Leader: Our thoughts of you,
O Lord, have been too small, too few—
for seldom have we considered
how specific is the exercising of your authority,
extending as it does into the myriad particulars
of creation.
People: There is no quarter over which you are not king.
And as creation hurtles toward its liberation and redemption,
the full implications of your deep Lordship
are yet to be revealed in countless facets unconsidered:
Christ, you are the Snow King.
You are the Maker of All Weathers.
You are The King of Sunlight and Storms,
The King of Grey Skies and Rain.
You are The Rain King,
The Sun King,
the Hurricane King.
You are the King of Autumn
and King of Spring.
And our thoughts of you,
O Lord, have been too small, too few.
The old and impotent gods
our ancestors once believed in were,
at their best,
but imperfect pictures of you,
whose strength and goodness
and creative majesty
and wonderful mystery and love
exceed those old rumors as sunlight exceeds
the tiny dimness of stars reflected
in a dark and wavering pool.
The fairy tales
crafted by our old cultures
hinted at you,
though they knew it not.
Yet their perfect princes
and blessed ends were
yearnings for all that has found
fulfillment in you.
You are the Lord of the Harvest.
The Grain King,
The Wine King,
The God of Plenty,
The God of Hearth and Home.
You are The Hill King,
The Wildflower King,
King of the Great Bears,
King of Canyons.
You are The Monarch of Meadows,
The Lord of the Lava Fields,
Ruler of the Desert Wastes,
The Polar King,
The Rainbow King,
The King of the Southern Cross,
and The King of the Northern Lights.
You are the King of the Rabbits,
and The Lord of Tall Trees.
You are the God of Youth
and the God of Age.
You are The Acorn King,
The River God,
The Swamp King,
King of Glades,
King of Dells,
Ruler of All Hummingbirds.
You are The Horse Lord,
The Crag King,
Lord of the Bees,
King of the Walruses,
Commander of Rhinos,
Lord of the Lightning Bugs,
Cave Lord,
Mountain King,
Ruler of the Grassy Plains,
God of the Valleys.
You are The Captain of the Clouds,
The Wolf King,
The King of the Cockatoos.
And our thoughts of you,
O Lord, have been too small, too few.
For your claim over creation is vast. You are
The Lord of Antarctica,
the King of California,
the King of the Scottish Hills,
and the King of the Nile.
You are the weaver of
the unseen fabrics of the world.
You are Lord of the Atoms,
The Ruler of Electrons,
The Lord of Gravity,
and The King of Quarks.
Your dominion enfolds the earth and rises
beyond it to the furthest extremes of the stars.
You are Lord of the Vast Empty Spaces.
You are The King of the Constellations,
The Black Hole King,
Lord of Novas Exploding,
Lord of Speeding Light,
High King of Galaxies,
King of Orion,
King of the Moon.
And still, even still,
our thoughts of you
have been too small, too few.
You are the God of Justice,
The God of Wisdom,
The God of Mercy,
The God of Redemption.
You are The Lord of Love.
All of this is true.
But our thoughts of you are still too few,
for our minds are too small
to conceive of them all,
let alone to contain them.
You were before all things, you created
all things, and in you all things are
held together. There is no corner of creation
you will fail to redeem.
You are Lord of Lords,
and King of Kings,
O Jesus Christ,
our King of Everything.
Amen.
The Dao and Orthopraxy
Specifically, while we've been reflecting upon Jesus as "the Way" and Christian community as "Followers of the Way," we should pause to make a comment about orthodoxy and orthopraxy.
I don't know if this is completely true, but I have a suspicion that the creedal debates that characterized the first three to four centuries of the church, the constant concerns over heresy, tipped Christianity toward an overemphasis upon orthodoxy, the espousal of "right belief." To be sure, theology matters. I'm not suggesting otherwise. But when faith is reduced to assent to metaphysical propositions, something vital is lost.
