Teilhard de Chardin and our Time


III

Teilhardism and the Modern Religious Intuition

 

 

 

(1)

 

 

 

We have tried to show Teilhard's "apologetics" in its proper bearings. We have distinguished it from the classical form with which it is equated by admirers who wish to assimilate him into traditional Christianity. True, Teilhard has a missionary aim inasmuch as he wants to bring the modern world to Christ. But we must never forget that the Christ he preaches is one who is in accord with the demand of that world and differs from the traditional version of the God-Man of Judea. And his missionary aim backfires on the Church to which he belongs, for he wants just as earnestly the traditional version to change in the light of the religious intuition prompted by modernism.

 

Rideau, who keeps insisting on Teilhard's assimilableness to the Church's basic stand, is yet forced to admit difficulties in him for Roman Catholics. But he tries to play them down by adducing certain reasons for them. After mentioning the marked originality of Teilhard's thought as one difficulty, h1 adds: "It is surprising, too, that so original a thought should be embodied in a style that is coloured by personal emphasis and prepossessions." Then he 2 comes to the final explanation, namely, that Teilhard's message "is addressed primarily to the Gentiles and uses language deliberately adapted to the modern world". Rideau's suggestion3 is that the difficulties are linguistic and that if "the deposit of faith", "the Word of God", could merely be re-expressed in consonance with new historic factors Teilhardism would hardly be considered "a shattering revision". But, when he4 tells us of the project that

 

1.Op. cit., p. 244,

2.Ibid., p. 245.

3.Ibid., p. 243.

4.Ibid.


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inspired Teilhard - "the gulf between the Church and the modern world must be closed" - we get a hint of the backfiring we have spoken of, and are emboldened to ask: "Why should the Teilhardian use of language create difficulties unless what is addressed to the Gentiles is at the same time a criticism of the terms in which Roman Catholic theology still expresses itself and of the old dogmas it still retains in face of the modern world?" The Church evidently finds it difficult to accept Teilhard as its missionary. This means that the manner in which he attempts to convert the Gentiles cannot be taken, always and mainly, as suiting the Church. It has to go against the Church's position and attitude as he sees them. We are therefore under no obligation to interpret Teilhard's apologetics to be no more than linguistically anti-traditional.

 

Something in his thought itself sheers away from the orthodox line. And Rideau, despite his aversion to doing so, has again and again to write in a regretful vein when particular points are evaluated. For an example, take the subject of Redemption in Teilhard's hands. Rideau5 informs us: "He looks at it in a way that is more faithful to the logic of his thought than to the biblical evidence.... It would certainly seem that because he wished to present his apostolic message in a form acceptable to the modern world Teilhard did not develop the full depth of the traditional teaching of sin whose gravity (involving a divorce and a rupture of friendship between God and man) called for a tragical redemption, God's passage through death."

 

Rideau's words definitely attest to Teilhard's fundamental non-orthodoxy: else he would not speak of the "logic" of Teilhard's "thought" as ignoring the evidence of the Bible. But he endeavours at the same time to make this non-orthodoxy look like a matter of missionary convenience - a strategic disguise in order better to impress the modern world and win acceptance by it. The truth is not that Teilhard, while addressing the Gentiles, has orthodoxy up his sleeve: he

 

5. Ibid., p. 171.


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presents his message as he does simply because neither he nor the modern world whose product he is has any need of a Christianity that fails to chime with the heterodox implications of an evolutionary universe. All we can affirm on the other side is: Teilhard, in the midst of his modernism and his heterodoxy, firmly holds that the evolutionary universe which is basic to his thought is fully provided for in his double-aspected formula: "an apologetics based on evolution but whose spirit seems to me to be truly and equally Christian."6 Evolution, not Christianity, is the basis of Teilhard's missionary project; nevertheless, in his view, Christianity is well served by such a basis if we get simultaneously at the true drift of the evolutionary phenomenon and the true version of the Christian faith.

 

What is the former's true drift and what the latter's true version? The whole of Teilhardism would be contained in the answer to this question. We have already treated the theme from various angles. Now we may concentrate the answer in a few excerpts and then proceed to the precise reconciliation proper to Teilhard's sense of the true drift and the true version. Thus we shall get at the true revelation of Teilhardism itself.

