By the rivers of Babylon—
there we sat down and wept
when we remembered Zion.
There we hung up our lyres
on the poplar trees,
for our captors there asked us for songs,
and our tormentors, for rejoicing:
“Sing us one of the songs of Zion.”
On Intentionality: Part 7, The Heart of the Christian Moral Life
“Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth.” (Colossians 3:2)
“Put on then, as God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, compassionate hearts, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience.” (Colossians 3:12)
“Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you…be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another.” (Ephesians 4:31–32)
“Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 2:5)
“Look carefully then how you walk, not as unwise but as wise.” (Ephesians 5:15)
“Put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to gratify its desires.” (Romans 13:14)
“Let no corrupting talk come out of your mouths, but only such as is good for building up.” (Ephesians 4:29)
“Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep.” (Romans 12:15)
“Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ.” (Galatians 6:2)
“Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances.” (1 Thessalonians 5:16–18)
“Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly.” (Colossians 3:16)
“Be sober-minded; be watchful.” (1 Peter 5:8)
“Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.” (James 4:7)
“Draw near to God, and he will draw near to you.” (James 4:8)
On Intentionality: Part 6, Tradition is No Escape
To recap, one of the ways many low-church non-denominational Christians attempt to escape DIY Protestantism is to convert to Catholicism or Orthodoxy. The fissuring provisionality of Protestantism, rooted as it is in how the individual reads Scripture, is exchanged for a venerable and stable tradition.
What do I mean by DIY Protestantism? Think of a typical Sunday morning at a low-church Protestant congregation. While there might be a general and traditional flow to the service, much of what you experience and hear changes week to week. For example, at my church we celebrate the Lord's Supper every week. And being low-church Protestants there isn't a set liturgy for the Table. Nor do we have any sacramental theology to consecrate the experience. Rather, a member of the church is invited to share some thoughts about the Lord's Supper. And these thoughts can be all over the place, week to week. Innovations can be introduced that are, frankly, bizarre.
Another example is how my church celebrates Lent. Again, as low-church Protestants we've never historically celebrated Lent. But wanting to enrich our spiritual formation culture we've begun to observe the season. And yet, our celebration of Lent is very DIY. Every year the materials shared with the church are different, often having very little to do with Lent as a penitential season. For some odd reason, my church thinks Ash Wednesday is about "contemplating your mortality." We're all existentialists! Plus, since Lent is so foreign to our tradition it's not imposed on anyone as a hard expectation. You're invited to participate in Lent. And you're free to select your own personal Lenten practices. All that to say, when it comes to Lent at my church some people observe it and some people don't and among those who observe Lent everyone is doing their own thing. Choose-your-own adventure Lent.
Those are a few examples from my church. Stepping back, there's also the entrepreneurial and performative aspect of many non-denominational churches. Each church has its own brand and vibe aimed at attracting religious consumers who shop the church marketplace. The game of church growth is getting customers to buy your product.
Lastly, what do low-church Protestants believe? Well, they believe all sorts of different things, on just about every conceivable subject, from the atonement to Armageddon. Consequently, in choosing a church you're also choosing what you want to believe. And even then it's pretty low risk because if you change your mind you can simply find another church. And if you can't find a church that fits you, you can start your own.
Now, compare all that to Orthodoxy and Catholicism. To be sure, churches and parishes have local character. But the liturgy and the beliefs are old and not open to debate. Nothing is provisional or up for grabs. Plus, while members do opt out of expected obligations this is understood to be problematic, a form of disobedience. You can get disciplined and excommunicated.
As mentioned in the last post, many low-church Protestants are converting to Orthodoxy and Catholicism because they find rest in the consistent stability of these traditions. Nothing has to be invented. Choices don't have to be made. There is a givenness that doesn't await a decision. And for many who have anxiously wandered the hermeneutical maze of low-church Protestantism, where doctrines multiply like rabbits, there is a sense of relief in arriving at a place where beliefs aren't up for debate and will never change. Truth is no longer anything you can decide for yourself. The ruminating mind can stop its obsessive quest and finally come to rest.
