a.
The
problem of Gnosticism
We
mentioned
-from our very
first lessons- that we would
be tracking the Symbol of Faith (Creed) in the structuring
of Dogmatics. Up to now, we have covered the first few
words of the Creed:
“I
believe in one God, the Father…”
Continuing on, we encounter the words
“the
Almighty, Creator of heaven and earth”.
And this is where we find the problem regarding Creation
- the dogma on creation.
God is not
only the Father of His Son; He is not only Triadic; He
does not have existence only unto Himself; we do not
simply confess that He exists eternally. We confess that
this God embarked on an act, an energy outside of
Himself, which brought into existence something else,
other than Himself. And this, precisely, is the dogma
on Creation. We need to point out from the very start
that this act of God, of creating something else outside
of Himself, did not constitute a necessity for God.
When we say “necessity”, we do not imply any form of
psychological necessity (as many contemporary
dogmaticians do), such as “loneliness”, or “the desire
to have someone else, other than Himself”, etc. We must
never apply the concept of “psychology” when
referring to the existence of God, even though the Holy
Bible and our Theology may sometimes resort to referring
to God with the aid of psychological terms (e.g., ‘God
is angry’, or ‘the wrath of God’, etc.; even the fact
that He ‘loves’ us is often perceived from a
psychological point of view). All such terms –when they
do not have an ontological basis- are anthropomorphic
and should not be applied to God’s being. We cannot
apply psychology to God. Augustine (as we saw) did
apply it, and eventually created the problems that we
pointed out.
Consequently, when we say that ‘God created the world’
(i.e., a thing outside of Himself) out of ‘love’, or
‘motivated by love’, we should not attribute any
sentimental meaning to this word ‘love’.
This is
where the problem arises, as to how we should perceive
God’s motives in the creation of the world. At this
point, in accordance with the principle that we follow
in our lessons, we should firstly take a look at the
history of the dogma on Creation, to see under what
historical prerequisites it appeared, and afterwards see
what this could entail for us. This way, we will also
be able to give a reply to the question posed before,
regarding the motives of Creation; in other words: Why
was the world created by God?
During
this stage of
“…the
Almighty,
Creator of heaven and earth
and all things visible and invisible…”
the Creed has -as a prerequisite- certain concepts
regarding ‘the creation of the world’, or ‘the world’;
notions, which the Fathers and the Church deemed heretic
and unacceptable. At first, the Creed was simply a
confession of faith in the Father, the Son and the Holy
Spirit. The addition of these phrases was the result of
a historical necessity. We need to therefore examine
what sorts of ideas regarding Creation are exempt from
the Creed first of all. Then, we shall examine what
sorts of ideas are hidden behind these expressions.
Historically, the first thing that brought about this
extension to the Creed was the idea that Gnosticism had,
regarding Creation. Gnosticism put great emphasis on
the transcendental status of God, in order to resolve
the problem of theodicy, in other words, the
problem of why there is so much evil in the world and
how we can explain the existence of evil in the world;
that is, how it originated. Naturally, if we say that
God is responsible for evil, we immediately endanger the
concept of God. God must not be held responsible for
evil. Then what should we do, to ensure that God is not
held responsible for the evil that exists in the world?
Gnosticism’s reply to this question was its theory that
this world was not created by God - this ‘God the
Father’. ‘God the Father’ is apparently so
transcendental and unapproachable, so foreign to what is
going on in the world, that He can even be considered
altogether alien to the world. This is the
“stranger-God” of Marcion. Thus, by alienating God from
the world, they have acquitted Him of the responsibility
for the existence of evil; however, they then needed to
explain why and how this world exists. The answer that
Gnosticism gave to this question was that this world was
the creation of another, inferior being whom they called
‘Creator’, thus distinguishing between ‘Father’ and
‘Creator’. ‘God the Father’ was one thing, and a
‘god-Creator’ was another. This
‘Creator’
of theirs is found among the series of “aeons” - beings
that link the world to God. There,
towards the end,
near
the world, is the place of this
‘Creator’
who created the world and who is therefore also
responsible for the evil that exists in the world.
Because, a prerequisite of Gnosticism is that this world
is by definition evil. In other words, evil resides
within matter, within the structure of matter, within
all of creation, within everything that exists in this
world. Subsequently,
this world cannot even be repaired. To be saved, you
must therefore get out of this world. And a Gnostic is
supposedly the one who is asked to abandon space and
time, through the knowledge that he possesses.