One of those things is the rabbinic context of the Gospels, where followers of Jesus were just that, followers of a rabbi. Jesus didn't present himself as a metaphysician, theologian, or a philosopher. Instead, Jesus set before the world a way to follow, a life to emulate. Following in this way is the mark of a disciple.
The word to describe all this is orthopraxy, the "right practice" of the faith. And for many Christians, due to our bias toward orthodoxy, this is a foreign, exotic notion, the idea of "practicing Christianity." Along with the related notion of a "skilled Christianity." Any yet, if Jesus is "the Way," the Dao become visible in human history, then the life of faith can be viewed as a practice. There is believing in Jesus, and there is following Jesus. There is believing in Christianity, and there is practicing Christianity. There is a propositional Christianity, and there is a Daoist Christianity.
There is orthodoxy, and there is orthopraxy. There is belief, and there is also the Way.
C.S. Lewis and the Tao
The Chinese also speak of a great thing (the greatest thing) called the Tao. It is the reality beyond all predicates, the abyss that was before the Creator Himself. It is Nature, it is the Way, the Road. It is the Way in which the universe goes on, the Way in which things everlastingly emerge, stilly and tranquilly, into space and time. It is also the Way which every man should tread in imitation of that cosmic and supercosmic progression, conforming all activities to that great exemplar. 'In ritual', say the Analects, 'it is harmony with Nature that is prized.' The ancient Jews likewise praise the Law as being 'true'.
This conception in all its forms, Platonic, Aristotelian, Stoic, Christian, and Oriental alike, I shall henceforth refer to for brevity simply as 'the Tao'. Some of the accounts of it which I have quoted will seem, perhaps, to many of you merely quaint or even magical. But what is common to them all is something we cannot neglect. It is the doctrine of objective value, the belief that certain attitudes are really true, and others really false, to the kind of thing the universe is and the kind of things we are. Those who know the Tao can hold that to call children delightful or old men venerable is not simply to record a psychological fact about our own parental or filial emotions at the moment, but to recognize a quality which demands a certain response from us whether we make it or not. I myself do not enjoy the society of small children: because I speak from within the Tao I recognize this as a defect in myself—just as a man may have to recognize that he is tone deaf or colour blind. And because our approvals and disapprovals are thus recognitions of objective value or responses to an objective order, therefore emotional states can be in harmony with reason (when we feel liking for what ought to be approved) or out of harmony with reason (when we perceive that liking is due but cannot feel it). No emotion is, in itself, a judgement; in that sense all emotions and sentiments are alogical. But they can be reasonable or unreasonable as they conform to Reason or fail to conform.
This is the Way
Due to our fondness for The Mandalorian its tagline "This is the way" shows up every so often in our house. Recently, I went down a rabbit hole to appropriate that phrase for Christian purposes.
The trigger was learning that, in popular Chinese translations of the New Testament, John 1.1 is translated like this:
In the beginning was the Dao, and the Dao was with God, and the Dao was God.
My explorations concerned the degree of conceptual and metaphysical overlap between the Greek understanding of the Logos versus the Chinese concept of the Dao (also spelled Tao). There is, if you investigate, a lot of overlap, which justifies the decision of Chinese translators in translating Logos as Dao in John 1. Of course, there are some differences in these concepts and by connecting the Dao to the incarnation of Jesus Chinese translations of the Bible give the Dao a Christological form.
Concerning the identification of Jesus with the Dao, there is a lot of material to work with here. As you probably know, while a very rich and nuanced metaphysical notion, the word Dao straightforwardly means "way" or "path." In the beginning was the Way, and the Way was with God, and the Way was God. Jesus describes himself in just such terms. "I am the Way" Jesus declares in John 14. Jesus tells his followers, "Come, follow me." The Greek word for "disciple" in the New Testament means "student," "follower," and "apprentice." Consequently, the earliest name for the Christian community was "Followers of the Way" (Acts 9.2, 22.4, 24.14).