Returning to the topic of this series, we can appreciate how the perennial call for “intentionality” is differently affected within Orthodoxy and Catholicism. Take, again, the example of Lent. In low-church Protestant spaces, Lent is framed as a practice of intentionality. During Lent we become more deliberate about our faith, and this intentionality is said to improve our spiritual lives. The vibe is one of spiritual self-improvement. In Catholic and Orthodox churches, by contrast, Lent is not something you invent but something you inherit. It is given, not chosen. The season arrives every year with its prescribed fasts and liturgies already in place. You simply step into it. There is a contrast here between choice, decision, intentionality, and invention versus obedience, givenness, participation, and inheritance. The former is ongoing and effortful and the latter, in its already-decidedness, is rest.
We can see the appeal here. Instead of faith always being "up to me," something I'm always creating and inventing for myself, traditions like Orthodoxy and Catholicism allow us to escape this exhausting, never-ending work. Instead of being "intentional," like deciding what I'm going to do for Lent, I just do the thing set before me.
And yet, there are three locations where I don't think intentionality can be wholly escaped, even within the Orthodox and Catholic traditions.
First, as I pointed out in the last post, we're embracing these traditions from within the secular, liberal order. We're not living in Latin Christendom or the Byzantine East. Orthodoxy and Catholicism are not taken-for-granted cultural givens. One has to choose to become Orthodox and Catholic. You must intentionally swim the Tiber or turn toward the East. Faith in the modern world still pivots upon the choice of the individual. True, once chosen Orthodoxy and Catholicism are settled traditions that don't require constant reinvention. But the traditions themselves must be embraced through an intentional act, a choice. And it's a choice that never goes away and that has to made over and over again. In the taken-for-granted past deconversion wasn't a live option. Today, it's a constant temptation.
Second, while traditional practices don't have to be invented over and over again, rites and rituals can become empty and rote. This is a horrible example to use, but it makes the point clear. Consider the Catholic sexual abuse crisis. The Catholic liturgy is beautiful, a sacramental wonder. But the venerable givenness of the liturgy doesn't guarantee moral formation and sanctification. Not even of the priest. The heart of the person must be engaged. Intentionality cannot be avoided. We must bring ourselves--intentionally--to the sacrament for transformation to occur. There is a synergy between the divine and human wills that demands an intentional response from our side.
Lastly, submission is still a choice. In Orthodoxy and Catholicism the individual conscience must submit to the magisterial tradition and ecclesiastical authority. Individual autonomy is traded in for corporate obedience. Personal choice gives way to collective submission. But obedience is an intentional act, a choice that has to be made over and over again. Consider how conservative American Catholics responded to the pontificate of Francis. Many of them faced a crisis of conscience, causing some to revolt and rebel. Where was that longed for rest in the givenness of tradition in all that foment, drama, weeping and wailing? Catholics and the Orthodox do experience crises of conscience.
To conclude, I get why some low-church Protestants find peace when they convert to Orthodoxy and Catholicism. They really have escaped the liturgical and doctrinal churn of low-church Protestantism. They really have left a sector of Christianity that is performative, entrepreneurial, and consumeristic for something venerable and stable. But converting to Orthodoxy and Catholicism isn't an escape from intentionality. The cultural givenness of Latin Christendom and the Byzantine East is gone. Converting to Orthodoxy or Catholicism cannot restore these traditions to a cultural taken-for-grantedness. Consequently, converting to Orthodoxy or Catholicism is a choice, and will always remain a choice each day of your life. In the modern world, deconversion is always a live option. And when the church goes sideways, you have to choose to either submit or rebel. Crises of conscience cannot be avoided. And finally, when another Lent rolls around or the Eucharist becomes rote and perfunctory, you have to step into that season and sacrament with renewed intentionality. True, you don't have to make anything up. But you do have to show up. Not just physically, but mentally. And that showing up doesn't happen accidentally. It's a mental act. You have to be intentional.
On Intentionality: Part 5, Seeking a Thick Culture
First, there are the political movements.
There are some, like the Catholic integralists, who want to restore the culture of Latin Christendom. This vision is stronger and more systematic than the evangelical pursuit of “Christian nationalism.” For Catholic integralists, secular political authority must be subordinated to ecclesiastical authority. The ideal is hierarchical, a recovery of the medieval order in which the pope exercised spiritual supremacy over kings and princes, including the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire.On Intentionality: Part 4, The Desolations of an Intentional Faith
As I've described, many lament this loss, and that sadness can tip toward nostalgia. We long for the homogeneous consensus that had once characterized Latin Christendom. Having lost this consensus we're condemned to a decisional, effortful, and deliberative choosing of faith, over and over again. Faith as intentionality.
