Archive for the 'Bulgakov' Category

AAR, Literary Theory and the Bible

I’m sorry we’ve been so absent lately. I know you miss us, a lot. But we’ve been really busy, and we know you’re a patient folk. Besides, we gave you that lovely Bulgakov Blog conference, and we know you still haven’t read every post yet, and you certainly haven’t read every comment made by your fellow readers. Come now, can’t you make at least one comment yourself?

This would be an excellent opportunity for me to offer my sincere thanks to everyone who contributed to the conference. Whether you made a large or small contribution, we are in your debt for what turned out to be a fascinating and thought provoking event!

In any event, we were busy. I was in Chicago with many of you at AAR. However, Aron seems to have joined that contentious group of protesters who haven’t quite come to terms with the AAR/SBL estrangement. Fear not, they’re getting back together, maybe even by 2011. Aron made up for his absence by attending the Chesterton Conference in Niagra, Ontario. Look for his paper to appear here soon once I steal it from his laptop.

I’ve recently become interested in the Bible again after reading Irenaeus’ Against Heresies and teaching the Revelation unit in my advisor’s Seminarian course a couple times.I’m currently writing a paper on the regula fidei, and at Joshua’s suggestion began reading up on some literary theory, including Northrop Frye (although I wonder what you had in mind when you made that recommendation, JADR). Anyway, I stumbled across this bit in Frye that made me laugh, and for lack of anything substantial to post at the moment, I thought I’d toss this one out there:

It took me some time to hit on the right formula for a course in the Bible. I consulted the curricula of other universities, and found that they gave courses called “The Bible As Literature,” which involved chopping pieces out of the Bible like the book of Job and the parables of Jesus, saying, “Look, aren’t they literary?” that approach violated all my instincts as a critic, because those instincts told me that what a critic does when he is confronted with any verbal document whatever is to start on page one at the upper left-hand corner and god one reading until he reads the bottom right-hand corner of the last page. But many people who have attempted to do that with the Bible have flaked out very quickly, generally somewhere around the middle of Leviticus.

- Northop Frye from Northrop Frye and Jacy McPherson, Biblical and Classical Myths

 

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Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 14 – FINAL POST

“A Discussion in Sophiology and Magic:  Renaissance Precursors to Bulgakov” — PART FOUR

By Janet Leslie Blumberg (Deep Grace of Theory)

Wow, Joshua. You responded to every issue I raised, only more succinctly than I had managed to raise them. (In fact, I had to throw away two previous responses, because I discovered I hadn’t read your reply deeply enough yet.)

I find myself much won….

As you say, surely, what is most important is to think through the application of sophiology in contemporary culture. And that means most of all thinking how Bulgakov helps us to “maintain our openness to knowing that we are known by God.”

Continue reading ‘Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 14 – FINAL POST’

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Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 13

“A Discussion in Sophiology and Magic:  Renaissance Precursors to Bulgakov” — PART THREE

By Joshua Delpech-Ramey (The Land of Unlikeness)

The question Janet raises about whether Renaissance humanism, as found in Pico and Bruno, is really human enough, is very important to think through in terms of what we could call the application of sophiology in contemporary culture.

Pico’s emphasis on the polyvalent or indeterminate status of the human essence is not so much opposed to the Augustinian duality of divinity/humanity as the defining feature of human life as it is a setting of that duality in an epistemological situation that has complexified.  Augustine was adroitly skeptical about tying theology to the current dogmas of natural inquiry, whether it be inquiry about the difference between animals and humans or about the number of fixed stars or about any other subject of natural knowledge, including Biblical interpretation, where he advised much more caution about fixing the meaning of Biblical sense than future commentators would. Continue reading ‘Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 13′

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Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 12

“A Discussion in Sophiology and Magic:  Renaissance Precursors to Bulgakov” — PART TWO, cont.

Meanwhile, the Longest Overtly Sophiological Poem I know
by Janet Leslie Blumberg (Deep Grace of Theory)

Meanwhile, let me regale everyone with two passages from the longest overtly Sophiological poem I know. Or so I will posit… to see what you think. (It ought to further our discussion of precursors to sophiology among the Renaissance humanists, at any rate.)

This poem was written by an acquaintance of Giordano Bruno and a fellow renegade, John Donne, although Donne chose to go under cover so as not to die as Bruno did. Or to die as Donne’s own brother had died during the Elizabethan anti-Catholic purges of the 1590s.

