Showing posts with label Thomas R. Kelly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thomas R. Kelly. Show all posts

2021/08/05

William Penn/Seeking Faithfulness Lectures - Pendle Hill

William Penn/Seeking Faithfulness Lectures - Pendle Hill - A Quaker study, retreat, and conference center near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania



William Penn/Seeking Faithfulness Lectures (free to download in epub & PDF formats)


There are many free epub readers available online for Windows, Mac, Android, and Apple iOS.

The William Penn Lectures started as a ministry of the Young Friends’ Movement of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting (PYM). In the beginning of the last century, “Young Friends” was the community of young adults from both the Hicksite and the Orthodox Philadelphia Yearly Meetings, which reunited in 1955. The Young Friends Movement began the lecture series “for the purpose of closer fellowship; for the strengthening by such association and the interchange of experience, of loyalty to the ideals of the Society of Friends; and for the preparation by such common ideals for more effective work through the Society of Friends for the growth of the Kingdom of God on Earth.” The name of William Penn was chosen because the Young Friends Movement found Penn to be “a Great Adventurer, who in fellowship with his friends started in his youth on the holy experiment of endeavoring ‘To live out the laws of Christ in every thought, and word, and deed; and that these might become the laws and habits of the State.’”

The first run of William Penn Lectures were given between 1916 and 1966, and are warmly remembered by Friends who attended them as occasions to look forward to for fellowship with our community, inspiration, and a challenge to live into our faith.

The lectures were published by the Book Committee of PYM, and PYM has since granted Pendle Hill and Quaker Heron Press permission to reproduce the lectures as free e-books.

Although it was announced in 1960 that the series would be discontinued, several lectures were published in the early ’60s. It appears that the lectures given between 1923 and 1931 were never published. If we come upon manuscripts of these lectures, we hope to publish them in future.

In 2010, the Young Adult Friends of PYM revived the series, officially launching the second run of the William Penn Lectures in 2011. The series was renamed the Seeking Faithfulness series in 2016, as part of the Young Adult Friends of PYM’s concern for dismantling racism within the yearly meeting and the wider society. It no longer felt rightly ordered to have a major event named after a slaveholder. The Seeking Faithfulness series is hosted by the Young Adult Friends for the benefit of the whole yearly meeting community, and invites a Friend to challenge us all to explore new ways to practice our Quaker faith. The Seeking Faithfulness series seeks to nourish our spiritual lives and call us to faithful witness in our communities and throughout the world.

Requests for permission to quote or to translate should be addressed to:

Pendle Hill Publications
338 Plush Mill Road
Wallingford, PA 19086-6023
E-mail: publications@pendlehill.org

Below is a chronological list of the lectures soon to be available in epub (e-book) and PDF format. Just click on the link(s) to download. For a list of recommended e-readers for Windows, Mac, Android, and Apple iOS platforms click here – many can be obtained for free online.

1916/05 Elbert Russell ~ The Christian Life ~ e-book | PDF
1916/11 George A. Walton ~ The Quaker of the Future Time ~ e-book | PDF
1917 Norman M. Thomas ~ The Christian Patriot ~ e-book | PDF
1918 Harry F. Ward ~ The Christian Demand for Social Reconstruction ~ e-book | PDF
1919 Rufus M. Jones ~ Religion As Reality, Life and Power ~ e-book | PDF
1920 John Haynes Holmes ~ Heros in Peace ~ e-book | PDF
1921 Paul Jones ~ Hidden from the Prudent ~ e-book | PDF
1922 Kirby Page ~ Incentives in Modern Life ~ e-book | PDF

1932 Henry T. Hodgkin ~ Can Quakerism Speak to this Generation? ~ e-book | PDF
1933 John A. Hughes ~ The Light of the World ~ e-book | PDF
1934 Harold E. B. Speight ~ Tradition and Progress ~ e-book | PDF
1935 Patrick Murphy Malin ~ Design for Living ~ e-book | PDF
1936 Howard W. Hintz ~ The Basic Necessity for Spiritual Reconstruction ~ e-book | PDF
1937 Douglas V. Steere ~ The Open Life ~ e-book | PDF
1938 Howard H. Brinton ~ Divine-Human Society ~ e-book | PDF
1939 Thomas R. Kelly ~ Holy Obedience ~ e-book | PDF
1940 Allen D. Hole ~ Sharpening the Edge of the Spiritual Message ~ e-book | PDF
1941 Rufus M. Jones ~ The Vital Cell ~ e-book | PDF
1942 Kenneth Boulding ~ The Practice of the Love of God ~ Kindle | Nook
1943 Edward R. Miller ~ In the Nurture of the Lord ~ e-book | PDF
1944 Henry J. Cadbury ~ Two Worlds ~ e-book | PDF
1945 Cecil E. Hinshaw ~ The Light Within as Redemptive Power ~ e-book | PDF
1946 Gilbert H. Kilpack ~ The City of God and the City of Man ~ e-book | PDF
1947 D. Elton Trueblood ~ A Radical Experiment ~ e-book | PDF
1948 Bayard Rustin ~ In Apprehension How Like A God! ~ e-book | PDF
1949 Jean Toomer ~ The Flavor of Man ~ e-book | PDF
1950 Amiya Chakravarty ~ A Saint at Work ~ e-book | PDF
1951 Clarence E. Pickett ~ Having Done All, To Stand ~ e-book | PDF
1952 A. Burns Chalmers ~ Declaring the Everlasting Truth ~ e-book | PDF
1953 H. Richard Niebuhr ~ The Churches and the Body of Christ ~ e-book | PDF
1954 Thomas Shipley Brown ~ The Personal Relevance of Truth ~ Kindle | Nook
1955 Elfrida Vipont Foulds ~ Living in the Kingdom ~ e-book | PDF
1956 Elise Boulding ~ The Joy That is Set Before Us ~ e-book | PDF
1957 Norman J. Whitney ~ Into Great Waters ~ e-book | PDF
1958 Ira De A. Reid ~ Peace and Tranquility: The Quaker Witnesses ~ e-book | PDF
1959 Henry J. Cadbury ~ The Character of a Quaker ~ Kindle | Nook

1962 Albert Bigelow ~ Freedom to Love ~ e-book | PDF
1963 Landrum Rymer Bolling ~ The Search for a Sense of Unity ~ e-book | PDF
1964 Allan A. Glatthorn ~ God’s Lonely Man ~ e-book | PDF
1965 Dorothy H. Hutchinson ~ Unless One is Born Anew ~ Kindle | Nook
1966 Warren W. Wiggins ~ If You Want to Have a Friend ~ e-book | PDF

Videos of recent William Penn/Seeking Faithfulness Lectures:

Living Earth Community - Preface

Living Earth Community - Preface

Living Earth Community
Preface

Preface

Sam Mickey


© Sam Mickey, CC BY 4.0 https://doi.org/10.11647/OBP.0186.21

There are many ways of seeing Earth. It is possible to gaze at the planet from the vantage of a space shuttle in orbit. If you are standing on the moon, you can see Earth rise in the distance, as seen in the famous photograph of Earth taken from the moon by the NASA astronaut William Anders in 1968, Earthrise (see Figure 1). You can also look at Earth much more closely, on a more minute level, observing the habitats and inhabitants of Earth as they appear at any moment, and in any context — urban, rural, or wild. You are looking at Earth when you see a meadow, a forest, a tree, a cat, a farm, a house, or the ground beneath your feet. Along with these different ways of visually perceiving Earth, there are also many ways of understanding Earth, spanning various fields of scientific research, the religious traditions of the world, and philosophical theories of nature. There is great diversity in how we can relate to the vast panoply of beings composing the life, land, air, and water of Earth. This book is a celebration and revitalization of that diversity.


Fig. 1 Earthrise. Photo by William Anders (1968), Wikimedia, public domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:NASA_Earthrise_AS08-14-2383_Apollo_8_1968-12-24.jpg

Everything lends itself to multiple perspectives. Consider the heart: an organ that is found in fish, reptiles, birds, and mammals. What is the heart? There are different ways of responding to that question. A poet speaks about the heart in terms of love and loss. A biologist speaks about the heart in terms of the cardiovascular system and blood pressure. It is not that one person is right and the other wrong. Those different ways of speaking reflect different perspectives, different ways of understanding and experiencing the heart, and different ways of knowing and being in relation to the heart. A poet and a biologist can both be right. They do not have to be mutually exclusive. They can each be true at the same time. Indeed, those perspectives can be held by the same person. Each human being contains various capacities for taking different perspectives on the world: logical, poetic, verbal, emotional, perceptual, intellectual, social, and more.

One can cultivate the artistic perspective of a poet or painter, the mathematical and logical perspective of a chemist or biologist, the verbal skills of a speech writer, the emotional intelligence of a sensitive friend, and the embodied or somatic knowledge of a swimmer or basket weaver. Furthermore, different perspectives are variously cultivated throughout human cultures and traditions. Biology, Buddhism, Hinduism, Indigenous lifeways, mathematics, and music all involve different ways of thinking, feeling, and acting. Understanding these differences is a way of understanding ourselves collectively, of understanding humankind. Furthermore, different perspectives are not taken up only by humans, but by all kinds of living beings.

