capitalism, on the other.
I believe, along with Radical Orthodoxy in general, that only the Church has the theoretical and practical power to challenge the global hegemony of capital and to create a viable politico-economic alternative. I stand thereby in a long tradition of Anglican and Catholic Christian socialism, which has always insisted on the necessity of the "Christian" component for the "Socialist" one. In that sense I have always stood proudly amongst those who see themselves as "conservative theologically, radical politically."
But over the years I have become more aware of the potential for smugness and inertia in that perspective. One can gently challenge it in three ways.
*
First, there is a dimension that I have already hinted at. Can Christians really, fundamentally, categorize themselves as either left or right?
[...]
The second reason for questioning an overly glib "conservative in theology/radical in politics" equation is that one has to integrate one's politics with one's ecclesiology.
[...]
The third reason for questioning a facile Christian leftism is circumstantial. In the face of the ever-increasing triumph of capitalism in our times, secular socialism has all but vanished and the left increasingly understands itself as liberal, and frequently, in addition, as atheist and anti-religious.
*
Kolmannen kysymyksen ja koko puheen lopetuskappaleet ilmaisevat Milbankin eetoksen suoraan ja ehkä hieman provokatiivisestikin. Ne eivät jätä epäselviksi ainakaan sitä tosiasiaa, että tämä mies ei ole mikään postmoderni ajattelija, jolle uskonto, metafysiikka, kristillisyys ja politiikka olisivat pelkkää sanoilla leikittelevää game-ability-peliä.
Milbank ei leiki näillä asioilla ja seisoo sanojensa takana sata kertaa vankemmin ja totuudellisemmin kuin joku sekopäinen John Shelby Spong markkina-pelleksi muutetun 'realistisemman' Jeesuksensa sponsorina - [palaan tuohon modernin liberaali-teologian pohjanoteeraukseen eli Spongiin myöhemmässä päreessäni Milbank ja D. B. Hart 'gorilloinani'].
*
It should be added here that it is possibly only religion that can provide the element of tacit binding ethos that prevents both distributism and corporatism from drifting back toward the twin dominance of the State and monopoly capitalism. More specifically, one needs the Church as an organization in continuous excess of the State to coordinate without suppressing the diverse activities of intermediate associations. (Lack of this, as William Cavanaugh has argued, has often led to the perversion of Christian Democratic projects in Latin America.[4]) And when one asks, as one must, how is one initially to bring a radical distribution about, then the answer can only be through the bringing about of a new mass-cultural ethos, which will empower a new sort of elite who will win self-respect for their social generosity rather than their wealth (this will then be their "self-interest" and so will be able to ensure that governments will encourage through new legislation, tax structures, and regulation of banking that a radical distribution will occur. But perhaps it is only the Church that has the capacity to inspire and coordinate such a switch in ethos.
This ethos would be radically Catholic rather than radically Protestant. An aspect of the deadlock in British and American politics today is the way in which the hinterland of the left's assumptions remains determinatively Protestant. Indeed its subjectivism, emotionalism, restrictive puritanism, iconoclasm, and opposition to high culture owe more in the end to the Reformation than they do to the Enlightenment. These attitudes are all powerless to resist capitalism and bureaucracy, because both are profoundly promoted by the mainstream Protestant legacy. Even the radical Protestant legacy is in the end unable to think beyond individualism, sectarian isolation, and collectivism—which is but individualism dialectically inverted or else writ large. Anabaptism also is usually mired in the social metaphysics of the via moderna, or else its anti-metaphysical perpetuation—though one can allow that certain British dissenting radicals, like Williams Blake (as Peter Ackroyd has suggested), were strangely echoing, in a newly creative way, the suppressed British Catholic past.
By contrast, it is only a "Catholic center" more extreme than either of the extremes, because it points metacritically to a different plane, that can think and act its way out of our current heretical, immoral, and neopagan political morass.
II
Provokatiivinen huomautus
Luulenpa, että esimerkiksi rakkaita derivaattojaan säännöllisesti masuunittava Ironmistress ei ymmärrä Milbankin ideahistoriallisesta katsauksesta sekä hänen innovoimastaan teologiasta ja filosofiasta paljon mitään, sillä niin täysin toisenlaista on 'oikean ja syvällisen ajattelijan' luovuus matruunan kalkylointeihin verrattuna. - Milbank siis jäänee rautarouvalle artefaktaksi ja nonsenseksi [voi miten paljon nonsensea matruuna-parka sinun maailmassasi onkaan - ja kaiken lisäksi maailman fiksuimpien ihmisten lausumaa nonsensea!]