I think there is something profound in seeing Jesus as the incarnation of the Way in human history, the Path become visible to human eyes. Christians are those who become Followers of the Way.
In short, it is completely appropriate for Christians to say "This is the Way" in describing their faith, practice, and life.
The Psychology of Jesus: Part 8, Anxiety and Cruciformity
Again, in The Slavery of Death I focus upon the claim in Hebrews 2.14-15 that the power of the devil in our lives is our fear of death. We have traced this fear through basic and neurotic anxiety, our scarcity concerns about having enough and being enough. In our attempts to cope with these anxieties we attempt to secure and control material resources and achieve self-esteem through performing in our hero game of worth, value, and significance. And yet, these fear-driven activities never wholly or permanently solve the problem of anxiety. Materially speaking, we perpetually face a world full of real and perceived scarcity. Regarding our hero games, these also, along with our neurotic performances within them, remain chronically precarious. In the end, never enough problems continue to haunt us, and the devil uses the attendant anxieties to keep us selfish and self-absorbed.
Jesus, by contrast, stands before us as embodying an eccentric identity, a mode of living vividly illustrated at his baptism where Jesus receives himself as a gift from the Father. Where we struggle to secure ourselves in striving for ownership and self-esteem, Jesus rests secure in his Father. And having his life rooted in the Father, Jesus is emancipated from both material and neurotic concerns. This, I have argued, seems to the distinctive mark of Jesus' psychology, his non-anxiousness. No material loss or physical threat moves Jesus. Nor did Jesus experience any neurotic shame or embarrassment when he "took the last place" in social hierarchies of value as he "took on the form of a servant."
Stated even more simply, we look upon life as something we must "win," either materially or neurotically. Jesus, by contrast, didn't need to win, which allowed him to lose when that was what love demanded.
Which brings me to the big implication I want to underline in his final post, the association between anxiety and cruciformity.
I expect you have noticed across these posts how love involves facing down both basic and neurotic anxiety. We describe love as "sacrificial" for just this reason. Sometimes the sacrifice of love is material, which exacerbates basic anxiety. At other times, love demands that we step out of the spotlight of our hero game to wash feet. In those moments, neurotic anxiety hits us hard. Across the board, love demands non-anxiousness. As it says in 1 John, perfect love casts out fear.
The implication, then, is that love only becomes a possibility to the degree we can step into and embody Jesus' eccentric, baptismal identity. Our ability to love is directly dependent upon our capacity for non-anxiousness, both materially and neurotically. Being "Christlike" isn't, therefore, first or primarily a moral endeavor. It is, rather, stepping into Jesus' distinctive psychology. Non-anxiousness creates the capacity for cruciformity.
Returning to Hebrews 2, all this explains why fear is the power of the devil in our lives. Anxiety is the string the devil pulls to undermine our love. To cut this string we need to cultivate the psychological capacities that make love possible. I've suggested that Jesus' eccentric identity points the way toward loving non-anxiousness.
And critical to providing the metaphysical ground of this eccentric identity was Jesus' defeat of death itself. As John Chrysostom once observed:
The person who does not fear death is outside the tyranny of the devil...When the devil finds such a soul he can accomplish in it none of his works. Tell me, what can the devil threaten? The loss of money or honor? Or exile from one's country? These are small things to those "who count not even his life dear," said the blessed Paul.
Do you not see that in casting out the tyranny of death, Christ has dissolved the strength of the devil?
Psalm 67
Go from your land,
your relatives,
and your father’s house
to the land that I will show you.
I will make you into a great nation,
I will bless you,
I will make your name great,
and you will be a blessing.
I will bless those who bless you,
I will curse anyone who treats you with contempt,
and all the peoples on earth
will be blessed through you.
May God be gracious to us and bless us;
may he make his face shine upon us
so that your way may be known on earth,
your salvation among all nations.
Let the peoples praise you, God;
let all the peoples praise you.