Different forms of agency, sentience, significance (semiosis), intelligence, and communication are exhibited throughout the community of life on Earth. For example, research in microbiology suggests that communication takes place between bacteria, specifically through exchanges of pulses of electrical energy.1 Communication enables bacteria to sustain themselves in communities, without which an individual bacterium cannot survive. Regarding the increasing number of scientific studies that find evidence of intelligence across all forms of life, the botanist Robin Wall Kimmerer makes the following observation during an interview with Krista Tippett: ‘I can’t think of a single scientific study in the last few decades that has demonstrated that plants or animals are dumber than we think. It’s always the opposite, right? What we’re revealing is the fact that they have extraordinary capacities […] we’re at the edge of a wonderful revolution in really understanding the sentience of other beings.’2

Approaching the middle of the twenty-first century, humans are learning more and more about the extraordinary capacities of life on Earth, and, at the same time, life on Earth is undergoing a profoundly troubling transformation due to the massive overexploitation and overconsumption of resources by developed (industrialized) nations. During the current period of environmental change, immensely complex challenges are facing life on Earth, including pollution, deforestation, water scarcity, climate change, and mass extinction. Such challenges cannot be sufficiently addressed through a single perspective alone. What is needed is dialogue and integration among diverse perspectives. Planetary problems call for globally coordinated responses. The inclusion of multiple ways of being and knowing is crucial for coordinating viable responses to the intensifying ecological crises occurring around the world. This anthology is a contribution toward that effort, presenting succinct essays that explore the diverse ways in which humans think, feel, and act in relation to the community of life on Earth.
Dialogue across Perspectives

The essays in this volume illuminate different ways of being in the world and the different kinds of knowledge that they entail, such as the traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) of Indigenous communities, the affective knowledge that comes with religious love and devotion, the scientific knowledge of a biologist, the aesthetic knowledge of someone listening to or composing music, and the embodied knowledge communicated through storytelling. It is important to emphasize that different ways of knowing are not always harmonious or even compatible. Consider an example between different religions. Some ways of knowing are oriented around belief in God, as in the monotheism of Christianity or Islam, whereas other ways of knowing suspend belief in God (i.e., agnosticism) or they explicitly believe that there is no God (i.e., atheism). In astronomy, the idea that Earth revolves around the sun (heliocentrism) is strictly incompatible with the ancient model of geocentrism, which assumed that the sun revolved around the motionless Earth. There will always be contrasts and contradictions between perspectives, especially when considering the community of life on Earth in all its diversity. The question is how to sustain a flourishing coexistence amid this radical diversity.

Integrating multiple perspectives does not mean that everyone will agree about everything all the time. It means, rather, that there is an ongoing dialogue between those perspectives, seeking shared understanding and common interests, while accepting differences. However, not all perspectives should be included in a thriving planetary civilization. Perspectives oriented around violent control, domination, or hate cannot be included in any kind of integrative dialogue, since those perspectives refuse to participate. Respectful or hospitable relations are required for dialogue to take place. If you cannot acknowledge some truth or intrinsic value in your interlocutor, then you cannot have a dialogue. Authoritarianism, racism, religious fundamentalism, and colonialism are examples of perspectives that are not amenable to dialogue. Even the perspective of a poet can become too narrow-minded to hold itself open to dialogue. A poet and a physicist cannot have a dialogue about an ocean if the poet refuses to acknowledge that there is some validity to physics (e.g., tides are caused by the gravitational pull of the moon), or if the physicist refuses to acknowledge that there is some truth in poetry (e.g., tides are the ocean’s dream of the moon).

Dialogue between multiple perspectives is not only about knowledge. Ways of knowing (epistemology) are always connected to ways of being (ontology). To put it simply, epistemology implies the existence of knowers. An artist has a way of life, a way of perceiving and acting in the world, a way of being, of which an artistic way of knowing is an integral part. Ways of knowing are not merely abstract frameworks or belief systems. Frameworks and beliefs are involved with knowledge, to be sure, but knowledge only makes sense in some kind of existential context. Knowing is therefore entangled with encountering, feeling, imagining, experiencing, relating, sensing, intending, and so on. Your understanding of the world shapes and is shaped by who you are, including your opinions and beliefs, as well as the practical, emotional, embodied, historical, and material dimensions of your existence. What a gorilla knows is part of what it is like to be a gorilla. What a scientist knows is part of what it is like to be a scientist. What a rabbi knows is part of what it is like to be a rabbi. The contributors to this volume are mindful of this connection between knowing and being. Bringing together scholars, writers, and educators across the sciences and humanities, this anthology provides informative and inspiring accounts of perspectives that attend to ways of being and knowing that intimately intertwine humans with the vibrant vitality of the Earth community.

Multicultural and interdisciplinary in scope, this anthology engages with diverse cultures and traditions around the world, and draws upon academic disciplines across the sciences and humanities. It is unique for its mixture of expertise and accessibility. The authors included in this book are leading figures in their respective arenas, and in the chapters that follow they introduce contemporary research, traditional knowledge, and emerging modes of thought in ways that are accessible to the general reader while also relevant to specialists. The essays included in this volume are revised versions of what the contributors presented to one another when they met for a workshop held in the fall of 2018 at the Oak Spring Garden Foundation in Virginia. The workshop was hosted by the renowned botanist and evolutionary plant scientist Peter Crane and organized by the two directors of the Forum on Religion and Ecology at Yale, Mary Evelyn Tucker and John Grim. The focus of the workshop, like that of this book, is the integration of multiple perspectives on the community of life on Earth.

When bringing multiple perspectives into dialogue, there is no perspective that is assumed to be the best or truest. No single perspective is given priority over the others. Any contrasts, conflicts, and comparisons between them emerge through mutual understanding and not one-sided evaluation. It is the dialogue that is given priority, the ongoing struggle for mutual understanding. Furthermore, if no single perspective is given priority, that includes the perspective of this introductory overview. The birds-eye view is not privileged over a close-up. A more general or universal perspective is not given priority over more specific, local perspectives, and vice versa. Each perspective can be understood on its own terms. Each of this book’s chapters do just that: they elucidate different ways of being and knowing on their own terms, based on their own place within the evolving community of life on Earth. The aim of the book is not to determine once and for all which perspective comes out on top, but to figure out ways to move forward together.
Chapters

The chapters of this book are grouped into six sections, which reflect the diverse histories and futures of humankind in intimate relationship with the more-than-human world. The focus of Section I is precisely the presence of that which is more-than-human. Reflecting on species dynamics within the planetary biosphere, David Abram, in Chapter 1, suggests that new insight into the astonishing navigational feats of migratory animals can be gleaned by recognizing the broad Earth as a dynamic, agential player in these migrations. The long-distance movements of various animals can readily be understood as metabolic processes within the body of the living planet, not unlike the rhythmic systole and diastole of a heartbeat.

Remembered songs of extinct wattlebirds, endemic to Aotearoa New Zealand, catalyze Julianne Warren’s storytelling. In Chapter 2, she spins a path from first listening to a Pākehā-narrated recording of an elder Māori performing traditional mimicry of Huia. Replaying these dead bird-human voices interacting with sounds in the near-Arctic helps her begin learning, in poet W. S. Merwin’s words, to ‘hear what never/ Has fallen silent.’3 Between antipodes, ancestral echoes escape from machines, and sleeping languages live on—in loss—spellbinding companionships of hope’s sound.

In Chapter 3, Paul Waldau considers possibilities for transforming human institutions (e.g., law, education, ethics, and religion) in ways that promote a flourishing Earth community. The author considers how self-actualization for humans can be found not through the arrogance of human exceptionalism, but through different expressions of humility and through a recognition of the animality of humankind.

Section II brings attention to the dynamics of forests in Latin America. Drawing on his ethnographic research among Indigenous communities in Ecuador, Eduardo Kohn considers the political and ethical implications of thinking with forests in Chapter 4. It is a diplomatic undertaking that seeks to integrate multiple ways of understanding the cosmos, and it is an ontological undertaking that rethinks the very nature of existence by recognizing the intelligence inherent in all life.

Frédérique Apffel-Marglin advocates for integral ecological healing in Chapter 5, particularly by attending to the practices of Indigenous Amazonian communities. The use of psychedelic plant medicines in Amazonian shamanism exemplifies the kind of non-rational ways of knowing that expand human consciousness beyond the individual ego and into intimate communion with the more-than-human world.

In Chapter 6, Thomas E. Lovejoy elaborates on the importance of biodiversity for the Earth community and the role of biologists therein. Bringing science together with ethical and political issues, Lovejoy articulates the responsibilities of biologists and other scientists for promoting biodiversity and addressing contemporary ecological crises.

The ecological implications of Asian traditions provide the guiding thread for the next section, Section III. In Chapter 7, Prasenjit Duara thinks with the circulating waters of oceans to articulate the complex confluence of human and natural histories, particularly with reference to Asian contexts. Whereas the fragmentation of human and natural histories contributes to ethical and political failures to address environmental issues, Duara’s oceanic metaphor demonstrates how human history, including the study of history (i.e., historiography), overlaps with natural history, while these histories nonetheless operate on different temporal scales.

Religion and ecology in Hinduism is the focus of Chapter 8, with David L. Haberman elucidating the value of love and devotion as ways of connecting to the natural world. In contrast to the detachment that characterizes abstractly intellectual forms of knowledge, these ways of connecting to nature yield emotional or affective knowledge, which promotes care for the beauty and vulnerability of the natural world.

In Chapter 9, Mary Evelyn Tucker presents contributions to ecological ethics in Confucianism, highlighting the importance of Confucian cosmology for understanding the material world as vibrant and lively, not passive and inert. Confucianism facilitates an approach to ethics for which personal and social concerns are embedded in the Earth community and the whole cosmos, such that ecological concern is not separate from the practice of self-cultivation.

Section IV integrates perspectives from ecology and the humanities, with a view toward storytelling. To build a bridge between scientific and ethical perspectives on ecological issues, David Haskell advocates in Chapter 10 for contemplative exercise, in the sense of repeated, open-ended attention. Contemplative participation within the community of life deepens one’s sense of ecological aesthetics, and such appreciation for the beauty of nature provides an integrative ground for ethical actions informed by scientific knowledge.

