Gregory C. Higgins

A Revitalization of Images


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theologian, George Lindbeck, “absorbs the world” that Christians inhabit.2 The Christian way of life involves becoming proficient in the language of Christian narrative and acquiring the virtues that characterize the Christian way of being in the world. Unlike orthodox theologies that see the truth of Christian claims as consisting in a correspondence between statement and objective reality, the postliberal approach sees no way of definitively proving or disproving Christian claims in this way. While certainly not ruling out the possibility that doctrines do in fact correspond to the nature of God or Christ, the postliberals insist that we cannot step outside the language we used to know if, or in what way, the propositions we make are true. We can only apply a regulative test as to whether a proposition coheres with the way of life described in the Christian narrative.

      Basil and Ambrose

      Similarities in the Hexameron

      If a reader were to compare the Hexameron by both Basil and Ambrose, he or she would be struck by the deep similarity between the structure and purpose of the two works. Both are comprised of nine sermons delivered extemporaneously during Holy Week. Basil delivered his sermons around 378 in Caesarea and Ambrose presented his in the following decade in Milan. Both are a combination of philosophical debate, moral exhortation, and catechetical instruction. Each author prefaces his scriptural commentary with a spirited defense of the Christian doctrine of creation ex nihilo (“from nothing”) and then engages in a detailed examination of each of the six days of the creation story narrated in the opening chapter of Genesis.

      Basil and Ambrose both regard the first creation story as a divinely inspired text and proceed accordingly in their close reading of it throughout the Hexameron. Where modern scholars focus on issues such as the relationship between the priestly account of creation (the modern designation given to the first creation story that was edited into its present form by the priests during the Babylonian exile) and the ancient Babylonian creation story Enuma Elish, Basil and Ambrose approach the text with an eye toward spiritual truth and moral exhortation. This becomes immediately apparent as we read their commentary on the events described during the first day of creation: the spirit of God sweeps over the waters on the formless earth covered in darkness; God separates the light from the darkness, and day and night are created. Relying on a Syrian interpreter whom he trusts, Basil argues that the spirit