2016/12/26

新渡戸稲造が伝える、伊藤博文の朝鮮人観 - 布屋忠次郎日記

新渡戸稲造が伝える、伊藤博文の朝鮮人観 - 布屋忠次郎日記





新渡戸稲造が伝える、伊藤博文の朝鮮人観

2008-05-18 02:10:27 | 日本
伊藤博文公爵といえば、日帝による韓国蹂躙の一番の悪玉というイメージ(があるらしい)。
一方、新渡戸稲造博士といえば、日米間で「太平洋の架け橋」ならんと奔走した人格者というイメージ(があるらしい)。

ところが、新渡戸博士が伊藤公に「朝鮮の植民地化」を提案して却下された、という噂があります。

たとえば、渡部昇一が八木秀次との対談で次のように発言しています。
韓国統監府の初代統監に就いた伊藤博文は、朝鮮の植民地化を意図していなかった事実をどれほどの日本人、コリア人が知っているか。台湾経営に当たった植民地政策の専門家、新渡戸稲造が伊藤博文に植民地政策案を出したところ、「これは要らない。日本は朝鮮植民地経営のようなことをやる気はない」と突き返されたと新渡戸自身が書き残しています。
(渡部昇一、新田均、八木秀次共著「日本を貶める人々」p87より引用)

この渡部の発言は、前野徹も「亡国日本への怒りの直言」のP94でも引用しています。
ネット上でこの件について書いている人も、だいたいこの両書をもとにしているんじゃないかと思います。

となると次は、渡部はどこで「新渡戸自身が書き残している」のを読んだのかということですが、残念ながら前掲書には出典の記載がありません。
で、新渡戸稲造全集を調べることにしました。ボリュームがあるのと、市内の図書館には蔵書がないので県立図書館から取り寄せてもらわなきゃららない手間がかかるのとで、手を出したくないなとも(ちょっとだけ)思っていたのだけど、ネットではこれ以上調べるのが難しくて。

それらしき記述を見つけたのは、新渡戸稲造全集第5巻に所収の「偉人群像」という論文というかエッセイ。1931年に実業之日本社から出したもので、その中の「第廿七章 伊藤公」から引用します。
 当時伊藤公は朝鮮の統監であり、木内君は農相工の事務担当をしてをつた。伊藤公は世間でも知る通り「朝鮮は朝鮮人のため」といふ主義で、内地人の朝鮮に入り込むことを喜ばれなかつた。その反対に木内君は日本人をもつと移したい考へであつた。ゆゑにしばしば公に日本人移住の策を献策しても採用にならなかつた
 ところが内地においては桂さんが、しきりに内地人移住を企て、東拓会社を設計されてをり、かつこの議には、我輩も少しく参加したした関係もあるため、木内君がしきりに渡鮮を促したので、我輩は出かけて行つた。
 木内君の注意に「伊藤さんといふ人は、なかなか人のいふことを聞かぬ人で、僕が幾度この問題について献策したか知れんが、いつも頭を振らるゝので、少し君の力を借りたい、明日にも統監を訪問してくれ玉へ、その時は君一人で行く方がよかろう」

引用の補足をいくつか。
「木内君」というのは、農商務省商工局長の木内重四郎のことでしょう。のちに、朝鮮統監府で農商工部長官をつとめた人です。(さらにその後、勅撰の貴族院議員、官選の京都府知事。)
「桂さん」は、首相を3度つとめた桂太郎公爵のことだと思います。で、「東拓」というのは東洋拓殖株式会社ですね。東洋拓殖は、第二次桂内閣の1908年に東洋拓殖株式会社法を根拠として、大韓帝国政府と日韓民間資本の共同出資などにより設立されています。朝鮮半島に土地を買って日本人農民を移住させる、という目的だったようですが、移住が進まず、朝鮮人を小作人として雇用したらしいです。
上記引用で「東拓会社を設計」というから、新渡戸博士が統監府に伊藤公を訪ねたのは、東洋拓殖設立の1908年前後から、伊藤公がハルピンで暗殺される1909年までの間ということになりますね。などと推理遊びをしてないでそろそろ本題に戻ります。

上記の「偉人群像」からの引用に、「ゆゑにしばしば公に日本人移住の策を献策し」とありますが、主語はあいまいで、新渡戸博士自身と読めないこともありません。渡部はそう読んだのでしょうか。(ちなみに引用中「公に」は「おおやけに」ではなくて、「公爵に」のつまり伊藤博文公を指します。この時代の文書や記事では爵位を省略して書く場合があるのがややこしくて、「○○伯爵」を略して「伯」というのはまだいいのだけど、「○○子爵」を略して「○○子」とか、「○○男爵」を略して「○○男」というのは、最初は何かと思いました。おっと、また脱線。)
でも、そのあと木内の発言として「僕が幾度この問題について献策したか知れん」とありますし、となると「献策したが却下された」のは新渡戸博士ではなくて木内重四郎ですよね。東洋拓殖の計画に参加していた新渡戸博士は、木内の朝鮮植民地化策に賛成はしていても、みずから伊藤公に献策したと読むことはできないと思います。

渡部が読み間違えたのでしょうか。
それとも、渡部も「新渡戸自身がこう書いている」と誰かから聞いた伝聞情報だったのか、あるいは何かの孫引きだったのか。
それとも、まだ私が見つけていないだけで、新渡戸自身がそう書いているものがまだどこかにあるのでしょうか。でもこれ以上調べるのはしんどいなぁ。何しろ新渡戸稲造全集は、会社員がヒマを見つけて調べるには量がアレだし。まして新渡戸博士が英文で書いたものの中にあるとしたら、英語アレルギーの私には探せないし。

ということで、私の調査不足の可能性もあるというのに勝手ですが、ここでは『新渡戸稲造が伊藤博文に植民地政策案を出したところ、「これは要らない。日本は朝鮮植民地経営のようなことをやる気はない」と突き返されたと新渡戸自身が書き残してい』るという事実はない(少なくとも確認できない)と結論させてください。(って、誰に許可を求めてるのだろう)