In the next chapter, advocating for the cultivation of storytelling skills, Timothy Brown shares his experience bringing science and storytelling to students, specifically through work with National Geographic. Stories provide a framework for communicating scientific information to non-specialists, for thinking across different academic disciplines, and for motivating action.

Chapter 12 attends to the role that listening plays in attuning humans to the stories of the natural world, specifically in terms of a project involving Long-Term Ecological Research oriented around conserving coastal ecosystems. Willis Jenkins describes The Conservatory Project, which integrates perspectives on environmental change from sciences, humanities, and the arts, designing ecoacoustic listening exercises that afford participants an aural sense of their embodiment and embeddedness in a dynamic environment.

Listening can facilitate a contemplative awareness that is conducive to nonanthropocentric ways of being in the world. Brooke Williams, in Chapter 13, presents a series of reflections on the conference that gave rise to this volume. Williams discusses an exercise for engaging with ecology through the imagination. Participants are guided through an imaginal encounter with ancestors, the different kinds of gifts they might bring, and the paths those gifts can be taken.

In Section V, attention is given to the resilient relationships cultivated within Indigenous lands. Chapter 14 introduces the worldview of the Okanagan people, an Indigenous people inhabiting the northwest of North America. Jeannette Armstrong describes her personal background and experience growing up as a member of the Okanagan community in the Okanagan Valley in British Columbia, Canada. She highlights the importance of intimacy with the land, taking responsibility for relationships, and building resilient communities in the face of cultural and environmental destruction.

In the next chapter, drawing attention to the contemporary resurgence of Indigenous languages, Mark Turin describes the collaborative work of linguistic and cultural revitalization in response to the destruction of Indigenous communities in settler colonial nations. While recuperating the vitality of languages, this process also facilitates the recuperation of the well-being of Indigenous communities as well as the lands within which those languages and communities are embedded.

Chapter 16 draws on the wisdom of Indigenous traditions and the world’s religions, as John Grim proposes a triad of sensing, minding, and creating, to help us understand the world without separating nature from culture. All things exhibit capacities for external interaction (sensing) and an inner patterning or consciousness (minding), and those external and internal facets change over time as novel conditions arise (creating). The emergence of life from matter and of humans from other life forms can be understood as an explication of the dynamics of sensing, minding, and creating inherent in the universe.

The following chapter indicates that revitalizing Indigenous communities requires more than a recognition of tribal sovereignty. Samara Brock shows how it also requires a recuperation of Indigenous understandings of existence and ways of being. The inclusion of multiple ontologies opens up possibilities for creating relational, hybrid forms of practices that cultivate mutuality and reciprocity between humans and the land.

The final section, Section VI, concentrates on the planetary and cosmic dimension of human existence. In Chapter 18, Sean Kelly proposes that the current cultural and ecological transformations taking place on Earth are evidence of a Second Axial Age. The period between the eighth and third centuries BCE is known as the ‘Axial Age’, which saw the beginnings of philosophy, science, mathematics, and many of the world’s religious traditions. Whereas Axial Age values were oriented around transcendent or cosmological principles (e.g., Truth, God, Oneness), values of the Second Axial Age compel humans to reorient civilization around the living Earth community — Gaia.

The next chapter reflects on the enduring quest of human beings to inhabit and understand the universe. Weaving together an account of the exterior (objective) and interior (subjective) facets of the cosmos, Heather Eaton finds the unique qualities of human subjectivity in symbolic consciousness and in the worldviews, narratives, and other systems of symbols through which humans interpret and respond to their surroundings. Along with symbols and narratives, learning about ecology involves attention to systems and interrelationships at multiple scales, from ecosystems to the biosphere.

To facilitate the cultivation of ecological imagination and promote environmental awareness, Mitchell Thomashow’s concluding chapter presents proposes five qualities of environmental learning (observation, information, interpretation, expression, and manifestation). Those educational qualities are pathways for integrated ways of knowing and being in the living Earth community.

As the concluding chapters of this volume indicate, the end of the book is not the end of the journey. This whole book is a beginning, an opening for people who seek different ways to partake in planetary coexistence. In other words, this book is an invitation to new beginnings, new possibilities for living, learning, connecting, and communicating with other humans and with the more-than-human world. This includes new opportunities for the revitalization of Indigenous lands and languages; for the rejuvenation of ancient wisdom; for the inclusion of rational, emotional, embodied, animal, and ecological ways of knowing; and for the integration of humankind within a living Earth community.

What would it look like if more people became more aware of and sensitive to their relationship with the living Earth community? How would the education, government, economy, and media change? How would individuals think, feel, and act differently? The responses to those questions will vary from place to place, depending on different cultural values, and from person to person, depending on different experiences, moods, and personal backgrounds. This book does not present a framework that the reader should apply. If a framework or model is like a map, this book can be thought of more like a compass. A map is something distinctly separate from the territory that it describes and separate from the person using the map; a compass has a more participatory relationship to the territory and to the position of the person wielding the compass. The needle of a compass is composed of steel, an alloy of iron, which is responsive to Earth’s electromagnetic field. A compass needle moves according to the specific place of the person using it. With compass in hand, where will you go?

As humans shift toward a more sustainable way of inhabiting the community of life on Earth, every single human being will participate in that shift differently. Each of us will navigate several overlapping concerns, including oneself along with family, friends, and strangers, whether human or more-than-human. Some might start new nonprofits or nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), whose mission is to restore ecosystems or advocate for peace and justice. Some will advocate for environmental issues in their respective sphere of influence — at home, in school, on social media, or in the workplace. Some will feel more empathy toward a companion animal, maybe a dog or cat, whose personality makes it impossible to hold up a rigid boundary that would separate humans from our nonhuman kin. Some will make changes in dietary preferences and other personal behaviors to adapt to the precarious conditions of life on Earth. Some will have conversations with friends and family. Some will have conversations with trees, listening to what trees might have to say to an inquiring mind, like one of the characters in The Overstory (2018), a novel by Richard Powers about the many ways humans and trees relate to one another. Sitting on the ground, leaning against a pine tree, a woman listens to what the tree is saying, ‘in words before words’, and then she hears it say, ‘Sun and water are questions endlessly worth answering’.4

We all move forward in our own way, depending on the unique circumstances of our lives. There is more than one way to read this book, as there is more than one way to inhabit this planet and answer the ongoing questions of sun and water. We are making ourselves at home on Earth, and we are learning how to do so together.
Bibliography

Merwin, W. S., ‘Learning a Dead Language’, in Migration: New and Selected Poems, W. S. Merwin (Port Townsend, WA: Copper Canyon Press, 2005), p. 41.

Popkin, Gabriel, ‘Bacteria Use Brainlike Bursts of Electricity to Communicate’, Quanta Magazine, September 5 2017, https://www.quantamagazine.org/bacteria-use-brainlike-bursts-of-electricity-to-communicate-20170905

Powers, Richard, The Overstory: A Novel (New York, NY: W. W. Norton and Company, 2018).

Tippett, Krista, ‘Robin Wall Kimmerer: The Intelligence in All Kinds of Life’, On Being, February 25 2016, https://onbeing.org/programs/robin-wall-kimmerer-the-intelligence-in-all-kinds-of-life-jul2018


1 Gabriel Popkin, ‘Bacteria Use Brainlike Bursts of Electricity to Communicate’, Quanta Magazine, September 5, 2017, https://www.quantamagazine.org/bacteria-use-brainlike-bursts-of-electricity-to-communicate-20170905


2 Krista Tippett, ‘Robin Wall Kimmerer: The Intelligence in All Kinds of Life’, On Being, February 25 2016, https://onbeing.org/programs/robin-wall-kimmerer-the-intelligence-in-all-kinds-of-life-jul2018


3 W. S. Merwin, ‘Learning a Dead Language’, in Migration: New and Selected Poems (Port Townsend, WA: Copper Canyon Press, 2005), p. 41.


4 Richard Powers, The Overstory: A Novel (New York, NY: W. W. Norton and Company, 2018), p. 3.

Living Earth Community: Multiple Ways of Being and Knowing - Open Book Publishers

Living Earth Community: Multiple Ways of Being and Knowing - Open Book Publishers

Living Earth Community: Multiple Ways of Being and Knowing

Living Earth Community: Multiple Ways of Being and KnowingSam Mickey, Mary Evelyn Tucker, and John Grim (eds)
PaperbackISBN: 978-1-78374-803-7£20.95
HardbackISBN: 978-1-78374-804-4£30.95
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Living Earth Community is a gift to the bewildered world. It asks the most urgent and crucial question of our time: what worldview will supplant the materialist, dualist, narcissist paradigm that has led the world to the edge of devastation? This book seeks answers from wise and creative thinkers who find remarkable new ideas in the confluence of ecological, religious, and Indigenous traditions. If you are looking for reasons to believe that humans can find a way through the unfolding catastrophe, this is your book, your hope, your answer.

Kathleen Dean Moore, author of Great Tide Rising: Toward Clarity and Moral Courage in a Time of Planetary Change

So why are we in such a predicament? The contributors to Living Earth Community trace our discontents to a kind of cultural amnesia. In our rush to progress we forgot deeper sources of wisdom and with it the calm awareness that humankind is a part of the larger community of life in the unfolding cosmic story. We've been looking for meaning, as it were, in all the wrong places. It is both much simpler yet far more grand than we've imagined. From varied perspectives, the essays here shed the bright light of remembrance and reverence.

