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© J. Glenn Friesen 2003-2007 |
Linked
Glossary of Terms
(references to De Wijsbegeerte der Wetsidee, unless
indicated. See concordance
for correlation with pages in the New Critique. The concordance
is in pdf format.)
| antithesis |
WdW I, 32, 80, 83-84, 86-87, 492
NC I, 114, 524
NC II, 562
De Crisis der Humanistische Staatsleer, in het licht eener
Calvinistische kosmologie en kennistheorie (1931), 91. |
| antithetical |
I, 81, 133 |
| choice of position |
I, 10, 14, 18, 23-25, 31-32, 34, 38-39, 43, 45, 50, 52, 57-58,
62 (take a position), 67-68, 70, 72, 87, 125,
NC I, 11, 20 |
The antithesis is the choice of position that we make
in our heart's transcendent
religious dimension. The choice is of an
Origin either in God or in temporal reality. If we choose an origin in
temporal reality, we end up absolutizing aspects of temporal reality.
In the transcendent religious subjective a priori of
the cosmic self-consciousness the whole of human cognition is directed
either to the absolute Truth, or to the spirit of falsehood. In this
cosmic self-consciousness we are aware of temporal cosmic reality being
related to the structure of the human selfhood qua talis. (NC II, 562)
Kuyper's neo-Calvinism
emphasizes the religious antithesis. But Kuyper was profoundly influenced
by Baader, and praises Baader for his stand against autonomous thought.
The neo-Calvinism of both Kuyper and Dooyeweerd has often
been assumed to mean a polemical us-against-them division between those
who have chosen their direction towards God and those whose thought is
apostate. This can certainly be found in Kuyper, who says,
There are two kinds of people. a difference of principle,
which does not find its origin within the circle of our human consciousness,
but outside of it. Regeneration, being begotten anew, enlightening,
changes man in his very being. Abraham Kuyper: Principles of Sacred
Theology (Grand Rapids, Baker Book House, 1980, p. 152).
Wolterstorff rejects the Idea of a religious science
that says there are “two kinds of people, hence two kinds of science”
as a form of “religious totalism.” See Nicholas Wolterstorff,
“On Christian Learning,” in: Stained Glass: Worldviews
and Social Science (University Press of America, 1989). Although
I do not agree with postmodernist concerns of totalizing,
I think that Wolterstorff does have a valid point here.
But Dooyeweerd himself emphasizes that his idea of religious
antithesis “runs along a line of separation entirely different from
what has hitherto been supposed” (NC 1, 114) It is not a line dividing
“us” from “them”, but rather a line that the line
of antithesis runs through the heart of each of us:
It is in this universal sense [the universality of
the kingship of Christ and the central confession of God’s sovereignty
over the whole cosmos as Creator] that we must understand Kuyper’s
Idea of the religious antithesis in life and thought. Many peace-loving
Christians have made this very point the victim of numerous misunderstandings.
They do not recognise that this antithesis does not draw a line of personal
classification but a line of division according to fundamental principles
in the world, a line of division, which passes transversely through
the existence of every individual personality. (NC I 523, 524; WdW I,
492)
Antithesis is certainly not intended as a division between
Calvinists and non-Calvinists. Dooyeweerd became much more ecumenical
in his outlook and abandoned the term ‘Calvinistic’ for his
philosophy. Klapwijk also argues for a broader view of antithesis. J.
Klapwijk: “Calvin and Neo-Calvinism on Non-Christian Philosophy,”
The Idea of a Christian Philosophy, p. 57.
Because the line of division runs through the heart of
each of us, the antithesis represents a challenge for us to turn in the
direction of the true Origin. There must be a turning of the personality,
a giving of love in the full sense of the word, a restoring of the subjective
perspective of our experience (II, 563). This turning must include the
recognition of the supratemporal selfhood as the religious root of temporal
reality, which for Dooyeweerd is the “key
of knowledge.” The Christian Ground-motive of creation, fall and
redemption must be understood as occurring within this religious root,
as restored in Christ, the New Root (Twilight of Western Thought,
124, 125, 145). And the Bible must also be interpreted in terms of this
key of knowledge.
