Gregory C. Higgins

A Revitalization of Images


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of Christ as the unique and unsurpassable union of human and divine nature in history. McFague criticizes the traditional understanding of the Incarnation as the singular moment in human history in which God dwelt among us in the flesh. “In the traditional picture, the incarnation of God occurs at one point and one point only in the world—in the man Jesus. God is not everywhere all the time, for apart from creating the world, God enters it just once.”24 The organic imagery of the ecological economic model suggests Christ is the chief exemplar of a divine-human interrelation that permeates all of creation. “By bringing God into the realm of the body, of matter, nature is included within the divine reach. This inclusion, however, is possible only if incarnation is understood in a broad, not a narrow fashion; that is, if Jesus as the incarnate Logos, Wisdom, or Spirit of God is paradigmatic of what is evident everywhere else as well.”25

      The Revitalization of the Image of the Six-Day Creation

      At the outset of our study of Basil, Ambrose, and McFague, we posed a series of questions regarding the image of the six-day creation story. Can the image of the six-day creation still inform the theology, spirituality, and morality of a Christian community that no longer shares Basil and Ambrose’s understanding of the universe, their theory of the origins of species or their acceptance of the Mosaic authorship of the text? Can the six-day creation story still speak to Christians who are deeply troubled about the state of the environment and the role that humans have played in causing it? Is it possible to ground a theological position in Scripture, to critically engage the work of esteemed thinkers within the Christian tradition, and to respond in a way that is credible and meaningful to contemporary Christians? At first glance, given the many theological differences between Basil and Ambrose on the one hand and McFague on other, the prospects for revitalizing the image of the six-day creation seem dim. However, upon closer examination we discover a consensus in their thinking that makes it possible for us to forge several strategies that incorporate the theological insights of all three theologians.

      The liberal tradition, which regards religious statements as expressions of depth-experiences, sees in music the potent articulation of the yearnings of the human spirit. The civil rights leader Andrew Young relates the story of the time police had blocked protesters from marching to the Birmingham jail.

      When we go about two blocks from the jail, the police had blocked the street with the dogs and the fire trucks. When we got there, they said, “You can’t go to the jail.” And so everybody got down on their knees and started praying. And when people are in that kind of situation, it’s not a verbal prayer, it’s more a moan. And when the emotional, scared, religious people start moaning, something happens. And something happened not only to us but to the police.