In 1611, Donne was asked to commemorate the untimely death of his patron’s adolescent daughter, and Donne seized upon the occasion to write not only about Elizabeth Drury, but also about what he called “the Idea of a Woman.” And while he was eulogizing the young woman who had died (and also eulogizing the passing of more than she), Donne performed an “anatomy” upon the “corpse” of the desolate world that “Shee” had left behind her at her passing. The poem is called “The First Anniversary: An Anatomy of World,” and it turns out to be, among other things, a prescient lament for the “death” of Sophia in the coming mechanistic age. Continue reading ‘Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 12′

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Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 11

“A Discussion in Sophiology and Magic:  Renaissance Precursors to Bulgakov” — PART TWO
From Janet Leslie Blumberg to Joshua Delpech-Ramey:

Joshua,
So many rich ideas here in your own oration, Joshua:  An Oration on the Dignity of Sophia — the creaturely Sophia, that is. (As if she ever could be kept apart from the divine Sophia for very long…but we’ll try.)

I must choose just a few threads, out of this closely woven tapestry of yours….

So…you begin with precursors of sophiology in the German Romantic tradition; they had a direct influence on the Russian sophiologists. Then… you work your way back into the Great Unknown, back into the darkness of that more ancient tablet of the West which, according to Bulgakov, is a blank slate with respect to Sophia — at least insofar as her importance to theology is concerned. (But no one, including Bulgakov, should ever be expected to be acquainted intimately with everything, or be made to suffer indignity because of not being.)

So you say, Joshua, that the thinking of the creaturely Sophia was not absent in the West – at least among the poets and philosophers, although “at the level of systematic theology“ you accept Bulgakov’s judgment. But then I notice that after your wonderful “deregulation of nature” (Schelling’s liberation of the physical world from some of the rigid enclosures effected by early-modern epistemologists) –- that you make your transition back in time to the Renaissance not by explicitly citing Pico or Bruno as sophiologists, but instead by using Goethe’s Faust to raise a crucial modern problem, the way that knowledge has been drained of eros and set against love in our scientific, post-Newtonian thoughtworld, so that we are forced to choose one as against the other…. Continue reading ‘Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 11′

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Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 10

Our final installation in the Bulgakov Blog Conference is a dialogue, which I think you will find highly illuminating. The dialogue will be published over the next couple days until we have posted it all.

“A Discussion in Sophiology and Magic:  Renaissance Precursors to Bulgakov” (PART ONE)
Between Joshua Delpech-Ramey (The Land of Unlikeness) and Janet Leslie Blumberg (Deep Grace of Theory):

Hello Joshua –
I have an opening question for you, having just finished Sophia, The Wisdom of God and being filled with its wise and gentle music…. Bulgakov says that Sophia, as the ousia of God, is “not a fourth” with respect to the Trinity. Not a quaternity. But via the Marian dimension of Sophia, he does bring into view an additional dimension to the efficacy of the Godhead, in terms of that special human nature that was Mary’s first, and then, through Mary, Christ’s. This humanity “possesses the Adamic nature” and is therefore capable of sin, but sinfulness is effectively reduced to nothingness by the holy life produced by the Holy Spirit with the full consent of the human agent.

I’m wondering, since you know much more about Pico della Mirandola than I do, how you would compare Bulgakov’s vision with Pico’s famous vision of a divinized humanity (a vision, by the way, somewhat qualified and brought down to earth by Shakespeare in the person of Prospero, in The Tempest). Continue reading ‘Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 10′

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Bulgakov Blog Conference, Response to Congdon & Bennett

“How Far Can You Go With Sophiology?”
by Brendan Thomas Sammon, The Catholic University of America

In chapter five of Catholicity and Orthodoxy, Eastern theologian John Myendorff insightfully inquires how the historical development of Western Christianity during the Reformation would have gone had there been a stronger Eastern Orthodox presence.  Reading David Congdon’s and Kyle David Bennett’s lucid presentations on Bulgakov’s sophiology reminded me of Myendorff’s insight; Congdon is, by his introductory admission, a Western Protestant, while Bennett offers a comparative analysis between Bulgakov and the Western Protestant theologian J. Moltmann.  The Eastern Orthodox/Western Protestant conversation, while interesting, inspiring and important, is unfortunately infrequent if not rare among theologians today.  That these two thinkers agreed to pursue Bulgakov is admirable and courageous.