Let the nations rejoice and shout for joy,
for you judge the peoples with fairness
and lead the nations on earth.
Let the peoples praise you, God,
let all the peoples praise you.
The Psychology of Jesus: Part 7, Despising Shame
Again, this seems to be due to Jesus' eccentric, baptismal identity. Knowing that his identity is secure in the Father, Jesus is immune to the sort of neurotic shame and embarrassment we feel when we step into low status roles or behaviors. Jesus can "take on the form of a servant" because his value and worth are not dependent upon social hierarchies of status and worth. You see this psychological connection quite clearly in John 13:
Jesus, knowing that the Father had given all things into his hands, and that he had come from God and was going back to God, rose from supper. He laid aside his outer garments, and taking a towel, tied it around his waist. Then he poured water into a basin and began to wash the disciples' feet and to wipe them with the towel that was wrapped around him.
Knowing that "he had come from God and was going back to God" Jesus has the shame-resiliency to become a servant. As we see in Peter's response, the disciples are embarrassed for Jesus because they remain caught up in hero games of status. Jesus lacks this neurotic anxiety and is therefore immune to the embarrassment the disciples fear. Jesus can love because he is indifferent to shame.
Consider also this famous text about Jesus from Hebrews 12: "Who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame." The cross involved both basic and neurotic anxiety. Basic anxiety, of course, because the cross involved physical torture and death. But Hebrews 12 points to the neurotic aspect of crucifixion as well, its shame. Jesus spurns not just death in his crucifixion but also its social stigma. We witness here, once again, Jesus' lack of neurotic anxiety, a non-anxiousness that enables sacrificial self-donation.
There are other examples we could examine, but these suffice to make the point. Over the last two posts we've noticed two distinct features of Jesus' psychology, his lack of both basic and neurotic anxiety. This non-anxiousness flows from Jesus' eccentric, baptismal identity, an identity that enables Jesus to overcome the power of the devil in demonstrations of sacrificial love.
The Psychology of Jesus: Part 6, "Father, Into Your Hands I Commit My Spirit"
In regards to basic anxiety, we can trace examples of Jesus trusting in the Father's care over worrying about securing and grasping material goods:
After fasting forty days and forty nights, he was hungry. The tempter came to him and said, “If you are the Son of God, tell these stones to become bread.”This display of radical non-anxiousness, best captured in the "do not worry" passages from the Sermon on the Mount, illustrates the point about Jesus' relationship to basic anxiety. Namely, Jesus didn't seem to have much basic anxiety at all. In regards to material possessions, Jesus lived without worry like the birds of the air and the flowers in the field. This is what I meant in the last post that because Jesus possesses nothing, material speaking, he cannot be dispossessed. Receiving all things as gifts from the Father, Jesus cannot be taken or stolen from. Jesus is clear on this exact point:
Jesus answered, “It is written: ‘Man shall not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God. (Mt. 4.2-4)
I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothes? Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life?
“And why do you worry about clothes? See how the flowers of the field grow. They do not labor or spin. Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these. If that is how God clothes the grass of the field, which is here today and tomorrow is thrown into the fire, will he not much more clothe you—you of little faith? So do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. (Mt. 6.25-34)
Then a teacher of the law came to him and said, “Teacher, I will follow you wherever you go.”
Jesus replied, “Foxes have dens and birds have nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay his head.” (Mt. 8.19-20)
“Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moths and vermin destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moths and vermin do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal."
Then he said to them, “My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death. Stay here and keep watch with me.” Going a little farther, he fell with his face to the ground and prayed, “My Father, if it is possible, may this cup be taken from me. Yet not as I will, but as you will.” (Mt. 26.38-39)
When Pilate heard this, he was even more afraid, and he went back inside the palace. “Where do you come from?” he asked Jesus, but Jesus gave him no answer. “Do you refuse to speak to me?” Pilate said. “Don’t you realize I have power either to free you or to crucify you?” Jesus answered, “You would have no power over me if it were not given to you from above." (Jn. 19.10-11)
Jesus called out with a loud voice, “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit.” When he had said this, he breathed his last. (Lk. 23.46)
The Psychology of Jesus: Part 5, Our Identity of Possession and Performance
Since we face perpetual never enough problems, always dealing with basic and neurotic anxieties over having enough or being enough, we form identities of possession and performance.