The desolations here are many. As I said, the very act of choosing faith over and over again is effortful, wearying, and exhausting. Do I still believe this? Do I still identify as a Christian? Should I leave my church? Do I want to get out of bed on Sunday morning? Decision fatigue sets in.
Next, given all the choices in the religious marketplace, we face chronic decision regret. Did we pick the right brand of Christianity? We look over denominational fences and think the grass is always greener. We also observe people wandering from tradition to tradition looking for a place to land.
Also, by privileging individual choice we create the conditions of fissuring and fracturing. The moment Martin Luther privileged the individual conscience over tradition--"To go against conscience is neither right nor safe"--a Pandora's Box was opened. Now left up to the individual, faith has became a DIY project.
Scholars also describe a fourth problem. Beyond the issue of belief there is also the question of forming virtue. Forming virtue requires a thick culture. As scholars such as Alasdair MacIntyre and Stanley Hauerwas have argued, virtue emerges from a habitus, a communal ethos of social practices, religious tradition, normative expectations, patterns of living, and shared cultural worldview. Virtue is different from the content of an ethics class, like what to do with the Trolley Problem. Virtue concerns habits and dispositions. And you need a culture to form that character.
In short, when the habitus of Latin Christendom evaporated we lost our ability to cultivate virtue. We're no longer embedded in a thick and rich moral culture that shapes and forms us. This, I think, is one of the reasons our politics has become so moralized. Politics has replaced virtue. I'm a good person not because of my character but because of how I vote. Politics is faux-virtue and ersatz character.
Summarizing, here's how our loss of a taken-for-granted tradition affects the experience of modern faith:
Decision fatigue: It is effortful to keep choosing faith.
Decision regret: We worry over having chosen the "right" denominational brand of Christianity.
DIY Christianity: We privilege individual autonomy over submission to tradition and church authority.
Loss of virtue: We lack thick moral cultures that can form virtue.
Summarizing, calls for intentionality are occurring within this cultural context and these accompanying desolations. In fact, as I've suggested, the call for intentionality might not be a cure for the disease but symptomatic of the disease itself. By privileging individual choice and decision-making "being intentional" may be reinforcing the very things making us so sick.
And if that's so, what might the alternative be? And is an alternative even possible?
Psalm 136
The self is inherently relational. There is no isolated ego or self. We exist only in relation. Thus, I can only come to know, define, and explore myself through relation. Self-help, self-exploration, and self-actualization are, at root, delusional, resting upon a false ontology and anthropology. Consequently, it stands to reason that when the self cuts itself off from relation, and tries to explore, define, and know itself in isolation, it will become disordered and hallucinatory.
As Martin Buber put it, our relation to reality is not I-It, but I-Thou. Object-relations theory, however, would reverse this. Self-definition requires a prior relation. A child comes to know herself in relation to the mother. The relation is Thou-I, where a parental Thou precedes my I. Relation is prior to the self.
As I describe in The Shape of Joy, this is why the science of positive psychology has shown that transcendence is good for us. Our flourishing flows out of a trusting relation with reality. Our I comes into being and flourishes in relation to a prior, parental Thou.
On Intentionality: Part 3, Enchantment by Choice?
The question flows from what we discussed in the last post. Can enchantment be a choice? Can an encounter with God be an act of will? Can you make yourself believe something if you don't really believe it?
Simply put, can you, via intentionality, re-enchant yourself? And if you can, isn't this "re-enchantment" fundamentally different from the taken-for-granted enchantment experienced by our forebears 500 years ago? Isn't enchantment-by-choice different from an enchantment of naivety?
On this point, Paul Ricoeur famously described what he called the "second naivety" of religious belief. The first naivety is the stage of pre-critical belief. In this first naivety belief is simple, straightforward, literalistic, and given. Faith was trusting, accepting, and childlike. But as we grow up we move into a stage of critical reflection and questioning. We kick the tires of timeless verities. We question settled truths. We interrogate the tradition. We dissect the dogmas. In modern parlance, we engage in what is called "deconstruction."