David Orr, author of Hope is an ImperativeDown to the Wire, and Ecological Literacy

In the modern industrial period we have lost our sense of resonant relationships with Earth’s ecosystems and species. This book revitalizes those relationships and reawakens the desire to participate in the fecundity of Earth’s creative processes. As such it is an invaluable contribution to our way forward.

Brian Thomas Swimme, co-author of Journey of the Universe

This book makes essential connections for understanding how humans may interact with all of life on Earth, especially in the face of rapid global climate change.

J. B. Richardson III, emeritus, University of Pittsburgh, CHOICE connect, April 2021 Vol. 58 No. 8

Living Earth Community: Multiple Ways of Being and Knowing is a celebration of the diversity of ways in which humans can relate to the world around them, and an invitation to its readers to partake in planetary coexistence. Innovative, informative, and highly accessible, this interdisciplinary anthology of essays brings together scholars, writers and educators across the sciences and humanities, in a collaborative effort to illuminate the different ways of being in the world and the different kinds of knowledge they entail – from the ecological knowledge of Indigenous communities, to the scientific knowledge of a biologist and the embodied knowledge communicated through storytelling.

This anthology examines the interplay between Nature and Culture in the setting of our current age of ecological crisis, stressing the importance of addressing these ecological crises occurring around the planet through multiple perspectives. These perspectives are exemplified through diverse case studies – from the political and ethical implications of thinking with forests, to the capacity of storytelling to motivate action, to the worldview of the Indigenous Okanagan community in British Columbia.

Living Earth Community: Multiple Ways of Being and Knowing synthesizes insights from across a range of academic fields, and highlights the potential for synergy between disciplinary approaches and inquiries. This anthology is essential reading not only for researchers and students, but for anyone interested in the ways in which humans interact with the community of life on Earth, especially during this current period of environmental emergency.

You can find more information on this book on the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology.


Living Earth Community: Multiple Ways of Being and Knowing
Sam Mickey, Mary Evelyn Tucker, and John Grim (eds) | May 2020
286 pp. | 9 colour illustrations | 6.14" x 9.21" (234 x 156 mm)
ISBN Paperback: 9781783748037
ISBN Hardback: 9781783748044
ISBN Digital (PDF): 9781783748051
ISBN Digital ebook (epub): 9781783748068
ISBN Digital ebook (mobi): 9781783748075
ISBN Digital (XML): 9781783748082
DOI:10.11647/OBP.0186
Categories: BIC: RN (The environment), RNT (Social impact of environmental issues), RNA (Environmentalist thought and ideology), J (Society and social sciences), PSAF (Ecological science, the Biosphere); BISAC: SCI019000 (SCIENCE / Earth Sciences / General), SCI026000 (SCIENCE / Environmental Science), SCI042000 (SCIENCE / Earth Sciences / Meteorology & Climatology), SOC026040 (SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / Social Theory); OCLC Number: 1155880239.


 

Living Earth Community


Contents


Acknowledgmentsix


Notes on the Contributorsxiii



Prefacexxvii


Sam Mickey



Introduction: Ways of Knowing, Ways of Valuing Nature

1  John Grim and Mary Evelyn Tucker




SECTION I: PRESENCES IN THE MORE-THAN-HUMAN WORLD 9


1.  Creaturely Migrations on a Breathing Planet: Some Reflections

11  David Abram



2. Learning a Dead Birdsong: Hopes’ echoEscape.1 in ‘The Place Where You Go to Listen’

19 Julianne Lutz Warren



3. Humilities, Animalities, and Self-Actualizations in a Living Earth Community

19  Paul Waldau



SECTION II: THINKING IN LATIN AMERICAN FORESTS 53


4. Anthropology as Cosmic Diplomacy: Toward an Ecological Ethics for Times of Environmental Fragmentation

55  Eduardo Kohn



5. Reanimating the World: Amazonian Shamanism

67  Frédérique Apffel-Marglin



6. The Obligations of a Biologist and Eden No More

75  Thomas E. Lovejoy



SECTION III: PRACTICES FROM CONTEMPORARY ASIAN TRADITIONS AND ECOLOGY  83


7.  Fluid Histories: Oceans as Metaphor and the Nature of History

85  Prasenjit Duara



8. Affectual Insight: Love as a Way of Being and Knowing

101  David L. Haberman



9. Confucian Cosmology and Ecological Ethics: Qi, Li, and the Role of the Human

109  Mary Evelyn Tucker




SECTION IV: STORYTELLING: BLENDING ECOLOGY AND HUMANITIES


121  

10. Contemplative Studies of the ‘Natural’ World

123  David Haskell



11. Science, Storytelling, and Students: The National Geographic Society’s On Campus Initiative

133  Timothy Brown



12. Listening for Coastal Futures: The Conservatory Project

141  Willis Jenkins



13. Imaginal Ecology

153  Brooke Williams



SECTION V: RELATIONSHIPS OF RESILIENCE WITHIN INDIGENOUS LANDS

161


14. An Okanogan Worldview of Society

163 Jeannette Armstrong



15. Indigenous Language Resurgence and the Living Earth Community

171  Mark Turin



16. Sensing, Minding, and Creating

185  John Grim



17. Land, Indigeneity, and Hybrid Ontologies

193  Paul Berne Burow, Samara Brock, and Michael R. Dove



SECTION VI: THE WEAVE OF EARTH AND COSMOS

203


18. Gaia and a Second Axial Age

205  Sean Kelly



19. The Human Quest to Live in a Cosmos

217  Heather Eaton



20. Learning to Weave Earth and Cosmos

229  Mitchell Thomashow



List of Illustrations

235


Index

237



Fig. A1 Garden Aerial. Oak Springs Garden Foundation House, Upperville, Virgina. Photograph by Max Smith (2018), CC BY.
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2021/07/22

A Japanese Perspective on the Trinity - The Gospel Coalition

A Japanese Perspective on the Trinity - The Gospel Coalition

ARTICLES
Volume 22 - Issue 2
A Japanese Perspective on the Trinity
BY NOZOMU MIYAHIRA


The Christian doctrine of the Trinity has traditionally been expressed in terms of three persons and one substance or being. This belief and formulation is taken for granted by orthodox Christians. But a question may emerge when we take into consideration the fact that, although the gospel itself is universally relevant, unrestricted to any particular place or time, this formula was originally elaborated in the ancient Greco-Roman world, using the terms available in those days and intelligible within that mindset. Is this formula relevant today to Christians with other cultural backgrounds? With this question in mind. I shall set out the reasons why Japanese Christians may use another formula: God is three betweennesses, one concord. I shall do so in two steps: first, I shall explain some Japanese conceptualities, and secondly. I shall seek parallels for them in the orthodox Christian tradition.

Japanese concepts of humanity and community
Historically, the traditional trinitarian formula played a role in distinguishing orthodoxy from heresy. In fact, however, the important point is not so much the formula itself, as what trinitarians intended to express through it. Studying deeply the ancient, heated argument over the doctrine of the Trinity, and in the course of serious argument against the anti-trinitarian Servetus. John Calvin wrote calmly and tersely about trinitarian terms, in his celebrated Institutes of the Christian Religion. ‘I could wish they were buried, If only among all men this faith were agreed on: that Father and Son and Spirit are one God, yet the Son is not the Father nor the Spirit the Son, but that they are differentiated by a peculiar quality.’1 For him, two things are crucial in this definition; unity and difference in God. These are of primary importance: the terms that signify them are secondary. This will lead those in whom a cultural mindset other than the Greco-Roman is ingrained, to say that they may use their indigenous terms provided that they signify unification and differentiation as properly and accurately as possible. When they take this route, they have an advantage. They can begin to understand the mystery of the Trinity through the terminology congenial to their mindset. Besides, they can in their turn contribute to the elucidation of the Christian understanding of God as Trinity, by introducing subtle modifications to the traditional expression of the doctrine as they use their own, native, terms.

In Japan, the original trinitarian terminology, and even its translated terms, such as ‘ikaku’ for ‘person’ and ‘jittai’ for ‘substance’. Is arcane and misleading. This is partly because these translated terms are not indigenous ones, historically used in the actual life of people over a long period of time. So I wish to explore the possibility that we make use of indigenous Japanese terms in order to express the unity and difference in the triune God. Let us now look at the terms that are potentially suitable as differentiating and unifying concepts.

Human betweenness
Obviously, there is no old and indigenous term in Japan for the Christian triune God. But the Japanese have long nursed a term for humanity. How can we make it useful for theology?

The traditional and indigenous Japanese term for a human or humanity is ‘ningen’. If we translate this directly into English, it can be expressed as ‘human betweenness’. In Japan, we tend to think of humans as being what they are in their interrelationship: they are living, as we should put it, ‘between’ one another. This notion is inextricably interwoven with people’s work in rice agriculture, in which a very large number of the Japanese were engaged for about 2,000 years, until the end of the war. Rice agriculture is so labour-intensive that it necessarily demands mutual co-operation. Moreover, workers follow the same pattern of rice cultivation every year. All this means that work with the same people is carried on again and again, because the nature of rice agriculture keeps workers inescapably bound to the same fields. Therefore, people always find themselves in relation to each other or, as we might put it, ‘between’ one another.

In this century, the first major attempt to examine ‘ningen’ was made by Watsuji Tetsuro (1889–1960), ‘the best philosopher of ethics of modern Japan’,2 in his book Ethics as the Study of Man, published in 1934.3 According to this work, the Chinese characters for ‘ningen’ used to mean, not ‘humanity’ but ‘the world of humanity’ or ‘the community’, and it came popularly and erroneously to mean a ‘human’ or ‘humanity’ in Japan about 1,000 years ago.4 Watsuji thought that this event shows how the Japanese understand humanity: their understanding is drawn from the context of community existence (pp. 14, 18f.). He regarded this as an event of great importance, since it brings into clear relief the fact that the Japanese mindset tends to think of humanity and community on the same level. On this basis, he defined ‘ningen’ as ‘hito no aida’, or ‘between humans’, with reference to the fact that they live closely together in a community.

