Worshipping a Weak and Foolish God

I cannot begin to measure the amount of time I have spent over the years in conversations about the “problem of evil.” That problem, in short, is the impossibility of reconciling an all-powerful, all-knowing, all-good God with the presence of suffering, injustice, and evil in the world. Those conversations often involve listening to a deeply felt pain. “Why does God allow…?” runs the refrain. The impossibility in the conundrum suggests that something is wrong in the question – or that there is no God.

The answer is that there is no such God.

The French philosopher, Paul Ricoeur, once described three men as the “Masters of Suspicion”: Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Sigmund Freud. The term well describes their efforts to undermine the hidden motives of classical thought. Freud dismissed God as nothing more than a parental projection. Marx saw economic motives in religion, the “opiate of the people.” Nietzsche’s critique is too complex to explore in this setting. However, these men are but weathervanes in a cultural drive that has consistently sought to replace “God” with our own efforts. The serpent’s whispered suggestion, “You shall be like gods” echoes down through the centuries. My contention is that the Masters of Suspicion, and their many lesser figures, have all been arguing against a “straw God,” that is, a God who not only does not exist, but does not resemble the God Whom Christians properly worship. And, I should add, many Christians frequently forget this to be the case. We try to defend the God who is not there. We generally come up short and frustrated.

So, Whom do we worship?

St. Paul boldly wrote:

“For Jews request a sign, and Greeks seek after wisdom; but we preach Christ crucified, to the Jews a stumbling block and to the Greeks foolishness, but to those who are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God. Because the foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men.” (1 Cor. 1:22–25)

“And I, brethren, when I came to you, did not come with excellence of speech or of wisdom declaring to you the testimony of God. For I determined not to know anything among you except Jesus Christ and Him crucified.” (1 Cor. 2:1–2)

In recent times we have this wonderful declaration by Fr. Thomas Hopko, of blessed memory:

I believe we have only one thing to offer, and it is Christ as Christ really is. I think that’s what Orthodoxy really is. It’s a conviction about Christ as Christ really is. And that’s the Christ of the Holy Scriptures, the Christ of the sacraments, the Christ of the services of the Church, the Christ of the development of theological doctrine, it’s Christ as Christ is. And here Christianity, we have to remember always, is – all theology, the word of God – is for Orthodox Christians, stavrology [stavros=cross (Gk.)].  I like to say that theologia is stavrologia….The word of God is the word of the Cross. We witness to, preach, confess, make a defense of, Christ and Him crucified, as being the power of God and the wisdom of God….And that’s all we have to give and all we need.

In another place Hopko says:

The Cross for us is not God concealing Himself. God is revealed on the Cross, not concealed.

I have particularly drawn from Fr. Thomas’ words as a touchstone of Orthodoxy. Typical of his work – these are statements that are definitive in character. “The word of God is the word of the Cross.”

It remains, however, to think about what this means.

It would seem that, for many, the “God” whom they imagine is the God of the philosophers with the Crucified Christ as an interesting historical interlude. In the worst of such treatments, “God” is pictured as punishing His only Son for our sins. Christ becomes the victim of the Father.

However, we do not know God apart from Christ. It is Christ who has made Him known.

No one has seen God at any time. The only begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, He has declared Him. (John 1:18)

It is worth considering that even in the opening chapters of Genesis, the God in Whose image we are made is none other than the Crucified Christ. Thus, as the Fathers and the liturgies note, Adam is caused to sleep, and from his side Eve is fashioned. It is according to the image of Christ, who “sleeps” in death on the Cross, whose side is pierced. Blood and water flow from His side from which His bride, the Church, is fashioned. This is no accident, nor a mere coincidence of creative interpretation. This is how the Church reads the Scriptures.

There have been plenty of efforts across the Christian centuries to impose the philosopher’s God (or worse) on the Church. Christ says to the authorities:

You search the Scriptures, for in them you think you have eternal life; and these are they which testify of Me. (John 5:39)

We read the Scriptures through Christ that we might see Christ and, in Him, be transformed. The transformation that we seek is to be conformed to the image of His crucifixion.