But after this critical stage, continues Ricoeur, some of us return to faith. We call this "reconstruction." The pieces are put back together again. Ricoeur describes this return as a "second naivety." This second naivety is a post-critical stage. Faith is re-embraced, but it has also been changed and transformed by the season of questioning. As the title of a Brian McLaren book puts it, the second naivety is "faith after doubt."
To return to our question, is the experience of enchantment different during the first versus second naivety? Is the experience of enchantment different in the pre-critical versus post-critical stages? It would seem so. Once God has been questioned and doubted, once the childlike faith has been lost, faith seems to be permanently destabilized. Questions nag and doubts linger. The second naivety feels more provisional than the first.
I agree with this. And following from the last post, I think modernity permanently changed the conditions of faith. I also don't think the clock can be rolled back. Consequently, faith in a secular age is always going to feel more tentative, provisional, and contested when compared to prior eras where faith was a cultural given. This loss of our culture's "first naivety" can be lamented and viewed as tragic. And people will nostalgically long for the lost culture of Christendom, with its taken-for-granted givenness and homogeneity. But I don't think we can put that genie back in the bottle.
While we can lament the impacts of modernity upon the conditions of belief, the call I make in Hunting Magic Eels isn't a call to "choose enchantment." The intentionality I describe isn't pretending or metaphysical cosplay. The intentionality I call for isn't like Dorothy visiting Oz where, in the book version, she has to wear green-tinted glasses locked onto her face to guarantee she will see the city as green. To make this point in the book, I rework a quote from the novelist Iris Murdock:
Whenever we experience religious doubts or have crises of faith, “pure will” can usually achieve little. It is small use telling oneself “Stop having doubts! Believe! Have faith!” What is needed is a reorientation which will provide an energy of a different kind, from a different source. Notice the metaphors of orientation and of looking. Faith is not a jump of the will, it is the acquiring of new objects of attention and thus of new energies as a result of refocusing.
Re-enchantment isn't a "jump of the will." Experiencing God isn't a choice. Mystical encounter isn't a decision. We cannot pretend something is there when it isn't. The goal of "acquiring new objects of attention" through intentional practices isn't to trick yourself. It is, rather, to make oneself available to new experiences. Let me share again the famous quote by Karl Rahner:
The devout Christian of the future will either be a ‘mystic’—someone who has ‘experienced something’—or will cease to be anything at all.
On Intentionality: Part 2, Faith as Choice
And yet, intentionality isn't without it critics. Especially when it comes to faith. To illustrate some of this criticism of intentionality, I want to borrow the analysis from Peter Berger and Anton Zinderveld in their 2009 book In Praise of Doubt.
In their book, Berger and Zinderveld take aim at what has been called "secularization theory." The basic claim of secularization theory is that as modernity advances people give up religious belief and become "secular." A classic account of secularization theory was Freud's The Future of an Illusion. Freud argued that as humanity "grows up" and "develops" we would give up our primitive mythological beliefs. In our lifetimes, secularization theory was the sermon preached by the New Atheists during their high water mark in the mid-2000s.
But as many social scientists have pointed out, empirically speaking, secularization theory has been falsified. Modernity hasn't run faith out of the building. Faith remains very much with us.What has happened in modernity, argue Berger and Zinderveld, is not secularization but plurality. What we see around us isn't a binary choice between faith and unfaith. Rather, it's choices between faiths, unbelief among them, along with the bespoke, DIY, mixing and matching we find among the spiritual but not religious. What characterizes modernity is the radical range of choices now in front of us. Faith hasn't been eliminated from modern life. Rather, faith has become radically open. The options available to us are dizzying. We live in the wake of what Charles Taylor calls "the Nova Effect," an explosive expansion of choices, worldviews, and lifestyles.
Berger and Zinderveld explain how this happened in the following way. According to secularization theory the shift that was predicted to occur was this:
But what really has happened in modernity was this:
To understand this shift we need to grasp some sociological terminology. Sociologists distinguish between the background and the foreground of human culture and cognition. The aspects of life that are assumed, instinctive, unconscious, and taken for granted function in the background of life. Rarely do I reflect upon or evaluate these background structures of my life. In contrast to this background, the foreground of life is the location of choice, reflection, and decision making.
Consider the following example given by Berger and Zinderveld to illustrate the point. When I wake up in the morning I have to decide what I want to wear. These considerations are in the foreground of my life. I reflect and make choices about what clothes to put on. However, I never really question the assumption that I will be wearing something. Leaving the house with clothes on is assumed. It functions in the background.