The antithesis between a Christian worldview and a non-Christian
worldview is thus not between Calvinism and non-Calvinism, and not even
between a Biblical and non-Biclical philosophy, unless the Bible is itself
understood in terms of the religious root. The antithesis is between a
worldview that affirms the supratemporal religous root and one that does
not:
Want het Christendom had een waarheid geopenbaard,
die de Christelijke levens- en wereldbeschouwing eens en voorgoed in
een onoverbrugbare antithese tegenover alle wijsbegeerte van het immanentiestandpunt
plaatste. Het was deze waarheid, dat de boventijdelijke scheppingseenheid
onzer tijdelijke werkelijkheid niet in de nous, niet in de
immanente rede- of bewustzijnsfuncties is gelegen, maar in den religieuzen
wortel van het menschengeslacht in zijn scheppingsverhouding tot den
souvereinen Schepperswil Gods en in zijn onderworpenheid aan den eeuwigen
zin der goddelijke scheppingsorde: den dienst der verheerlijking Zijns
Naams.(De Crisis der Humanistische Staatsleer, in het licht eener
Calvinistische kosmologie en kennistheorie (1931), 91).
[For Christendom had revealed a truth, which once and
for all placed the Christian life- and worldview in an unbridgeable
antithesis over against all philosophy based on an immanence standpoint.
It was this truth, that the supratemporal creation unity of our temporal
reality is found not in the nous, nor in the immanent functions
of reason or consciousness, but in the religious root of the human race
in its creational relation to the sovereign Creative Will of God and
in its subjected-ness to the eternal meaning of the divine creation
order: the service of glorifying His Name.]
Based on this criterion, to the extent that current reformational
philosophy denies the supratemporal religious root, it is antithetical
to Dooyeweerd's idea of a Christian philosophy. In his terms, such philosophy
is apostate (not standing within the religious
root, but rather denying the enstatic relation
of the religious root to temporal reality), and it is immanence
philosophy, since it seeks the selfhood within time. See my article,
“Dooyeweerd
versus Strauss: Objections to immanence philosophy within reformational
thought.” Of course, this does not mean that reformational philosophers
who deny these ideas cannot be Christian. The point is that such philosophy,
to the extent that it denies a supratemporal heart and religious root,
is antithetical to Dooyeweerd's ideas, and that from his viewpoint can
only be immanence philosophy.
But no Christian should think that his/her philosophy
is free from theoretical error:
And finally the motive of sin will guard Christian
philosophy from the hubris (pride) which considered itself
to be free of theoretical errors and faults, and which believes itself
to have a monopoly on theoretical truth. (NC I, 176).
It is also interesting that Dooyeweerd indicates that
the antithesis may already be reconciled in the supratemporal or religious
dimension, although this reconciliation is still being worked out in time:
It may be that this antithesis has been reconciled
by the redemption in Jesus Christ, but in temporal reality the unrelenting
struggle between the kingdom of God and that of darkness will go on
until the end of the world. (NC II, 33).
If the antithesis runs through each of our hearts, then
each of us continues, at least to some extent, to deny the reality of
our supratemporal selfhood as it participates in Christ, the new religious
root. Our worldview is not consistent. We do not always consciously stand
in this truth, and so our apostate attitude continues; and we then also
fail to see God, selfhood, others, and temporal reality as they really
are (NC III, 30).
The idea of antithesis is also found in Baader. He says
that our freedom as creatures can be used in two antithetical ways–for
or against God. When we use our freedom against God, we are denying our
creation in the image of God (Elementarbegriffe, 544, 545). This
antithesis affects our knowledge. We know differently if our hearts are
with God rather than against God:
How a man is related to God determines how he is related
to himself, to other men, to his own nature and [to] the rest of nature
(Werke XV, 469).