Watsuji attempted to explain, from a Buddhist perspective, how the understanding of community and of humanity are closely related. He interpreted the relation between community and humanity as a dialectical relation of the whole to its parts (pp. 19ff.). For instance, pupils (parts) depend on the school (the whole) in that, without the school, there is nothing to attend and so they can no longer be pupils, whereas the school depends on the pupils in that, without any pupils, there is no longer a school.5 In Buddhism, this kind of argument is called ‘absolute denial’; through this denial, parts and whole are seen in their dialectical relation.6

The second major attempt to interpret humanity in terms of betweenness was made by a psychiatrist. Kimura Bin (1931–) in his Between Man and Man, published in 1972.7 Here, he argued that a self becomes aware of itself when it meets what is not itself (pp. 14ff.). It is the distinction between the self and the non-self that enables the self to be so called. There is no self without the non-self. Both self and non-self appear simultaneously. But before they appear, there must be something which caused this encounter. For the sake of convenience. Kimura uses the terminology ‘between man and man’ to describe this something (p. 15). This does not describe the relationship which holds between two independent individuals who meet each other. Rather, it signifies the atemporal and spaceless field from which the relations between self and non-self, between I and thou, come into existence (pp. 15ff., 65).

There is a relationship here to Western thought. Kimura was stimulated by Martin Buber, who stated that

the fundamental fact of human existence is man with man. What is peculiarly characteristic of the human world is above all that something takes place between one being and another the like of which can be found nowhere in nature … Man is made man by it … It is rooted in one being turning to another as another, as this particular other being, in order to communicate with it in a sphere which is common to them but which reaches out beyond the special sphere of each. I call this sphere, which is established with the existence of man as man, but which is conceptually still uncomprehended, the sphere of ‘between’. Though being realized in very different degrees, it is a primal category of human reality … Where I and Thou meet, there is the realm of ‘between’.8

The atemporal and spaceless field of which Kimura speaks is more concretely expressed in terms of space, in ‘girl’ relation to others (pp. 35ff., 69). ‘Girl’, which describes the typical Japanese social obligations necessary for smooth relations between self and non-self, controls the Japanese pattern of social and moral behaviour to a great extent. The usual ways in which the Japanese fulfil ‘girl’ are to repay others’ kindness and to live up to others’ expectations (p. 40). The ‘girl’ relation originated in the repayment and exchange of kindnesses in the context of the farm work of Japanese rice agriculture.9 It was taken for granted that if one was helped with farm work by others, one was expected to be ready to offer help in return. To what extent one should repay kindness depends on what kind of relationship one has with the other. Whether this is a relationship of equality or subordination does not depend solely on the status of the one or the other; it depends, also, on their interaction, their ‘betweenness’. This betweenness of humanity is not some abstract idea; it embraces a very significant reality which determines Japanese human behaviour (p. 65). In this respect, moral duty is not determined vertically, in relation to God, but is horizontally situated ‘between man and man’ (p. 39).

When this betweenness is viewed in terms of time and, in particular, retrospectively regarded in terms of the self and parents, grandparents and ancestors, the riddle of Japanese ancestor worship is easy to understand (p. 69). From the genetic standpoint, the first non-self which the self temporally meets is the parents, who also encountered their parents as non-selves. Again, there is a connection here with Western thought. John Macmurray wrote that ‘genetically, the first correlate of the Self is the mother; and this personal Other … is gradually differentiated in experience till it becomes the whole community of persons of which I am an individual member’.10 Macmurray also offered an explanation of ancestor-worship:

The ritual head of an existing family or kinship group is inadequate as a representation of the community. For the community has a history which links it with the past, and this community with the past cannot be represented by an existing member of the group. The chief is only the temporary representative of the tribal community, himself related to the representative of a unity which spans the generations. The universal Other must thus be at least the original and originating head of the community, the original father of the kinship group. This explains the development of religion as ancestor worship.11

In Japanese thought, the self, in terms of its concrete existence, is in crucial relation to its ancestors. But this does not mean that its existence depends unilaterally on its parents and ancestors. Rather, it is grounded ‘in between’ itself and them. Parents are parents in virtue of their relation to their children; children are children in virtue of their relation to their parents. Parents depend on their children for their parenthood. One’s existence as the child of parents depends on the field which brought into existence their relation, or their betweenness. Ancestor worship is one way of expressing deference towards this betweenness. So the Japanese do not found the existence of the self just within their own, or another’s, self, but between them.12The Japanese term for self, ‘jibun’, clearly reveals this implication. Kimura points out that the Western concept of the self denotes its individuality and substantiality. This self keeps its identity and continuity eternally. But ‘jibun’ literally means not only ‘self’ but also ‘share’, so designating the self’s share of something which transcends the self, rather than any attribute or substance with an eternal identity (p. 154). That is, the Japanese concept of ‘jibun’ carries within it its share of the field in which it participates in its relation to others. In brief: ‘jibun’ is the fusion of the self and its relation to others, the self and its betweenness.13 Indeed, human betweenness is primary; what I am now is determined between man and man, or self and its partner.14 In contrast to the Western understanding of humanity, in Japan, relation precedes the individuality of the subject and not the other way around (p. 144).

The third major attempt to articulate a Japanese concept of humanity was that of a scholar in Japanese studies. Hamaguchi Eshan (1931–), in The Rediscovery of “Japaneseness”, published in 1977.15 This described the image of the Japanese with the help of a conceptual scheme excogitated from an inherently Japanese perspective. According to this portrayal, Westerners, irrespective of the contexts in which they find themselves, tend to behave on the basis both of what they believe to be a consistent norm determined from within and, at the same time, a sense of public values. The Japanese, on the other hand, worrying about the way in which they are seen by others, usually behave so as to adjust to the particular context in which they find themselves, along with other people.16 In other words, the Western concept of humanity is individualistic, signifying the ultimate indivisible and independent units which comprise society, whereas the Japanese concept of humanity is contextual, relational and communal. Therefore, Hamaguchi coined a new term—‘kanjin’, or ‘contextual’—which signifies this Japanese, as opposed to Western, view of humanity, with its contrasting ‘individual’ (pp. 62ff.).

Hamaguchi calls this contextual point of view ‘outside-in’ (p. 305). ‘Outside-in’ and ‘inside-out’ are technical terms used by aircraft pilots. While in flight, they look inside-out, viewing the window of the cockpit in front of them as their perceptual frame of reference. In this case, they perceive the horizon moving against the aircraft. But when they make a final approach to an airport, they change their perceptual frames of reference from inside-out to outside-in. The outside-in perspective takes the horizon as the fixed perceptual frame of reference. Now it is the aircraft that is moving in relation to the horizon and the pilots must do their best to keep the aircraft horizontal. This perceptual frame is obviously essential for safe landing. Hamaguchi applies these two frames of reference to human behaviour. ‘Inside-out’ is a form of behaviour in which people base their behaviour on some criteria derived from within themselves, and form independent and proper judgements of an event outside themselves. In the ‘outside-in’ form of behaviour, people act on the basis of the situation outside themselves, contextualizing their behaviour according to the human relations involved in the situation. Thus, roughly speaking, Westerners’ behaviour is characteristically inside-out, but it is typical of the Japanese to behave in the outside-in manner (p. 308).

It is natural that the difference between the individualist and the contextual understandings of humanity, between the inside-out and outside-in points of view, is reflected in the distinctive virtues respectively emphasized by Westerners and the Japanese. For the contextual Japanese, who take context and relation to others more seriously than their proper selves, there is something of cardinal importance, something which furthers smooth human relations. That something is ‘concord’, to which we now turn.

Human concord
Where context is concerned, the highly acclaimed virtue can be said to be human concord or harmony.17Hamaguchi presents three characteristics of concord in this situation. Before looking at these, let us see briefly how deeply ‘concord’ is embedded in the Japanese mind.

In Japan, the word ‘wa’, or ‘concord’, is of considerable importance. It is associated, above all, with the name of the country, Japan. Until the seventh century. Japan was called ‘Wa’ by the people of the Asian continent. The Chinese character for this ‘Wa’ meant ‘small’. However, as the Japanese came to understand the meanings of Chinese characters, which were introduced into Japan and came into use among a small number of people in the fifth or sixth centuries, some preferred a different Chinese character. This is also transliterated ‘Wa’ and has the same Chinese pronunciation as ‘Wa’ meaning ‘small’, but itself has the meaning of ‘concord’.