Sammalkielellekin saattaa tulla vaikeuksia mahduttaa tämänkaltainen teorisointi marxilaiseen antropologiaansa. Onhan Milbankin vokabulaari täynnään kerrassaan metafyysista kamaa, jonka antropologi mieluusti selittää joko funktionalistisesti tai strukturalistisesti pois kuleksimasta aaveen lailla tutkijan metodisesti tarkoin kehystetyistä ajatuksista [puhumattakaan Milbankin epäillyttävän 'sinisestä' sosialismista].
Finnsanity'lle milbankilainen moniselitteisyys ja paradoksaalisuus voi muodostua jopa fyysisesti vaaralliseksi kokemukseksi, sillä mitä ilmeisimmin hän saa epileptisen sätkyn tajutessaan [tosin hyvin hämärästi], että tämä teologi - vaikka onkin vasemmistolainen - on samalla myös katolisuuteen kallellaan oleva konservatiivi, joka vastustaa liberalismia.
Finnsanityn kaltaiset, vapauden kaipuuta yliannoksen impanneet ja sen vuoksi ikuiselle matkalle jääneet jälki-hipit kun eivät voi tajuta, että nykyajan liberalismi [myös vasemmistolainen] on perimmältään [arvotyhjää] markkina-liberalismia [jota valtion kontrolli yhä suuremmassa määrin tukee], ja että kaikenlaínen vouhkaaminen täysin auktoriteetittoman vapauden perään on itse asiassa kapitalismin oravanpyörässä juoksemista.
III
Politics of Paradox
This talk was presented at the 2009 Telos Conference [Friday · March 13, 2009]
In what follows, I summarize a fragmentary political theology, written from a British perspective, but one that opens itself out to Continental and North American intellectual influences, as well as to global concerns.
It was once said to me, by the late Texan theologian John Clayton, in Lancaster, that he had finally worked out what was "weird" about me: "Most of us, John, are trying to combine German theology with Anglo-Saxon philosophy. A few trendy people go for Continental philosophy as well. But you're doing the opposite—with utter perversity you're trying to combine British theology (of all things!) with Continental philosophy—and what is worse, with French stuff!"
This is by no means altogether true. But it contains a grain of truth. I have been consistently interested in the "minority report" of British intellectual history which resists reductive empiricism and utility in the name of what Coleridge called "the old, spiritual, Platonic England" as well as in the name of a more radical empiricism, open to the arrival of the strange and the unexpected. This is by no means simplistically linked to an "anti-science" stance. In the late seventeenth century, there was much fashionable discussion about the Scottish Highlands phenomenon of "second sight." But the skeptics and the scoffers here were the "wits," who were equally disdainful of the curious new things being revealed by natural philosophical "experiment." The Royal Society, by contrast, remained rather agnostic, and took so seriously the initial interest of Robert Boyle in this phenomenon that the far north of Britain became for it for a while, as Michael Hunter puts it, "an occult laboratory." Of course this was to confuse what may be experienced with what can be reliably measured and repeated—but the instance does reveal a non-dogmatic dimension to the British empirical temperament which is not confined to an induction to conclusions from "atomic" items of sensory information. In the case of the nineteenth-century "sages" Coleridge, Newman, and Ruskin, whose perspectives figure strongly in what follows, one sees a particular insular blending of "the empirical" with "the Platonic."
And though I have said that they represent "a minority report," it is nonetheless the case that Anglicanism itself, from Hooker onward, remained closer in its "Toryism" and "metaphysical bent" to this "report" on English and British culture than the "mainline" Whig-utilitarian tradition, which was in reality of course the voice of aristocratic and bourgeois dissent, usurping this theoretically official one. Yet the latter, as the voices of William Cobbett, William Wordsworth, and John Clare reveal, is also the deepest tradition of the British populace and its various regional expressions.
