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Theology Reference 4

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BRILL
Pneuma35 (2013) 157-161
brill.com/pncu
The Whole Gospel for the Whole Person:
Ontology, Affectivity, and Sacramentality
Dale M. Coulter
When Orthodox writers describe the deification of human persons, they usually invoke the idea of an ontological change. The theological insight is that
regeneration concerns a genuine change in human nature that unites the person to Christ and gives rise to righteous acts. This change does not simply initiate healing; it also begins to expand the capacities of human nature beyond
their original limits. For the Latin tradition, the change occurs through an
infused habitus that alters human existence or through the Spirit's directly
forming Christ in the soul. From this perspective, it would be reductionistic to
describe Christian existence simply as an imitatio Christi, an ethical form of
existence patterned on the words and deeds of Jesus of Nazareth. To reduce
Christian existence to such a stance would amount to a form of Pelagianism
that identifies putting on Christ with mere behavioral modification in light of
moral norms. Christian existence is a renovatio or reformatio, Latin terms that
translate anakainôsis (renewal) and metamorphosis (transformation) respectively (Rom. 12:2; Titus 3:5). It is an alteration in the very form of human existence that amounts to a fundamental renewal so that humans become novae
creaturae.
Talk of an ontological change may seem odd until one considers the connection to forming right affections (orthopathy). Affective transformation is about
being formed in Christ and conformed to Christ. The operative word in all of
this is "form," which in Hellenism carried metaphysical freight. Human nature
has a particular form or being that is a given, on the one hand, and yet can be
shaped, on the other hand. In other words, there is such an entity as human
nature and this nature is developmental. As innate dispositions, the affections
are movements that arise from human nature and also form it in particular
ways as persons habituate themselves to this or that set of objects. Forming
Christ within involves reordering affective movements that have become
"de-formed," which in turn provide a new "shape" to the person.
© Konmklijke Brill NV, Leiden, 2013
DOI: 10.1163/15700747-12341346
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D. M. Coulter / Pneuma 35 (2013) 157-161
Affections are also rnovements of the rational soul and therefore have a cognitive dimension. Desire, joy, anger, fear, and other affective movements all
relate to some object. Humans desire this or rejoice over that, which presupposes judgments of value. They take joy in what they value or they learn to
value what they rejoice over. To view affections in this way is to get hack behind
the view of emotions as involuntary, irrational feelings that emerged and then
became dominant in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.' It is unfortunate that the Holiness movement and pentecostalism took root at a historical moment when the broader culture devalued the emotions so much, both in
the staid values of Victorian life and the Gilded Age and in the development of
the "feeling" view of emotions as products of sensation that, according to
Dixon, William James promoted.
At least two corollaries follow. First, since one cannot sever the connection
between movements of thought and affective movements, it follows that there
is an intimate relationship between affections and beliefs so that affections
determine beliefs and beliefs shape affective movements. Value judgments
flow from the affective and cognitive dimension together, leading persons like
Aquinas to describe the will as a rational appetite. The statement "I want ice
cream" has an implicit judgment about its value. This judgment springs from
the connection between the desire and its object. Second, the relational connections humans form through affectivity shapes them in fundamental ways.
For this reason, classical writers like Aristotle and Cicero wrote about friendship in relation to the good life. Friends shape one another and promote flourishing or diminish it, which may be why Scripture pits friendship with the
world against friendship with God (Jas. 4:4) while simultaneously claiming
that God loves the world (John 3:16), with the implications that Christians
should do so also. Humans take on a particular character or shape as they
habituate their affections toward this object or that object. To claim that
humans are homo liturgicus, as Jamie Smith does, is to equate worship with
degrees of desiring.^
If I am on the right track, then transforming affective movements leads to a
change in the nature of the person, not only in terms of the values held, but
also in terms of the character that forms those values. Ontological change
occurs in and through affective transformation because affectivity shapes
' Thomas DLxon, From Passions to Emotions: The Creation of a Secular Psychological Category
(Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2003). The work of Martha Nussbaum, among others, has done much to recover the more ancient view of emotion and desire.
^ James K. A. Smith, Desiring the Kingdom: Worship, Worldview, and Cultural Formation (Grand
Rapids, MI: Baker, 200g), 39-74.
D. M. Coulter/Pneuma 35 (2013) 157-161
159
reason and will, binding them together with value judgments based on relational connections to objects outside the self. Affective transformation alters
human being as it shapes those dispositions central to the relational nature of
the person: it changes the heart and brings about a new configuration or
character. It is the human person who instantiates human nature in a particular way, and affectivity is central to that unique form of instantiation. Since
humans are embodied creatures of emotion and desire, personhood is
relational.
