Christopher
C. Green, Doxological Theology: Karl Barth on Divine Providence, Evil, and the Angels. T&T Clark Studies in
Systematic Theology, Vol. 13 (T&T Clark: London, 2011)
4. § 49.2, The Divine
Accompanying
The
doctrine of concursus exercises the
finest theological minds; it has also exercised mine. Ostensibly at stake is
the freedom of the creature in the face of the all-determining sovereignty of
God, and my own reading of Barth on concursus
has been that he doesn’t have any good news for the creature in this respect;
all he offers is a theological sleight of hand. Now I have become convinced
that I need to pay attention to Barth once more on the matter of concursus; but on Green’s reading of
Barth here, I’m not entirely sure that I’m likely to distance myself too far
from my previous conclusion(s).
According
to Green, Barth draws out the ethical implications of concursus, for concursus
concerns the enactment of God’s holy will from within history. This means that
Barth continues to use the concept of cause in his doctrine of concursus, but radically redefines it in
the light of the triune God revealed by the risen Jesus. God continually summons
– or accosts, as Green puts it, which, for me, is not a positive word – the
creature to obedience; and as the creature recognises this in prayer, it also
recognises its limitations. Thus the creature is not absolutely free, and any
freedom it does have is a freedom constituted by its free obedience to the
Father’s call and command issued in Christ. Any other concept of freedom is
not, on these terms, true freedom, but rather an instance of the ‘impossible
possibility’ of sin.
The
obedience of the creature is a matter of prayer, the creature’s participation
in the intercession of Christ. And through prayer, the creature recognises that
all its prayers are realised in the person of the interceding Jesus, whose
Father is the Father of all. So, in many respects, the divine intercession for
creaturely existence is an accompaniment of all creatures at all times – and by
participating in Christ’s intercession through prayer, it seems that it’s in
this way that the creature contributes, however minimally, to the divine
preservation of all things. It’s almost as though the creature is caught up in
God’s plans for the world rather than its own; and God’s will is that the
sustained creature prays. Green identifies three positive points in Barth’s
doctrine of concursus here: that God
goes with the creature in conservatio,
that the creature is autonomous, and that God accompanies the creature as its
Lord.
These
three points elucidate more of what’s implied by concursus. God and the creature are not merely two interacting,
mechanical causes, are not simply primary cause and secondary causes, but are
covenantal partners in covenantal relationship. God is free to elect a covenant
partner, and it is this election that makes creaturely existence possible. And
because God accosts (Green’s word again) God’s covenant partner to pray, the
creature is morally responsible to pray for others and mirror Christ’s own
self-giving love. It is in obedient prayer that the creature finds true
freedom, because in praying Christ’s own prayer – the Lord’s Prayer – the
creature is caught up in Christ’s prayer and finds itself in ready recognition
of Christ’s lordship. Ultimately, this means that God sustains the creature in
worship, which renders conservatio
and concursus concrete and not
abstract.
So
now concursus – or, more
specifically, the two causae – is
reoriented as the action of covenantal partners, Barth issues four safeguards
for the doctrine. First, there is no automatic or mechanical concept of
causality between God and the creature; God’s will is not mere causality. Secondly, neither partner is a ‘thing’. Thirdly,
neither God nor the creature are part of a larger master-concept of causality.
Finally, the concept of cause has to be understood by the Spirit’s guidance
through prayer. It is clear to see that Barth’s concern throughout is that we
cannot speak of divine providence in abstract terms, and Green does well to
emphasise Barth’s concern here.
Green
briefly analyses Barth’s further division of concursus into praecursus,
concursus proper, and succursus. In praecursus, God foresees what the creature will do and ‘touches’
(Green’s word) the creature’s will. Green does not explain what it means to say
that God ‘touches’ God’s will; the word itself is ambivalent and arguably could
connote a strict determinism or a weak influence, and everything in-between;
but the wider point appears to be that God’s praecursus makes possible the creature’s action. Concursus, of course, is the idea that
God’s action and creaturely action constitute a single action, though how this
happens is anyone’s guess! Barth is keen to say that God’s concurring action,
which is incomparable to creaturely action, takes place according to Word and
Spirit. He is equally keen to assert that this is something recognised through
prayer and thanksgiving as a result. Succursus
anticipates Barth’s discussion of gubernatio
in §49.3, and so it is enough to know here that God ensures that creaturely
actions have appropriate effects so that the creature can reap what it sows.
There is a form of causality at work here, but this form of causality must not
be understood as mechanical but as thoroughly pneumatological. And because it
is thoroughly pneumatological, Barth reasons that this is why people will only be
able to accept this treatment of providence through prayer.
The
strength of Barth’s account of concursus
is that he is more than willing to reinterpret the idea of primary and secondary
causality in terms of the triune God’s election of a covenant partner in the
Son and through the Spirit. For this reason alone, I must reconsider my
approach to Barth, especially when looking at him in the future. But if Green’s
reading of Barth is correct, I still have some reservations: Why does Barth
retain the concept of cause? (Darren Kennedy is also unsure on this point.) Is
Barth saying, perhaps arrogantly (though I do not believe that Barth was an
arrogant man), that those who pray aright will concur with Barth on concursus? Is Green’s comment that succursus ‘directly posits the outcome
of every event in history’ (Doxological
Theology, p. 87) accurate, and, if so, does it make Barth’s doctrine of concursus far more deterministic than
anticipated? And does this matter if the point of succursus is for God to ensure that whatever happens serves the
establishment of God’s Kingdom, which is a ‘good’ determination rather than a
capricious one? I would need to study Barth afresh, but it’s these kinds of
comments that lead me to suspect that Barth hasn’t followed through
sufficiently on his reinterpretation of the matter. Perhaps Green’s account of
Barth on gubernatio will address some
of my concerns.
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