In the face of basic death anxiety, where we worry about survival and resources, we attempt to own and possess some part of the world. Here's how Arthur McGill describes this dynamic:
What is the center, the real key, to sinful identity? It is the act of possession, the act of making oneself and the resources needed for oneself one's own. This act can be described with another term: domination. If I can hold onto myself as my own, as something I really possess and really control, then I am dominating myself. A sinful kind of identity surely requires aggression or appeasement; it requires defenses against others and against the threat of death as final dispossession. But fundamentally, a sinful kind of identity consists in the act of domination. I am because there is some section of reality which I own, which bears my name and I truly own it; it truly bears my name because I dominate it completely, because it is an instrument of my identity and my will...
The Psychology of Jesus: Part 4, A Baptismal Identity
And yet, the mystery here might actually be a clue. That's the suggestion of the theologian Arthur McGill:
In the New Testament portrayal of Jesus, nothing is more striking than the lack of interest in Jesus' own personality. His teachings and miracles, the response of the crowd and the hostility of the authorities, his dying and his resurrection--these are not read as windows in Jesus' own experience, feelings, insights, and growth...However, this portrayal is understood to be a true reflection of Jesus' own way of existing.
Phrased differently, Jesus stands before us a non-neurotic human being. A non-anxious human being. Positively stated, Jesus is tranquil and secure within himself. Thus, following McGill, the lack of depiction of Jesus' inner life in the gospels isn't due to biographical oversight or disinterest but is, rather, "a true reflection of Jesus' own way of existing." The neurotic storms that make our egos loud and noisy didn't seem to plague Jesus. Jesus appeared to posses what psychologists describe as a "quiet" ego.
As we'll get to, the security of Jesus' identity and the quietness of his ego liberated him from both basic and neurotic anxiety. And lacking these fears, Jesus stood free from the devil's power. But before turning to how Jesus' psychology related to anxiety, let's step back to analyze how this identity was accomplished.
Readers of The Slavery of Death and regular readers of this blog/newsletter will already be familiar with the argument I'll make here, leaning upon Arthur McGill and David Kelsey. Specifically, McGill describes what he calls Jesus' "ecstatic identity." I've preferred Kelsey's description of an "eccentric identity." To combine the two, I'll share McGill's descriptions of Jesus' psychology below but replace "ecstatic" with "eccentric." Here, then, is the secret to Jesus' psychology:
[T]he center of Jesus' reality is not within Jesus himself. Everything that happens to him, everything that is done by him, including his death, is displaced to another context and is thereby reinterpreted...He himself does not live out of himself. He lives, so to speak, from beyond himself. Jesus does not confront his followers as a center which reveals himself. He confronts them as always revealing what is beyond him. In that sense Jesus lives what I call an eccentric identity.
If this is so, the issue becomes how this psychological configuration, this eccentric identity, is achieved. McGill continues:
In all the early testimony to Jesus, this particular characteristic is identified with the fact that Jesus knows that his reality comes from God...Jesus never has his own being; he is continually receiving it...He is only as one who keeps receiving himself from God.
Psalm 66
Describing this testing, Psalm 66 uses a metallurgical metaphor: "You have purified us like silver."
Every semester in my Experimental Psychology class I break the students into research teams. I give them a list of variables to choose from and they pick one for the research project they will do together during the semester. This semester one of the teams selected the psychological construct of "grit" to study.
Grit has gotten a lot of attention since 2018 when the psychologist Angela Duckworth published her best-selling book Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance. A lot of people have used grit to beat up on kids today, and I don't want to do that. But it is true that doggedness and perseverance, pushing through obstacles, hardships, and failures, and sticking with things to achieve long-term goals is an important trait. If you lack grit there will be a lot of things in life you'll never experience or achieve.
