In a recent post, I said something
about Thomas Aquinas, that he fused theology and rationalism in a
fundamental way, in the Western mind. I might have been more accurate
to say Theology and Logic, maybe. As with most theological
expositions and exposition-ers, reading about his life, and some of
his words, I feel very much like Aquinas is reported to have felt,
toward the end of his life. He is said to have found himself in the
presence of Jesus, who asked him, “What do you desire?” Aquinas
replied, “Only you.” That might have been a mistake, because he
went into a deep funk then, and never wrote again. He is reported to
have said, “Mihi veditur ut paleam,” attributed, “All that I
have written is like straw to me.” He died a little more than a
year after, giving a commentary on the Song of Songs. It is not
reported, what that commentary was.
I'm not anything like an expert on the
theology of Thomas Aquinas. I'm more like an orderer of symbols, as
words, and so Thomas Aquinas is more a symbol to me, just as he is to
many Catholics. I know there were various setbacks in his life,
various attacks against his theology and character. But I believe he
was sincere, genuine. Indeed, for most of his adult life he
influenced Catholic theology considerably, and by the end of his life
he was revered. To this day, the Catholic Church takes the theology
of Aquinas as its theology, required reading in all the
apostolic schools.
When I contemplate the life of Thomas
Aquinas, I'm most interested in that late insight. What did he see,
that made the whole of his life-work like straw to him? Indeed, there
are few in the history of humanity, who have as broad or influential
a life work, influential more than seven centuries after his death. The
Catholic Church ignores the consequences of this late revelation, as
a kind of God-influenced discombobulation, but what could they say?
That straw is a cornerstone of their
institutional/intellectual foundation. He couldn't have meant it!
My idea, and it is only an idea, is
that on asking Jesus, only to know Him, Aquinas saw how far his life's
work had been from a recovery of the garden, and he saw how the whole
of it would be taken very seriously, for a very long time. That, and
there was nothing to do to prevent it, nothing he could say, nothing
he could write to take it back, only cast off as the raving of an old
man gone mad. Dante suggested in the Paradisio, Aquinas was poisoned.
It makes sense, if he was attempting, as perhaps – conceivably -
in his commentary on the Song of Songs, to take it back, to renounce,
to return to the garden?
In the context of the perniciousness of
institutions, and their inherent drive to control, the Catholic
Church is a kind of preeminent example. In a way, the Catholic Church
is like the template of the enduring institution. Even after split in
half, that other half splintering into seemingly endless variety, it
endures. Even after it has been revealed time and again to be
inherently corrupt, incapable of not being corrupt, it endures. Now,
it is one institution among many under the arc of Christianity.
Perhaps the most powerful though, still.
Christianity itself may not have
survived, but for the institutional structure the early Catholics
built.
I look at Christianity now, in the
twilight of American empire, and I am full of contempt for it's
leadership, and to a lesser degree for Christians generally. The
early Catholics survived and built their Religion with a capital R,
in part by taking control of the Roman Empire. Christian's in America
today, have not shown any less comfort with imperialist pursuits.
Christian leaders have never much quibbled with their congregates
conception of the American dream. It has proved very lucrative. Then
there have been the calls to war. Worst of all, is a refusal to
accept the full implications of science, while partaking insatiably
of the fruit.
Why can Christians accept the fruit but
not the full implications of science? Because faith in the
institution would collapse. The Christian gnostic may not have any
problem accepting the revelation of science, or the gnostic
scriptures, because a gnostic doesn't depend on any institutional
authority to establish his or her relationship to the divine. The
typical, institutional Christian, Catholic or otherwise, would not
likely be a Christian, but for the hierarchical power structure,
providing strength by association, telling him what to do, how to
act, justifying his willful ignorance, and so perceives any threat
to the mythology that sustains that hierarchy, a threat to his soul,
her salvation. In the time of Aquinas, you paid the local
ecclesiastical elite to grant you indulgences, that you might be
saved. These days, the institution panders to your indulgence. It's a
lucrative co-dependency, and virulently defended by both dependents.
Never mind what science has revealed about the depth of the cosmos;
let us embrace ignorance; and we shall demand it from all! The people
shall bow down before God! Tyrannical, very Islamic like
mytho-fascism.
Thomas Aquinas. I wonder what his
intellect would have done with a true knowledge of the working cosmos
- and global resource limits? Who knows? Would he remain tied to the
one God monotheism of his fathers? Could he allow that the masculine
is like a divine energy embedded in universal processes, and could he
see the feminine the ethos of Western Civilization is designed to
dominate and subdue? I find it deeply gratifying that he died, giving
a commentary on the Song of Songs, that one erotic book in the bible.
I like that he took refuge there, at the end of his life, the great
man who never lay with a woman. And it seems to me, if he lived a
whole year after his conversation with Jesus, maybe he was headed on
a whole new path. If he transformed the Catholic Church in a
fundamental way, he might have turned it another. What Dante said is
perfectly in keeping with institutional motive. A good Catholic can't
have Thomas Aquinas advocating for a return to the garden (if you'll
beg my indulgence.)