それはそれとして、「偉人群像」を読んだこと自体が私にとって収穫でした。
たとえば、伊藤公が植民地化に反対だったという話は聞いていたけれど、実際に当時を知る新渡戸博士の証言でそれを確認できたこと
つまり、冒頭に引用した渡部の発言中で「伊藤博文は、朝鮮の植民地化を意図していなかった事実」というところについて、当時の日本を代表する国際人であり、日本国の紙幣(5千円札)の肖像にも選ばれ、現代でも教育者としての評価が高く、ついでにキリスト教徒である新渡戸稲造が、『伊藤公は「朝鮮は朝鮮人のため」という主義であった』ということ、しかもそれが当時の日本(内地)では周知のことだったということを、証言しているということです。

さらに、上記引用の続きを紹介しましょう。新渡戸博士の「朝鮮人だけでこの国を開くことが、果して出来ませうか」との問いに対して、伊藤公は次のように答えているのです。
「君朝鮮人はえらいよ、この国の歴史を見ても、その進歩したことは日本より遥以上であつた時代もある。この民族にしてこれしきの国を自ら経営出来ない理由はない。才能においては決してお互に劣ることはないのだ。然るに今日の有様になつたのは、人民が悪いのぢやなくて、政治が悪かつたのだ。国さへ治まれば、人民は量に於ても質に於ても不足はない」

なんか、伊藤博文が「日本の韓国植民地化の親玉」だなんて言ってるのは誰ですか、と小一時間問い詰めたくなります。

ここでちょっと歴史を整理しておきます。
1905年11月、「第二次日韓協約」によって韓国が日本の保護国となる。
1906年2月、韓国統監府が設置され、伊藤公が初代統監として赴任する。
1908年12月、前述の東洋拓殖会社が設立される。
1909年10月、ハルピン駅頭で伊藤公が暗殺される。(ちなみに品川区にある墓所を私が訪ねたときの写真をこちらで公開しています)。
1910年8月、「韓国併合に関する条約」により日韓併合が成立する。同月、朝鮮総督府が設置される。


新渡戸の証言によれば、伊藤公は朝鮮人に対してこの上ない敬意を持っていて、しかも「植民地化すべし」との動きからの防波堤となっていたわけです。
それを安重根が暗殺した結果、その翌年に日韓併合となったわけです。日韓併合を仮に植民地化と呼ぶなら、「安重根が伊藤博文を暗殺したことにより、韓国の植民地化が実現した。安重根は『植民地化に邪魔な伊藤公』を取り除いた、植民地化の功労者だ」ということになるわけですね。
修学旅行などで韓国に行く日本の生徒は、以上の歴史をふまえた上で、事前学習でこの『新渡戸稲造著「偉人群像」第廿七章「伊藤公」』を必読としてほしいです。正直に言うと私自身、このBLOGを書くのにいろいろ調べていて「俺、けっこう勘違いしてたな」ということが少なくありませんでした。
(ちなみに「仮に植民地化と呼ぶなら」というのは、私は日韓併合を「日本による韓国の植民地化」とは考えていないからです。もう少し正確に言うと、キリスト教徒が植民地でやったことに比べたら、日本が韓国や台湾でやったことは恥ずかしくて植民地だなどと自慢できるものではありません。
他の日本人はともかく、日本人キリスト教徒が「日本が韓国を植民地化した」というのは、「歴史上、キリスト教徒が植民地でどんな残虐非道なことをしたか」を「日本がやった程度のこと」にまで印象薄くしようとしているようにしか思えません。)

私は、安重根だけでなくすべての「テロにより自分の信条を表現する者」の手法に反対しますが、安重根の愛国心を否定することはできません。民族のために行動し、母からの「控訴すれば命乞いになる」という手紙によって粛々と死刑判決に服した彼は、少なくとも「この世で大切なのは自分の命だけ」としか言わないし教えない連中よりはるかに、人間として上等だったと思います。
結果的に安重根は、祖国を日本の植民地にしてしまった(少なくともその最後の引き金を引いた)わけですが、それは結果論でしょう。ただ、安重根が生まれてくるのが遅すぎたことを惜しみます。せめて日露戦争前、あるいは日清戦争前に、彼の祖国を保護国にした者に向かってではなく、他国に保護されなければならないような祖国にした者に向かって行動していれば。それが成功していれば

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A JAPANESE VIEW OF QUAKERISM Nitobe Inazo 1926

A JAPANESE VIEW OF QUAKERISM

APPENDIX D   LECTURES ON JAPAN (1937)


Address given at the University of Geneva on December 14th, 1926, prior to Us departure from Geneva.

