A Grace Dispelled (Part Two)


III. These Great Bones of the Dying Sun
This is, for our purpose, to say that the world essentially lost intrinsic meaning.  The noumenal thing-in-itself was inaccessible, and any phenomena as we perceived it was already codified within the matrix of the a priori categories of reason, and God himself seemed to be reduced and contained quite literally to the moment of subjective apprehension within the thinking subject and was by no means a literal part of the world.[1]  In various ways the split between a world inherently meaningless in itself, and the subjective meaning of the subject, repeated itself in post-Kantian philosophy up to our contemporary times.  Fichte discarded even the idea of a noumenal thing-in-itself and argued the ego posited its own world to provide a medium for personal moral endeavors;[2]  Feuerbach interpreted the Kantian transcendental concept of God via Hegel’s reading of the “death of God” and noted that God was simply a projection of man and his values;[3] Nietzsche abolished all regulating concepts, most explicitly that of God or the Kantian transcendental rationality, and unapologetically focused on meaning as the sheer will-to-power of the individual;[4] Heidegger and Sartre made the meaningless world a key to their own existentialist philosophies, Sartre in particular naming the individual “for-itself” as an agent who annihilates and re-arranges the given meaninglessness of the world for her own ends.[5]
The point in outlining these trajectories is that, though there is no straight line of development, they all combine in various ways to essentially abolish sacred meaning—or in fact any meaning—from the world itself.  The sacred was “privatized, spiritualized, and transcendentalized.”[6]  The direct corollary of this is that in the secularization of the world as mere geometrical space, the subject or Ego became elevated as the creator and manipulator of meaning over-against the world reduced to a mere “thing”, whose nomothetic regularities were now transparent to the artificing reason of man.  In the so-called “postmodern” situation, whatever the plasticity and even vacuity of the term, a theme of this inherent meaninglessness arises in its philosophies as an articulation of an ontology of violence whereby the world is understood as fundamentally chaos against which various restraining violences—the state, reason, law, warfare, retribution, civic order—must be deployed.[7]  The other side of this thesis is that
Being itself could now be conceived of only in absolutely opposite terms: as a veil, or an absence [of meaning]…The entire pathology of the modern and postmodern [of Derrida, Levinas, Foucault, Nancy, Lyotard, Deleuze] can be diagnosed as a multifarious narrative of the unrepresentable sublime, according to the paradigm of Kant’s critical project: what pure reason extracts from experience and represents to itself is neutral appearance, separated by an untraversable abyss from everything “meaningful..”[8]
 
Or as Hart puts it elsewhere:
We believe in nothing...that is not to say we have no beliefs, the truly modern person may believe in almost anything, or perhaps even everything...so long as all these beliefs rest securely upon a more fundamental and radical faith in the nothing--or better, in nothingness as such. Modernity's highest ideal--its special understanding of personal autonomy--requires us to place our trust in an original absence underlying all of reality, a fertile void in which all things are possible, from which arises no impediment to our wills, and before which we may consequently choose to make of ourselves what we choose. We trust, that is to say, that there is no substantial criterion by which to judge our choices that stands higher than the unquestioned good of free choice itself, and that therefore all judgment, divine no less than human, is in some sense an infringement upon our freedom...the ethos of modernity is--to be perfectly precise--nihilism.[9]

            This evaluation may seem esoteric or too speculative to have any pertinence to a discussion on regaining perspective on Christian ecological ethics, but it is of the utmost significance.  The gestalt of the situation outlined is the frame of reference and contextual horizon in which current options are outlined and dialogued about.  The world-picture supposed by many Christians—even by ones who still hold to supernaturalist models—is this architectonic theme of the world as a system of molecular components or mathematical quanta which can be manipulated to various benefits or goals.  Devoid of intrinsic meaning the secularized world is locked into itself, apart from any transcendent upper tier—be it the supernatural, or, now, the Kantian subject—and is as such homogenized by a narrative which understands it as nothing more than a controllable interchange of systems of energy.  On the other hand the subject, freed from religious restriction has an “absolutization of earthly aquisitiveness” which now receives control only via the demands of society.[10]  That is to say, this is an inherently economic discourse disguised as a moral science relating to nature.[11]  In this situation the ethic masquerading as a pure physics of nature is fundamentally (though cryptically) a pure discourse of capitalist-type exchange.[12] 