The point here is that a great deal of life is regulated to the background where my worldview hums away, largely unnoticed. And this makes good adaptive sense. As Berger and Zinderveld note, if 100% of life was up for grabs, in the foreground, we would be cognitively and socially crippled. Everything would be a matter of conscious reflection and deliberate choice. Consequently, some things just have to be assumed.
With these understandings in place we can describe how modernity has affected us. Modernity has increased the foreground relative to the background. That is, things that used to be assumed and taken for granted have now moved into the foreground and have become objects of choice and reflection. Think about the choices you face that your forebears 500 years ago didn't even consider:
What should I do with my life?What career should I pursue—and should I change it later?Where should I live? In what kind of community?Should I marry? When? Should I stay married?How many children—if any—should I have?What kind of education do I want for myself or my family?What political views should I hold?What moral values should guide my life?What do I believe about God, the soul, and the afterlife?Should I be Christian, another religion, or “spiritual but not religious”?If Christian, should I be Protestant, Catholic, Orthodox—or none of these?What church—or kind of church—should I belong to?What does it mean to live a good life?
In short, modernity didn't undermine the contents of religious belief. What modernity changed was the location of belief in the mind. Specifically, faith moved from the background to the foreground. From taken-for-granted to an object of choice. Here's a visual of the change, the left side portraying the location of faith in the mind 500 years ago versus the right side portraying the location of faith in the mind today:
And beyond this weariness and fragility there is also the drift into pluralistic self-expression.
I hope you can see the concern here. Simply put, the call to intentionality is often presented as the cure for modernity’s ailments. But it may be part of the illness itself. In a world where everything is determined by individual choice, being “intentional” about those choices is the only kind of advice we can offer. Yet such advice never touches the deeper sickness.
On Intentionality: Part 1, Disengaging the Autopilot
I've contributed my fair share to this discourse. Intentionality sits behind many of the recommendations and practices I describe in my books.
For example, in Stranger God I describe Thérèse of Lisieux's Little Way as an intentional practice of hospitality. In Stranger God I devote chapters to intentional practices I call "seeing," "stopping," and "approaching." The point I make in the book is that if we're not being intentional as we move through the day we operate on what I call "social autopilot." This relational autopilot tends to get captured by social psychological dynamics. One of these dynamics is what David Leong has called "the social logic of homogeneity," how like is attracted to like, along with our natural wariness toward difference. As I describe in Stranger God, without intentionally disengaging my social autopilot my relationships unconsciously and naturally drift toward affinity groups. I associate with and befriend people who look like me, exist in the same socio-economic bracket, have the same educational status, vote like me, think like me, and share the same hobbies and interests. The social autopilot draws me into an "echo chamber" of sameness. None of this is willfully malevolent, but it creates the social and relational sorting that makes our relational groups very homogeneous. Given this tendency, the only way to diversify our relationships is to adopt intentional practices of navigating our social world that create opportunities to encounter and develop friendships with people very unlike ourselves.
In Hunting Magic Eels I describe how recovering enchantment--God being present and filling all things--involves intentional practices of attention. Many modern Christians, for example, default to the metaphysics of scientism. The world is full of inert objects governed by the laws of physics. We've lost what theologians call a "sacramental ontology" where, as Gerard Manley Hopkins put it, the world is charged with the grandeur of God. In the words of Martin Buber, we default to experiencing the world through an I-It relation. The world around me is an It, a dead object devoid of mind and spiritual resonance. Given this attentional default, we need to become more intentional in how we direct and invest our attention. I describe many such practices in Hunting Magic Eels, from liturgy to prayer to nature to poetry to testimony to sacramentals. These practices foster an I-Thou relationship with the world. Through intentional practices of attention a capacity for sacred encounter is cultivated.
As a last example, The Shape of Joy encourages readers to make an "outward turn" toward transcendence. As I describe in the book, the modern self is self-referential and ruminative. This morbid introversion, being curved inward upon yourself, has destabilized our mental health. When left alone this inward focus is our attentional default. Worse, it's a therapeutic recommendation. We're told to "find our true self." To discover "our truth." Consequently, if we want to reverse the curvature of the self, to flip the ego inside out, we have to become intentional in directing our gaze outward, toward a sacred, cosmic, existential, and transcendent ground of purpose, mattering, and worth.
