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Sunday, June 24, 2012

Free Will?

Recently I had a discussion about God and the problem of evil.  The discussion, as these discussions typically go, eventually came around the concept of free will:  free will is the reason there is evil in the world.  

If you've never encountered the argument before, I'll sum it up briefly:  God gave us free will because (according to the common line) He wants to be authentically loved.  And since no creature who is forced to love can really be said to honestly love, God gave us the ability to choose our own paths.  Because of this, we can either choose God or we can choose evil.  God cannot, by the very nature of the way He created the universe (with free will), interfere in our decisions because that would take away our freedom.  He may influence our decisions with gentle (and sometimes not so gentle) leading, but he does not and will not push us out of the driver's seat and grab the wheel.

That's one of the arguments meant to explain the problem of evil.  And while it addresses the problem and provides a possible answer, I'd like to propose that the reason for free will (God wanting to be loved) is incomplete.  Yes, God wants to be authentically loved, so He gave us free will, but there's more to it.  In fact, that might be the lesser reason.  

The larger reason for free will is found in God's own nature.  God's nature is, amongst other things, perfect, flawless and infinite Love.  As the Bible states:  God is Love.  And love--true love--must allow freedom.  Were God to pre-program us, we would be nothing but puppets in His hands.  Lumps of living flesh:  able to think, but not able to think freely.  Our thoughts would be scripted, crippled. Our words, our days, our years all would be pre-planned, pre-ordained, and unchangeable.  

In short, we would be toys.  Complex, and beautifully created, yes, but still only toys. 

If we had been created with the capacity to think rationally, but without the freedom to choose our own path (good or evil), God would not be a loving creator.  Instead, He'd be nothing but an exaggerated and perfected (in all the diabolical qualities) Dictator.  (After all, Dictators want nothing more than to control thoughts and actions.  God, being God, would be able to effortlessly accomplish with utter perfection what our commonplace dictators only dream:  complete, scripted, perfect control over the actions of His subjects.)

And no matter how much you may like the idea of a "Benevolent" dictator, there's no reasonable way we could ever affix the quality of "love" to His actions.  He would simply be using us for His amusement.  Our lives with all their struggles and all their pain and all their joy would simply be a game God was watching or playing.  

He'd be the Grand Manipulator, the All-Powerful Author, Our Benevolent Dictator.  But He wouldn't be the lover of our souls.  For love--to be true love--requires the gift of freedom.

***UPDATE***

QUESTION/COMMENT 1:  What if God had decided against creating man, would he then be  incapable of being truly loving without us; does he need us to be that  or to do that?  If so, doesn't that suggest that God is not as  all-powerful as we thought?

If God decided not to create us or, had created us instead as  non-rational animals, then He can choose to impart no freedom of will  and still keep His infinite and perfectly loving nature untarnished.

However, if He created not us, but another type of being that was,  nevertheless, rational, then that being NEEDS to be free to use that  rationality for God to continue to be TRULY loving.  For one reason:  to give a gift and absolutely limit it's use, is not loving. 

Secondly, to create a being capable of rational thought, but to  manually prevent that being from reaching any undesirable conclusions  (even for that being's good) necessarily removes the concept of "True  Love" from the equation.

If I could control my kids' thoughts as God undoubtedly is capable of  doing, I could ensure absolutely the fact that they never do anything  wrong, that they never make any mistakes, that they never suffer any  sorrow or pain.  However, if I were capable of that and actually did  it, few (if any) of us would label my actions as the actions of a  loving father no matter how vehemently I argued that true love was my  motivation. Even if I could only semi-adequately accomplish something  like this through hypnosis, nowhere would my actions be thought of as  healthy, loving and imitable.

God isn't a father like that.  Our rationality and God's loving nature  makes it necessary that He give us free will.
QUESTION/COMMENT 2:  On a side note, is the love we feel for our pets not true? What level  of depth is necessary for truly satisfying love? Is the standard the  same for everyone? Can puny creatures such as ourselves, ever measure  up and satisfy God's need for love? Or is the fact that He doesn't  need much from us in the way of love a function of his greatness?  Again, does God need our love?
God needs nothing from us at all.  He made us from nothing for our own  benefit, not His.  It took Him no effort and enhanced His being not  the slightest.  So no, He doesn't need our love.  He wants our love  because loving Him is good for us.  It's concern for us that drives  this, not concern for Himself.

If Jesus Knew, Then Why? A Question on the Real Presence in the Eucharist

Here's a question I've been wondering about.  But before I ask it, let's lay out some Scriptural facts.