My subject is "What is Quakerism? " To begin with the defmition of my subject, " Quakerism" is a term embodying those religious beliefs, moral precepts, social practices, which are either peculiar to, or particu­larly inculcated by, the community of Christians who came into existence in England in the middle of the 17th century under the name of the Society of Friends, and who were mockingly called Quakers, i.e., people who quake and tremble.
II
Quakerism is so peculiarly English, at least in its beginning, that I cannot conceive of it being started else­where. It is true that similar religious bodies were formed in other countries such as the Mennonites in Friesland, and later on the Doukhobors in Russia. None the less it may be said that Quakerism was a product of the religious turmoil of the 17th century England seek­ing for personal conviction in matters of religion and politics, and that its vitality is also due to the individualistic frame of the English mind. Its founder, George Fox, did not think of founding a new sect; but when as a young man he came to realize the power of the Spirit, as he called it, within himself, he shared it with those who were in search of a religious conviction, who were not at all satisfied with the formalistic teaching of the priesthood. I am inclined to think that it was partly the English character of Quakerism that made it non-prose­lytizing and circumscribed its activities within the British Islands and within the Anglo-Saxon stock in America and Australia. It is also the practical genius of the English race that kept up the vitality of Quakerism despite many obstacles and impediments, for other mystic bodies have either been suppressed by authorities or have gradually dispersed; and what remains is but a faint image of what they once were. Quakerism, too, has been losing its ground more or less, its followers diminish­ing in number; but the remnant came to the fore during the Great War on account of their objection to war and of their activities in relief work. At present they num­ber about 20,000 in Great Britain, ioo,000 .in America, about 300 in Japan and perhaps iso in Germany where they were quite a large body once, but where they were suppressed entirely under the power of militarism. As to France, until about 30 years ago there was a small community near Nimes, but at present I do not think there are many left.
III
When Quakerism is such an English institution why should a foreigner, so foreign as a Japanese, take upon himself to explain " What is Quakerism" to a Swiss audience, especially to the spiritual descendants of Calvin, and under the presidency of a professor of theology of the University of Geneva ! As, however, the Chairman has himself explained, Geneva is an inter­national city and is becoming more and more so, and its citizens will surely take interest in hearing something of Quakerism, which has always stood for international good-will and co-operation. As to myself, an Asiatic and Japanese, I have found many points in common between Quakerism and teachings long current in the Far East. I shall explain, and you will understand, I hope, even without my going into detail, why Quakerism is so attractive to Eastern minds. When I speak of the East, I have naturally the Far East in my mind; but even in the so-called Levant, we meet with religious bodies —Sufism, Bahaism, etc.—which entertain principles very analogous to Quakerism.
IV
The starting point of Quaker teaching is the belief in the existence of the Inner Light, the Light that lightens everyone coming into the world. It is given other names, such as the Seed, the Voice, the Christ, and so on. Whatever the name, it means the presence of a Power not our own, the indwelling of a Personality other than human, in each one of us. Such a doctrine is not at all new. It is as old as the oldest form of mysticism. George Fox knew perfectly well that it was not his own discovery or invention. It is an idea that comes to every mystic soul in any clime. Perhaps it has developed more in the East. SOcrates' daemon must have meant some­thing very much like it. Buddhism is full of references to it. The famous word "Nirvana" which is so often translated "Annihilation" is but a negative way of naming it. Taoism starts and ends with it. The Zen sect of Buddhism makes it its aim to comprehend it. Wang Yang Ming,  a comparatively new Chinese philo­sopher of the i5th Century, has made it the basis of his moral philosophy.
Now you see the reason why I was particularly drawn to Quakerism. When I began in my boyhood to hear Christian sermons and read Christian books, including the Bible, I confess that they were not at all convincing to me. Only in Quakerism could I reconcile Christianity with Oriental thought.
V
Let it be far from me to turn Quakerism into Oriental mysticism. Quakerism stays within the family of Christianity. It professes to rest its structure on the person of Jesus Christ, whom it identifies with the Inner
Light. It does not deny his incarnation and historicity,
but it accepts his continued work of grace in each suc‑
ceeding generation. Not only that, it believes his grace
was retroactive, so that it was he who enlightened all
the seers of old. He still dwells within us—in the least
as well as in the greatest, even in the savage and the un‑
lettered. Unlike Orientals, George Fox, a genuine Eng‑
lishman, and his followers, conceived of a personal Christ
as the Light, or, of Light as a person; but, by making
this person eternal and existent before the world was,
Quakerism came to much the same conclusion as the old
mystics. Laotze, 600 years before Christ, spoke of the
same thrme, but in a reverse manner, namely, of a person
in an impersonal way. Allow me to quote that famous
14th chapter of Tao Tel King. He writes: "You
look at it and do not see, and you call it colorless.
You listen to it and cannot hear it and you call it sound‑
less. You stretch your hand and you cannot grasp it and
you call it bodyless. These three surpass your power of
definition and must be all put together as one." Now
the words he used - " colorless," " soundless," and
"bodyless," are in the original Chinese pronounced
ji-hi-wel. Had Laotze ever heard of Jahveh, of Jehovah?
Perhaps he had. It is not impossible.       there was a
communication between China and Judea in those olden times. If he had, may we not say that he identified Christ with the Tao, the Way, which is the subject of his whole philosophy—the 'Tay, which the Christians call their Master and God?
I shall not detain you longer on this particular theme. I have cited only one instance out of hundreds to show the affinities between the Western and the Eastern thought of centuries ago, and the idea developed by the untutored English cobbler of the 17th century.
VI
Were these mystics misguided, building their houses on the sands of fantasy and clothing themselves in gar­ments woven of cobwebs out of their fevered brows ?‑
There seems to be a regular order in mental evolu­tion. An author with whom I am not always in, sym­pathy has made the distinction clear between the different stages in the development of consciousness. Dr. Bucke, a Canadian alienist, in explaining the four gradations in the development of consciousness, says : "These four stages are, first, the perceptual mind—the mind made up of percepts or sense impressions ; second, the mind made up of these and recepts-_the so-called receptual mind, or, in other words, the mind of simple consciousness; third, we have the mind made up of percepts, recepts and concepts, called, sometimes, the conceptual mind or other­wise the self-conscious mind—the  mind of self-conscious­ness ; and fourth, and last, we have the intuitional mindthe mind whose highest element is not a recept or a concept, but an intuition. This is the mind in which sensation, simple consciousness and self-consciousness are supplemented and crowned with cosmic consciousness."
Modern psychologists do not seem to deny that there can be such a gradual development in consciousness: Monsieur Bergson's distinction between intelligence and intuition is well known. Dumb creatures, and perhaps plants also, possess a certain degree of consciousness, but man alone can detach himself from himself and reflect upon his own consciousness. This is a state of develop­ment not very difficult for us to attain, in fact every normal human being attains it. But is not there a stage still higher where we can merge ourselves in the great universe and feel the very pulses of the all-pervading life—a stage of consciousness where the microcosm becomes one with the macrocosmos, where we can feel at once that we are one with the great Spirit that lives and moves through the universe?
Eastern philosophy loves to contemplate on the identity of individual life with the life of the Whole. Known under different names—there is, for instance, "Libera­tion," "Brahmithc Splendour," or "Nirvana "—this cosmic consciousness is the experience of many minds among all the races of the world. It is an experience whereby man is convinced beyond a shadow of doubt that he is a Spirit and that his Spirit is in close communion with the Spirit of the Universe. He finds himself at the center of the world; he shares all its joys and sorrows. He blows with every flower and weeps with every ephemeral insect. All mankind live in him and he in them.
He feels like a giant. Like a lover whom Emerson paints, he is twice the man and walks with arms akimbo. Like Dante, another lover, he talks to the Absolute Being in the language addressed to Beatrice. Curiously enough, the Cosmic sense, as described by those who attain it, is very much the same everywhere—whether it be by a Buddhist priest, a Shinto votary, a Mohammedan saint, a French mathematician, an American farmer, or a Jewish philosopher. Nothing confirms the identity of the human race better than this spiritual expansion. But I can speak only as a close observer of those who attain this high and lofty sense, and not as one who has himself attained it.
To make a little clearer what I mean by Cosmic Con­sciousness and how this is reached, let me cite the example of Blaise Pascal. Fortunately he left on record what we may call his religious conversion, and what we may call attainment of the Cosmic Sense. His biographer, no less a man than Condorcet, has made public the so-called Mystic Amulet of Pascal, I a parchment document which was found on his person at his death and in which he described an experience he had in the year 1654, when he was 31 years old.
The year of grace 1654
Monday, 23 November, day of St. Clement, Pope and Martyr,
Pascal's Mystic Amulet (so-called by Condorcet), original parchment disappeared. Copy on paper in Pascal's own writing preserved in the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris.
From about half-past ten in the evening until about half-past twelve, midnight,
FIRE
God of Abraham, God of Isaac, God of Jabob,
not of the philosophers nor of the Wise.
Assurance, joy, assurance, feeling, joy, peace.
God of Jesus Christ,
My God and thy God.
Forgotten of the world and of all except God.
He is only found in the ways taught
in the Gospel. The sublimity of the human soul.
Just Father, the world has not known thee
but I have known thee.
Joy, joy, joy, tears of joy,
I do not separate myself from thee
They left me behind, me 'a fountain of living water.
My God, do not leave me.
Let me not be separated from thee eternally.
This is eternal life that they should know thee
the only true God and him whom thou has sent.
Jesus Christ
Jesus Christ