My main concern, though, is with how this diffuse cultural current, at once theological and philosophical, as well as literary, has informed political thought and practice. Here I engage with a tradition of British political reflection, largely Anglo-Catholic and Catholic, which has a great deal in common with that of Catholic Social Teaching on the continent, and which, like that tradition, has been in continuous debate with secular socialism and Hegelianism-Marxism. I try to carry forward the thinking of both traditions in response to the circumstances of recent times. The scope of my theopolitical analyses extends to matters of culture and cultural pluralism, government, economics, history, ecclesiology, and pedagogy. My own thinking appears to combine opposite tendencies. There is both subtlety and brutality, just as there is both radicalism and conservatism. Only the "middle" of an anemic liberalism is consistently and relentlessly refused. I suspect that there will be many who will like the "subtle and radical," on the one hand, but not the "brutal and conservative," on the other, while there will be many others with exactly the reverse set of discriminations. However, for my own part, I consider that I am only understood and agreed with when the reader is prepared to endorse a "subtle brutality" that is a "brutal subtlety," and a "radical conservatism" which is a "conservative radicalism."
This paradoxicality, I believe, makes my political theology greatly relevant to the global juncture at which we now stand.
As Phillip Blond has suggested, there are now three crucial global forces in the world: capitalist rationality, Islam, and Christianity. And of the latter two, the global reach of Christianity is far more serious and far more likely to prevail in the long term. This means that the anomaly pointed out almost a century ago by Hilaire Belloc is likely to pose its cultural contradiction ever more strongly upon the world stage. This is the manifest gap between the teachings of Christianity which still undergird Western morality, on the one hand, and the theory and practice of capitalism, on the other.
I believe, along with Radical Orthodoxy in general, that only the Church has the theoretical and practical power to challenge the global hegemony of capital and to create a viable politico-economic alternative. I stand thereby in a long tradition of Anglican and Catholic Christian socialism, which has always insisted on the necessity of the "Christian" component for the "Socialist" one. In that sense I have always stood proudly amongst those who see themselves as "conservative theologically, radical politically."
But over the years I have become more aware of the potential for smugness and inertia in that perspective. One can gently challenge it in three ways. First, there is a dimension that I have already hinted at. Can Christians really, fundamentally, categorize themselves as either left or right? Surely, as André de Muralt has argued, both the ideas of "the rule of One," of the sovereign center, and of the "rule of the Many," of individuals either in contracted dispersion or collective unity, are equally "nominalist"—both genealogically and ontologically?[3] For both deny primary real relation, the real universal that is "the common good" and the role of "the few," whether that of the guiding virtuous elite or of the mediating institutions of civil society. But "right" and "left" define themselves variously in terms of either "the One" or the "the Many," both nominalistically construed.
Today, of course, what we really have is two versions of a "left" celebration of the "Many" either as individuals or as a democratically voting mass. For reasons still not yet sufficiently accounted for by historians and social theorists, we have a "liberal right," stressing economic negative liberty, and a "liberal left," stressing cultural and sexual negative liberty. In reality, of course, the two liberalisms are triumphing both at once and in secretly collusive harmony. So perhaps what still sustains party conflict is alternating anxieties among the populace about the inevitable insecurities generated by now economic and now cultural "freedom" in different temporal phases.
It follows that the very division of left and right assumes a nominalist social ontology, which of course I would reject. And it is also critically important to remind oneself that this division only postdates the French Revolution. This has created a curious historical delusion from which almost no one is really free. For we suppose that the premodern is somehow allied with "the right," just as barbarous journalists frequently imagine that the divine right of kings was a medieval theory, when it was in reality an early modern one. But pre-nominalist modernity was neither left nor right, neither "progressivist" nor "reactionary"—it was simply "other" to most of our assumed sociopolitical categories.
There is a further point to be made here. When the French revolutionaries invented "left" and "right," they arguably took us back to paganism and indeed they often explicitly supposed that they were doing so. For characteristically, the ancient Greeks lined up philosophies of the spirit and of "ideal forms" with aristocracy and philosophies of matter with democracy. It is as if they assumed that the latter was always a matter of lowest common denominator and not of highest common factor. But as I have already suggested, the Christian revolution cuts right across this categorization. Instead of siding with "the noble" over against "the base," or inversely "the base" over against "the noble," it paradoxically democratizes the noble: hence Paul addresses his interlocutors as "all kings." Yet at the same time, if there is now a new possibility of the spread of virtue (virtue being redefined as the more generally possible attitudes of love and trust, immune to the instance of "moral luck" as usually understood), there is still a political place for the superior role of the more virtuous and of those appointed to be the "guardians" of virtue, the virtuosos of charisma.
