Can Good Theology Change the World? Part 3: Embodied Theology by Carol P. Christ

carol p. christ photo michael bakasIn an earlier blog I asserted that one of the hallmarks of good theology is understanding that the only valid source of authority is to be found in individuals and communities that continually interpret and reinterpret texts and traditions in new situations.

For most of its two thousand year history, Christian theology was understood to involve rational reflection on revealed truths. It was assumed that revealed truths found in the Bible, the decisions of church councils, and church traditions are a fixed set of facts (such as the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ) and doctrines (such as the Trinity) that are eternally true. It was further thought that the theologian is able to rise above his body and history in order to contemplate these eternal truths. Thus, it was said, theology considers eternal truths from an objective and essentially unchanging vantage point.

For the past several hundred years, theologians have begun to realize that both of these traditional assertions are false. There is increasing recognition that the Bible can no longer be understood as having been dictated by God. Instead, revelation (if it exists at) comes through the minds and bodies and experiences and histories of those who write the sacred texts and doctrinal statements. Revelation can only be expressed in the language or languages known to the individual or group who receive it, and experiences and ideas will inevitably be conveyed using symbols and metaphors taken from a wider cultures.

As “the process of interpretation” is acknowledged, it is also understood that theologians can never reflect on eternal truths in any simple way. They must consider the circumstances in which facts and doctrines are received and written down. Some seek to remove the wheat from the chaff, hoping to discover a kernel of eternal truth encased in language and symbols that are relative. Thus, for example, it has become commonplace for liberal theologians to say that the kernel of truth in Genesis 1 is that God created the world, while the story that He created it in 6 days is not literally true.

While non-fundamentalist theologians generally understand that the process of interpretation of revealed truths is complex, they have been less eager to turn a critical eye on the standpoints from which they carry out the process of interpretation themselves. Many theologians recognize the relativity of all standpoints in principle, yet do not hesitate to assert that they have found “the true” meaning of a particular text or tradition. Rosemary Radford Ruether believes that her reading of the Bible from a liberation perspective is more true to the original meaning of the texts than alternative readings. Elizabeth Schussler Fiorenza, in contrast, always qualifies her readings, stating that what she asserts about the early Jesus tradition is true from the perspective of “wo/men seeking liberation.”

Schussler Fiorenza’s position is rooted in “standpoint theory,” which argues that every interpretation of a text or tradition is influenced by the standpoint of the interpreter. Taking standpoint theory seriously means that we cannot make statements like “the message of Jesus was concern for the poor” without adding that this interpretation is made “from a liberation perspective.” This qualification makes a lot of people—and not only fundamentalists—uncomfortable, because it means that all so-called “truths” are in fact relative to those who assert them.

It is not surprising that those whose voices are relatively new to the theological conversation are more likely to acknowledge their standpoints than those writing from traditional white male European perspectives. Many white male theologians continue to believe that they are writing “theology,” while theologians of color and female theologians of all colors are writing from particular perspectives. When theologies are acknowledged to be perspectival, more often than not, the perspective is a general one, such as “black,” “Asian,” “African,” “feminist,”  “womanist,” or “queer.” But even standpoint thinking can fail to be inclusive. A ground-breaking book on black women’s studies pointed out that All of the Women Are White, All of the Blacks Are Men, But Some of Us Are Brave. By the same token, some have wondered why all of the feminist theologians (who are invited to contribute to books and conferences) are Christian. And so on.

In our new book Goddess and God in the World, Judith Plaskow and I reconsider the question of standpoint in theology. We have been engaged in a theological argument about the nature of divinity that we could not resolve through rational argument for a number of years. We have discussed the general differences in our standpoints as reasons for our differences. Both of our theologies are “feminist” and both of us are “white.” As white and feminist, our theologies have certain commonalities, yet they also diverge.

My view that divinity is a loving and personal but not omnipotent is based in Goddess Spirituality, yet it is virtually identical with the views of Christian process theologians such as John Cobb and Monica Coleman and Jewish process theologians like Bradley Shavit Artson. Judith’s view that divinity is an impersonal creative power that is the ground of both good and evil is as likely to be shared with Neo-Pagans as with other Jews. Thus, we found that it would not do simply to further locate Judith’s position as “Jewish feminist” and mine as “Goddess feminist.”

We discovered that the ways in which our theological viewpoints are rooted in our experiences cannot be explained through a simple application of standpoint theory. Thus, we took the radical step of combining autobiography and theology in our new book, Goddess and God in the Worldexemplifying a new method we call “embodied theology.” Embodied theology is rooted in personal experiences in our individual bodies. At the same time, we all live in a relational world, shaped by social and historical events and forces that are shared. The relationship between theologies and experiences is embedded in complex webs, with the precise factors that lead to the differences in view being impossible to untangle from the whole.

