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WHY WE NEED BOTH STORIES.


All Christology begins "from below." Rahner's distinction, "from below/from above," describes the plots of the Christological stories we tell, but not the genesis or sources of those stories. Too often we fail to make that distinction.

Christology begins in disciples' imaginative responses to the "Caesarea Philippi Caesarea Philippi (sĕsərē`ə fĭlĭp`ī), city, N ancient Palestine, at the foot of Mt. Hermon. It was built by Philip the Tetrarch in the 1st cent. A.D. Its site (Paneas) had long been a center for the worship of Pan. " question. That's what Mark portrays the disciples and Peter doing. They answer Jesus imaginatively with code words ("Elijah," "John the Baptist John the Baptist

prophet who baptized crowds and preached Christ’s coming. [N.T.: Matthew 3:1–13]

See : Baptism


John the Baptist

head presented as gift to Salome. [N.T.: Mark 6:25–28]

See : Decapitation
," "Messiah") that are shorthand for stories about "who he is."

New Testament Christological narratives have two types of plots. The ascending types (for example, in the synoptics See Bay Networks. ) tell stories of how "God made a man God's Son." The descending forms (for example, in the Christological hymns) tell stories of how "God made the Son a man." Of course, the New Testament makes many other Christological claims. But these two plots pattern the Christological imagination.

Subsequent controversies are debates over which story should dominate. Christological heresies result when one story cancels the other. It is easy for ascending Christologists to fall into patterns that shortchange short·change  
tr.v. short·changed, short·chang·ing, short·chang·es
1. To give (someone) less change than is due in a transaction.

2.
 the true divinity of Christ, and for descending Christologists to slip into patterns that practically deny Christ's humanity.

Christian disciples continue these exercises to the present, as Robert Krieg reminds us. We continue to tell stories to account for the scandalous particularity par·tic·u·lar·i·ty  
n. pl. par·tic·u·lar·i·ties
1. The quality or state of being particular rather than general.

2.
 of the divine reality present fully in this one person. We start from where we are: here below. We can't descend from heaven, but we can recall the responses of our forebears and our colleagues.

The problem is not where Christologists start. The real issue is working out the plots of our stories. We need both plot lines. Can we truly tell only ascending stories that manifest well the divine reality? Can we truly tell only descending stories that faithfully capture the human reality? I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
. My hunch is that we will need "two narratives" for our Christologies, just as the Council of Chalcedon Noun 1. Council of Chalcedon - the fourth ecumenical council in 451 which defined the two natures (human and divine) of Christ
Chalcedon

ecumenical council - (early Christian church) one of seven gatherings of bishops from around the known world under the
 (a.d. 451) needed the "two natures" formula.

Recently, answering another set of questions has become de rigueur for Christology: "What is the status of other religious traditions and their members regarding Jesus, God, salvation, and the church?"

I am convinced these types of questions are as problematical as "Why does God allow evil in the world?" I have argued that constructing theodicies to answer questions about "God and evil" perpetuates old evils and creates new evils (see my The Evils of Theodicy theodicy

Argument for the justification of God, concerned with reconciling God's goodness and justice with the observable facts of evil and suffering in the world. Most such arguments are a necessary component of theism.
 [Georgetown]). Analogously, providing theories to answer "Christianity and the religions" questions is also unsatisfactory. Trying to answer "When and how will God save those who know not Christ?" may be like trying to answer "When and how will you start loving your spouse?" Arguing for this claim, though, is work for another day.

I did find unexpected support from Avery Dulles for not trying to provide a theological answer to the question of how Christianity and the other religious traditions are related. In "Christ among the Religions" (America, February 2), Dulles in effect backs off from theoretical answers to these questions. He advocates what amounts to a turn to the practices of tolerance, peaceful coexistence, and joint projects. Avoiding theory and turning to practices may well be the best "answer" to such questions. Even if we cannot say how God works, we can show our faith in God's work.

We don't need to develop a theory to show how God works it out. We do need to get our Christological stories straight when we respond to, "Who do you say that I am?" We do need to show that we can talk without contradiction of God's universal salvific sal·vif·ic  
adj.
Having the intention or power to bring about salvation or redemption: "the doctrine that only a perfect male form can incarnate God fully and be salvific" Rita N. Brock.
 will and the scandalous particularity of the incarnate in·car·nate  
adj.
1.
a. Invested with bodily nature and form: an incarnate spirit.

b. Embodied in human form; personified: a villain who is evil incarnate.
 and risen Lord. These challenges make Christology interesting--and necessary, now as ever.

Terrence Tilley is chair of the Theology Department at the University of Dayton The University of Dayton is one of the ten largest Catholic schools in the United States and is the largest of the three Marianist universities in the nation. It is also home to one of the largest campus ministry programs in the world. . His most recent book is Inventing Catholic Tradition (Orbis).
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Title Annotation:Christology
Author:Tilley, Terrence
Publication:Commonweal
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Mar 22, 2002
Words:642
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