 

On the evolutionary phenomenon we may take the pronouncement:7 "Our world contains within itself a mysterious promise of the future implicit in its natural evolution." On the Christian faith let us pick out the utterance:8 "If Christianity is to keep its place at the head of mankind, it must make itself explicitly recognizable as a sort of pan-Christism,"

 

A commentary on the two statements comes in a letter of August 13,1948:9 "The fundamental question really at issue is

 

6.Letter of August 21, 1925, to Auguste Valensin. quoted in Christopher Mooney's Teilhard de Chardin and the Mystery of Christ (Collins, London, 1966), p. 199.

7.Writings in Time of War (Collins, London, 1968), pp. 55-56.

8.Science and Christ, p. 124.

9.Letters to Two Friends, 1926-1952, p. 106.


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whether or not official authority is willing to accept (and to integrate into the Christian faith) a 'faith' in a future (i.e. a super-evolution) of Humanity on earth."

 

Here we are given to understand that evolution points to a higher state of itself in the future, the development of a Super-Humanity on earth by the very drive of the process which has developed through millennia an increasing complexity of biological structure and an advancing interiority of consciousness. Also, we receive the impression that this terrestrial fulfilment is the object not only of the modern scientific vision truly interpreted but also of the most authentic religious intuition possible today. There is a "faith" involved and to this "faith" Christianity has to adjust itself by finding in its heart of hearts a response it can identify as natural to its own revelatory drive. We cannot have integration, on top of acceptance, of the new "faith", without such a discovery.

 

A further gloss on the critical religious situation in which the Church is placed meets us in a quotation from Teilhard by Rideau:10 "The neo-humanist mysticism of an ahead clashes with the Christian mysticism of the above: it is precisely in this apparent conflict between the old faith in a transcendent God and a young 'faith' in an immanent universe that we find the modern religious crisis: here we touch the inmost essence, expressed in a form at once scientific and social. The whole progress of the kingdom of God depends at the moment on the problem of reconciling with each other not superficially but organically these two currents" (International Conference of the Society of Jesus, Versailles, 1947).

 

An organic and not a superficial reconciliation: this is Teilhard's call vis-a-vis Christianity's "transcendent God" and Evolutionism's "immanent universe" - that is to say, a universe inwardly activated by its own nature towards an ultimate self-fulfilment in a Super-Humanity, towards a final convergence - an "Omega Point" - of all reflective conscious-

 

10. Op. cit., p. 315.


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ness to form a totalised co-reflective Super-Consciousness. Teilhard's own solution of the crisis is what he terms "pan-Christism", the religion of the Cosmic Christ. But he appears to be in two minds as to how cosmos and Christ are related. What is the real meaning of making Christ a universal presence by which the transcendent God and the immanent universe are linked in a living way, conjoined in an internal manner?

 

How intensely Teilhard would like to permeate the cosmos" with Christ is evident from the very start of his religious career. To be convinced we have only to read a passage Rideau11 cites from one of his earliest writings: "In my own small way, Lord, I would wish to be the apostle and (if I may be so bold) the evangelist of your Christ in the universe.... To bring Christ, in virtue of interconnexions that are specifically organic, to the heart of realities that are considered the most fraught with danger, the most philosophically naturalistic, the most pagan - that is my gospel and there lies my mission" (Le pretre, 1918, in Ecrits du temps de la guerre, p. 298). Rideau12 rightly sees as basic to Teilhard "the experience of the conjunction or coincidence of the universe and Christ", and adds: "As has been demonstrated by Madame M. Barthe-lemy-Madaule, it is from this intuition that the whole body of Teilhard's work is derived."

 

But Rideau13 is careful to stress a feature of Teilhardism which poses a challenge to the synthetising mind: "Throughout his life he was to strive to unite, while still keeping them distinct, two absolutes: 'that of experience (the universe) and that of Revelation (the transcendent God)' (Mon univers, 1916, in Ecrits, p. 278)." The suggestion here is that God and the universe must never be identified, and that no Pantheism such as Spinoza's should be entertained; but there is also the suggestion that we have "two absolutes", which must signify

 

11.Ibid., p. 331.