Stepping back, as we can see, I've made many calls for becoming more intentional. From the Little Way, to re-enchantment, toward stabilizing our mental health, we need to become more aware of a default state of mind and relating to the world, relationally, spiritually, and psychologically. Otherwise, we move through the world on autopilot. And disengaging this autopilot requires intentionality.
So, I think intentionality is a good thing. But might there be some problems here as well?
On Essence and Energies: Part 3, The Vast Burning Bush
- There is in God a distinction between the essence and the energies or energy. (It is equally legitimate to refer to the latter either in the singular or in the plural).
- The energy of God is not created but uncreated.
- This distinction between the uncreated essence and the uncreated energies does not in any way impair the divine simplicity; there is no 'compositeness' in God.
- The term "deity" may be applied not only to the essence of God but to the energies.
- The essence enjoys a certain priority or superiority in relation to the energies, in the sense that the energies proceed from the essence.
- Man can participate in God's energies but not in his essence.
- The divine energies may be experienced by men in the form of light -- a light which, though beheld through men's bodily eyes, is in itself non-material, 'intelligible' and uncreated. This is the uncreated light that was manifested to the apostles at the Transfiguration on Mount Tabor, that is seen during prayer by the saints in our own time, and that will shine upon and from the righteous at their resurrection on the Last Day. It thus possesses an eschatological character: it is "the light of the Age to Come."
- No energy is to be associated with one divine person to the exclusion of the other two, but the energies are shared in common by all three persons of the Trinity.
Apophaticism, then, has both a negative and an affirmative aspect. It underlines, on the one hand, the transcendence and incomprehensibility of God, 'whom no man has seen or can see'; it proclaims, on the other hand, the possibility of an encounter face to face with this unknowable God, of an unmediated union with the Inaccessible. To express this double truth that God is both hidden and revealed, both transcendent and immanent, Orthodox theology makes a distinction between the divine essence (ousia) and the divine energies or operations (energeiai). This latter term, while possessing a philosophical flavour, is in fact also scriptural. Whereas 'the term ousia is used in only one passage of the New Testament (Lk 15: 12--13)- and here it does not refer to God, but means 'property' or 'wealth' - the term energeia, applied to God, is found several times in the Epistles (Ep I: 19, 3: 7; Ph 3: 21; Co 1: 29, 2: 12).Ousia or essence means God as he is in himself, the energeiai or energies signify God in action and self-revelation. According to the Orthodox apophatic tradition, the divine essence remains for ever above and beyond all participation and all knowledge on the part of any creature, both in this age and in the Age to Come; the essence of God can be apprehended neither by men nor by angels, but only by the three divine persons themselves. But God's energies, which are God himself, fill the whole world, and by grace all may come to participate in them. The God who is 'essentially' unknowable is thus 'existentially' or 'energetically' revealed.
This doctrine of the immanent energies implies an intensely dynamic vision of the relationship between God and the world. The whole cosmos is a vast burning bush, permeated but not consumed by the uncreated fire of the divine energies. These energies are 'God with us'. They are the power of God at work within man, the life of God in which he shares. Because of the omnipresence of the divine energies, each of us can know himself as made in the image of God. Through the divine energies, Jesus Christ ceases to be for us an historical figure from the distant past, with whose story we are familiar from books, and he becomes an immediate presence, our personal Saviour. Through the divine energies we know him not merely as a human teacher but as the pre-eternal Logos.
In His essence, God is infinitely transcendent, radically unknowable, utterly beyond all created being, beyond all understanding and all participation from the human side. But, in His energies, God is inexhaustibly immanent, the core of everything, the heart of its heart, closer to the heart of each thing than is that thing’s very own heart. These divine energies, according to the Palamite teaching, are not an intermediary between God and the world, not a created gift that He bestows upon us, but they are God Himself in action; and each uncreated energy is God in His indivisible totality, not a part of Him but the whole.