But unlike those paradigms of virtue hitherto, "the heroes," these Christian "pastors" (who are "shepherds" like Plato's guardians) will frequently remain both mocked and invisible, since they may lack the glamour of obvious "honor," and may need to retain a hidden "outlaw" status in order both to escape the need to appease the masses, upon whose adulation manifest power depends, and to directly execute a summary justice which the procedures of inevitably inflexible law might foil. This is the theme brilliantly explored in Christopher Nolan's Batman film The Dark Knight, with its explicit Platonic resonances concerning the noble lie and so forth. But the film leaves us with the Platonic aporia of a division between the ignoble hero-ruler (a John F. Kennedy figure) whom the people must believe to be noble if they are to have any ideals and the genuinely noble outlaw-guardian who must pursue virtue in uncorrupted secrecy (thereby passing the test of Gyges ring).
The only dimension that can in part resolve this aporetic tension is the Christian one of sacramental ordination and anointed monarchy. The ideal symbolic dimension of the pastoral role implicitly corrects, with its equitable outlawry, any abuse of legal authority—it also to an extent permits the enactment of such equity to the degree that awe at sacred charisma can override the blandishments of popular concession to which mere democracy must remain prone. And yet—save for the example of Lear on the heath in the storm, or Walter Scott's Richard the Lionheart in Sherwood Forest—the bishop-as-apostle rather than the monarch surpasses even this possibility of visible purity by stepping, like Paul, in and out of visibility, in alternation of command and vagabondage. Thus, likewise, there is still a monarch at the summit of the ecclesia—but it is the crucified, resurrected, ascended, and so apparently absent Jesus, who died as a king but had nowhere on earth to lay his head, and it is this pattern that is followed by the Church hierarchy which mediates his authority.
The politic-ecclesial pattern suggested by the New Testament therefore remains classically democratic/aristocratic/monarchic. Following the norms of antique political thought, this has often in Christian history implied that one or the other stress should dominate according to the prevalence or otherwise of virtue. One could nonetheless validly say that the ultimate bias of Christianity is democratic, because its aim is that all should love and trust, all should become virtuous. In this sense it has a populist bias "to the left." But this is not exactly "the modern left," because Christianity (unlike Bush and Blair) sees no automatic merit in democracy in all circumstances, nor any validity in the notion that the will of the majority should always prevail. Its reasons for favoring democracy are rather that the entire truth of Christianity exists in harmonious dispersal among the body of Christ (eschatologically the entire human race and the entire cosmos) and that agreement in the truth requires ideally a free consensus.
The post-revolutionary "left," however, tends to revive a pagan sense of democracy as lowest common denominator: it links democracy to naturalistic materialism and to a sophistic individualism. I constantly contrast this with Ruskin's genuinely Christian and explicitly at once "Tory" and "communist" desire to extend norms of nobility, of self-regulation of standards of behavior, work, outcomes, and protection of members from the "liberal" professions also to mercantile and artisanal pursuits.
It is mainly for this reason that "a Christian left" is not really situated within the same spectrum as the secular left—for it both aspires to democratize excellence and to grant an educative and political role to the exponents of excellence in order to balance out the verdict of the many. But this requirement does not compromise democracy—rather it enables it. For democracy is not an infinite regress—no one finally votes on the dominant options presented to people, and if these are not the work of disciplined elites, educated toward virtue as well as knowledge, then they will be the work of propagandists, of a corrupted elite, as now prevails.
The second reason for questioning an overly glib "conservative in theology/radical in politics" equation is that one has to integrate one's politics with one's ecclesiology. The Lamennaisian combination of hierarchy in metaphysical truth, democracy in pragmatic politics, will not quite do. Of course it is by no means entirely false: in Church affairs what matters is truth, not opinion, and so hierarchy must prevail. In secular affairs, though, a second-best pragmatic peace may usually be the priority, and therefore consensus must prevail at the cost otherwise of unacceptable violence and outright inhumanity.
Yet in the end there can be, for Christianity, no such absolute contrast. The earthly city is valid insofar as it serves the heavenly and from the outset Christianity has modified the role of the political ruler in a "pastoral" direction (sometimes for ill as well as good). He becomes more a kind of ecclesial pastor of material affairs—which always have an implication for our salvation.