This appears to be an ironic observation when most ecological theory champions conservation of resources, and so appears to be the diametrical opposition of a capitalist metabolism.  Yet the prima facie disjunction disappears when we realize ecological rhetoric is itself based upon the sustainability of our current lifestyle.  In order to continue to perpetuate itself it metastasized its discourse into ecology.  While terminologically moral concepts and debate are here used, these no longer seem to refer to discourse of the common good, but “moral ecology” stands as a trope for either the assumption of the good of our current state and how to maintain that equilibrium under the threat of scarcity, or it refers to the niche preferences of certain aggregations of like-minded individuals who happen to prefer ecology and bastion their position by vox populi appeal.  In other words between the twin “neutralities” of the free subjectivity of man and the unthematized “naturality” of the natural stands the representative and evaluative filter of money which under our contemporary ethos is the only space in which universal value can find any type of stability.[13]  This is because money, under the presuppositions of the various trajectories examined earlier, is the only modality left which can find conceptual justification even in our culture as a trans-subjective expression of a subjectivity’s own freedom.
Economically, money functions as the value of value, the value that allows exchangeability or interchangeability of values.[14] This means as such that money provides the rare medium of a valueless value; it has value but only as it is used as the expression or utilization of each persons own will.[15]  It becomes a shared fiction in which otherwise atomic and unrelated wills can interact with one another via a medium supposedly neutral or germane to each individual’s ability to follow their own desire without infringing on another person’s desires.  To misappropriate a set of terminology: money is the visible sign of the invisible wills of humanity.  It is plastic enough to cover the unique whims of each person and definite enough to be translatable across these whims without destroying them a priori[16] (unlike, say the perception of a religious universal, which would be taken as oppressive).  Simultaneously there is no intrinsic material such as printed paper, an electronic bank statement, or gold coins which exhaustively answers the question “what is money?”  Rather than indicating a particular material, the visibility of money is the deputization of any given medium, it does not signal the physis of a thing but its mode of being as representation of the will, and the system of belief which this inspires.[17]  The nature of money explains exchange: it represents an anticipation of the future, which means that money is essentially credit.[18] Money is the promise of value, which means a promise to pay which creates a debt, a form of capital that works when supplied with sufficient energy flows.   But the creation of financial wealth is at the same time the creation of debt, which means that modern economic freedom of purchasing power ends up being deeply constraining 
It is no accidental feature of moral ecology then that it must appeal to sustainability of our lifestyle in order to appear as a moral exortation: if, as Hart noted above, the only true moral value is the preservation of the unfettered volition of individual subjectivity then the only true way to make a universal moral claim across these pluralistic and punctiliar subjectivities to supposedly value-free nature, is by translating the value-free quanta into the only universal value-medium of money.   This is the precise variability of economics[19]—ecological and environmental sciences in this manner merely provide content for the variables in order to sustain the current systems of exchange from exhausting themselves with their own input and output.. Money is generally understood narrowly, in terms of one of its functions rather than broadly, ecologically speaking.  But their convertability becomes undeniable on deeper analysis. Modern industrial civilization is based upon the ability to capitalize upon new sources of energy, primarily fossil fuels, and these deposits of “ancient sunlight” have reached peak rates of extraction and exploitation, which means that the financial crisis is also an energy crisis and vice versa: the energy crises of conservation is summarily convertible as a crises of economy.  Money, which controls the value of value, can now be replaced with the word “nature” because of the logic of this convertibility: nature is the anticipation of value, i.e. it is seen as credit.  As such it is secured as value-laden because as credit it participates functionally in the only true value, namely the individual ability toward self-realized volition.