I have separated myself from him;
I have fled, renounced, crucified him.
Let me not be forever separated from him.
One is saved only by the teaching of the Gospel.
Reconciliation total and sweet.
Total submission to Jesus Christ and to my Director.
Continual joy for the days of my life on earth.
I shall not forget what you have taught me, Amen."
It is strange to see with what suddenness and exuberance these splendours come. Jacob Boehme, the Teutonic theosopher, who died the year that Fox was born (1624) and who was also a shoemaker, had an illumination all of a sudden in his humble workshop when he was 24 years of age. It seems that the experience of what we have termed cosmic sense happens at an age very much later than the so-called Christian conversion, which William James and other psychologists find most common at the period of adolescence. Whether the spiritual illumination is accomplished through visible fire as in the case of Moses and Pascal, or through an audible voice as in the case of Socrates or Jeanne d'Arc, or as a bright light as in the case of St. Paul and Mahommed, the result seems to be very much the same. It means an immense increase of energy, bodily and spiritual, peace of mind, joy of heart, readiness to depart this life, and love for all mankind.
The central doctrine of Quakerism is the belief in this Cosmic sense which they call the Timer Light, and all the doctrines and precepts of Quakerism are only corollaries drawn from this premise. Allow me to call your atten­tion, before I proceed further, to what I consider a very important point—namely, wherein Christianity differs from other faiths in respect to this power.
VII
Cosmic consciousness is the illumination of the mind; it is the acquisition of a new mental power; it is the puri­fication of the heart, the elevation of the earthly man to the higher sphere of existence. It is the baptism of the Spirit. The power to effect these changes has been pre­dicated of Christ. If, however, among Christians there be such as would refuse to be classed with the heathen who have caught this power—or if among the non-Christians there be such as would not gladly acknowledge as friends the Christians who have this vision—it only shows that neither of them has yet attained to the truth for whosoever gets it harbors no pride in his heart and entertains no enmity with other children of the light.
I ask again Is there, then, no superiority whatever in the so-called revealed religion, by which is meant, I presume, the revelation of Godhead in the person and life of Jesus Christ? I believe Christianity has this ad-vantage—not to call it a point of superiority—that it provides weak, ordinary human mortals with a definite and concrete object upon which to focus their mind, thus facilitating their discovery of the Perfect Man. Acquaint­ance with Him makes us one with Him—at-one-ment. To follow Him is to be redeemed from a lower plane of life. To contemplate Him is to see God Himself and be saved.
We read Laotze; we read Buddhist saints; we study Oriental mystics—we are brought very near to the idea of redemption, atonement, salvation. We shall perhaps feel the same assurance and bliss, the same power and the same love for our fellow men; but we feel that we have not reached our finality. Like Goethe, we still yearn for "more light." Yes, we see light, but not the one thing essential—namely, a perfect living Personality. It is not impossible that many an Oriental has caught a more abundant quantity of light than many a Christian saint, but in that light by which they saw a thousand and one objects, they could perceive only something brilliant, but amorphous, which they did not identify as the King of Kings. They could see rocks and pebbles of all sizes and shapes; but they knew not the Cornerstone. They saw herbs of varied hues and qualities, but the Vine escaped their scrutiny.
VIII
The immediate consequence of the doctrine of the Inner Light is the peculiar form of worship in vogue among the Quakers—namely, the silent waiting for inspiration. Believing that God is immanent in all, they come together and prepare a milieu for His manifestation. When anybody—it does not matter who, maybe a man, woman or child—feels stirred in his heart he or she gives testimony in a sermon, song or prayer. An English writer, Mr. Waley, in a little book in which he compared the Quakers with the Zen Sect of Japan has said that the "Quakers seek communion with the Divine Spark in corporate meditation and deliberately exploit the mysteri­ous potencies of crowd-psychology." This is in a way misleading, since it is not only in meetings, silent or other­wise, that Quakers stress the doctrine of Immanence.
Even their business meetings are conducted in an atmosphere of tranquillity. Should discussion become heated it is customary for some member to propose waiting upon the Lord for a few minutes, and when the excitement subsides they take up the business of the day again. I must add here that in the meetings decision is taken not by simple vote, i.e., by merely counting heads or hands, but it is taken by the weight of opinion. This means that the utterance of one man of high character and good judgment counts more than the opinions of ten men of lighter weight. Such a device may look very much like "respect of persons" and undemocratic and altogether against the fundamental principle of Equality espoused by Friends, but whoever knows that a mere majority is a mechanical contrivance, will admit that decision by weight is the more judicious procedure.
Ix
Another prominent feature in the religious profession of Friends is their disuse of the sacraments generally observed in the Christian Church. Holding divine wor­ship to consist in spiritual communion, and in nothing else, they deny the necessity of Water Baptism and of the Lord's Supper. They maintain that true baptism must be of the Spirit and not in water. They even go further. They accept the Bible as God-inspired, but will not credit it as the sole revelation of divine will. They say that it is not the Word of God, and in order to understand and profit by it, spiritual enlightenment must precede its perusal. It may be remembered that the Bible had been translated into English only eleven years before George Fox was born, and in his days it was evidently very much studied and almost superstitious virtues were ascribed to it. No wonder, therefore, that the Quakers, if for no other reason, should have been thought heretics and unbelievers.
Another consequence follows from the Quaker esti­mate of the Bible. They say that the knowledge of this book does not by itself qualify a man to preach the truth, for the truth comes direct from the Spirit. Theological study is not, therefore, valued by them as much as in other churches.
From this fact follows another, namely the usage among them of not having regularly educated clergy. If anybody distinguishes himself, be he educated or not, by preaching in a manner which appeals as sound and helpful, he is recognized as acceptable to the meeting, and inasmuch as his gift of preaching is free, he must not receive any material compensation.
X
The Inner Light being conceived as universal, it is given to all men irrespective of sex, race, or education. This being so, there should be no discrimination against women in any way. Hence among Quakers women have always been treated as equals of men. There are women preachers and women officials among them. In the meeting women have always exercised equal rights with men in every way. As to the equality of races, the Friends put their doctrine in practice in dealing with American Indians and negroes. When in the colonial days of America, Europeans vied with each other in hunting down the poor natives and taking their land, William Penn, an Englishman, surprised the natives by dealing fairly and squarely with them, signing a treaty with them as equal brethren and paying an adequate price for their lands. You remember Voltaire's remark that this was the only treaty in history which was concluded without an oath and which was never broken.
The Quaker attitude to the negroes in America is too well-known to be recited. So pronounced were the Quakers in their denunciation of slavery that they were often placed in very dangerous positions during and before the American civil war. Their protest finds a clarion voice in the lines of Whittier and their actual participation in the work of emancipation is immortalized by the pen of Mrs. Stowe in the story of" Uncle Tom's Cabin."

