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June 2010 > Theology: St. Irenaeus & the God Who Doesn't Need Us
The Word On Fire Blog

Theology: St. Irenaeus & the God Who Doesn't Need Us




 
Today is the Feast Day of St. Irenaeus of Lyons, an early church father and apologist whose writings have been very influential in in the life of the Church and the discipline of theology. Father Barron speaks about this great Saint here.


Last year, I participated in the annual meeting of the Academy of Catholic Theology, a group of about fifty theologians dedicated to thinking according to the mind of the church. Our general topic was the Trinity, and I had been invited to give one of the papers. I chose to focus on the work of St. Irenaeus, one of the earliest and most important of the fathers of the church. Irenaeus was born around 125 in the town of Smyrna in Asia Minor. As a young man, he became a disciple of Polycarp who, in turn, had been a student of John the Evangelist. Later in life, Irenaeus journeyed to Rome and eventually to Lyons where he became bishop after the martyrdom of the previous leader. Irenaeus died around the year 200, most likely as a martyr, though the exact details of his death are lost to history.

His theological masterpiece is called Adversus Haereses (Against the Heresies), but it is much more than a refutation of the major objections to Christian faith in his time. It is one of the most impressive expressions of Christian doctrine in the history of the church, easily ranking with the De trinitate of St. Augustine and the Summa theologiae of St. Thomas Aquinas. In my Washington paper, I argued that the master idea in Irenaeus’s theology is that God has no need of anything outside of himself. I realize that this seems, at first blush, rather discouraging, but if we follow Irenaeus’s lead, we see how, spiritually speaking, it opens up a whole new world. Irenaeus knew all about the pagan gods and goddesses who stood in desperate need of human praise and sacrifice, and he saw that a chief consequence of this theology is that people lived in fear. Since the gods needed us, they were wont to manipulate us to satisfy their desires, and if they were not sufficiently honored, they could (and would) lash out. But the God of the Bible, who is utterly perfect in himself, has no need of anything at all. Even in his great act of making the universe, he doesn’t require any pre-existing material with which to work; rather (and Irenaeus was the first major Christian theologian to see this), he creates the universe ex nihilo (from nothing). And precisely because he doesn’t need the world, he makes the world in a sheerly generous act of love. Love, as I never tire of repeating, is not primarily a feeling or a sentiment, but instead an act of the will. It is to will the good of the other as other. Well, the God who has no self-interest at all, can only love.

From this intuition, the whole theology of Irenaeus flows. God creates the cosmos in an explosion of generosity, giving rise to myriad plants, animals, planets, stars, angels, and human beings, all designed to reflect some aspect of his own splendor. Irenaeus loves to ring the changes on the metaphor of God as artist. Each element of creation is like a color applied to the canvas or a stone in the mosaic, or a note in an overarching harmony. If we can’t appreciate the consonance of the many features of God’s universe, it is only because our minds are too small to take in the Master’s design. And his entire purpose in creating this symphonic order is to allow other realities to participate in his perfection. At the summit of God’s physical creation stands the human being, loved into existence as all things are, but invited to participate even more fully in God’s perfection by loving his Creator in return. The most oft-cited quote from Irenaeus is from the fourth book of the Adversus Haereses and it runs as follows: “the glory of God is a human being fully alive.” Do you see how this is precisely correlative to the assertion that God needs nothing? The glory of the pagan gods and goddesses was not a human being fully alive, but rather a human being in submission, a human being doing what he’s been commanded to do. But the true God doesn’t play such manipulative games. He finds his joy in willing, in the fullest measure, our good.

One of the most beautiful and intriguing of Irenaeus’s ideas is that God functions as a sort of benevolent teacher, gradually educating the human race in the ways of love. He imagined Adam and Eve, not so much as adults endowed with every spiritual and intellectual perfection, but more as children or teenagers, inevitably awkward in their expression of freedom. The long history of salvation is, therefore, God’s patient attempt to train his human creatures to be his friends. All of the covenants, laws, commandments, and rituals of both ancient Israel and the church should be seen in this light: not arbitrary impositions, but the structure that the Father God gives to order his children toward full flourishing.

There is much that we can learn from this ancient master of the Christian faith, especially concerning the good news of the God who doesn’t need us!

In addition, here is the YouTube video of Father Barron's commentary on St. Irenaeus:



St. Irenaeus, pray for us!

Father Barron is the Director of Word on Fire Catholic Ministries.

Posted: 6/28/2010 6:00:00 AM by Word On Fire | with 3 comments
Filed under: AdversusHaereses, FatherBarron, St.Irenaeus, Theology


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Comments
Kerry Walters
I totally agree that love is a state of being and kind of action rather than (just) an emotion. St. Thomas' definition of love as unselfishly willing the beloved's good is a nice start, although it seems to me that it needs to be supplemented with something like Gabriel Marcel's notion of "availability"--a radical openness to the beloved, a willingness to make oneself completely at her disposal, which of course means accepting the risk and vulnerability of doing so. This is the kind of love exemplified, I think, by Jesus's life and Passion.

It follows, then, that even though God's love isn't "needy" and hence dependent in one sense, it IS dependent in that God accepts the vulnerability of loving. Put another way: God doesn't need our love any more than God needs our hatred. But because God is love and love is availability, our hatred or our love affects God.

Scripture attests to God's being angered or overjoyed or hurt by human action, and I think we ought to take such passages seriously. God's total availability to us means that God co-rejoices and co-suffers with us. (I take it that this is what John Paul II argued in Salvifici Doloris.) Now, I don't pretend to know what it means for God to rejoice or suffer except by analogy to human rejoicing and suffering. But that's enough to suggest that God's love, like all love, is affected and hence dependent.
6/28/2010 9:31:35 AM
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christine
thank you, once again, father, for helping me learn more of my faith.

i do not have the knowledge of the prior commentator who stated that: "God's love, like all love, is affected and hence dependent." it is my personal feeling that an infinite being, like our God, does not have that kind of a human constraint imposed upon Him; and, to speak of God, with that conditionality, ignores the basic understanding that He is beyond our human understanding so let's not place our human limitations of comprehension on Him.
6/28/2010 10:03:22 AM
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Kerry Walters
I agree with you, Christine, that we ought always do theology humbly and with an acute sense of our fallibility (part of what it means to do kneeling rather than sitting theology). But it's also the case that theology--at least natural theology in the Thomistic tradition--argues that it's reasonable to infer something about God's probable nature from an examination of God's handiwork. That's all I'm doing here in wondering about what it means for God to love. Granted, Thomas and others argue for divine simplicity, which is a good way of reminding us that God isn't just another being in the world, and so oughtn't to be thought of exclusively in those terms. But I think where I part ways with Thomas and Fr. Barron is the conclusion that divine simplicity means that God is impassable. Such a God smacks too much (for me) of Athens, and too little of Jerusalem.

As I said in my earlier post, however, I don't know what it means for God to suffer with and rejoice with humans. I do know that the suffering and rejoicing with can't be identical to its human analog. But by the same token, I do know that it must bear some kind of resemblance to it.
6/30/2010 11:47:56 AM
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Father Robert BarronFather Robert Barron is a sought-after speaker on the spiritual life-from prestigious universities to YouTube to national conferences and private retreats. The prominent theologian and podcasting priest is one of the world's great and most innovative teachers of Catholicism. His global media ministry called Word On Fire has a simple but revolutionary mission - to evangelize the culture.

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