Psalm 135
“He sent signs and wonders against you, Egypt”
Psalm 135 is a doxological recapitulation of Israel’s story and the Lord’s mighty acts of deliverance. Scholars view Psalm 135 as highly intertextual, as it densely quotes or echoes many other Scriptures. There are parallels with Psalm 115 in its idol critique, Deuteronomy 32 in its emphasis on God’s vindication, and the Exodus deliverance from Egypt. Some scholars argue that almost every verse of Psalm 135 either alludes to or incorporates other biblical texts, suggesting that the psalm functions as a theological summary of Israel’s identity and history.
For this reflection, I want to focus on Israel’s experience of the Exodus. The paradigmatic experience of salvation in the Old Testament was liberation and emancipation. All Christus Victor images of atonement in the New Testament echo the Exodus. What is important to note about the Exodus is that it did not concern or involve Israel’s guilt. Israel was not sent to Egypt as a punishment. Nor were the oppressions of the Egyptians sent by God. Consider Exodus 6:5–6, with the Lord speaking to Moses:
I have heard the groaning of the Israelites, whom the Egyptians are forcing to work as slaves, and I have remembered my covenant.
Therefore tell the Israelites: I am the Lord, and I will bring you out from the forced labor of the Egyptians and rescue you from slavery to them. I will redeem you with an outstretched arm and great acts of judgment.
Notice how “redemption” here is free of any forensic or penal aspects related to sin and guilt. Redemption simply concerns restoring the enslaved to their original state of freedom and liberty.
To be sure, by the time the New Testament opens, redemption has taken on penal and forensic dimensions. Israel was experiencing a new captivity in exile, and this oppression was understood as the result of covenantal infidelity. Thus, a “second Exodus” would have to deal with guilt. Passover, redemption from slavery, becomes conflated with the Day of Atonement, the expiation of guilt. We see this conflation in John the Baptist’s description of Jesus: “Behold the lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.” The reference to the lamb is a Passover image, while the removal of sin draws from the Day of Atonement. It is Israel’s exile that brings these together: an enslavement requiring Passover that is caused by unfaithfulness requiring atonement.
Here is the point I want to make. Atonement is not the end but the means. From the very beginning, salvation was emancipatory. The goal was freedom and liberation, being set free from oppressive and enslaving powers. True, a deserved guilt stood in the way, and that guilt had to be dealt with. But forgiveness was not the goal. It was the means. This is a point often forgotten in evangelical spaces where penal substitutionary atonement functions as the dominant soteriological paradigm. Guilt is only one piece of the whole, and not the most important piece.
Atonement is necessary, but what we ultimately desire and need is Exodus. To make the point plain, even if you are declared innocent from a penal and forensic perspective, you are still going to die. Innocent people still die. Innocent people are still captive to death. Being “forgiven” does you no good if you remain in captivity.
What we most desire is light and life. Salvation is God redeeming us from captivity to darkness and death. Atonement for sin is one part of that work, a means toward that end. Forgiveness is necessary for salvation, but not sufficient. Exodus is greater than atonement. Salvation is greater than forgiveness.
On Essence and Energies: Part 2, The Uncreated Light
The monk, archbishop, and theologian Gregory Palamas (1296–1359) stood up to defend the authenticity of the hesychasts' claims against Barlaam's attacks. Between 1338 and 1341, Palamas wrote For the Defense of Those Who Practice Sacred Quietude defending the legitimacy of the hesychast experience. Given that this defense was shared across three books with three treatises in each, the work came to be known as The Triads. And it's in The Triads where Palamas shares his famous distinction between God's essence and God's energies.
Palamas centers his defense on the experience of Peter, James, and John on Mount Tabor when they beheld Jesus' transfiguration. On the mountian the apostles behold, directly, the glory of God. This glory, Palamas continues, is the same light the hesychasts were experiencing. "Do you not see," Palamas writes, "how this light shines even now in the hearts of the faithful and perfect?"
Against this view, critics like Barlaam were setting themselves up as "enemies of such an illumination" by arguing that "all the lights which God has manifested to the saints are only symbolic apparitions, allusions to immaterial and intelligible realities."
Again, Barlaam had some Biblical support for his contentions. There was also the strong witness of the apophatic tradition and its influence upon scholastic theology. As a scholastic theologian, and like Thomas Aquinas, Barlaam argued that God's essence was unknowable. Consequently, it was impossible for the hesychasts to gaze directly upon God's essence.
Palamas was quick to agree with Barlaam on this point. No one can see or behold God's essence. In good apophatic fashion, Palamas agrees that God's essence "transcends all affirmation and negation." God does not "allow Himself to be seen in His superessential essence."