Thus were put into practice the doctrine of Equality and of Brotherhood long before these were adopted as political maxims. What about Liberty? Mr. Gooch, one of the most prominent living publicists of England, devotes several pages of his book on the Political Thought in England to the influence of Quakerism on the develop­ment of civil liberty. It is evident that coercion of any kind is incompatible with the belief in the Inner Light.
XI
The doctrine of equality, when applied in the daily conduct of life, has had some curious effects. At the time when social usage demanded different forms of expression in addressing different classes in society, such discrimination weighed heavily on the conscience of the Quaker and as a protest he called everybody "thou" and "thee." When the custom has changed and" you" is employed for all classes alike, of course the protest has lost its ground.
Similarly the custom known as hat-honor was intro­duced to England when Charles II returned from the continent. He brought the polished manners of the French Court and that involved punctilious formalities about uncovering one's head in the presence of the great. The Quakers insisted that all men are equal and they would not bare their heads before one class in preference to another. It looked as if they had insisted upon being rude to everybody ! We read of George Fox being summoned to the presence of the Lord Protector Crom­well and there he kept his hat on while talking with Cromwell for along time. I was told also that when John Bright was a member of Gladstone's government, he had often to appear before Queen Victoria: but he always kept on his hat. But as he did not resist the exercise of force majeure, a court official was placed near the door to take off his hat as he entered the presence. of Her Majesty, in that way sparing his conscience and preserving the etiquette of the Court.
The use of the plain language and the scruple about hat-honor are not strictly religious tenets, and the Quakers call them testimonies, i.e., usages which the members of the Society should observe as practical demonstrations of their religious profession. Of these testimonies there are some more, such as the objection to take oaths, to swear, under any circumstances (not even in the Court of Justice), and the avoidance of personal ornaments in clothing. Their refusal to swear is founded on the Biblical teaching. Their plain clothing was a testimony against wearing the garish luxurious dress introduced from France at the time of the Restoration. George Fox had to travel extensively on religious missions. Being a shoemaker he had sewn for himself a pair of leather breeches and also a leather coat, anticipating no doubt the latest fashion of automobile drivers ! There are still many conscientious Friends who will not carry a gold watch or a diamond ring. Formerly this sartorial scruple went so far as to regard all bright colors with suspicion, if not with abomination. It is said of an old Quakeress that when the wind blew a red maple leaf into her presence, she carefully turned it upside down. When the social custom has so changed that the man's broad-brimmed hat or the woman's bonnet has become rare and unobtain­able without paying a high price, they in turn become articles of luxury; and hence they have practically gone out of use among Friends.
It is due to their idea of the equality and brotherhood of man that the Quakers devoted their attention to the spread of general education, especially among those who were denied educational facilities. That is the reason why in the history of Poor Schools and of Adult education there are so many Friendly names, as no doubt Professor Bovet here will testify.
XII
The same principle that encouraged education, when applied in dealing with the unfortunate, namely those less gifted mentally, morally or economically, has given rise to new methods in the treatment of the insane, that is to say, the mentally deficient, the criminal—the morally deficient, and the indigent—the economically weak. it is a well-known chapter in the history of alienism that the Friends first started the system of handling the insane with kindness and as human beings. With regard to the attitude towards criminals, the work of Elizabeth Fry, at least in England, broke the record in prison ad­ministration. Lastly, about the poor ; as it is often said that there are no poor among Quakers I must explain how far the statement is justified.
The apparent absence of poverty among the Quakers is due, I think, to three causes :—(i) Owing to the neces­sity felt during the period of persecution, there is a strong esprit de corps in the Society of Friends, with the result that there has developed a good system of mutual assistance. The Society has a special Committee charged with the duty of looking into the condition of its suffering mem­bers, and when the suffering is due to poverty, relief is provided without any intimation as to the giver or the recipient ; so to all appearances, therefore, there is no suffering from poverty.
Secondly, as a rule, the members of the Society are constantly urged to fairness in all dealings with their fellow-men. In trade, honesty has proved to be the best policy. Mr. Bertrand Russell, the well-known writer and philosopher, in his little book, Icarus, speaks of the adoption of the one-price principle by the early Quakers. He says "They adopted this practice because they held it to be a lie to ask more than they would take. But the convenience to customers was so great that everybody came to their shops, and they grew rich." Mr. Russell adds :-" The same policy might have been adopted from shrewdness, but in fact no one was sufficiently shrewd."
Perhaps the third reason ,is the most important, but it is the least thought of. As has been said before, the Society requires of its members the utmost frugality in the manner of living. The typical house of a Quaker is comparatively bare—comfortably and simply furnished, not cumbered with ornaments or loaded with decorations. Luxury is held in horror in any form. Vanity costs more than hunger or cold, as a wise man has said. When we think that the most expensive items in living are the un­necessary things, we can see at once that whosoever has sufficient strength of mind to defy the demands of a showy life can keep povthy at a distance.
Being thus economically competent, the Friends have perhaps been more generous with their means and have thereby given an impression of being a philanthropic body; but charity is not the object of their organization. Money must be viewed as a by-product.
Though the care of the poor is but 'a practical con­sequence of the fundamental conception of man's relation to God,, it certainly forms a vital problem in social life, so much so that an apostle defined religion as visiting the fatherless and widows in their affliction and keeping one­self unspotted from the world. That Friends have not forgotten the traditions of their forbears, is amply shown during the war, as our Chairman' has made allusion.