Pneumatology now must enter the picture because, although Christ is the
form of the new creature, the Spirit brings this new form into existence. As
Augustine suggests, the Spirit achieves this end as the divine love who alters
human loves. The Spirit is that divine person whose movement within the
heart begins to reorder affective movements and so alter a person's habits of
mind. The Wesleyan insight, ultimately originating from Christian mystical
traditions, was to postulate the need for crisis encounters as the fuel of Christian growth toward final perfection. One might combine this insight with the
Protestant Reformers' insistence on sola fide by thinking of faith as the first
affective movement toward God (fiducia), who has become the new object
of desire. In the act of faith the cognitive and the affective unite as a vision
of divine beauty unfolds amidst the affective turn. This is the nature of
conversion — a turning away from slavery to the temporal toward the freedom
of the eternal. Consequently, the encounter with God and its impact on human
love is a triune event, an ecstatic moment in which the Spirit forms the Incarnate Son and so ushers the person into the presence of the Father.
The analysis thus far may wrongly lead to a privatized Christianity, a Plotinian ascent of the one to the One. At times Christians, including western pentecostal ones, have advanced just such an interpretation. It has taken a more
robust, interdisciplinary approach to global pentecostalism to recover the
insight (for pentecostals) that humans are socially embedded creatures. Upon
entering the world, humans are caught up in a social imaginary.^ What Charles
Taylor means by "social imaginary" is how individuals imagine their existence
as part of a larger whole, which is usually expressed in and through stories,
songs, and symbols. These stories convey sets of expectations (norms) about
life that inform practices and the way in which practices alter norms. A social
imaginary also includes pretheoretical constructs (such as a world view) that
^ Charles Taylor, Modem SocialImaginaries (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2004), 23-30.
See also Smith, Desiring the Kingdom, 63-71, in v/hich he argues for using social imaginary over
worldview.
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D. M. Coulter /Pneuma S5 (2013) 157-161
can be theorized upon, critiqued, and reinserted back into the social imaginary. Social imaginaries flow from social embeddedness, pointing toward the
"storied" nature of human existence. Christian thinking always challenges and
affirms social imaginaries and social embeddedness — which brings us to the
current issue of Pneuma.
Affective transformation occurs while being caught up in a larger narrative,
a new story into which persons become embedded that reshapes them and
brings with it a new conscientization. This new conscientization is the vision
that emerges with and initiates the act of faith. It is also a conscientization that
unfolds through the ritual acts of baptism and Eucharist in which the believer
encounters Christ afresh amidst his body and enters the drama of redemption,
as Terje Hegertun's article argues. Chris Green's reflection upon the Emmausroad encounter suggests that the Spirit's work of reordering human affectivity
enables believers to inhabit another reality, a new history that offers a different
social imaginary. Such an encounter with the living Christ through the Spirit
opens the person to Christ hyforming Christ within and therefore brings about
a different way of reading scripture, something that James Dunn highlights in
his exploration of the Pauline contrast between the letter and the Spirit In calling pentecostals an epicletic people, Johnathan Alvarado underscores Green's
contention that the Eucharist becomes^rwiaííve for the whole people of God
who "in the Spirit" are "re-storied." Alvarado joins Daniel Castelo's call for a
more robust account of epiclesis.* Finally, Samuel presents preaching as a participatory event all the way through in which the speaker and the listeners dialogue with one another as they are caught up in the presence of the God whose
story is being proclaimed through the inscripturated word. Each of these articles reminds pentecostals of the importance of sacramentality, both as a theological affirmation that created realities become vehicles of grace and as an
explanation of how a vision of a deeper transformation of those same realities
unfolds through the conscientization that is the Spirif s affective transformation of the person.
When pentecostals proclaim the whole gospel for the whole person, they
have in view the way in which the gospel radically alters and fulfills human
existence. The Christian life begins with a reformatio and renovatio of human
nature. This reformatio marks the first stages of conversion while also initiating
a formative process that culminates in immortality, incorruptibility, and the
Visio dei. Through ongoing moments of crisis, all of which are fundamentally
" See also Daniel Casteilo, Revisioning Pentecostal Ethics: The Epictetic Community (Cleveland,
TN: CPT Press, 2012).
D. M. Coulter /Pneuma35 (2013) 157-161
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sacramental, this renovatio also catches people up into the story of God
that forms the people of God and, in an important sense, continues to be written by the Spirit of God. Paul's declaration to the Corinthians that they were
human letters communicating the wondrous work of God intimates as much
(2 Cor. 3:3). This means that the social imaginary of the people of God encompasses the full experience of human personhood as a lived and embedded reality. This new story absorbs other stories even as it forges an alternative
consciousness, allowing believers to prophetically critique those stories that
used to determine their own identity. The crisis of renovatio frees persons to
dialogue with and critically engage their ovwi stories. It is a whole gospel, proclaiming a salvation that changes human nature through the forging of one
new humanity conformed to Christ through the Spirit. The articles of this issue,
therefore, call pentecostals to explore more deeply the intersections between
ontology, affectivity, and sacramentality.
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