Thus the ecological attitude of creating low impact fuel systems or reducing carbon emissions are all couched in an implicit economic theory of debt in which the production of wealth has realized, thermodynamically speaking, that it has begun to produce an entropic disequilibrium because it cannot pay back the “loans” it takes out on nature as the wealth of the current system is based solely on anticipations of future value.  But a postulated null point of production in the future here invalidates the viability of the current debt based system which can only operate now if it can operate perpetually without ceasing in the future.  Due respects must then be paid to atrophy as the hegemonic principle of the whole system. Hence the inner logic becomes apparent as to why one of the recurrent themes regarding solutions or resistance to solutions of global warming center around questions of resources and proper interpretation of the scientific data.  While these are certainly important, unless one simply assumes a pragmatic ethical outlook, they do not answer the ethical question of what is the right course of action.  Moreover, and this is the other side to the same stream of thought, current solutions—e.g. regarding alternative fuels or emergency emissions limitations— presuppose the necessity or rightness of action based upon the ability to recorrect the world, like the repair of a machine or the catharsis of an organism.  Rejection of these methods by many conservatives center mainly around either a skepticism of what is perceived as amphibolous data, or a disagreement about the ability of resources to correct the current situation, which could then be better utilized in other areas. 
Insofar as this logic is followed—the pure logic of a vast and irresistible economy which must be appeased lest we perish—the secular economic model of our understanding ironically repristinates the classical Indo-European mythical consciousness. This was the myth of “cosmos”[20]—of the universe as a precarious equilibrium of contrary forces—which undergirded a sacral practice whose aim was to contain nature’s promiscuous violence within religion’s orderly violence.[21] Gods and mortals were bound together by necessity; we fed the gods, who required our sacrifices, and they preserved us from the forces they personified and granted us some measure of their power. “There was,” writes David Hart, “surely, an ineradicable nihilism in such an economy: a tragic resignation before fate, followed by a prudential act of cultic salvage, for the sake of social and cosmic stability.”[22] Taking the thought slightly out of context, we can understand Jüngel’s words as pertinent here: “Do we not have, do we not need, an unending atrophy of gods?...Do we not live on the basis of eschatological atrophy?...Is not the modern world [seen] as an eschatological process of atrophy without end?  And is not ‘God’ the code word for this unending process of atrophy?”[23]  Reversing this, noting that the stochastic concept of entropy itself now assumes the traditional position of the divine who must be appeased we might say “do we not now need the unending god of Atrophy?”  If this narrative undergirds the logic of ecological choice, then ecology is inherently justified by an economical parody of the cosmological myth; financiers and ecologists are simply now the ones who speak the hieratic language of the priests.
            Yet if the metaphysical picture of participation painted in the first section of this essay is largely correct—and it is here argued that a true concept of God as infinite demands it to be[24]—then questions regarding the possibility or impossibility of reestablishing the world’s homeostasis, or questions of resources, are secondary. Our theology calls for an entirely different economy of valuation.  If the world is God’s creation, and as such an analogical index whose beauty and goodness are constant semeiotic participants—at an analogical remove, of course—in God’s own beauty and goodness, then it follows by logic that a defamation of the world’s beauty, or a wanton abuse of its resources, is analogically an assault upon God’s own beauty and goodness. This is not to argue, as some have,[25] that the world is God’s body, or some facsimile of the divine, or divine itself.  Quite the contrary,[26] the concept of participation demands that analogy always describe likeness by an ever-increasing differentiation between creation and God.[27]  Nonetheless “The God who is shows his glory not as the nimbus of otherness that dwells like a phantom glamour about all finite things…[rather] all that is finitely apprehended (which is to say aesthetically as a continuous series of objects appearing...) fills the distance as light, approach, proximity, and peace, because God gives his beauty as expression…”[28] Or put otherwise, “All things that are dwell in the glory of God, and yet the glory of God becomes visible as a beauty among the world’s beauties.”[29]  In the words of Paul himself “for from the creation of the world the unseen things [of God] have nevertheless been seen, through having become known in the creatures.” (Rom 1:20).[30]