XIII‑
I have one more subject to present before you and I shall be done. 'I refer to 'tha1l-iinportant and all-embrac­ing question of World Peace, which it has been the task of the Society of Friends from its very beginning to advocate and strive after. They have fought for it as few others have fought, they suffered for their conscience Many have sacrificed their bravest sons and daughters, not to count their worldly possessions, at the altar -of peace.
Prof. Eugene Ch6isy, ,Doyen of the Faculty of Theology in the Uni­versity of Geneva.'
In England and America, many young Quakers were imprisoned as conscientious objectors and more of them risked their lives in bringing succor to friends and foes,' while the fighting was going on. A recent book by A Ruth Fry, A Quaker Adventure, modestly and graphically written, shows what -Peace can do in the midst of war. While the heat of nationalism was high, under the regime of,, War psychology, they were subjected to abuse and scorn, but history, I hope, will one day do more justice to their achievements.
When the captains depart and the turmoil' is over the pacific mission of Friends will assume' a new form. If in war they risked their all, should they do less in peace? Spinoza very wisely remarked that the absence of war does not necessarily spell peace.
XIV
Friends as a body have had the immense satisfaction of seeing generally accepted some of the ideas which they were the first to propose and promulgate. The equality of woman, the abolition of slavery, the human treatment of the insane and the criminal, freedom of speech, liberty of conscience, the general spread of education among the poor, the spiritual interpretation of the Bible—all these are assets to their credit. But what are these achievements compared with what still remains to he done--a handful of sand on the vast shore of human sorrow and suffering.

I have thus far dwelt upon some of the peculiarities of the Quakers, and tried to explain the ground for them. I hope I have not overdrawn their virtues. In speaking of the religious body with which I have identified myself for the last forty years, I have been constantly reminded of a story of an Arabian saint, who, when a lad, was ordered one evening by his father to study the Koran with his brother. Seeing the brother fallen asleep the little boy said: "Father, look at him sleeping while I have my eyes fixed on the Holy Scripture." Upon hearing this the good father admonished him gently, saying, "My boy, I wish you were asleep too rather than that you should indulge in spiritual prides"

2016/12/19

(5) Yipyo Hong - 71년 전 일본의 세월호를 만나고 통곡하다! 어제 40대 여성 교우의 아버님 장례식에...

(5) Yipyo Hong - 71년 전 일본의 세월호를 만나고 통곡하다! 어제 40대 여성 교우의 아버님 장례식에...