Here we need to balance Western with Eastern Christian perspectives: the "monarch" may be properly subordinate to "the priest," and his dealing in law and coercive violence is now (uniquely by Christianity) desacralized because of its ambivalence—and yet the "kingly" role remains Christological insofar as it foreshadows the integrity of the resurrected body, when the material will fully shine with the glory of the spiritual. In the end Christ's priesthood fades, and his kingship remains. Perhaps, therefore, something authentically "Byzantine" has shone out in the Anglican stress upon the "incarnational" aspect of sociopolitical transformation—even if this has often been perverted by support for the modern absolutely sovereign and disciplinary State.
The sense that the secular arm is "within" as well as "outside" the Church accords then with the need also for secular hierarchy, for the reasons which I have explained. But inversely, one can also argue that we need more participatory (not formally representative) democracy inside the Church. This is because, as Newman pointed out, the "correctness" of doctrine must finally be tested in practice by the assent of all. For Christian truth abides more fundamentally in the entirety of liturgical and pastoral life than it does in abstract reflection.
Political theory and ecclesiology must finally then be of one piece. Both involve a classical mixture of democracy, aristocracy, and kingship, even if the Christian demos is paradoxically anointed and Christian "kingship" is paradoxically kenotic.
The third reason for questioning a facile Christian leftism is circumstantial. In the face of the ever-increasing triumph of capitalism in our times, secular socialism has all but vanished and the left increasingly understands itself as liberal, and frequently, in addition, as atheist and anti-religious. The minority who have continued seriously to question the free market have increasingly begun to realize that in some measure an opposition to this can only be "conservative"—and indeed I argue below (in an essay that dates from the 1980's) that originally in France socialism itself was somewhat "counter-enlightenment" in character. This is because only what is "sacred," what possesses a value that reason cannot fully fathom—that which, therefore, is validated only by modes of usually religious tradition—is truly immune from commodification. Equally, a non-nominalist politics, stressing the role of "the Few" both in the mode of mediating associations and of virtuous elites, must perforce appeal back to the Middle Ages and seek to re-commence what Belloc referred to as its unfinished project of freeing people from antique slavery by assuring the widest possible distribution of land and capital which will allow both individual creativity and collective sharing and conviviality. (The latter being something that Belloc's overly modern liberal perspective—despite everything—failed properly to emphasize. It is for this reason that one can correct his "distributism" with the articulation of a "distributist socialism.")
It is also the case that a secular liberal left is unable metaphysically to validate even its own liberalism, because its abandonment of any belief in the spiritual reality of "mind" or "soul" leaves it with only a sham belief in either freedom or ideals worth struggling for. Inevitably it plays more and more lip service to "scientific" diagnoses of human behavior and more and more favors a utilitarian state-plus-market control of human beings designed to facilitate their maximally efficient collective functioning. The danger of the current financial crisis is that the Keynesian measures to which we should properly for the moment return (and may have to return) will mutate into a new blending of market monopoly and state oligarchy, merely further politicizing the power of the very rich.
In the long term, to exit the Hayekian/Keynesian cycles that capitalism objectively imposes (as Marxists have correctly understood), we require the more stable dynamism of a genuinely collectivist (and so socialist) distributist/corporatist economy. This would be built upon a socially judged recognition of the inherent relative value of natural and produced things and the inherent relative needs and deserts of all human beings as all workers as well as consumers. Of course, only the general embrace of a realist metaphysics of transcendence can render this possible. The way forward, therefore, has to be thoroughly "paradoxical."
With the above provisos, I stand on the whole within that tradition of non-statist Christian Socialism, which regards modern statism as involving the support of the very rich, a guarantee of their finances and an enabling additional support through "welfare" of their dispossessed workforce. However, one needs also to recognize a wider family resemblance with many variants of Christian social teaching that characteristically stress subsidiarity (the distribution of money and power to appropriate levels, not necessarily the lowest) and the break-up of central sovereignty through the operation of intermediary associations. These theories can appear as relatively more "left" or "right," yet all in reality question the left/right distinction in its secular form. In relation to the latter, Christians must pursue a politics of seeming paradox from apparently "opposite" vantage points. Thus, some within Radical Orthodoxy may follow Phillip Blond in his espousal of a new British form of "Red Toryism." Others, currently the majority, will follow my own brand of "Blue Socialism"—socialism with a Burkean tinge, now common to many of the more reflective on the left, including some within the center-left (anti–New Labour) British Labour party "Compass Group."