Grassl summarizes Baader’s thought: ‘With
God a man knows differently than against God.’ See H. Grassl (ed.)
Franz von Baader: Über Liebe, Ehe und Kunst, 18; cited by
Betanzos 47, 48.)
Baader says that we have the freedom to be for or against
God (Elementarbegriffe, 544). And this has impolications for
the way that we regard our selfhood. We either affirm the Central Unity
or we deny it (Zeit, 24). We can choose to find our center either
in God or in our own self. If our center is in God, then we understand
ourselves as ordered (gesetzt), as participating in a previously
given Ground. Or we can choose to deny our true center and attempt to
find our ground in our own self (Selbstsetzung) (Werke
14, 61f, Sauer 28). The foundation of our existence can be immanent, insofar
as it is founded in oneself by oneself, or ‘emanant’–founded
in another being (Werke II, 520).
Baader says that this choice of position in the religious
antithesis, where we choose for or against God, is our only real choice.
All our subsequent actions are driven by it. It is in this sense our “motive”:
Nur in dessen Wahl ist der Wille frei, aber nicht,
nachdem er einmal in diese Stätte eingegangen ist, indem er sich
dann nach der Natur lezterer bestimmen muss (Rat. theol.,
Werke 2, 501)
[Only in this choice is the will free, but not once
one enters into this state, then it must be determined by the nature
of it].
Baader's two standpoints: Selbstsetzung [autonomy
or giving one's own law] or Gesetztsein [being placed within
God's law]. And Baader compares two kinds of knowledge based on this antithesis:
Jedes Verbot einer Erkenntnis A (wovon z.B. in der
Genesis die Rede ist) nothwendig mit einem Gebote einer anderen Erkenntniss
B zusammenfällt, so wie dass eine Intelligenz, welche einmal von
ihrem Erkenntnissvermögen jenen Gebrauch machte, den sie nicht
hätte machen sollen, hiemit aber zu einer Erkenntniss kam, die
sie nicht haben sollte und die ihr zur Pein, zur Qual und Strafe ist,
sich selber überlassen, die Freiheit verloren hat, sowohl dieser
abnormen Erkenntniss wider los zu werden, als auch die ihr manglende
normale zu gewinnen. Dies abnorme Erkenntniss A ist nun aber verfinsternd
und beraubend die Erkenntniss B, und soll letztere wider in der Intelligenz
aufgehen, diese wieder klar und licht werden, so muss erst das Feuer
in ihr entzündet werden, welches jene erste Erkenntniss (als Finsterniss)
aufhebend oder verbrennden der anderen den Eingang öffnet.) Das
Verklärtwerden einer niedrigeren Sehsphäre durch eine höhere
ist nemlich nicht das durchscheinen oder blosse Anscheinen, sondern
das Ein-und ausscheinen letzterer durch und in jener, wodurch did niedere
Sehsphäre nicht wie jene finsternde aufgehoben, sondern in die
höhere erhoben wird.” (Werke 2, 506).
[Each forbidding of a kind of Knowledge "A"
(e.g. the prohibition in Genesis) necessarily carries with it the commandment
of a different Knowledge "B", so that an intelligent being
who makes use of his means of knowledge in a way that he should not,
in this way comes to a knowledge that he should not have had and is
therefore given over to pain, suffering and punishment. He has also
lost the freedom to get rid of this abnormal knowledge as well as to
win back the normal knowledge he is lacking. This abnormal knowledge
"A" darkens and robs from him the knowledge "B"
and if such a person wants to enter again into an intelligence that
is clear and light, then there must first be a fire lit in him, which
opens the way to the true knowledge by sublating or burning up this
first darkened knowledge. When a lower sphere of our sight is explained
by a higher one, that is not by a shining through or a mere shining
on, but rather a shining within and without of the higher sphere, through
which the lower sphere is not sublated as in the darkened knowledge,
but rather elevated in the higher sphere].
Revised Sept. 11/07
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