71년 전 일본의 세월호를 만나고 통곡하다!
어제 40대 여성 교우의 아버님 장례식에 다녀오는 길, 이상하게 나의 발길을 이끄는 신사가 하나 있어 차를 세우고 들어갔다. 효고현 북부 시골 토요오카(豊岡) 이즈시쵸(出石町)의 이치노미야신사(一宮神社)... 1,000년 가까이 된 느티나무들과 오랜 삼나무 숲이 그곳이 오랜 세월 지역의 종교적 공간이었음을 묵묵히 증언한다.
음습한 뒷길을 따라 올라가니 빽빽한 삼나무 숲 앞에 청일, 러일, 중일전쟁 등에 나가 목숨을 잃은 지역 젊은이들의 혼을 기리는 ‘충혼탑’(忠魂塔) 세워져 있어, 흔한 일본 신사의 국수주의 선양 공간이라 생각했다. 그런데 그 오른 쪽에 서 있는 ‘대효고개척단 순난자의 비’(大兵庫開拓団 殉難者之碑弾)라는 비석이 호기심을 자극해 뒤로 돌아가 보았다. 그리고 비문을 읽고 아연(啞然)하여 통곡하고야 말았다.
“1944년 3월, 대효고 개척단원 476명 만주(국) 빈강성 난서현 북안촌, 쌍합 촌락 두 곳 입식(入植, 식민지 이주 시킴). 1945년 8월 17일 345명 입수자결(入水自決)하다.“
(昭和十九年三月大兵庫開拓団員四七六名満州浜江省蘭西縣北安村, 双合屯二入植シ昭和二十年八月十七日三四五名入水自決ス)
대동아공영권(大東亞共榮圈) 건설 구호로 국민들을 속이며 세뇌하던 일본 정부는, 전쟁 막바지까지도 전쟁 식량의 조달을 위해 자국의 농민들을 무리하게 만몽(만주몽골) 지역으로 강제 이주시켜 농업에 종사케 했다. 그리고 선량한 농민들로 하여금 본토 농민들을 노예로 삼게 하고 착취하도록 했다. 즉 가해자가 되도록 강요함으로써 그들은 가해자로 살아야만 하는 피해자가 되었다.
문제는 일본이 전쟁에서 지자, 그들 농민과 가족(노인, 여성, 아동)들은 집단 자결을 강요받았다. 정부 정책과 명령을 믿고 그대로 순종하여 1944년에 만주로 떠난 토요오카의 농민들은, 다음 해(1945) 패전 소식을 듣고, 어른아이 할 것이 없이 몸을 줄에 묶고 돌을 메달아 집단으로 물에 빠져 죽었다. 소련군의 포로로 비참하게 죽느니 자결을 선택하도록 종용한 국가의 무책임한 폭력이다.
내가 통곡한 이유는 만주로 떠난 토요오카 농민 가족의 숫자가 세월호 탑승객고 똑같은 476명이었던 것이다. 그리고 희생자 숫자도 세월호 306명(사망실종)을 조금 웃도는 345명이었다. 그리고 모두가 물속으로 빠지는 집단 자결을 강요받았다.
2014년의 세월호 참사는 저 무책임한 일본 정부의 ‘대효고만주개척단’의 죽음과 본질상 다르지 않다.
1944년 476명 만주행, 익년 345명 집단 익사 자살...
2014년 476명 제주행, 익일 306명 집단 익사 학살...
지난 2016년 8월 14일, 일본 NHK는 【마을 사람들(村人)은 만주로 보내졌다 - ‘국책’ 71년째의 진실】(村人は満州へ送られた~“国策”71年目の真実)이라는 다큐멘터리를 방송했다. 일본 농민들의 만주몽골 지역 이주정책은 무려 500만명을 목표로 했었고, 국내 빈곤층을 해외로 내보내어 국내 경제의 파이를 확대함과 동시에, 식민지 통제 관리 요원확대를 통해 효과적인 수탈과 전쟁동원을 획책하기 위함이었다. 최근 전북 지역 새누리 의원 정운천이란 자가 젊은이들 10만 명 쯤 캄보디아나 아프리카 보내면 좋겠다는 발상의 뿌리이기도 하다.
목표는 500만명이었지만, 패전 때까지 보내진 일본인 개척민의 수는 27만 명 이상이었고, 전황이 불리해져 위험이 극대화된 1943년 이후에도 6만 명 이상이 바다를 건너 한반도를 거쳐 만주로 향했다.
이 다큐멘터리에는 3만 5천 명이라는 가장 많은 지역민을 사지(死地)로 내몬 나가노현의 비극적 일화를 소개한다. 전쟁 말기에 만주에 건너간 95명의 마을 사람들이 결국 집단 자결로 내 몰렸다는 것을 알게 된 촌장의 일기가 그것이다. 탁무성(拓務省)과 농림성 등 중앙정부와 각 도도부현(지방정부)이 교묘하게 마을 촌장들을 유도하여 만주 개척민 인원수를 강제 할당하였고, 그 확보 인원만큼 지역 보조금를 주는 등, 사탕과 채찍을 동원해 이주를 획책했던 경위가 일기에 자세히 기록돼 있다.
오직 전쟁과 부국강병의 광기에 빠져 있던 국가의 폭력 하에서, 국민의 생명과 안전은 뒷전이었다. 476명이 타고 있던 세월호처럼 말이다. 그리고 저 일본인 개척단의 최종 배후 조정자들은 만주의 관공군 군벌 장교들이었다. 박근혜의 아비 박정희는 바로 그들 ‘관동군’의 장교였다. 일본군 위안부, 강제 징병징용, 그 모두가 그들이 주도한 야만적 군국주의의 죄악이다. 지금도 원자력발전소의 위기와 불안고조, 사드 배치 등의 무기의 과잉 수입과 전쟁 공포 조장 등의 문제는 이들 군국 좀비들이 일소되지 않은 까닭이다.
다큐멘터리에는 나가노현 남부, 시모이나군(下伊那郡)의 토요오카무라(豊丘村)가 나온다. 공교롭게도 내가 어제 방문한 효고현의 ‘토요오카’와 발음이 같다. 2,900명이 살던 궁핍하고 조그만 이 마을에서는 전쟁 말기에 27세대 95명의 마을 사람이 만주에 보내졌다. 하지만 그 후 남자 농민들은 모두 군에 소집되었고, 일본이 항복한 다음 날, 현지인들로부터 습격을 받으며 폭력과 강간에 노출된 여성과 아이들 73명은 산속으로 도주하던 끝에 결국 집단 자결을 하게 된다. 당시 15세였던 쿠보다 칸(久保田諫) 씨(현재 86세)는, 아이 어머니들의 간절한 부탁으로 아이들을 목 졸라 죽이는데 협력했고, 20여 명의 아이를 죽였다고 기억한다. 그리고 서로가 서로에게 칼을 찌르며 집단 자결한 어른들... 산속은 그야말로 지옥이었다. 하지만 급소를 빗겨간 쿠보타 씨는 빈사(瀕死) 상태에서 발견되어 잘 알던 중국인의 도움으로 생명을 건졌다.
그리고 천신만고 끝에 고향에 돌아와 당시의 비참함을 증언했다. 전쟁 당시 촌장으로서 개척단을 꾸려 그들을 배웅했던 35세 촌장 쿠루미사와 모리(胡桃澤盛) 씨는 그 이야기를 듣고 큰 충격을 받았다. 그리고 패전 직후 41세가 되던 해에 촌장으로서의 책임을 지기 위해 “개척민들에게 죄송할 따름이다”라는 유서를 남기로 목을 매 자살했다. 지금 내 나이의 촌부(村夫)조차 자신의 오판에 책임을 지고자 스스로 목숨을 끊었다.
지금도 그 마을에 살고 있는 아들 쿠루미사와 켄(胡桃澤健, 78세) 씨는 아버지가 자살했던 안방을 슬픈 표정으로 소개한다. 일본 정부의 폭력성을 고발하며, 자신의 그릇된 판단을 참회하는 내용은 1만 쪽 분량의 일기가 최근 공개됐다.
양심의 가책으로 괴로워하는 쿠리미사와 촌장의 일기와 달리, 당시 그 사업을 진행한 전직 관료들의 반성 없는 뻔뻔스러운 증언 모습이 너무나 대조적이다. 책임지지 않는 국가의 모습은 지금도 변함이 없다. ‘정책’이라는 이름의 악마는 지금도 발악(發惡)하고 있다. 하지만 ‘정책’을 온순한 개로 길들여 ‘발선’(發善)케 하는 것은 시민들의 양심과 연대 의식이다.
71년 전, 나라의 지시만 믿고 만주행 배에 몸을 실었던 476명의 효고현 농민 가족 중 345명은 이듬해에 목숨을 잃었다. 3년 전 세월호에 몸을 실었던 476명의 승객들 중 306명이 선장과 해경의 지시를 믿고 따르다 목숨을 잃었다. 하지만 아무도 책임지지 않는 그러한 역사는 지금도 똑같이 반복되고 있다. (기권이표)
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https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x4opo90

村人は満州へ送られた~“国策”71年目の真実~20160814

2016/12/18

한국에서 뜬 구름 잡기

[한겨레] 시드니의 늙은 잉여 :: 한국에서 뜬 구름 잡기



한국에서 뜬 구름 잡기
비정규 기독교 2015/12/04 09:28 http://blog.hani.co.kr/sydneytaxi/48053 


삶에서 만남처럼 중요한 것은 없다. 왜냐하면 누구를 만나느냐에 따라서 운명이 결정되는 수가 많기 때문이다. 나는 직업이 사람 만나는 일이다. 대부분 사람을 만나는 것은 일 때문에가 아니면 재미를 위해서일 것이다. 그런데 나는 둘 중에 어느 것도 속하지 않은, 의미를 찾기 위해서 사람을 만난다. 쉽게 이야기해서 뜬구름을 잡기 위해서 만난다는 것이다. 요즘 좀 큰 뜬구름을 잡기 위해서 쫒아 다닌다. 이 뜬 구름은 원래는 독일산인데 영국에서 많이 개발된 퀘이커라는 것이다. 