The
Patristic
response
– and chiefly Saint Ireneos, who confronted Gnosticism
with his significant treatise “Against Heresies”
–
was comprised of the following points, which are also
the prerequisites in the Symbol of Faith (Creed) :
THE
FIRST POSITION maintained by Saint Ireneos is that ‘God
the Father’ and ‘God the Creator’ is one and the same
person. We do not make any distinction between the
Father and the Creator. This is why in the Creed, these
words are so close to each other, that many interpret
the notion of ‘Father’ as pertaining to Creation and not
to His eternal state of existence. And indeed, in the 2nd
century, this anti-Gnostic position of relating the
‘Father’ with the ‘Creator’ was so intensely stressed,
that the impression was given –when reading the
Patristic texts of that period– that the words
“I
believe in one God, the Father..”
implied the Creator more than it did the eternal God,
that is, the Father of the Son.
This was
clarified at a later stage, mainly during the 4th
century following Arianism, when the problem became more
pressing and acute and the answer was given, that God is
indeed the Father - not as a Creator, but as the Father
of one Son, Who always existed, Who pre-existed, Who
always existed, within the Essence of God. This,
therefore,
was the
first position.
THE
SECOND POSITION is that this God/Father/Creator is
directly involved in the act of Creation: He is not a
Creator through
any intermediaries.
The
theory of ‘aeons’ - of all those intermediaries between
God and the world according to Gnosticism – is rejected,
and is replaced by the insertion of the idea of the immediacy of God’s involvement in the act of
Creation. This is a direct relating of God to the world.
Here of
course, is where the other point is brought up, which
appears later on in the other clause of the Creed (“…through
Whom everything came into being….”)
–but we shall discuss this in the future– and states
that it was through the Logos, the Son, that God
created the world.
And this is
where an impasse appeared somehow, on the issue of God’s
transcendental status. This was such a delicate and
difficult point, that it created much confusion, both in
the 2nd and the 3rd and even the 4th
century.
This role
of the Son in Creation (as the One through Whom
God created the world) was responsible for the notion
that the Father is so transcendental, that God as the
Father was not the One who directly created the
world, but Who used the Son to do it; thus, the Father
remained the One that we could say nothing about; (we
see here, how Gnosticism even took on a Christian form)
He remained the Complete Stranger. The Son was the One
who effected the work of Creation, but, because this had
not been clarified (during the 2nd and 3rd
centuries), whether the Son belonged within the sphere
of the Uncreated God, or if the Logos of God had
somehow appeared for the first time when God the Father
was effecting the work of Creation; in other words, it
was because of the prevailing confusion on this point,
that we arrived at Arianism, which had posed the
question as to whether the Logos belonged within the
sphere of the created, or of the Uncreated.
Naturally,
the Church -through its 1st Ecumenical
Council- decided that the Logos belonged in the sphere
of the Uncreated, even though it espoused Ireneos’
position in this case, whereby, albeit the Father uses
the Son in Creation, He is nevertheless acting in a
direct manner. In other words, by saying that God
created the world through His Son, we should not
imply that the Father remains so transcendental that He
has no direct involvement Himself in Creation. The
creation of the world is a work of the Father’s love.
It is executed by the Son, but the Father is also
ever-present in the work of Creation, and, as elucidated
in the 4th century, the Father and the Son
are inseparable.
At any
rate, it is imperative that we stress, chiefly with the
theology of Saint Ireneos, this immediacy of the
Father’s involvement, even though He uses the Son in the
work of Creation. We therefore have an ‘immediacy’
and a ‘coincidence’, between the terms ‘Creator’
and ‘Father’. The Son does not become Creator, just
because the world is created through the Son. The
Father is the Creator, according to the 4th
century’s theology. This changes slightly during the
Patristic period; however, I would like to remind you at
this point, that we should not perceive the Patristic
period as a monolithic period. Unfortunately, during
recent years, a very unscholarly perception of patristic
theology has become prevalent in orthodox theology.
Patristic theology has a history of its own; we cannot
say “Fathers” in one breath, and in this word include
everyone, from Saint Ireneos through to Saint Gregory
Palamas, as though no ‘fermentations’ whatsoever had
occurred during this entire historical period. That
which ensures the unity of Patristic thought, is that in
basic issues (such as this one, of ‘immediacy’), all of
Patristic theology is consistently in agreement. Thus,
even if the Son does appear later on as the Creator,
this does not negate the immediacy of the Father’s
involvement.
This is why the Creed insists: «….in
one God, the Father, the Almighty,
Creator of heaven and earth…».