I am crucified with Christ, nevertheless, I live; yet, not I, but Christ lives in me. And the life that I now live in the flesh, I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave Himself for me. (Gal. 2:20)

More than anything, Christ Crucified is a revelation to humanity that God is love. However, it teaches us that love is not coercive. The philosopher’s God is expected to selectively coerce, controlling evil and rewarding the good. The scandal of the Cross is that it reveals the weakness of God who, in love, suffers Himself and His creation to endure evil, “overcoming evil by doing good” (in the words of St. Paul). It is not the God that many imagine themselves to want. It is, however, God as He has made Himself known.

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a retired Archpriest of the Orthodox Church in America. He is also author of Everywhere Present: Christianity in a One-Storey Universe, and Face to Face: Knowing God Beyond Our Shame, as well as the Glory to God podcast series on Ancient Faith Radio.



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115 responses to “Worshipping a Weak and Foolish God”

  1. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Janine,
    I do not know about the end of salvation (whether it’s universal or not – God alone knows). But, we do know from Scripture that God is willing the salvation of all (2 Peter 3:9) …”but is longsuffering toward us, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.” There is some level/manner of cooperation (faith) – in that it involves “coming to repentance.” But even our own unwillingness or lack of cooperation prevents God from doing what He will (working for our salvation). It was that sense that I had in mind.

    I’ll put it on the level of my personal experience. I always assume, and have done so throughout my ministry, that when I encounter someone, in conversation, etc., that God is working for their salvation. It’s impossible for me to know what they might “need.” Some great elders sometimes have that kind of knowledge – I don’t. But I know that I can safely assume that God knows and that He will use that encounter as part of His work. It’s for me to be faithful.

    I once had a young woman (when I was an Episcopal priest) who came to the Cup for communion. I knew her name since her parents had mentioned her to me before the service and asked me to pray. When I gave her communion, I did so using her name (as we do in the Orthodox Church). She called me later that day and wanted me to visit…which I did. Hearing her name spoken at the Cup shook her to her core – and brought about a deep repentance in her soul. I’ll not share more – but it was just one of those instances that I think of from time to time. God uses things we would never have known. I could multiply this example many times over.

    St. Paisios once said that we should never take any pride in converting someone to Christ. Because, by grace, God could convert a sinner by them “simply seeing a fox cross the road.”

    What I am certain of is that God is at work. I have no idea at this point in my life what became of the young woman in that encounter. Her life changed at that time. I pray that her repentance bore fruit. That’s in God’s hands. It’s for us to pray, to trust, to be faithful, but never to doubt that He is working for the salvation of all (as mentioned in 2Peter 3:9).

    As for the end of things…I have hope…but I have no knowledge.

  2. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Janine,
    I will add that the mystery of repentance is great. The tiniest crack in the wall (so to speak) is more than sufficient for the grace of God. It might mean getting a camel through the eye of a needle – but, as Christ said, “With men it is impossible…but with God all things are possible.” So, I try never to despair or to presume to know what I cannot know. What I know is the boundless mercy of God.

  3. Janine Avatar
    Janine

    Thank you Father. Yes, I absolutely 1000% believe that God is at work as you say. No doubt about it, and for everybody. I mean — that’s what I think the Passion and the Cross is, Christ’s Crucifixion is a permanent extension of that salvation to all, period. And we don’t even know the limits of what kind of time we’re talking about on that (in terms of eternal time/worldly time). We have some hints about that, but still, as you say, that’s for God to know and not us. But yes, repentance and faith seem that they must be factors. I’m with you in that it’s not our job to decide about those possibilities, we can just go where we think the Spirit takes us in that work for the Kingdom. Sometimes I’m sure it’s better to back off, as St. Paul also indicates when he speaks of leaving some outside the Church, but that is also accompanies with the understanding that that God is nonetheless at work.

    I’m just suggesting that suffering is redeemed through faith. In my own experience that can happen long, long, long after the suffering. Our repentance can come in the form of being willing to look at it (like for instance childhood abuse) through the eyes of faith and where prayer leads us to “see.”

    I don’t remember who said that the only unpardoned sin is the one not repented. But perhaps you also have an insight about that one!

