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Who is Christ? a year-long conversation with theologians
by Elizabeth Solsburg
This year, the St. Augustine Catholic is
exploring Christology – the study of Jesus Christ.
We asked several eminent seminary professors some
questions about Jesus. Their answers are
enlightening and thought-provoking.
SAC: If we met Jesus the moment after the
Resurrection, how would he look and sound? Could we
touch him? Why did so many of his friends not
recognize him?
Father Acklin: All we have to go by are the
Gospel accounts. The skepticism of the last several
centuries has affected us overmuch. I am not a
literalist or fundamentalist in a negative sense,
but we go too far if we become very skeptical about
what really happened. The historical elements are
very important. But the most important element is
faith – it is not so much proving what “really
happened” as understanding that the Resurrection was
an event that took place in time, yet reaches into
every moment of time and beyond time. I think the
appearance of the risen Lord – the variety of the
Gospel accounts – is explained by the subjectivity
of the recipients. Jesus had already gone beyond
space and time. He had already descended into hell
and come back into space and time in some ways. Yet,
Jesus invites people to touch him – to eat meals
with him. The tendency to explain away the bodily
resurrection diminishes our own bodily significance
– we are going to live exactly as Jesus: in
transformed bodies. As Paul says, if Jesus did not
rise from the dead, then our faith is in vain.
Father Muller: According to the Gospel accounts,
you could touch Jesus after the Resurrection. When
he tells Mary not to do so, it’s cryptic – he is
letting her know that their relationship has
changed. When Jesus appeared to the disciples, it
could have given them the impression that their
relationship was going to go back to what it had
been before the crucifixion. Jesus is saying that
isn’t the case – their relationships will be
transformed. In terms of his appearance, we don’t
have a clear idea of the properties of a resurrected
body. Jesus could appear behind locked doors;
clearly there was some sort of change that took
place in his relationship to bodiliness. In terms of
recognition, when someone is changed, you don’t
necessarily recognize them immediately. You go to
high-school reunions, and someone looks vaguely
familiar and you know
you should recognize them, but it takes some kind of
action to jar the memory. And so some did not
recognize him until he broke bread with them.
Father Stevens: It is interesting how
reticent the Gospels are about providing a physical
description. There are two texts about how we
recognize him after the Resurrection. One is Paul’s
conversion story, where Jesus says, “Saul, Saul, why
are you persecuting me?” In this, Jesus makes no
distinction between himself and his community. This
is how we are to recognize him – it is in the lowly
that we find Christ.
(Mt 25) His followers also recognized him in the
breaking of the bread – at that moment, they said,
“Our hearts were burning within us.” The recognition
makes us more, bigger. Read the Magnificat – Mary’s
heart is enlarged, increased. We are made bigger
because the Word is made present – whenever our
hearts burn, that’s the recognition.
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theologian of the month |
Anselm of
Canterbury (c. 1033-1109)
> Anselm was born in Burgundy,
and was the noble son of Gundulph
and Eermenberga. After his father
died, he fled his father’s harsh
temper and traveled a while before
coming to Normandy and entering the
abbey at Bec when he was 27.
> Anselm became the abbot,
building Bec into a formidable
academic power and writing several
theological works. He was the
archbishop of Canterbury from
1093-1109, and was renowned as a
philosopher and theologian. His
famous ontological arguments for the
existence of God still influence
theological thought today.
> Anselm’s Christological
position rests on the concept of the
atonement – if our sins have wounded
God’s honor, God’s justice demands
satisfaction, which, as a penalty
for man, must be of man. Since God
is infinite, the satisfaction must
also be infinite, and therefore
divine. Only in Jesus could this be
accomplished. |
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what does that symbol mean? |
Alpha
and Omega
Jesus Is called the alpha
and omega in the Book of
Revelation. Alpha is the first
letter of the Greek alphabet and
omega the last. So, this symbol
indicates that Jesus is the
beginning and end – the all. |
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Heresy! |
Monarchianism: Jesus is holy,
not divine
This heresy has nothing to do
with kings and queens – or
butterflies. Its name is rooted
in the Greek monarches, or “one
rule.” Dynamic Monarchians
taught that the Father, the Son
and the Holy Spirit were three
persons, one God. They taught
that God is one person – the
Father. Jesus is a man and the
Holy Spirit is a “presence” of
God the Father. Jehovah’s
Witnesses are modern examples of
Dynamic Monarchians. Some
Dynamic Monarchianisms were also
adoptionists, which will be
discussed later. Modal
Monarchianism teaches that the
Father, Son and Holy Spirit are
modes of a single person – God.
So, Jesus is God the Father,
simply in a different mode or
form. Modern examples are some
Pentecostal and Apostolic
churches, which teach that the
name of the one God is really
Jesus and that baptism must
occur in his name, not in the
name of the Trinity. |
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