As for Christianity, I was raised
Lutheran, and then evangelical. Little of the gross hypocrisy, crass
materialism and willful ignorance that drove me from the faith, has
abated; indeed, I see it now mixed with a belligerent
quasi-nationalism, with gay-bashing, anti-female, militaristic,
fascist overtones. I'm starting to sense a kind of rabidness, an urge
to internal violence. With most guys, Christian and non-Christian
alike, I think they're just bored, mostly, and angry, full of rage,
and aiming it at what they know to aim at, what they've been told,
pretty much. It's not like critical thinking is truly
encouraged, by any of our institutions.
Good Christ, our soldiers are killing
themselves in record numbers. Just wars, Aquinas, Augustine? If I could talk to such a
soldier in such a place, I would say, offer yourself up in service to
the Goddess, and see what happens.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I published the third chapter of Progress Interrupted. I apologize beforehand for the scrolling necessary to get there, if you've read the first two chapters; I'm working on making it more user-friendly with my webmaster. There's also a blog entry, recently published, about where I'm at with the garden and the house. I know I've been on a curious path lately, rather harsh, radical in the extreme. I'm reevaluating everything. Everything has changed, and I'm not sure what to do or where to go from here. No regrets, but I feel a little like the wild man howling into an echo chamber. If anybody out there has any opinion, I'd love to hear it, and if you don't want your comment published, say so and it won't be.
That last post, Dum and Dee, was my 200th on this blog. I think it would have been better served, to have been a post of gratitude. Thank you for reading. Thank you for taking a chance with me. About a hundred people a day, lately. Not so long ago, it was 35. That's a lot of responsibility, more than I've ever had. I'm honored. I'm trying to make sense of this world I inhabit. Your checking in tells me, I'm making some.
WHD,
ReplyDeleteHang in there,there are many of us out here in the matrix struggling to deal with the daily shitstorm. Sometimes things you write about and reveal to us are so commonly experienced it just gets me through the day. So thanks for being in the other room, you don't seem that far away. A kindred spirit wrote this and it gave me a lift I needed:
http://deepintoartlifewest.blogspot.com/
Thanks Nina...Peace
I've been in a funk lately myself.
ReplyDeleteI think trying to make sense of this late mess will put the best of us in a desolate mood.
I don't keep up with your other blog, and I haven't been reading your other writing, but I read this one every time I see a new one pop up. 100 a day! That's awesome considering when I first started reading this blog you were about to quit because nobody was reading it. You deserve to have a large audience, and I bet it will keep growing...which is good for me to. A good percentage of the traffic on my blog comes from here and eight acre farm.
I personally value your straw, however straw like it may be. I view you as sort of like a virtual older brother. I know I can trust your conclusions and observations. I also think it takes courage to take on the responsibility of having an audience...especially within the context of this blog.
I think you should know that the only online blogs that I keep up with are JMG, Orlov, Kunslter, and you. So for me, you are in the same arena as the other three. The four of you have a heavy influence on where my thinking can go. Thank you for your service to those of us trying to figure it out as well.
And I would like you to publish this comment.
Hey WHD,
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on your blog milestone. Just wanted to tell you that I read your blog every week and, like Lucid, you are on my short list of must reads. I admire your writing and your courageous positions.
And Lucid, I've followed your comments here too and I must say that your honesty and sensitivity as a father of young children trying to cope in this insane world, has often brought me close to tears.
Peace and blessings to both of you good men.
-Sidd
Kevin,
ReplyDeleteThat was an interesting journey, from Nina, to Arthur Silber. Precisely what I needed right now, leading to my next topics, Population Control, and The Original Sin of Augustine of Hippo.
luciddreams,
The three you mentioned have influenced me immensely. For you to consider me equal, in the effect on you, is emotional for me. I've never had a younger brother, not even a virtual one. It feels good.
siddrudge,
You guys are going to make me cry. (But like any 'real man', I'll blame it on my house wine.) Thanks, Sidd. Peace and blessings to you, too. All around
WHD, I take Aquinas's comment in the same vein as "through a glass darkly" or "the Tao of which you can speak is not the Eternal Tao". After being in the presence of Jesus, words would seem so meaningless.
ReplyDeleteMyself, I am much more like the Christian gnostic you describe. I have absolutely no use for any church except to share Joy (as in Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring). Sadly, those are few and far between.
I actually have over 50 blogs I follow. That bloglist on my home page, ordered by most recent update, is very hard working. I simply start at the top and work my way down until I come to ones I have already read. Many I will skip over if the topic doesn't look interesting, but yours I will always read. Congratulations on reaching 200.
Thanks John,
ReplyDeleteAnd you are right, most Christians aren't Christian because of any Joy they experience contemplating the life of Christ, but because they are obedient. Which obedience is beaten and shamed into most of them from the moment they can reach out and touch the world. Even the joyful noise of the evangelical churches my mother brought me to, was mostly joy in community association, not is Christ, which came to look hideous to me, when I realized how so many of them were capable of rank hypocrisy, and how it seemed to me at 13-14, as it seems to me now, that obedience is damaging to the brain, and erasing of the personality.
Extraordinary mediation and thought experiment about Aquinas.
ReplyDeleteYour work continues to impress me as I catch up on your blog. Keep up the good work, as well as your spirits. Your contributions are needed!
IP,
ReplyDeleteThank you, and I will.