Consequently, it was somewhat refreshing to read these two thoughtful reflections on the enigmatic doctrine of Sophiology as found in the thought of Sergius Bulgakov.  Both reflections offer praiseworthy considerations that help to draw out the beauty of this Eastern thinker.  At the same time, both offer points that merit critical attention. Continue reading ‘Bulgakov Blog Conference, Response to Congdon & Bennett’

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Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 9

“Moltmann and Bulgakov Pneumatologies”
by Kyle David Bennett, Fuller Seminary

1.1. Introduction
This brief post on the pneumatologies of Sergius Bulgakov and Jurgen Moltmann is predicated on and oriented by one query in particular: How do they converge and diverge with reference to the Spirit’s role in the parousia and eschatological return of Christ? For the sake of brevity I have decided not to explicate Bulgakov and Moltmann’s general pneumatologies (for example, who is the Spirit?); one can ascertain such information from the previous post. What I am interested in, and what this post is concerned with, is how does a prominent Russian Orthodox theologian’s view of the eschatological coming of Christ, and the Spirit’s action in it, differ from that of a Reformed theologian? Before we begin this critical juxtaposition though a note on methodology: I have formulated this critical juxtaposition with a categorical framework consisting of three theological foci, namely, resurrection, judgment and new creation. It is my hope and intent, as a systematic theologian, that this formulation will serve to be the most pedagogically salutary and insightful for the reader. Hopefully, he or she will be able to perceive, understand, and appreciate the logic of these two and how their logic influences and conditions their pneumatologies. That being said; let us begin. Continue reading ‘Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 9′

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Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 8

The Comforter: Bulgakov on the Holy Spirit
David W. Congdon, Princeton Theological Seminary

I must begin by confessing up front that I am wholly unqualified for this task.  I am knowledgeable neither in Russian Orthodox theology nor in pneumatology.  Furthermore, I approach theology as a modern, Western Protestant-attributes which predispose me to find the work of Sergius Bulgakov quite alien in nature.  Due to limitations in time and ability, I have limited my focus to the second volume in Bulgakov’s “great trilogy” on Divine-humanity, The Comforter.  In this volume, Bulgakov builds on the account of Divine-humanity and Sophia that he explores in more detail in The Lamb of God (christology) and The Bride of the Lamb (ecclesiology and eschatology), the first and third volumes in the trilogy, respectively.  My treatment of Bulgakov’s pneumatology will proceed by exploring (1) the procession and (2) the revelation of the Spirit, before (3) closing with some final critical reflections. Continue reading ‘Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 8′

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Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 7

Hypostatic Motherhood and the Mother of God
by Scott Sharman, University of Toronto

It is no secret that Fr. Sergei Bulgakov was a controversial theologian. He remains so today. In the eyes of some of his colleagues,1 and in the judgment of the synods of the Moscow Patriarchate and the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia (ROCOR),2 Bulgakov was guilty of more than just controversy; he was a heretic, seen to be propagating such heavy-hitting errors as Gnosticism, Pantheism, Arianism, and Origenism.3 Though less known than these official proceedings, the criticisms of Archbishop John Maximovitch were equally strong, and more specifically targeted. In his 1933 The Orthodox Veneration of the Birthgiver of God, Maximovitch denounces Bulgakov for his ‘over-deification’ of the Mother of God, arguing that anyone holding such a Mariology cannot be considered a member of the Orthodox Church.4 While there remains some uncertainty regarding the final canonical status and authority of such assessments,5 statements of this kind continue to cast shadows over Bulgakov’s legacy. Continue reading ‘Bulgakov Blog Conference, Day 7′

  1. Most notoriously Fr. Georges Florovsky, who A. F. Dobbie-Bateman has called the “Anti-Bulgakov.” See “Footnotes (IX)-In quos fines saeculorum,” Sobornost, no. 30 (1944).
  2. See Decision of the Council of Bishops of the Russion Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, Dated 11/30 October 1935, On the New Doctrine of Archpriest Sergius Bulgakov Concerning Sophia, the Wisdom of God, translated by Reader Isaac Lambertsen.
  3. For more on the so-called ‘Sophia controversy’ see Paul Valliere, Modern Russian Theology, (Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdman’s Publishing Co., 2000), 287-89 and Rowan Williams, Segeii Bulgakov, (Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 1999), 172-181.
  4. St. John Maximovich, The Orthodox Veneration of the Birthgiver of God, Fr. Seraphim Rose, trans., (Platina, CA: St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood, 1996).
  5. Valliere, 288 n.21. See also Andrew Blane, ed., Georges Florovsky, (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1993).
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