12.Ibid., p. 329.

13.Ibid., p. 328.


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that to Teilhard the universe has in some sense as much primacy, as much sufficiency, as much reality as God: the position is as if there were not only a transcendent divinity but also a Pantheos, and the two godheads - each existing in its own right - were to be organically reconciled. Obviously, Teilhard's religious sense is pretty complicated. And nothing short of a strong suspicion of there being a Teilhard Pantheos leads Pastor Crespy to remark, as Rideau 14 notes: "Teilhard tries to make evolution say what only faith can say,"

 

Teilhard himself often makes no bones about the absolutism of the universe for him. "I am possessed", he15 says, "by a certain demon or angel of the All and the Universal." Again, he16 confesses to "a certain enthusiastic vision of the immensity and promise of the World, a certain relish, a certain intoxication with real concrete 'being' as it is revealed to us in the Universe". As a Christian he cannot circumscribe himself with the cosmos, however drunk with it his religious heart may be: he needs must turn his eyes to the Transcendent. But even the Transcendent is, for him, a summum bonum continuous with the Universe's revelation of "real concrete 'being'". To his friend Leontine Zanta he17 writes from China: "It looks as though mankind will never regain its passion for God until God is presented to it as the term of a movement which extends our worship of the concrete Real (rather than tearing us away from it). Oh how tremendously powerful the Real would be for lifting us out of our egoism if only we knew how to see it in its prodigious greatness."

 

"Worship of the concrete Real" which is the physical cosmos, and this worship extended (rather than diverted) to God, the Transcendent, who thereby is definable as the Super-Real, the Ultra-physical, the Hyper-cosmic: here we have the Teilhardian bedrock. This bedrock may be felt also through

 

14.Ibid., pp. 648p-19.

15.Letters to Two Friends, 1926-1952, p. 40.

16.Ibid., p. 44.

17.Utters to Leontine Zanta (Collins, London 1969), p. 72.


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an expression of Teilhard's18 like: "the Saint...loses his materiality. Everything is God for him, God is everything for him, and for him Christ is at once God and everything." Hence the concrete Real, the physical cosmos, must in the last resort be, to Teilhard, the outer expression or the expressive body of a World-Soul, and the World-Soul must be the transcendent God Himself expressed or embodied in cosmic terms. Hence, again, the Cosmic Christ must be the Transcendent self-projected as the Soul of a universe which is that Soul's concretely real form moving evolutionarily onward to manifest this Soul completely and join it with its transcendent counterpart. Hence, finally, pan-Christism must be a new pantheism differing from the old sort, as understood by Christianity, in only one particular: Pan-Christos, as the Soul of the cosmos, is a Being who has an aspect of Self distinct from all the selves or beings or entities He manifests out of His own plenitude, so that He can be loved as the Personal Other at the same time that He is known as one's own deepest Within. But this pan-Christism is like the pantheism abhorred by Christianity insofar as the cosmos is a manifestation of Christ Himself and not a foreign substance, however often the manifestation may be a veil rather than a "transparency" or -to use a still more typical term of Teilhardian mysticism - a "diaphany".

 

Christianity, unlike ancient Vedanta, knows nothing of such a many-sided vision. As a Christian, Teilhard shares his co-religionists' anti-pantheist shudder. However, while the doctrinal mind in him tends to shy away, his intuition cannot be frightened off. In consequence we see him expressing his "cosmic sense" in several modes, some of them running counter to those where the conscious Christian is unmistakably intended to have his say. Facing the unconventional modes, de Lubac19 observes: "He tried to show in Our Lord Jesus Christ 'the synthesis of the created Universe and its

 

18.Writings in Time of War, p. 108.

19.The Religion of Teilhard de Chardin (Collins, London, 1967), p. 202.


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Creator': did he not sometimes seem to establish this synthesis at a too accessible level and thus, in spite of the qualifications and corrections we have noted, and against his unmistakable intention, to some degree naturalize Christ?"