Still, we found that theological views can be judged by criteria that are in the broadest sense rational and moral: do they make sense of the world we share; and do they promote the flourishing of the world? Though different experiences may lead to different views of divinity, we can enter into conversation with each other about them, based on criteria that are shared. In the process of debating our views, Judith and I concluded that both of our views make sense of the world we share (though we each remain committed to our own view) and that both promote the flourishing of the world. At the same time we agree that other views such as the notion that divinity is exclusively male, or omnipotent and totally transcendent of the world, not only make less sense of our shared experience, but also hinder and obstruct the flourishing of the world.

At the end of our book, we invite others to join with us in a fully embodied theological dialogue that heretofore has been unimaginable, unthinkable, unspeakable. In an embodied theological discussion, we will be able to identify relatively more and less adequate theologies, but we will not be able to prove the truth of particular views.

Also see: Part 1 and Part 2.

This is discussed further in the newly published Goddess and God in the World: Conversations in Embodied Theology by Carol P. Christ and Judith Plaskow–order now. Ask for a review copy (for blog or print) or exam or desk copy. Please post a review on Amazon.  Share with your friends on social media using the links below.

Listen to Judith and Carol’s first interview on the book on Northern Spirit Radio.

Carol P. Christ leads the Goddess Pilgrimage to Crete. Space is available on the fall tour October 1-15. Join now and save $150. With Judith Plaskow, she is co-editor of Womanspirit Rising and Weaving the Visions. Carol wrote the first Goddess feminist theology, Rebirth of the Goddess and the process feminist theology, She Who Changes.

 

Author: Carol P. Christ

Carol P. Christ is a leading feminist historian of religion and theologian who leads the Goddess Pilgrimage to Crete, a life transforming tour for women. www.goddessariadne.org

14 thoughts on “Can Good Theology Change the World? Part 3: Embodied Theology by Carol P. Christ”

  1. As a woman who was an atheist when she was 11, until she found out she was actually an agnostic, I concur. In my 30’s “God” spoke to me, and now I know that Yeshua Ben Josef is a rabbi, a teacher, a wise one, just like the sages of all ages and religions. The Quakers on the East Coast of US ‘speak to my condition” and I joined The Religious Society of Friends .. we have no creed, no preachers ..”That Which Is” speaks through us during meeting for worship. We embrace all, non-theists, too!

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  2. Truly our universe is complex, multi-layered, and multi-dimensional and each of us has a uniquely insightful perspective. Without any one of us, our combined spiritual understanding of it would be diminished. I look forward to the ongoing conversation within FAR, the spiritual feminist community, and beyond that your invitation to dialogue is creating!

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  3. Thanks Carol. You mentioned: “Some seek to remove the wheat from the chaff, hoping to discover a kernel of eternal truth encased in language and symbols that are relative.”

    One of the reasons I love Taoism, is because it follows the “way” of nature — “one blends into the seamless unity of life, without losing the sense of self.” And thus there is no need to separate the wheat from the chaff. And since we ourselves are part of nature, and nature is sacred, our very presence is sacred — it’s all one.

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  4. Something must be true, the question is whether any of us can know for sure what that truth is. In terms of our book, I think both of us would agree that either the divine power is loving and good or that it is not. But neither of us can convince the other with any kind of argument.

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      1. Hi Barbara Kay, Traditional theology has said that our idea of what is good may not be the same as the divinity’s idea. This stance is then used to say, well, there may be higher good we cannot see in rape, genocide, war. Judith and I discuss the reasons we reject that view in our book. For us the idea that a deity who could stop the rape of a child or the genocide of the Holocaust and decided not to do it for reasons unknown to us is not acceptable. This is why we both reject the idea of an all powerful or omnipotent deity. We think we can know what the good is relatively speaking at least. It certainly is not rape or genocide and I would add not war. How to achieve a world without them is another question because no one knows the long term consequences of his or her actions. Still, I think Judith and I would agree that Donald Trump’s hate speech is not “good.”

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  5. I very much liked this post and it prompted me to listen to the Northern Spirit Radio interview and read some more from your book. Some of your autobiography resonates with me in uncanny ways: my grandmother was a devout Christian Scientist who lived most of her life in San Fran, but was originally from Michigan (a U. Mich grad (I think ’08))(Ruth Anderson). Her sister was Julia, wife of Paul Blanshard (a thorn in the side of the Catholic church and brother of Brand–Yale philosophy chair but a decade or so before you were there).

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  6. Thought provoking Carol. Thank you.
    My understanding of the One we call “god” is always changing, along with lived experience, study, conversation, etc. But in small groups rather than in a parish. Maybe that’s one of the reasons there are so many empty pews.

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    1. Hi Barbara! On empty pews, Buddhism is beginning to take on some really interesting new ideas, and the one I find most wonderful is the phrase, “Earth-Sangha,” which understands the entire Earth itself, and I suppose all life, all its plants and creatures, as our monastic community.

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