나는 영국에서 기술을 배워온 황우승 목사를 만나서 이 퀘이커를 국산화 하려는 구름을 잡고 있다. 그러니까 뜬구름이 현실화될 가능성을 잡은 것이다. 핵심 기술은 침묵이다. 요즘은 '침묵은 금이 아니라 납 '인 자기 표현의 시대이지만 그것은 사람을 사이에서의 일이고 신 앞에서는 침묵을 해야 통할 수 있는 법인데 그걸 모르고 있다. 내가 한국에 와서 제일 고통스러운 것이 식당이나 커피숍에서 사람을 만나는 중에 씨끄러운 것이다. 왜들 그렇게 악들을 써대는지 모르겠다. 나는 신이 있다면 (나는 믿지만) 인간들이 자기를 향하여 떠드는 소리 때문에 무척 성가실 것 같이 생각된다. 더욱이 신에게 땡깡부리는 것을 가르치는 직업마저도 있지 않은가? 그래서 내가 하려는 것은 ' 신 앞에서의 침묵 지키기 '이다.
왜냐하면 그래야만 자기 내면에서 들려오는 소리를 들을 수있기 때문이다. 그런데 이 점은 기독교인들에게는 가장 어려운 점일 것이다. 그 이유는 애초에 기도를 잘못 배워 신을 귀찮게 해야만 기도를 하는 것이라고 배웠기 때문이다
.

그래서 드디어 주사위를 던졌다. 모든 것이 황우승 목사님 때문이다. 황 목사님은 영국에서 오랫동안 퀘이커와 교류를 가졌던 경험이 있다. 종교적 형태의 가장 성숙한 모습으로서 퀘이커를 생각하고 있던 나로서는 황 목사님의 등장은 천군만마를 얻은 샘이다. 이제까지 생각만 하고 가 보지 못하던 길이라서 자신이 없어 망서리고 있던 길을 떠나도록 등 떠밀어 재촉을 받은 것이다. 하여서 드디어 12월 13일 모처에서 극비리(?)에 첫 모임을 가지기로 했다.
밖이 아닌 내면의 세계로의 여행이다. 나는 그동안 우리의 종교 생활이 너무 시끄럽다고 생각했다. 찬송도 기도도 설교도 모두 시끄럽다. 그렇다고 가부좌 틀고 앉아 참선을 하자는 것도 아니다. 그저 내면의 소리에 귀 기울이고 주변을 조심스럽게 바라보자는 것이다. 갈릴리 호수가에서 홀로 앉아 있던 예수처럼. 그리고 그 다음에 무엇을 어떻게 할 것인가를 생각해 보자는 것이다. 그게 혼자서는 잘 안되니까 모여서 함께 해보자는 것이다. 원가가 가장 적고 들고 부가가치가 높은 영성개발을 해 보자는 것이다. 조직도 제도도 교리도 없는, 그러나 이미 많은 믿음의 선배들이 갔던, 그리고 지금도 가고 있는 길을 가보자는 것이다. 저 장바닥 같은 종교 시장에서 한 발 떨어져서. 다석 유영모 선생의 " 참생각을 하는 곳에 하나님이 있다. "고 하셨다. 그런데 아이러니 하게도 참생각을 하는 것에 가장 장애가 되는 것이 종교이다. 자기들 문화권에서 형성된 제 멋대로의 개념으로 신을 주조해서 주장하고 다르게 믿는 사람들과 싸움을 벌인다. 그것이 2000년 기독교 역사이고 2500년 불교역사이고 1300년 이슬람 역사이다. 내 안에 있는 하나님을 발견하지 못하고 밖에 있는 하나님만 찾은 탓이다. 

참생각은 어떻게 하는 것인가? 다석 선생은 깊이 깊이 생각해야 한다고 하셨다. 그래서 우리는 그렇게 하려고 하는 것이다.
포스트모던 시대에는 하나님과 인간의 관계가 재정립되어야 한다. 즉 초월적이며 동시에 내재적인 관계여야 한다. 그래서 포스트모더니즘의 신관은 신의 초월성과 내재성의 양극성을 포함하는 범재신론(panentheism)이다. 범신론과 범재신론은 비슷한 것 같지만 전혀 다르다.
범재신론은 신의 초월성과 내재성의 양극성을 포함하는 즉 초월적이며 동시에 내재적인 관계라는 것이다. 신이 초월적이며 내재적인 존재라는 것은 "우리 가운데서 우리를 넘어(beyond in our midst) 있다"라는 의미이다. 신이 초월(transcendence)로 부터 내재(immanence)로의 轉移. 즉 신을 밖에서 찾으려는 노력보다 안에서 찾으려는 시도라고 할 수 있다. 

초월적인 세계를 추구하는 것이 아니라 삶과 나 자신에 대한 정직한 질문만이 신 앞에 서는 올바른 자세라고 생각한다. 나는 초월적인 요소를 찾는 것 보다는 삶의 참 모습에 직면 할수록 존재인 근원인 절대자에게 가까워진다고 생각한다.
이런 노력은 공관 복음 보다는 도마 복음에서 찾아 보기 좋은 태도이다.
다석 유영모는 범재신론을 생각하는 곳에 신이 있다고 하는 염재신론으로 표현 했다. 염재신론(念在神在)이란 말은 생각이 바로 神이라는 것이 아니고 "사람의 거룩한 참 생각은 神이 있음으로 존재하기에 생각하는 곳에 神이 있다."라는 말이다.
그렇다고 해서 생각이 바로 신이라는 것이 아니다. 생각이 신의식의 근거일 수 있다는 말이다. 즉 방바닥에서 뒹굴 딩굴거리는 놈팡이의 공상 속에 신이 있는 것은 아닌 것이다.
포스트모던 시대에는 하나님과 인간의 관계가 재정립되어야 한다. 즉 초월적이며 동시에 내재적인 관계여야 한다. 그래서 포스트모더니즘의 신관은 신의 초월성과 내재성의 양극성을 포함하는 범재신론(panentheism)이다. 범신론과 범재신론은 비슷한 것 같지만 전혀 다르다.
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