 

We may ask in return: "How can Christ help being naturalized to some degree by a worshipper of the concrete Real?" Simultaneously we must admit that Teilhard the Churchman would act as censor to his instinctive World-adoration, his spontaneous touch on the World-Soul through the "prodigious greatness" of its cosmos. The Churchman Teilhard is bound to look upon the World as gross Matter, as Godless distracting dust, to which the human psyche must never give its love and to whose glitter it must always rise superior. Especially the physical universe of modem science, with its intoxicating immensity and unity, is the snare par excellence for stealing the heart away from the Christian pursuit of the "above", the transcendent Perfection beyond cosmic life. Yet Teilhard the modernist can hardly shut his eyes to this universe. How then to be a genuine Christian as well as an authentic modernist - how to keep Jesus as "Our Lord" even while leaping to the call of science's divine-seeming cosmos?

 

In order not to look worshipfully at this World in spite of thrilling to its wonderfulness, Teilhard seeks to combine a Personal Creator God with a Divine Universal Presence in the creation. To do so he has to oppose a common practice of Jesus's partisans. They emphasise how sweetly and virtuously a Man lived in Galilee twenty centuries before us rather than emphasising how superhumanly he rose from the dead, assumed a body of glory, took his place in heaven to oversee the entire universe and reveal himself as the terminator and gatherer-up of all things. In a passage we can cull from Rideau20 we get a passionate appeal by Teilhard to Jesus to disclose his real being: "Sometimes people think that they can increase your attraction in my eyes by stressing almost

 

20. Op. at, pp. 613-14.


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exclusively the charm and goodness of your human life, in the past. But truly, O Lord, if I wanted to cherish only a man, then I would surely turn to those whom you have given me with the bloom of their charm here and now. Are there not with our mothers, brothers, friends and sisters, enough irresistibly lovable people around me? Why should I turn to the Judea of two thousand years ago? No, what I cry out for, like every being, with my whole life and all my earthly passion, is something very different from an equal to cherish: it is a God to adore. Tear away, O Jesus, the clouds with your lightning! Show yourself to us as the mighty, the radiant, the risen! Come to us once again as the Pantocrator who reigned alone in the cupolas of the ancient basilicas! Nothing less than this Parousia is needed to counterbalance and crown in our hearts the glory of the world that is coming into view. So that we may triumph over the world with you, come to us clothed in the glory of the world" (Le Milieu divin, pp. 127-28).

 

What directly concerns us are the last two sentences. Teilhard wants Jesus to come in such a manner as both to prevent the glorious universe of science from out-weighing him in our eyes and to allow this universe to get its fullest response from us, the utmost justification of its splendour. Teilhard wants the manner of Jesus's coming to be itself cosmic and still personal: he must appear as a Universal Presence and yet as substantially different from the Universe - the wonderful world must be seen to be a tremendous beauty with which he has adorned himself but with which he is not identified - it is divine by being his decoration and not divine in its own right.

 

Thus does Teilhard strive to be a genuine Christian no less than an authentic modernist and to proclaim pan-Christism without succumbing to what Christianity considers the danger of world-deification in pantheism. But has he really subdued the glory of the world that science has overawingly laid bare and has he rendered valid a Pan-Christos without bringing in a Pantheos?

 

If the wonderful world still remains substantially different


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from Christ, its power must always stand over against him: such a world, by its alien glory, will continue to demand our worship. To avoid this, we must relate it to Christ as an emanation of his own being: we must be able to see Christ himself in it - not merely by its clothing him but by its forming his outer self - an evolving and developing self, no doubt, but nonetheless essentially his own being.

 

Nor is Teilhard always bound down to the metaphor of "clothing"; he is capable of exhibiting a more plastic vision. In a recent book R.C. Zaehner21 has some quotations from him which lead on from the sense of All to the question of this All's relation to God. Zaehner has Teilhard saying: "When one reads the accounts of certain Christian or pagan mystics or indeed the confidences of many apparently quite ordinary men, one has to ask oneself seriously whether there is not a sort of cosmic consciousness in our soul more diffused than individual consciousness, more intermittent, but perfectly well defined - a sort of feeling of the presence of all beings at once, not perceived as multiple and separate but as sharing in the same unity - at least in some future time...." Zaehner remarks: "In 1923 Teilhard thought that this experience of the All must necessarily point towards God. 'The All,' he then wrote, 'with its attributes of universality, unity, and infallibility (at least relative), could not reveal itself to us unless we recognized God in it - or the shadow of God. - And can God, on his side, manifest himself to us except by passing through the All, by assuming the figure, or at least the clothing, of the All?'"