But if that's true, what were the hesychasts seeing?
Palamas argues that what the hesychasts beheld, the same light seen by the apostles on Mount Tabor, was not God’s essence but God’s uncreated energy. By “energy” Palamas means God’s direct and uncreated activities, His operations by which He is present and active in the world. The names of these energies are various: virtue, goodness, power, grace, wisdom, illumination, providence, deification. Even existence itself. Palamas uses the metaphor of the sun to explain the contrast. There is a difference between what the sun is in itself (its essence) and the light/energy it radiates which we can enjoy and share.Moreover, the Holy Fathers affirm unanimously that it is impossible to find a name to manifest the nature of the uncreated Trinity, but the names belong to the energies...He Who is beyond every name is not identical with what He is named; for the essence and energy of God are not identical.
But just as one cannot see fire, if there is no matter to receive it, nor any sense organ capable of perceiving its luminous energy, in the same way one cannot contemplate deification if there is no matter to receive the divine manifestation. But if with every veil removed it lays hold of appropriate matter, that is of any purified rational nature, freed from the veil of manifold evil, then it becomes itself visible as a spiritual light. "The prize of virtue," it is said, "is to become God, to be illumined by the purest of lights, by becoming a son of that day which no darkness can dim. For it is another Sun which produces this day, a Sun which shines forth the true light. And once it has illumined us, it no longer hides in the West, but envelops all things with its powerful light. It grants an eternal and endless light to those worthy, and transforms those who participate in this light into other suns."
On Essence and Energies: Part 1, The Hesychast Controversy
To start, I want to share a bit of the history behind Palamas' writing of The Triads, focusing on the controversy that prompted him to articulate his famous contrast between God's essence versus God's energies.
The controversy started in the 1330s when Barlaam of Calabria, a monk and scholastic theologian, visited Mount Athos. There, Barlaam encountered the hesychasts. Inspired by the desert fathers, the hesychasts were monks devoted to stillness and continual prayer. The name hesychast comes from the Greek hesychia, meaning “quiet.” By the 14th century, the hesychasts had brought their ascetic practices to Mount Athos.
The hesychasts shared with Barlaam mystical experiences in which they beheld the "Uncreated Light" emanating from God's very Being. This was the "Light of Tabor" that flashed out during Christ's transfiguration.
These claims startled Barlaam. Barlaam felt that no human could gaze upon God directly. The Bible seems clear on this point: as God said to Moses, "For no one may see me and live" (Exodus 33:20). 1 Timothy 6:16 and John 1:18 also clearly state that no one has ever seen God. Consequently, whatever the hesychasts were seeing, it couldn't be God. Barlaam contended that the light the hesychasts were reporting was a created light, something generated by their own imaginations, perhaps symbolic of the Uncreated Light, but not the actual Uncreated Light. In claiming to see God directly, the hesychasts were skirting blasphemy.
In response to Barlaam’s criticism of the hesychasts, Palamas set out to defend their mystical experiences. In his For the Defense of Those Who Practice Sacred Quietude, Palamas argued that the hesychasts were having a real and direct experience of God. The light they beheld wasn't imagined or symbolic but was, rather, a genuine encounter with divine reality.
At the heart of Palamas' defense was a distinction he made between God's essence versus God's energies.
The controversy between Barlaam and Palamas eventually made its way into the broader church, culminating in the series of councils held in Constantinople between 1341 and 1368. These councils officially affirmed Palamas' teaching and formally recognized the experiences of the hesychasts as authentic. As a result, Palamas' defense of hesychasm, with its contrast between essence and energies, became a cornerstone of Eastern Orthodox theology, spirituality, and liturgical practice. Hesychasm continued to thrive on Mount Athos, shaping Orthodox spirituality to this very day.
With this history now in front of us, in the next post we'll turn to Palamas' The Triads and his essence versus energies distinction.
"The Road to Damascus" (a poem)
"The Road to Damascus"
Tracing the fissures,
fingering the shards
of a fractured life.
And you,
the thrown stone.
The cause of my cracking.
It was not a gradual waking,
dully, from sleep.
Our meeting, rather,
sharp and irreversable.
Beholding what I took to be myself
rendered beyond mending.














