God-Eater: In Defense of the Fish-Hook Theory of Atonement, Sort of (Part Two - Patristic Contexts)

Patristic Contexts


As with many things Patristic, the Fish-hook is often badly misunderstood because its formation contexts have been overlooked. For example placing Divine deception into a category of “lying” so as to disqualify it is to overlook the fact that even Augustine did not make this connection. In fact, as David Satran has argued, deceit has since classic antiquity been seen as a legitimate strategy in certain contexts.[1] While this is not uncontroversial, it falls into the category of perennial Biblical puzzles like the midwives lying to the Egyptians (Ex. 1:17-19). Here in particular Constas points out the parallels Patristic authors drew between Odysseus feigning weakness to beat an opponent and Christ’s kenosis,[2] or how many like Plato deliberately blurred the lines of truth and falsehood for pedagogical purposes.[3]

Some will then no doubt object that this parallel makes the incarnation Docetic: an appearance or a gambit designed to feign fleshliness while in no real way attaining it. Just the opposite is meant. More theologically, therefore, we must note the primarily anti-Arian context of the Fish-hook analogy which is meant to emphasize the reality of Christ’s humanity as an expression of God’s power, love, and wisdom.  Arian theology often circulated around the accusation that Christ’s suffering was an obvious indication of his inferiority to God the Father.[4] Constas notes the usual refrain justifying the Fish-hook analogy is precisely that the Arians, in saying the incarnation displays weakness, divide God’s power from His love and wisdom.[5] Christ’s weakness—the psalmic wormhood—is here not the antithesis to God’s power, but its very display. The Fish-hook analogy is in this sense entirely Chalcedonian. 

It moreover combines Isaiah’s claim that Christ had no form of loveliness to compel (53:2) with the Dionysian apophatic tradition where God only reveals Himself through a simultaneous concealment.[6] As Jon Robertson puts it, this is not to prioritize the apophatic over the cataphatic, but it is to note the intrinsic logic of the incarnation itself as Christ is the visible sign of the invisible God.[7] Or, in Morwenna Ludlow's terms, in the Catechetical Orations, for example, Gregory of Nyssa is at pains to show “the means of salvation is consistent with all of the divine attributes, notably justice, wisdom, and power.”[8]

Moreover, we must consider the context of being eaten.  This is not something that (thankfully) strikes most of us in our day to day lives. Yet, this was still an active anxiety of the ancient world. As Caroline Walker Bynum writes in her magisterial study on the doctrine of resurrection: “the literature of late antiquity throbs with fear of being fragmented, absorbed, digested …”[9] Here the Fish-hook as an atonement model and metaphor was related to resurrection as a solution to dissolution. Resurrection was in turn frequently displayed as “reassemblage and regurgitation”[10]. In other words: as God’s superabundant answer to Hell’s devouring putrefaction of the body in death. It runs in parallel to the traditions similar imagery regarding Christ’s harrowing of Hell.[11]

In addition to all of this, “deception” should not be seen in an isolated context in terms of God merely telling the truth as opposed to being deceptive. The Patristic concept of “recapitulation”[12]—namely the idea that Christ must re-live and re-perform the course Adam (and Israel) failed to take—is the proper context. Thus “deception” is meant to be a non-identical repetition of Satan’s deception of Adam and Eve: here where Satan originally deceived, he is now deceived to be undone. So, Constas: “In this stunning typological juxtaposition, the devil becomes a serpent, coiled around a tree, in order to seduce Eve, in response to which the deity becomes a worm writhing on the cross, the tree of life, in order to seduce the devil.”[13]  

Further, it should be read as a species of “accommodation” theory where God manifests Himself to the capacity others have to receive Him.[14] As such, Constas also notes, “deception” as a moniker is by itself wrong (deceptive?) because it overlooks the fact that God “adjusts” Himself even to the Devil’s capacity.[15] But shouldn’t God have been recognized by the Devil, just as the demons scream out unbidden that He is the Son of God (e.g. Lk. 4:41)? Here the deception is not meant to be at the level of identity but oikonomia or economy. Where the Devil tries to tempt Christ with the Kingdoms of the world, with bread, or tempting Him to display His Godly prerogative by having Angels attend to Him in a moment of distress (Mt. 4:1-11), so too does the Devil want to put Christ into the utmost temptation of violent, grotesque death. But like a fish lured to bait, Satan does not understand the true nature and activity of Christ, even if he knows the Son of God when he sees Him.

Conclusion

Our brief study here may not have proven the necessity of the Fish-hook metaphor, nonetheless we feel it has demonstrated it place amongst the plethora of images demonstrating the super-abudance of Christ’s atonement. Not only is it a recapitulation of the Devil’s deceit of Adam and Eve, it fulfills the sign of Jonah, and also rides along the caressing wave of Biblical and Dionysian apophaticism, where God as “worm” and other figures is only signified by images that reveal by also concealing. The image of “Fish-hook” does not consign God to some necessity (of “feeding” Satan), but it does reveal that His love, wisdom, and justice are one and the same, and take the same course of action.







[1] David Satran, “Pedagogy and Deceit in the Alexandrian Theological Tradition,” in Origeniana Quinta (Leeuven: Peters, 1993), 119-124. I owe knowledge of this source to Constas, “The Last Temptation of Satan,” 142.
[2] Constas, “The Last Temptation of Satan,” 151.
[3]  Ibid., 143.
[4] See: Paul Gavrilyuk, The Suffering of the Impassible God: The Dialectics of Patristic Thought (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004), 101-134.
[5] Constas, “The Last Temptation of Satan,” 161.
[6] On this tradition, see the fantastic study of David Williams, Deformed Discourse: The Function of the Monstrous in Medieval Thought and Literature (Ontario: McGill-Queens University, 1999).
[7] Jon M. Robertson, Christ as Mediator: A Study in the Theologies of Eusebius of Caesarea, Marcellus of Ancyra, and Athanasius of Alexandria (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007), 132.
[8] Morwenna Ludlow, Gregory of Nyssa: Ancient and Postmodern (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007), 116.
[9] Caroline Walker Bynum, The Resurrection of the Body in Western Christianity: 200-1336 (New York: Columbia University Press, 1995), 112.
[10] Ibid., 117-156.
[11] Hilarion Alfayev, Christ the Conqueror of Hell: The Descent into Hades from an Orthodox Perspective (New York: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2009).
[12] For example, see: John Behr, Irenaeus of Lyon: Identifying Christianity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015).
[13] Constas, “The Last Temptation of Satan,” 154-156.
[14] See: Arnold Huijgen, Divine Accomodation in John Calvin’s Theology: Analysis and Assessment (Connecticut: Vandehoeck & Ruprecht, 2011), esp. 47-106 for the historical development.
[15] Constas, “The Last Temptation of Satan,” 144.

Comments

Anonymous said…
Dr. Paul, I eat this stuff up, actually, I gorge myself on it. This dialog is excellent! I recently did a study in the incarnation mentioning the Christus Victor ideology and the outcomes of the Patristics (of whom you know I am a fan). Your presentation summarizes each view, and being fair to the positives and negatives of each view, shows how patristic and trinitarian views offer a compelling centric solution.