    Thank you again

  4. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Janine,
    I’m grateful to lived into my seventh decade. There are lots of things (sufferings and such) that I have seen reconciled or healed in various ways that have only been clear to me in these later years (and there are many things I’ve yet to see). But, I’ve grown a lot in the confidence that all things work together for good and that God is doing “abundantly above all we could ask or think.” At least, on my good days. On my bad days, I battle the demons of despair and anxiety. On the whole – God is winning. 🙂

  5. Janine Avatar
    Janine

    Father,
    Re your follow up comment on the mystery of repentance (I saw after I responded): Long ago, just as I was getting out of college and wondering if God was real (and prayed for God to let me know for myself), I had a dream about a giant castle. It had a moat that wasn’t only moat around it, this moat was a whole big giant river. It had a fence on the outside of the moat that wasn’t just a moat. It was a chain link fence with wires as thick as a man’s thumb forming those links. I thought, “Who could ever get into that castle?” Just then a little whisp of cloud like a fog threaded its way around those links and went through and across the moat and wove its way into the castle.

    It took me decades to conclude that was an image of the Holy Spirit going through my defenses.

  6. Janine Avatar
    Janine

    Father, you wrote:
    Janine,
    I’m grateful to lived into my seventh decade. There are lots of things (sufferings and such) that I have seen reconciled or healed in various ways that have only been clear to me in these later years (and there are many things I’ve yet to see). But, I’ve grown a lot in the confidence that all things work together for good and that God is doing “abundantly above all we could ask or think.” At least, on my good days. On my bad days, I battle the demons of despair and anxiety. On the whole – God is winning. 🙂

    I’ll be 70 on my next birthday (in January). Thank you SO MUCH for this! 🙂

  7. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    Father, you say that “Nietzsche’s thought is too complex to explore”. Indeed, that is so. He likes to make things complex on purpose. Yet one over simplification works most of the time: “When there is a affirmation of God or from God, especially Jesus, just say: NO! When God says no, we must say YES.

  8. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    Father, you write of the weakness of God and that the Cross reveals the scope and depth of that weakness.
    Nietzsche could not abide even the thought of such weakness as his “Will to Power” and other titles indicate. Yet as I first began to know Him beginning 1967 and continuing into the present, it is through His weakness that He begins to reveal Himself and connect to me in a unique and special way–not
    quite like anybody else–through His Body and Blood. Transcending my sinful corruption beyond
    death, confusion and pain. Glory be to Him

  9. Lina Avatar
    Lina

    How many times do we read the word Christ and think, Messiah, Anointed One or even Jesus?

    When I grew up, 80+ years ago we called him Jesus. Somehow the use of his given name has fallen away. Why?

  10. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Lina,
    I’ve noticed this in preaching and elsewhere. I prefer to use the name “Jesus” – in that it carries power. But, I’ve never heard anyone say why they prefer another usage.

  11. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    Father, I have long wondered what was going on in the German’s heart that these 3 were conceived in the same general time period and wrote their anti-human philosophies in the same historical time.

    I read Nietzsche the most. Some how my immersion in him helped me find and recognize Jesus. Never have understood that.

    Our human temptation to darkness…..

    May our Lord Jesus Christ forgive.

  12. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Michael,
    I suspect that whatever was going on in that general culture was going on in various ways elsewhere in Europe at the time (in great and small ways). Modernity was dealing with its own birth pangs. The rise of the Industrial Revolution that was reshaping so much of life certainly called out some kind of response (there were others – far more salutary). Perhaps something worth reflecting on is the rise of the modern academy and its power as it created a cultural elite.

    I remind myself that I grew up in a household where the names of these men were completely unknown, and none of us could have spelled them correctly (I still struggle with Nietzsche – it would be better if it were spelled “Neechee.” – also, Froid and Marks). It is a hallmark of elite culture that it would have no value if it stopped telling itself how valuable it is.

  13. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Fr. Stephen said:

    “It is a hallmark of elite culture that it would have no value if it stopped telling itself how valuable it is.”

    Elite culture should not be arrogant, but being cultured and educated is not wrong.

  14. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    I have no argument with education. I have doubts as to what “cultured” means. There are class issues that run throughout that notion.

  15. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks Fr. Stephen. I´m wondering if we can exist in a classless, yet cultured society? I guess, though, I am defining “cultured” from a western perspective as it relates (traditionally) to art, the humanities, education and manners.

    A car mechanic or a university professor can be cultured. There need not be class struggle or arrogance involved.

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