            This analogia entis also resituates the apparent perversion rendered to the concept of the dominion of man into “license without stewardship,”[31] by the Western intellectual tradition into a more appropriate reading of the responsibility implied in the Genesis narrative’s concept of the Imago Dei.  The analogical nature of the world is not a mere linguistic novelty, but actually shapes the character of man by a constant increase and purification of his concepts of, and relationship to, God.[32]  This destabilizes the autonomous post-Kantian subject who simply is himself and creates the world by resituating our identity within the analogical world process itself.[33]  “Is it not the case that man cannot expect an answer to the question about himself without knowledge of the world, of society, of history, and of God?...The understanding of the world and of God are not merely the expression of man’s question concerning himself [i.e. as in Bultmann] but, on the contrary, the relationship to the world…and to God is what first mediates man to himself.”[34] 
This is not to elevate the world to a priority over man, it is rather to indicate that humanity only exists within the formative processes of the world—the world is in fact the medium of our communion with God.[35]  Conversely, creation in this manner is contextualized as being God’s good creation for man—the importance of ecological awareness is not an interest in nature per se or in nature qua nature, but in nature as it is the environment within which humanity relates to God (Rom. 8:19-22; Eph. 1:10).[36]  Moreover this highlights the anthropological issue hidden within ecology that the abuse of nature quite often redounds upon other humans as famine, poverty, and desolation.  The world is not merely the barren desert of a geometrical exteriority forever exiled from our true spiritual and interior existence, nor is this a mystification, an arbitrary rhetoric foisted upon an otherwise empirical and “factual,”[37] reality: “the vanity of the world outside the light of divine grace is not a thesis concerning an ultimate indifference to the world’s content…for the world seen in the light of divine grace is the world seen as that light.”[38] Indeed this “viewing-as,” must reflect the ontic structure of the world for “how could God be love if his love did not pervade all cosmic processes, the world itself being his creation?”[39] This is decisive for “it is only the true which deserves to be called beautiful.”[40]  If the theology here presented is accurate, then ecology and this theological view of the world are just as much an act of discipleship as any effort to evangelize.  
The theological project of this paper has attempted to demonstrate a properly theological understanding of the world which could ground the context for an inherently Christian ethical evaluation of how we should view and act ecologically.  The conclusions drawn here are that we should not be “going green” because of our fear that we must save the world, nor can we reject ecological activity because we deem the world’s salvation impossible.  Nor indeed should certain Millenarian expectations that God is going to destroy the world to recreate it—even if a proper reading of the apocalyptic image—dissuade us from acting ecologically.  The world, as God’s good creation and our medium of communion with Him and each other, reflects the very beauty and goodness of God and, as such, at every point we should attempt to respect it, cleanse it, and moderate our dealings and consumption of it.  This is not an activity isolated or exterior to our “spiritual” existence, but is in fact demanded by it.  This theological habitus does not mean that ecological decisions will suddenly be easy, or that the right course of action will be obvious.  What it has done, however, is to contextualize our reasons for acting or not acting.  The historical trajectories elaborated on here often conceal deeper rhetorical and conceptual structures which make modern modes of decision making appear to be common sense.  But an uncritical adoption of contemporary parlance by the Christian church can often lead to an implicitly untheological process.  While certainly many things we do in our daily lives—such as driving cars or working at factories with toxic emissions—will often be inescapable, nonetheless like the rest of our Christian lives, so too does our ecological activity require a constant humility and act of repentance before God, and is a fact of Christian existence that cannot be dismissed lightly or flippantly through either pragmatic argumentation or questionable eschatological reasoning.


[1] Jüngel, God as the Mystery pp.111-151.
[2] Grenz The Named God p.83f; Davies Theology of Compassion p.83f.