So, what about grit in the spiritual life?
Throughout the Bible, God is described as testing us, a testing that produces grit. A famous passage in this regard comes from Hebrews 12 (which also cites Proverbs 3):
“My child, do not regard lightly the discipline of the Lord
or lose heart when you are punished by him,
for the Lord disciplines those whom he loves
and chastises every child whom he accepts.”
Endure trials for the sake of discipline. God is treating you as children, for what child is there whom a parent does not discipline? If you do not have that discipline in which all children share, then you are illegitimate and not his children. Moreover, we had human parents to discipline us, and we respected them. Should we not be even more willing to be subject to the Father of spirits and live? For they disciplined us for a short time as seemed best to them, but he disciplines us for our good, in order that we may share his holiness. Now, discipline always seems painful rather than pleasant at the time, but later it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who have been trained by it.
Therefore lift your drooping hands and strengthen your weak knees and make straight paths for your feet, so that what is lame may not be put out of joint but rather be healed.
The Psychology of Jesus: Part 3, The Never Enough Problem
We get scarcity because we live it…Scarcity is the “never enough” problem…Scarcity thrives in a culture where everyone is hyperaware of lack. Everything from safety and love to money and resources feels restricted or lacking. We spend inordinate amounts of time calculating how much we have, want, and don’t have, and how much everyone else has, needs, and wants.Brown goes on to share this assessment from Lynne Twist:
For me, and for many of us, our first waking thought of the day is "I didn’t get enough sleep." The next one is "I don't have enough time." Whether true or not, that thought of not enough occurs to us automatically before we even think to question or examine it. We spend most of the hours and the days of our lives hearing, explaining, complaining, or worrying about what we don't have enough of…Before we even sit up in bed, before our feet touch the floor, we're already inadequate, already behind, already losing, already lacking something. And by the time we go to bed at night, our minds are racing with a litany of what we didn't get, or didn't get done, that day. We go to sleep burdened by those thoughts and wake up to that reverie of lack…This internal condition of scarcity, this mind-set of scarcity, lives at the very heart of our jealousies, our greed, our prejudice, and our arguments with life.
The Psychology of Jesus: Part 2, Hero Games
If basic anxiety concerns survival neurotic anxiety involves self-esteem. We're moving here up Maslow's hierarchy of needs, away from physical and material needs to focus on internal motivations for establishing an identity and positive self-regard. But how, it will be asked, are these motivations being affected by death anxiety? Where the impact of basic death anxiety is easy to observe in our lives, the influence of death anxiety upon our self-esteem seems a bit murky.
The seminal works here are Ernest Becker's The Denial of Death and Escape from Evil. According to Becker, in the face of death we confront a crisis of meaning. Death threatens to destroy all that makes life significant and worth living. This is the lament of Ecclesiastes:
“Meaningless! Meaningless!”
says the Teacher.
“Utterly meaningless!
Everything is meaningless.”
What do people gain from all their labors
at which they toil under the sun?
Generations come and generations go,
but the earth remains forever.
No one remembers the former generations,
and even those yet to come
will not be remembered
by those who follow them. (1.1-4, 11)
The Psychology of Jesus: Part 1, No Strings On Him
During a lecture covering this material I share that one of my objectives is to describe "the psychology of Jesus," to get inside his head to try to understand how he experienced the world. To be sure, this is a highly speculative endeavor as the gospels are notorious for not revealing much about Jesus' inner life. Still, using the core ideas in The Slavery of Death I make an attempt.
The Slavery of Death is a theological and psychological meditation on this passage from Hebrews 2:
Since the children have flesh and blood, he too shared in their humanity so that by his death he might break the power of him who holds the power of death—that is, the devil— and free those who all their lives were held in slavery by their fear of death.