Moreover, this ‘Wa’ assumed an official presence in the first Japanese written law, the Seventeen Article Constitution of 604, ascribed to Prince Shotoku (574–622). The first article of this constitution is overlaid with an affirmation of concord: ‘Concord is to be valued, and an avoidance of wanton opposition to be honoured.’18 This urgent need for concord fundamentally derives from the discords and conflicts prevalent in those days. Before Prince Shotoku came to power and established a centralized state, the powerful clans were notoriously in serious conflict. It was these chaotic social conditions that led Prince Shotoku towards a primary insistence on concord, and the avoidance of wanton opposition.19 Although this understanding of concord is relatively negative, in that it means ‘avoiding discord’, this article means that ‘concord’ has firmly become the watchword of Japan as a term with positive meanings as well. Nowadays, consciously or unconsciously, almost all Japanese communities, such as families, groups of friends, fellow workers, think of concord as indispensable to keeping them together.20 It is especially the leader, or the head, who is expected to play a major role in maintaining concord.21

Hamaguchi clarifies the spirit of the concord infiltrated into the Japanese mind in this way, by contrasting it sharply to the individualism described by Steven Lukes.22 Firstly, individualism is based on self-centredness and attempts to maintain and develop the established inviolable self; contextualism is grounded on mutual dependence and reciprocal help. Secondly, individualism stresses self-reliance and the need for all one desires in life to be met by oneself: contextualism has a high view of mutual reliance which presupposes that all concerned should be trustworthy. Thirdly, individualism regards interpersonal relations as a means for promoting self-interest, and does not maintain inconvenient relationships; contextualism regards interpersonal relations as ends in themselves. In sum, to be in relation to others is of essential value, and to maintain and develop such relations is meaningful for life.23

It is easy to point out, from the perspective of contextualism, the problems associated with individualism. Firstly, excessive self-centredness can infringe the rights of others. Secondly, excessive self-reliance can lapse into self-righteousness. Thirdly, those who treat others as means to an end will sooner or later be faced with a situation where they themselves are treated as a means. These things count in favour of contextualism. Within its perspective, firstly, one may expect others’ help. Secondly, one may have self-respect by being trusted. Thirdly, one may realize that one’s dignity is valued when one is treated as an end in oneself.

These characteristics of concord have been cultivated and developed historically for such a long time, through being embedded in the social economy of rice agriculture, that this framework of thought is deeply rooted in the Japanese mind. We now come to an important question; how can it be used to understand the triune God in the Japanese context?

At this point, it will help the later argument if we consider the possibility that ‘betweenness’ and ‘concord’ could be used as concepts which respectively differentiate and unify. Kimura argues that betweenness is a metaphorical field from which the relation between self and non-self comes into existence. This field can be said to cause a differentiation, as well as an interrelation, between self and non-self. This is naturally so, since, as Watsuji shows, in dialectical thought the relational whole depends on some difference between those parts that engage in the relation and on the wholeness that embraces the differences. As the Japanese terms for ‘between’ (‘aida’, or ‘ma’) originally designate some space differentiating something or someone from something or someone else, betweenness can be, relatively speaking, particularly appropriately used as a differentiating concept. On the other hand, concord can be used as a unifying concept in that, as Hamaguchi argues, the concord maintained in contextualism is grounded on mutual help and reliance. Here, where the relation itself is regarded as essential, this concept plays a role in connecting humans and deepening the relation. We shall extend the scope of these concepts by applying betweenness and concord to the triune God.

Christian concepts of the triune God
How can we relate these Japanese concepts of humanity and community to Christian concepts of the triune God? Jesus Christ was a man in a particular place and time. I do not take this to mean that he accommodated himself to Jewish culture and to no other, but that he can and will accommodate himself to any culture. Athanaslus’s classic study on the incarnation and redemption. On the incarnation, shows the depth and breadth of Christ’s work.24

In Athanaslus’s argument, a motif of some importance emerges. The one and the same Word both created the world and humanity and recreated corrupted humanity by assuming flesh.25 If the Word who made all things universally in creation also recreated them in redemption through the incarnation, this implies that the scope of redemption is also universal.26 In order to emphasize the universal range of redemption. Athanasius states that Christ’s redemptive work was ‘In the stead of all’, ‘on behalf of all’ and ‘for all’.27 According to him, the Word became flesh and dwelt ‘to us’, ‘into us’, ‘among men’ and ‘with them’.28 This variation on the ‘among us’ of John 1:14 points to his interpretation that the Word in flesh relates closely to humanity in every possible way.

How can we develop Athanasius’s argument in a Japanese context? As he argues, the Word condescended and accommodated himself to humanity, in order to teach it higher subjects effectively.29 In the words of a contemporary writer, God ‘chose a personal, interactional, receptor-oriented approach within the frame of reference of those he sought to reach.’30 If we apply the divine receptor-oriented approach to the Japanese concept of humanity conceived in terms of human betweenness, it is possible to interpret the incarnation in terms of Christ being not merely a human but also a human betweenness. That is, the Word became a human and dwelt between us as a human. Christ became a man between man and man. This interpretation is theologically defensible. As we have shown, Athanasius used several prepositions in order to express the ways in which Christ dwelt in relation to us. This latitude in the way of conceiving the relation of Christ to humanity allows us, in a Japanese context, to use our culturally orientated term ‘between’.31Therefore, for us, the Word became a human and dwelt between us as a human betweenness. In fact, this interpretation is exactly identical with John 1:14 in the two recent Japanese translations of the Bible, the New Revised and the New Collaborated versions.32 Both translations run ‘watashi tachi no aida ni’, literally translated as ‘between us’. Christ between man and man is a ‘ningen’ and, as such, is intimately connected with humanity in Japanese culture.

The human betweenness of Christ is closely related to the divine betweenness which the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit maintain. We shall next direct our attention to the betweenness of God.

Triune betweenness
Gregory Nazianzen, who contributed immensely to the formation of the doctrine of the Trinity, interestingly enough refers to the relations and ‘betweenness’ of the triune God. Let us clarify these concepts by focusing on his Five Theological Orations.33

According to Eunomius, the ‘Father’ is a name denoting an essence or an action. But Gregory argues against this, as follows. If ‘Father’ denotes essence, there must be a distinct essence from that of the Son. If it names an action, the same would follow: the Son would be made by the Father’s action and the essence of the Son, as someone made, would be different from the essence of the maker.34 Gregory proceeds to introduce the concept of relation: ‘Father is not a name either of an essence or of an action … But it is the name of the relation in which the Father stands to the Son, and the Son to the Father.’35 These relational names of the Father and the Son ‘denote an identity of nature between him that is begotten and him that begets’ (XXIX.16). Although, on earth, the begetting ‘happened according to flesh’, the Son’s earthly mother is a virgin, and this is called ‘spiritual generation’, by which Gregory seems to mean the begetting through the Holy Spirit (XXIX.4).36 If this begetting is not merely fleshly, but essentially spiritual, ‘begotten of’ does not mean ‘begotten after’, which implies a temporal relation, although ‘in respect of cause’ the Son is not unoriginate (XXIX.3).37 The internal relations within the Trinity, therefore, are beyond such categories as time and space, for they are essentially neither fleshly nor temporal, but, rather, spiritual and eternal.38

Gregory further introduces the concept of betweenness into these spiritual and eternal triune relations. As he proceeds to explain what the Holy Spirit is, he uses ‘mesos’ or ‘between’. He summarizes concisely as follows: the Holy Spirit who ‘proceeds’ from the Father is not a creature: he who is not begotten is not the Son;39 and he who is ‘between [mesos] the unbegotten and the begotten is God’ (XXXI.8). First, Gregory had already confirmed that the Holy Spirit from the Father is God and, as such, ‘consubstantial’ with the Father (XXXI.10); and that the Spirit, as well as the Son, is ‘co-eternal’ with the Father (XXIX.3). Secondly, he made clear that the Spirit is not the Son. The names ‘Father’ and ‘Son’ come from the facts of unbegottenness and begottenness respectively, while the name ‘Holy Spirit’ comes from the fact of the procession (XXXI.9). Thirdly, he explained that the Spirit is between the Father and the Son. Now, what is this ‘between’? According to Gregory, between them ‘nothing … is peculiar’ except the names, Father and Son, ‘because all things are in common’ (XXX.11). This betweenness exists precisely because there is a difference between the Father and the Son. If there were no difference at all, there would be no betweenness at all, simply outright identity. Therefore, betweenness is the relation which arises from begetting: when it is stated that the Spirit is ‘between’ them, he is contrasted with this relation. In other words, the distinctive procession of the Spirit is stated in comparison with the begetting relation between the Father and the Son.40 This means that the procession happens in a way different from the begetting, so that the proper name of the Holy Spirit is secured.41

How can we develop Gregory’s doctrine of the triune relations and that of ‘betweenness’ in a Japanese context? We can begin by finding some similarities between his view of the triune God and the Japanese view of humanity. In Gregory’s trinitarian view, God is what he is in the tri-personal relation: in the Japanese anthropological view, humans are what they are in their relation. In both cases, the category of ‘relation’ refers to what is intrinsic, not optional, and divine and human persons are defined not according to any individualities, but by their relations. As Watsuji refers to the dialectical relation of community (whole) and humanity (parts), so Gregory refers to the dialectical relation between three persons and one substance.42Of course, we must also note the differences regarding relation. Kimura states that relation, or betweenness, precedes the self and the non-self, not in a temporal sense, but ontologically, in the sense that betweenness is the ground of their existence.43 Gregory would not say this in the case of the triune God, since the origin of the existence of the Son and Holy Spirit lies not in their relation, but in the Father, from whom the former is begotten and the latter proceeds.

The supremely interesting point is that, in both cases, the term ‘between’ is used. Now if, as Gregory states, there is a betweenness of Father and Son, and the Spirit is also between them, we may say that the betweenness is shared by the Spirit as well. For the triune God, beyond corporeal and temporal categories, carries neither dissolution nor separation within himself.44 So ‘betweenness’ is a (spatial) metaphor. Further, if the betweenness is shared by all three, we should also have the betweenness which the Father and Spirit share and that which the Son and the Holy Spirit share, as well as that which the Father and the Son share. Thus, the Spirit is between the Father and the Son, and the Father is between the Son and the Spirit, and the Son is between the Father and the Spirit. ‘Three what?’ Augustine asked, about the Trinity.45 We can answer: ‘Three betweennesses.’46 But it is important to emphasize that although the triune God shares betweenness, the three betweennesses I have mentioned differ according to the different relations. The Father-Son betweenness differentiates Father and Son through the begetting. This begetting or begotten betweenness is different from the processional betweenness that relates Father and Spirit. Betweenness, then, is also a differentiating factor in the triune God.