[3] Jüngel God as the Mystery p.141ff.
[4] Hart Beauty of the Infinite pp.93-135; Davies Theology of Compassion pp.115-118.
[5] Jean-Paul Sartre, Being and Nothingness (New York: Routledge, 2002) pp.461-462.
[6] Milbank, Theology and Social Theory p.9.
[7] Ibid pp.278-279.
[8] Hart Beauty of the Infinite pp.44-45, 81.
[9] David Bentley Hart The Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009) pp.20-21.
[10] Pannenberg ST 2:204.
[11] Knight, The Eschatological Economy pp.217ff.
[12] This critique should not be misunderstood as a wholesale dismissal of capitalism.  Rather it is attempting to disallow for capitalist logic to become the metaphysics undergirding our ethical decision making as Christians.
[13] Much of the following observations are heavily indebted to Philip Goodchild A Theology of Money (New York: SCM Press, 2007) p.63.
[14] Ibid p.61
[15] Ibid p.166
[16] Though ultimately of course, as is argued here, money or economics itself becomes a totalitarian system which coerces into specific sets of behavior like its own religion.  Ibid p.174.
[17] Ibid p.165.
[18] Ibid p.57.
[19] Ibid
[20] Eliade The Sacred and the Profane p.116ff.
[21] Ibid.
[22] Hart “Christ and Nothing.”
[23] Jüngel God as the Mystery p.160.
[24] F. LeRon Shults Reforming the Doctrine of God (Grand Rapids: Eerdman’s Publishing Co., 2005) pp.97-132; Pannenberg Theology and the Philosophy of Science p.305.
[25] Sallie McFague The Body of God: An Ecological Theology (Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortress Press, 1993); Rosemary R. Ruether, Gaia and God: An Ecofeminist Theology of Earth-Healing (New York: HarperCollins, 1992).
[26] John Zizioulas, Communion and Otherness: Further Studies in Personhood and the Church ed. by Paul McPartlan (New York: T&T Clark, 2006) p.95 argues along the same lines: “the alternative to a depersonalization of nature is not necessarily the personalization of it.”
[27] Hart Beauty of the Infinite pp.241ff.
[28] Ibid p.236.
[29] Ibid p.212.
[30] C.f. Jenson ST 2:153ff.
[31] Jenson ST 2:114-115; C.f. Pannenberg, ST 2:235: “Since the natural world…remains God’s creation, self-aggrandizing exercise of divinely commissioned dominion must recoil on humanity itself…The ecological crises at the end of self-emancipating modernity may be understood as a reminder that the God of the Bible remains lord of his Creation.”
[32] Ayres, Nicaea and Its Legacy pp.325-343; Hart Beauty of the Infinite e.g. pp.187-210 though in its own way it is arguably a major theme of the whole book.
[33] Pannenberg Metaphysics and the Idea of God Ch.3.
[34] Wolfhart Pannenberg Basic Questions in Theology vol. 1 trans. George Kehm.  (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1970) pp.110-111.
[35] Davies A Theology of Compassion pp.29ff; Hart Beauty of the Infinite pp.142-151.
[36] Zizioulas Communion & Otherness pp.95-97.
[37] Contra Kant, The Critique of Pure Judgment sect.VII: “That which is purely subjective in the representation of an object, i.e. what constitutes its reference to the subject, not to the object, is its aesthetic quality.”
[38] John Milbank, “Can a Gift Be Given? Prolegomena to a Future Trinitarian Metaphysic,” Modern Theology 11, no.1 (1995): 134.
[39] Pannenberg Systematic Theology 3:196.
[40] Eberhard Jüngel, “‘Even the Beautiful Must Die’—Beauty in the Light of Truth: Theological Observations on the Aesthetic Relation.” In Eberhard Jüngel Theological Essays vol. II ed. J. B. Webster (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1995) p.62; C.f. Jean-Luc Marion God Without Being trans. Thomas A. Carlson (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991) pp.108-138

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