 

Here Teilhard is ready to go beyond Christ's coming merely "clothed in the glory of the world". He entertains the possibility of Christ taking on the world's very figure - nay, he even conceives of Christ passing through the world, which means that the world would be Christ himself not only assuming the look of the world for the sake of self-manifestation but actually charging the world with his own being and

 

21, Drugs, Mysticism and Make-believe (Collins, London, 1972), pp. 177-78. The reference Zaehner gives is: "Comment je crois (Editions du Seuil, Paris, 1969), pp. 75-76. Written in 1923" - and Ibid., p. 77.


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getting transmitted by it as if its glory were his outer self, though under the conditions of a developing process. To the Teilhard of this passage the "clothing"-metaphor is the minimum necessary rather than the maximum possible. The latter takes Divinity to be making the All "the shadow of God", a reduced reflex or image or duplication of Divinity in spatio-temporal terms, the being of Divinity transposed and exteriorised in an evolving universal form.

 

The solution Teilhard has offered in the passage from Le Milieu divin is not the whole solution even he is capable of offering. It is a superficial, not an organic reconciliation between "the old faith in a transcendent God and a young 'faith' in an immanent universe". The true solution glimmers out only in those parts of his writings where in presenting through Christ "the synthesis of the created Universe and its Creator" he seems, as de Lubac marks, to "naturalize Christ" to some degree even while unmistakably intending to preserve Christ's supernatural status.

 

And, after all, if Teilhard wishes to build a living bridge between Evolutionism and Christianity, he cannot but do as we have suggested. The very terms in which he poses the religious situation brought about by Evolutionism require him in some measure to "naturalize Christ" and thereby Christify Nature. To be convinced, we have only to look at the picture he paints time and again of this situation. Rideau provides us with several glimpses of it, some of them carrying also Teilhard's hints of his fond belief that the picture- does not call for a rejection of Christianity but, on the contrary, for a readjusted Christian frame to lend it proper definition.

 

Teilhard speaks of "the Soul of the world" having "spontaneously disclosed itself" to the consciousness of our contemporaries and of its appearing "to them as an 'extra', or antagonistic, or stronger absolute" than Christ - "a new Messiah more desirable than the old" (L'ame du monde, 1918, in Ecrits, p. 227).22

 

22. Ibid., p. 319.


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We also read: "Some reasonable reconciliation must be made, I am sure, between God and the world, between the detaching mysticism of Christianity and the ineradicable passion that makes our whole being vibrate when we experience something of the soul of the mighty whole of which we are undeniably a part" (Letter of 2 February 1916, in The Making of a Mind).23

 

Then we have: "For every modern mind (and the more modern the mind the truer this is)...a sense is born - the sense of a universal, completely specific, movement, by virtue of which the totality of things shifts as one whole, from top to bottom, and in one block, not only in space but in a space-time (hyper-einsteinian) whose particular curvature has the faculty of making what moves within it progressively more organized" (Du cosmos a la cosmogenese in L'activation de l'energie, p. 264).24 The idea of evolution is the perception of "this fundamental unity" (Ibid.).25

 

Once again: "What is happening to the world now is that it is being spontaneously converted to a sort of natural religion of the universe that is mistakenly turning it away from the God of the Gospel; and it is in that that its unbelief lies. We must carry that conversion one degree further by making our whole lives show that only Christ in quo omina constant ['in whom all things hold together'] is capable of inspiring and directing the universe's newly appreciated line of advance; thus from the very thing that produces modern unbelief, there may emerge the faith of tomorrow" (L'incroyance moderne: Cause profonde et remede, 1933, in Science et Christ, pp. 152-3).26

 

"It has become a commonplace to speak of Western civilization - the home of the new mankind - as materialistic. Nothing could be more unfair. The West has overthrown many idols, but by its discovery of the dimension of the universe

 

23.Ibid., p. 315.

24.Ibid., p. 338,

25.Ibid.