FACT 1:  Jesus knew the thoughts and hearts of the people He interacted with while He was on earth.  (Mark 2:6-9; Luke 9:47; Luke 24:38; Matthew 9:4, Matthew 12:25, Luke 6:8, Luke 11:7) 

FACT 2:  Jesus knew the future while He was on earth.  (John 13:11, Matthew 17:27, Matthew 26:34, Luke 22:10-12, John 6:64, Mark 13:1-2)

FACT 3:  Jesus spoke the words given to Him by God the Father.  (John 14:10, John 14:24, John 14:31)

FACT 4:  God the Father knows the future.  (Isaiah 46:9-12, Psalm 139:1-6, Hebrews 4:12-13, Isaiah 42:9)

OK, with these facts established, let's get to the question:  IF Jesus knew the hearts and thoughts of His hearers and IF Jesus knew the future and IF Jesus only spoke the words given Him by the Father, then why would Jesus allow all of Christianity to misunderstand His teaching regarding the Eucharist for over 1500 years?

When we look at early historical documents, it is clear that the early Church all the way up until the Reformation believed that Christ was really teaching in John 6 that Christians needed to eat His body and drink His blood in the Eucharist.  

So that brings us back to the question:  IF Jesus knew how the Church would interpret His teachings, why did He let them interpret these teachings so incorrectly for so many years? 

As far as I can see, there are only a few possible answers to this question:

ANSWER 1:  The early Church DID NOT misinterpret the teachings, but instead held to a view on communion and the Eucharist much like the views held by modern-day non-Catholics.  Therefore, Jesus taught and the Church interpreted as God intended.  The current Catholic view was later adopted by the "Romanized" Catholic Church.

The first potential answer is the "Catholics changed the teaching of the Church later" answer.  Unfortunately, this answer doesn't truly deal with the historical record.  Even a cursory glance into Church history will reveal that the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist was a standard belief of the Church from the very beginning. 
"Consider how contrary to the mind of God are the heterodox in regard to the grace of God which has come to us. They have no regard for charity, none for the widow, the orphan, the oppressed, none for the man in prison, the hungry or the thirsty. They abstain from the Eucharist and from prayer, because they do not admit that the Eucharist is the flesh of our Savior Jesus Christ, the flesh which suffered for our sins and which the Father, in His graciousness, raised from the dead."  (St. Ignatius, Letter to the Smyrneans, paragraph 6, 80-110 AD)
 Notice, St. Ignatius says the Eucharist is the flesh "which suffered for our sins and which the Father...raised from the dead."  If the Eucharistic presence of Christ's flesh is symbolic to St. Ignatius, then so was the suffering and resurrection of Christ.

Here's another quote, from St. Justin Martyr as he describes "Church" to the Romans:
"We call this food Eucharist, and no one else is permitted to partake of it, except one who believes our teaching to be true and who has been washed in the washing which is for the remission of sins and for regeneration [i.e., has received baptism] and is thereby living as Christ enjoined. For not as common bread nor common drink do we receive these; but since Jesus Christ our Savior was made incarnate by the word of God and had both flesh and blood for our salvation, so too, as we have been taught, the food which has been made into the Eucharist by the Eucharistic prayer set down by him, and by the change of which our blood and flesh is nurtured, is both the flesh and the blood of that incarnated Jesus" (St. Justin Martyr, First Apology, 66 [AD151]).
There are many quotes to choose from, but here's one last one:
 "If the Lord were from other than the Father, how could he rightly take bread, which is of the same creation as our own, and confess it to be his body and affirm that the mixture in the cup is his blood?" (St. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, 4:33-32 [AD189]).

Notice here that St. Ireneaus isn't debating the Real Presence in the Eucharist.  Instead, he's using it as a proof that Jesus is God.  The basic gist of his argument is this:  if Jesus wasn't of the same substance of the Father, how could he take bread and turn it into his body?  He starts with an obvious assumption that must have been an accepted belief everywhere--the body and blood of the Lord are truly present in the Eucharist--and he uses it to further develop a deeper understanding of Christ.
Now, it could be argued that I'm cherry-picking quotes--that the early Church really didn't believe in the Real Presence except in a few unusual writings of a few unusual writers.  Well, we don't have the time to go through the entire written record of the Early Church Fathers.  But we can appeal to as unbiased a source as I can think of:  the renowned Protestant historian, J.N.D. Kelly.  Kelly explains, in his book entitled Early Christian Doctrines:  "Eucharistic teaching, it should be understood at the outset, was in general unquestioningly realist, i.e., the consecrated bread and wine were taken to be, and were treated and designated as, the Savior’s body and blood" (p. 440).

So, even a renowned Protestant historian (who has nothing to gain and much to lose by admitting the early Church clung to starkly Catholic beliefs regarding the Eucharist) readily admits that the witness of history is clear:  the early Church believed in the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist.