But these differences may not be what matters. In either case the debate is about how one would bring about an "initially" just distribution that would render reactive State "re-distribution" mostly redundant and how this would be sustained. These debates concern the role of nuclear and extended families, of cooperatives, of trade guilds, of mutual banks, housing associations, and credit unions, and of the law in setting firewalls between business practices, defining the acceptable limit of usury and interest and the principles that must govern the fair setting of wages and prices. Above all perhaps they concern how we can turn all people into owners and joint-owners, abolishing the chasm between the mass who only earn or receive welfare and so are dependent and the minority who own in excess.
This abolition will then allow a more genuine, multi-stepped, and educationally dynamic hierarchy of virtue to operate. For in the economic sphere also there needs to be a mixture of the democratic and the paternalistically guided: some enterprises are adapted to the cooperative, others require more hierarchical corporations. But the corporation based upon Christian principles must, like the units of "feudalism" (though that is a mis-description) in the Middle Ages, combine political and economic functions, since the engineered indifference of these to each other is not a division of spheres preserving liberty, but rather an abuse that permits both "the purely economic" and the "purely political" to enjoy a nihilistic sway. For defined in purity apart from each other, they both cease to involve moral concern and oversight and instead come to have an exclusive regard for the positive power of money as such or the positive power of law as such. By contrast, exchange for the social good must also be "political" in character, while legislation for the social good has to have regard to the economic in all its aspects.
This mention of a "corporatist" aspect is bound of course to raise charges of fascism as are those paradoxical titles that seem to invoke a crossover of left and right. But this is ahistorical—the Christian Democratic parties at the end of the Second World War for a short time (before they succumbed to the lure of liberalism) sought to recapture from fascism principles of Catholic social teaching that it had perverted. For fascism involves a secular cult of state, race, or military power that really lines up with modern political nominalism: it is bound in reality (as experience has always proved) increasingly to eradicate the role of the few and so both to exalt the One at the sovereign center and to disguise, through ersatz paternalistic pretense, the market manipulation of the Many at the margins.
It should be added here that it is possibly only religion that can provide the element of tacit binding ethos that prevents both distributism and corporatism from drifting back toward the twin dominance of the State and monopoly capitalism. More specifically, one needs the Church as an organization in continuous excess of the State to coordinate without suppressing the diverse activities of intermediate associations. (Lack of this, as William Cavanaugh has argued, has often led to the perversion of Christian Democratic projects in Latin America.[4]) And when one asks, as one must, how is one initially to bring a radical distribution about, then the answer can only be through the bringing about of a new mass-cultural ethos, which will empower a new sort of elite who will win self-respect for their social generosity rather than their wealth (this will then be their "self-interest" and so will be able to ensure that governments will encourage through new legislation, tax structures, and regulation of banking that a radical distribution will occur. But perhaps it is only the Church that has the capacity to inspire and coordinate such a switch in ethos.
This ethos would be radically Catholic rather than radically Protestant. An aspect of the deadlock in British and American politics today is the way in which the hinterland of the left's assumptions remains determinatively Protestant. Indeed its subjectivism, emotionalism, restrictive puritanism, iconoclasm, and opposition to high culture owe more in the end to the Reformation than they do to the Enlightenment. These attitudes are all powerless to resist capitalism and bureaucracy, because both are profoundly promoted by the mainstream Protestant legacy. Even the radical Protestant legacy is in the end unable to think beyond individualism, sectarian isolation, and collectivism—which is but individualism dialectically inverted or else writ large. Anabaptism also is usually mired in the social metaphysics of the via moderna, or else its anti-metaphysical perpetuation—though one can allow that certain British dissenting radicals, like Williams Blake (as Peter Ackroyd has suggested), were strangely echoing, in a newly creative way, the suppressed British Catholic past.
By contrast, it is only a "Catholic center" more extreme than either of the extremes, because it points metacritically to a different plane, that can think and act its way out of our current heretical, immoral, and neopagan political morass.
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http://www.telospress.com/main/index.php?main_page=news_article&article_id=302
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Milbank
http://www.examiner.com/lutheran-in-cleveland/is-jesus-a-socialist
http://andrewgoddard.squarespace.com/john-milbank/
http://takkirauta.blogspot.com/
http://sammalkieli.blogspot.com/
http://finnsanity.blogspot.com/
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