If, in a Japanese context, we can consider humans, living between other humans, as human betweennesses, we can apply the category of ‘betweenness’ to the triune God as well, considered as consisting of three betweennesses. As we said, the Word became a human and dwelt between us; that is, the Word became a human betweenness. The betweenness which the Word assumed on earth can be interpreted as a reflection of that betweenness inherent in the triune God. Because God is divine betweenness, he became human betweenness. Relational humanity is possible for God because deity is relational.47

Triune concord
What should we say, when asked: ‘One what?’ One possibility, consonant with Japanese conceptuality, is to answer: ‘One concord’. But is the use of the term theologically supportable? To examine this, we shall have recourse to Novatian’s The Trinity.48

In order to counter the Patripassian view that the Son is the Father and the Adoptionist view that the Son is only man. Novatian introduces the concept of concord. Whereas he adduces scriptural passages to maintain that God is one (XXX, XXXI passim), he points out that in John 10:30. ‘I and the Father are one’, the word ‘one’ (unum) ‘is in the neuter gender, denoting harmony of fellowship [societatis concordia], not unity of person’ (XXVII.3: cf. XXXI.22). In order to clarify the distinction between them who are ‘unum’. he also has recourse to a scriptural illustration, where Paul refers, in 1 Corinthians 3:6ff., to ‘harmonious unity’ (concordiae unitas) (XXVII.6). Paul states: ‘I planted, Apollos watered.’ Now he and Apollos are not one and the same person. By using the term ‘concord’, on the one hand Novatian corroborates, over against Patripassianism, the existence of two persons, the Father and the Son, who maintain concord.

This concord carries another implication in the relationship between Father and Son. Novatian paraphrases the concord between them in terms of ‘identity of judgement’,49 and he seems to explain what he means concretely in The Trinity XIII.6: ‘… If Christ sees the secrets of the heart [cor]. Christ is certainly God, since God alone knows the secrets of the heart [cor].’ This passage is based on Matthew 9:4. John 2:25 and 1 Kings 8:39,50 and these passages are situated in a context where God or the Son make a certain judgment on humanity by discerning what they have in their hearts. That is, Father and Son share a common way of thinking in making judgment, in discerning the heart. But what they share in judgment is not merely a way of thinking, but also a content. This close relation of Father and Son has much to do with the Son’s origin.

When Novatian confirms that the Son is the Word of God, of divine nature, he adduces the scriptural passage that ‘my heart [cor] has brought forth a good Word’ (XV.6, XVII.3).51 The ‘Word’, or the ‘Son’, is the embodiment of the Father’s heart, with the result that their judgment is necessarily the same on account of having the same origin.52 That is, Father and Son are in concordant relationship, not only in the sense that the divine judgment is the same, in the discernment of human hearts [cor], but also in the deeper sense that they share a common [con-] heart [cor]: i.e., that retain ‘con-cordia’ on account of their origin. Therefore, Novatian’s concept of the concord between them can hardly be delineated only ‘in terms of moral unity’.53Rather, ‘he seems to look beyond this moral union towards something more metaphysical …’.54 Thus Novatian refutes the Adoptionists, too, by corroborating the Son’s divinity and his unity with the Father.

Novatian does not refer much to the Holy Spirit. But he places the Spirit, who proceeds from God, on a par with the Father and the Son, and puts special emphasis on his personal, distinctive outward work.55 We can understand, from this, that the divine concordant relation between the Father and the Son can be applied to God the Holy Spirit as well. That is, the Trinity is one in terms of the divine concord. The similarities to the Japanese concept of concord are clear. As the Japanese concord was officially introduced to counter political discord. Novatian’s concord is introduced to explain that there is no discord of two gods which, the heretics allege, is entailed in the divinity of the Son. Japanese concord emphasizes the mutuality and worth of the human relation itself; Novatian’s trinitarianism emphasizes that the mutual relations to which begetting and procession give rise are essential in the life of the Trinity.

Conclusion
I have argued for three betweennesses.

The begetter/begotten difference comes through the eternal process of begetting. The fact that the Spirit is between Father and Son means that the Spirit operates within this differentiation, playing a role corresponding to that played in the virginal conception, the role of the river of life.
Interpreting betweenness as a differentiating concept enables us to speculate about a second betweenness, where the processor/processed difference comes through the eternal process of procession. The fact that the Son is between Father and Spirit means that the Son operates within this differentiation, playing a role corresponding to that sent when he sent the Holy Spirit from the Father.
The difference between the begotten and the processed is now established. The fact that the Father is between Son and Spirit means that the Father operates within this differentiation, sending both Son and Spirit in different ways, corresponding to the begetting and proceeding.
Divine betweenness is thus a concept which renders the distinctions between Father. Son and Spirit in terms of relations of origin. What are distinct are called the three divine betweennesses.

I have argued, too, for one concord. Although we have the unbegotten/begotten difference between Father and Son, there is concord between them. The same holds good for the difference between Father and Spirit in terms of procession and between Son and Spirit, respectively begotten and proceeded. Because they have the same origin (the Father), the Son and the Spirit are concordant with the Father. Concord is the concept that describes their divine unity. Thus the triune God is one concord.

I therefore propose that the Japanese formulation of the doctrine of the Trinity be this: God is three betweennesses, one concord.

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1 John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion I. tr. F.L. Battles (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1960), p. 126.

2 G.K. Plovesana. ‘Watsuji Tetsuro’, in P. Edwards (ed.), The Encyclopedia of Philosophy, vol. 8 (New York: Macmillan, 1967), p. 280. Japanese names are rendered here in their Japanese order, with the surname first and the Christian name last.

3 Watsuji Tetsuro, Ethics as the Study of Man (Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1934). Subsequent page references to this work are given in the text.

4 Ibid., p. 14. However, more recent scholarship shows that it happened in about the early fourteenth century: see Hamaguchi Eshun, The Rediscovery of “Japaneseness” (Tokyo: Kodansha, 1988: originally published in 1977), p. 118 n. 3.

5 Cf. Yuasa Yasuo, Watsuji Tetsuro: The Fate of Modern Japanese Philosophy (Kyoto: Minerva Shobo, 1981), pp. 268ff.

6 Watsuji, op. cit., p. 35. In Japan, this way of thinking (discerning parts in the whole and the whole in the parts) has been prevalent in earlier periods and remains in contemporary everyday language (Watsuji, op. cit., pp 8, 20. For example, ‘heltal’ can refer either to ‘troops’ or to a single member of the troops; a single term has a dual (member and group) meaning. Likewise, we can call a human member of the community ‘ningen’, a word that used to mean ‘community’. Interestingly, we can find a similarity in Hebrew thought: ‘The Hebrew concept designates … the concrete at the same time as the “abstract”, the particular as well as the collective.’ T. Boman. Hebrew Thought Compared with Greek (London: SCM, 1960), pp. 70f. For individuality and community with regard to Abraham and Christ, see J. Macquarrie, Principles of Christian Theology 2nd edn (London: SCM, 1977), p. 68.

7 Kimura Bin, Between Man and Man (Tokyo: Kobundo, 1972).

8 Martin Buber, Between Man and Man (London: Collins, 1961), pp. 244ff. For the self and the other as correlatives, see J. Macmurray, Persons in Relation (London: Faber & Faber, 1961), p. 86: ‘Self and Other are correlatives, and the discrimination of the one involves a correlative discrimination of the other … Moreover, in discriminating myself from the Other, it is always as belonging to the Other.’

9 Kimura, op. cit., p. 72. where he quotes from Minamoto Ryoen. Social Obligation and Human Feeling(Tokyo: Chuuo Koronsha, 1969), pp. 42f.

10 Macmurray, op. cit., p. 80.

11 Ibid., p. 164.

12 Kimura, op. cit., pp. 75f.

13 The implication of this becomes clearer when we consider that the Japanese language has more than ten words for the first person. ‘I’, whereas Western languages have only one. One Japanese term is chosen in relation to the one with whom ‘I’ am talking. We shall not show here how this eventually leads to conceiving relationality in some ways that differ from those of Martin Buber and John Macmurray.

14 Kimura, op. cit., p. 142. Cf. Mori Arimasa, Experience and Thought (Tokyo: Chikuma Shobo, 1970), p. 146. In this respect Kimura is close to Buber: see Martin Buber. 1 and Thou (New York: Scribner’s, 1970), p. 69: ‘… In the beginning is the relation.’

15 Hamaguchi, op. cit. Page references to this work are also given in the text.

16 Ibid., pp. 14ff. Elsewhere, he points out that Japanese culture presupposes that in the beginning is the situation (topos). while Western culture presupposes that in the beginning is the norm (nomos). See Japan, the Society of Contextualism (Tokyo: Toyo Keizai Shinposha, 1982), p. 197.

17 Cf. Hamaguchi, Japan, the Society of Contextualism, p. 127.

18 Tsunoda Ryusaku et al. (eds), Sources of Japanese Tradition (New York: Columbia University Press, 1958), p. 50. The translation is partly my own.

19 Cf. Muraoka Tsunetsugu, Problems in the History of Japanese Thought (Tokyo: Sobunsha, 1957), p. 31; idem. Outline of the History of Japanese Thought (Tokyo: Sobunsha, 1961), p. 190; Nakamura Hajime, ‘Basic features of the legal, political, and economic thought in Japan’, in C.A. Moore (ed.), The Japanese Mind (Honolulu: University of Hawall, 1967), p. 145.