Thus, our question still stands:  Why would Jesus give us a teaching which He knew would be misunderstood by so many Christians for so long?

ANSWER 2:  The second potential answer to this dilemma is to argue that God simply allowed the Christians to be wrong in the same way that He allows the Jehovah's Witnesses (for example) to interpret the Scriptures their way and come up with false ideas.  After all, there is no limit to the number of groups who have interpreted scripture on their own to come up with contrary ideas.  God doesn't stop all of these either.  In regards to the Real Presence in the Eucharist, He simply gave a teaching and the early Church screwed it up until Martin Luther and the other Reformers set it right.  Sad for all those early Christians, but "thems the breaks".

The problem with this answer is that indeed, much of Scripture can be interpreted to mean many different things and God is, by no means, responsible for our bending and twisting scripture to fit our doctrines.  However, with the doctrine of the Real Presence in the Eucharist, that's not really the case.  

The reason is this:  All we have to go on Biblically regarding the Real Presence are very clear passages in which Jesus says "I am the living bread that came down from heaven; whoever eats this bread will live forever."  So, he starts by saying He's the living bread.  Sounds symbolic.  But then he follows it up immediately, in the same verse, with:  "the bread I will give is my flesh for the life of the world"  (John 6:51).

Think about that verse for a second:  "the bread I will give is my flesh for the life of the world."  So the bread we must eat is what?  Is the flesh given for the life of the world.  Was his flesh symbolically given?  No.  Then how can we shift gears, break the analogy given by the Son of God, and say "the bread, the flesh, must be symbolic." 

We fall into the desire to make the passage symbolic because we, along with the early listeners of this discourse, don't understand.  We respond (as they did) with incredulity:  "You can't really mean we need to eat your body and drink your blood, right?  You've gotta be speaking symbolically, right?" (John John 6:52, paraphrased).  

To which Jesus says (and goes on to repeat himself 4 times):  "unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you do not have life within you" (John 6:53).  He even changes the Greek word from one which was the normal word for dining or eating, to one that was much more coarse and meant to "gnaw or to chew."  He says that this idea is a salvation issue--we must eat His flesh if we are to have life in us--and He lets people (followers) leave him (presumably forever) over this concept.  All He had to say was, "Wait!  I'm being symbolic!  Don't you get it?  It's just bread, but it represents my body."  Had He just said those simple words, the disciples (for disciples they were--see John 6:66) would never have left Him.

If Jesus had gone on to explain that He was speaking symbolically, then Catholics could be faulted for ignoring the clear words of Jesus and clinging to the metaphor instead.  However, He didn't say He was being symbolic.  In fact, He seemed to go out of His way to let everyone know He meant what He said.  And so, we have Jesus in Scripture giving us every inclination that He meant this literally.  If Catholics interpret this literally--as He implied it was meant--and they are wrong, are they to blame?  No.  The teacher is to blame.

Think about it this way:  if a teacher presents students with a lesson in class and uses heavy symbolism to make a point, and, when the students react and say the teacher can't be serious, only goes on to reiterate (over and over) that yes, indeed he is serious . . . well, are the students to blame for eventually taking him at his word?  Any responsible teacher, realizing the students had mistaken his intentions and the lesson, would have put the brakes on and made the symbolism clear. Any teacher who would stubbornly cling to symbolic language even when it was clear that the students didn't understand, has no right to feel angry or disappointed when those same students accept the teaching as true.

It's the same situation here:  with Jesus' teaching regarding the Eucharist, there is no interpretation of Christ's words needed to arrive at the Catholic concept that we must eat his flesh and drink his blood in the Eucharist.  If Catholics have taken Jesus at His word, they are not to blame if they are mistaken:  Jesus would be to blame for failing to clarify his teaching, especially since He (knowing the future and the hearts of men) would know that His stubborn refusal to admit to His followers He was being symbolic caused all of early Christianity to believe Him literally.

Finally, that brings us to Answer 3...

ANSWER 3:  He said it this way and let the early Church and all of the Church believe it in this manner because He truly meant it in this manner.  There was no other way to convey what He meant other than to simply say it as He did.  There was no clarification to make, so He gave none.  He said what He meant and meant what He said and He said it knowing that the Church, His Church, would understand exactly what He meant.

Of all the possible answers to the question posed at the beginning, the only one that makes sense logically and Scripturally is answer 3.  Jesus didn't mislead the Church.  He didn't give us a teaching that He knew we would misinterpret.  He knew the Church would get it right because He is God.  He knows our hearts, our thoughts and our futures.  Nothing surprises Him.  And so, when He spoke in John 6 about eating His flesh and drinking His blood and when He instituted the Lord's Supper with "This is my body", He knew how His people would interpret His words.