Post-monotheism - Christopher Schwartz

Christopher Schwartz

Further information: Theodicy and Problem of Evil

In Christopher Schwartz's formulation, "post-monotheism" is the belief in the existence of one deity, or in the oneness of God, coupled with the belief in the failure (or inability) of existing theological categories in Christianity and Islam to accurately describe divine nature. According to Schwartz, the paucity of theological language is most evident during human suffering and should thus be considered a major barrier for religious experience.

Schwartz's concept of post-monotheism opposes the "post-theism" formulated by Frank Hugh Foster and the notion "God is dead" from Heidegger and Friedrich Nietzsche. It has similarities to the "transtheistic" ideas of Paul Tillich and Heinrich Zimmer, as well as possibly open theism. However, its program is decidedly different from the existentialism of the former and the evangelism of the latter. Rather, it appears to be an application to traditional theodicy of pragmatist and post-modernist philosophy, as well as cognitive psychology and transhumanist futurology. In particular, Schwartz's post-monotheism appears to have its roots in Richard Rorty's Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity (1989), and has avowedly mystical aspirations.

Schwartz uses the phrase in the essay, "The Historian's Theodicy". In this essay he explores several problems of religious experience and the study of religion, e.g., "None of us can know with certainty that atheists and nontheists aren’t experiencing God — or that we monotheists are." From the deconstruction of traditional theodicy and hierology he derives eight "axioms":

  • History defies the absolutisms of moral theory.
  • History itself, as the theater of revelation, threatens the reliability of prophecy.
  • History challenges the very possibility of exegesis and theosophy.
  • History, both personal and of the species, challenges the very possibility of hierology.
  • Patterns notwithstanding, history teaches that there is no necessity (necessity is not necessary).
  • History creates its own ethical imperatives, and action requires only faith rather than certainty.
  • The future threatens the reliability of history.
  • History itself, though it is the theater of revelation, is insufficient to account for or against divine concern and action.

Fundamental to this brand of post-monotheism is the author's assertion, "God is an enigma and power beyond the human yet is accessible Spiritual experience flies in the face of historical experience: whatever 'God' is, it is concerned for us — and it is reaching out to us."

A central motif of Schwartz's post-monotheism is the analogy of God as a playwright or "storywriter," in essence the opposite of both the deist watchmaker analogy and what Schwartz describes as "ultra-transcendent, legalistic, and cruel visages" of religious fundamentalism. According to the "storywriter" analogy, God and the Creation are "in partnership." Schwartz gives the example of William Shakespeare's fictional character Hamlet, arguing that the character's dying words are metafictional and thus fitting for what he believes to be the actual nature of humanity's relation to the Godhead.

Read more about this topic:  Post-monotheism

Famous quotes containing the word christopher:

    Yet, when the walls of flesh grow weak,
    In such an hour it may well be,
    Through mist and darkness, light will break,
    And each anointed sense will see.
    —Ernest Christopher Dowson (1867–1900)