20 Cf. Arakl Hiroyuki, Thinking Japan from the Japanese Language (Tokyo: Asahi Shimbunsha, 1980), pp. 72ff. Cf. also E.O. Relschauer, The Japanese Today (Cambridge. MA: Belknap, 1988), p. 136: ‘The key Japanese value is harmony, which they seek to achieve by a subtle process of mutual understanding, almost by intuition, rather than by a sharp analysis of conflicting views or by clear-cut decisions, whether made by one-man dictates or majority votes.’

21 Nakane Chie, The Human Relationship in a Vertical Society (Tokyo: Kodansha, 1970), pp. 162ff.

22 Hamaguchl, The Rediscovery of “Japaneseness”. pp. 95ff. Here, Hamaguchl draws on Steven Lukes, individualism (Oxford: Blackwell, 1973), pp. 43–78.

23 According to statistics compiled about twenty years ago, 71.7% of the Japanese think that human relationships themselves give meaning to life: see Hamaguchl, Japan, the Society of Contextualism, pp. 52. 153ff. In this respect, Martin Buber would have a high opinion of the Japanese view of human relations: see his I and Thou, pp. 112f.: ‘The purpose of relation is the relation itself—touching the You.’ John Macmurray discovers relation as an end in itself in the relation between mother and baby: see Persons in Relation, p. 63.

24 The Greek text used is that found in F.L. Cross (ed.), Athanasius De Incarnatione: an edition of the Greek text (London: SPCK, 1957). The English translation used is A. Robertson (ed.), A Select Library of Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church. Second Series, vol. 4 (Grand Rapids. MI: Eerdmans, 1980).

25 ‘The renewal of creation has been the work of the self-same Word that made it at the beginning’ (op. cit., 1).

26 Cf. T.F. Torrance, The Trinitarian Faith (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1989), p. 284.

27 Op. cit., 7, 8. According to Torrance, Athanasius has the habit of ‘combining several prepositions … as though none was sufficient of itself, to help him express the range and depth of the vicarious work of Christ “for us”, “for our sake”, “for our salvation”, “on our behalf”, “In our place”, “In our stead”, “for our need”, and so on’ (op. cit., p. 168), Cf. Torrance, Theology in Reconciliation (London: Chapman, 1975), p. 228; G. Dragas, ‘St Athanasius on Christ’s sacrifice’, in S.W. Sykes (ed.), Sacrifice and Redemption (Cambridge: CUP, 1991), pp. 92f.

But it is important to note that ‘there is no suggestion in the thought of Athanasius of the kind of “universalism” advocated by Origen or by Gregory of Nyssen’ (p. 182; cf. p. 284). See, too. A. Pettersen, Athanasius and the Human Body (Bristol: The Bristol Press, 1990), pp. 40f. In the words of D. Ritschl, salvation is ‘subjective acceptance’ of ‘the objective work of God in the Incarnation’, Athanasius Versuch einer Interpretation (Zurich: Evz-Verlag, 1964), p. 43. So Torrance holds that Origen and Gregory of Nyssen advocate a kind of ‘objectivism’ which diminishes the importance of this subjective dimension.

28 See Athanasius, op. cit., 1–9.

29 Ibid., 15.

30 C.H. Kraft. Christianity in Culture (New York: Orbis, 1984). p. 175.

31 In rendering this in English, we prefer ‘between’ to ‘among’, because ‘between’ is ‘still the only word available to express the relation of a thing to many surrounding things severally and individually, “among” expressing a relation to them collectively and vaguely’. So the 1989 edition of the OED. Christ between man and man relates humans ‘severally and individually’ rather than ‘collectively and vaguely’.

32 Respectively, Seisho Shinkaiyaku (Tokyo: Nihon Seisho Kankokai, 1970) and Seisho Shinkyodoyaku (Tokyo: Nohon Seisho Kyokai, 1988).

33 We use the edition by P. Gallay, Grégoire De Nazianze Discours 27–31 (Discours Theologiques) (Paris: Les Editions Du Cerf, 1978), and the English translation in E.R. Hardy (ed.), Christology of the Later Fathers(London: SCM, 1954).

34 Gregory Nazianzen, The Five Theological Orations, XXIX.16. (Subsequent references to this work are given in the text.) Cf. R.P.C. Hanson, The Search for the Christian Doctrine of God (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1988), p. 712.

35 Gregory, loc. cit. Cf. T.F. Torrance, The Trinitarian Faith op. cit., pp. 239f., 320ff.: idem, Trinitarian Perspectives (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1994). The use of schests, “relationship”, within Trinitarian leaching does not first appear in the works of Gregory. The Dialogue on the Trinity 1:25—a treatise often attributed to Athanasius but probably written by Didymus the Blind—spoke of such a relationship between the Father and the Son’: F.W. Norris, Faith Gives Fullness to Reasoning (Leiden: Brill, 1991), p. 151. See too J.D. Ziziouias, Being as Communion (New York: SI Viadimir’s Seminary Press, 1985), pp. 235f.

36 On account of the life-giving role of the Holy Spirit and the fact that on earth he played a main role in Mary’s conception (Lk. 1:35). It would be more difficult to dissociate the Holy Spirit’s role from the Son’s begetting. See L. Boff, Trinity and Society (Kent: Burns & Oates, 1988), p. 6: ‘The Son, sent by the Father, becomes flesh by virtue of the life-giving Spirit.’ Boff even adds ‘Spirituque’ to ‘Filloque’: ‘The Father “begets” the Son Spirituque, that is, in communion with the Holy Spirit’ (p. 147). And according to Thomas A. Small, the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father through the Son; the Son is eternally begotten of the Father through the Holy Spirit: see C.E. Gunton, The Promise of Trinitarian Theology (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1991), p. 169.

37 Cf. G. L. Prestige, God in Patristic Thought (London: SPCK, 1959), p. 140. Gregory does not seek to Illuminate further the relation between the Father and the Son. This relation is ‘the divine and ineffable generation’ (XXIX.4), ‘a thing so great and august in the eyes of all those who are not altogether groveiling and material in mind’ (XXIX.11). ‘The begeiling of God must be honoured by silence’ (XXIX.8).

38 For the atemporal nature of the Trinity, see XXIX.3. Cf. Norris, op. cit., p. 142. For the incorporeality of the Trinity, see Gregory, XXVIII.7ff.; cf. Norris, op. cit., p. 44. These considerations led Gregory to reject any ranking in or dissection of the triune persons (XXXI.12).

39 This important phrase is missing from Hardy, op. cit., p. 198.

40 In order to highlight this, Gregory states that ‘the proper name of … the unbegottenly proceeding or going forth is “the Holy Ghost” ’ (XXX.19).

41 See J.N.D. Kelly, Early Christian Doctrines (London: A. & C. Black, 1977), pp. 262, 265.

42 ‘No sooner do I conceive of the One than I am illuminated by the splendour of the Three; no sooner do I distinguish them than I am carried back to the One’ (XL. 41). As Gunton says of this: ‘The interesting point about Gregory … a dynamic dialectic between the oneness and the threeness of God is of such a kind that the two are both given equal weight in the processes of thought’ (op. cit., pp. 149f.).

43 Kimura, op. cit., p. 13.

44 This means that the betweenness of the Father and the Son cannot be identified with the Holy Spirit himself. This is one of the differences between Gregory’s doctrine of the triune God and that of Augustine. See V. Lossky, The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church (Cambridge: James & Co., 1957), p. 81.

45 Augustine, The Trinity (Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press). V.ix.10.

46 To use physical terminology, the three is the three ‘mesons’, derived from the Greek ‘mesos’. Yukawa Hideki (1907–81), a Japanese physicist, is the first Japanese Nobel prize laureate (1949), who is known for his theory of mesons. It seems to me that Japanese intellectual culture, which esteems betweenness highly, had something to do with his idea and way of thinking. Whether we speak of ‘betweenness’ or ‘meson’, the point is that these terms inherently entail relation to others. Things are ontologically situated between something and something else.

47 Interestingly, Gregory refers to God’s betweenness after the final judgment, too: after separating the saved from the lost. God will stand ‘In the midst of gods, that is, of the saved’ (XXX.4). The gods are the saved that have been deified. The triune God is the divine betweenness not only in terms of himself internally but also in relation to the saved whom he himself deified.

48 Politically schismatic, Novallan was orthodox in the doctrine of the Trinity. We use G.F. Diercks (ed.), Novatiant Opera (Tvrnhoit: Typographt Brepois Edilores Pontificit, 1972), and the translation of Novatian. The Trinity, by R.J. De Simone (Washington, DC: The Catholic University Press of America, 1972). References are given in the text.

49 This concord between Father and Son is ‘the association of love [carliatis societas] itself existing between them’ (XXVII.4). Gregory speaks of the triune God as ‘a monarchy … that is made of an equality of nature, and a union of mind ignomes sumpnoia] and an identity of motion, and a convergence of its elements to unity’ (XXIX.2). Here ‘gnome’ is equivalent to the Latin ‘sententia’, Judgement.

50 Cf. Novalian, The Trinity, p. 53 n. 14f.

51 According to Prestige, ‘It is Theophilus who first employs the actual language of Logos immanent and expressed’: op. cit., p. 126.

52 According to Novatlan: Owing to His origin to the Father. He could not cause any disunion [discordia] in the godhead by making two gods’ (XXXI.13).

53 Kelly, Early Christian Doctrines, p. 125.

54 E.J. Fortman, The Triune God (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1982), p. 121.

55 Cf. B. Studer, Trinity and Incarnation, ed. A. Louth, tr. M. Westhoff (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1993), p. 73.

Nozomu Miyahira
Dr Miyahira, who earned his doctorate on the doctrine of the Trinity, is currently Visiting Scholar at Green College, Oxford.