26.Ibid., pp. 602-03.


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and of its forward progress, it has stimulated a powerful mysticism. The whole question now is to determine the truth of the Presence we believe we feel behind the fire of the universe, and to give it a name" (Le Christianisme dans le monde, 1933, in Science et Christ, p. 136).27

 

"In future, the only religion for man is the religion that will teach him in the first place to recognize, love and serve with passion the universe of which he is a part" (Le sens humain, 1929).28 The idea of "a unity in convergence is the only one that can be the basis of the morality and religion of a universe which is being built on research and progress. No conversion accordingly (if we may so express it) will be so deeply rooted as that which is now coming about under the disguise of modern unbelief" (La route de I'Ouest, 1932).29

 

Then: "The humanist pantheisms we see around represent a completely youthful form of religion - a religion that (apart from Marxism) has little or no exact formulation: a religion with no apparent God and no revelation. But it is a religion in the true sense of the word, if by religion we mean contagious faith in an ideal to which one's life can be devoted.... A rapidly increasing number of our contemporaries are agreed, from now on, in recognizing that the most important thing in life is to devote oneself body and soul to universal progress -that progress being expressed in tangible developments of mankind.... This can only mean that under different names (communist or national-socialist, scientific or political, individual or collective), for the last hundred years we have been witnessing the positive birth and the building up of a new faith: the religion of evolution" (Comment je crois, 1934).30

 

Finally: "Contrary to an over-popular preconception, it is in Christianity (provided it is understood in the fullness of its Catholic realism) that the pantheist mysticism of all times, and more particularly of our own day (when it is dominated

 

27.Ibid., pp. 305-06.

28.Ibid., p. 307.

29.Ibid., p. 308.

30.Ibid., p. 306.


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by creative evolutionism) can reach its highest, most coherent and most dynamic form, the form which is most instinct with worship."31

 

What we can gather from these delineations of the contemporary temper does not admit of any doubt. The modern religious intuition springs from the scientific vision of a universe which is known to be a colossal unity advancing in its complex wholeness towards a super-organisation of consciousness and which is thus felt to be a blaze of beauty and power on the move as if it were a divine phenomenon evolving through the ages its potentialities of perfection, "The religion of evolution", "a sort of natural religion of the universe", "a powerful mysticism" teaching man "in the first place to recognize, love and serve with passion the universe of which he is a part", "undeniably a part" of "the mighty whole" whose secret "soul", "the Soul of the world", has made itself perceptible to us and made "our whole being vibrate" with "passion" to its forward-calling convergence-effecting "Presence" for which we have yet no "name" but which is "antagonistic" to a "detaching mysticism" like Christianity and tends to turn the world "away from the God of the Gospel" and, by setting the universe afire to manifest it through "tangible developments", proves to be a "stronger absolute" than "the old Messiah" - how can a religious intuition that comes alive in terms stressing the progressive "totality of things" and inspiring the devotion of "body and soul" to the world itself and taking form, however vaguely at present, as "humanist pantheisms" or as a "pantheist mysticism... dominated by creative evolutionism", be ever fulfilled by a Christ such as Teilhard suggests when he tries not to break clean off from the Roman Church - a Christ in whom all tilings are said to hold together but who still is entirely different in being from the natural world and with whose divinity this world is in no essential sense continuous? The "over-popular preconception", which Teilhard wants to con-

 

31. "Introduction to Christianity" (1944) in Christianity and Evolution, pp. 171-72.


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tradict, is obviously correct. Christ - to be "capable of inspiring and directing the universe's newly appreciated line of advance" and of converting, by himself becoming cosmic, "modern unbelief" to a religion of his own universality and supplying it with a "form most instinct with worship" - has to stand, for all his aspect of transcendence, under the aspect also of "an immanent universe" and present himself "as the term of a movement which extends our worship of the concrete Real (rather than tearing us away from it)". Teilhard, in those moments when he dares to dub himself not Catholic but "irreducibly 'hyper-Catholic'32 and is ready to flout orthodoxy, evokes the kind of cosmic Christ who could produce a Christianity-coloured "faith of tomorrow" which would at once remedy the shortcomings, and answer to the truth-sense, of "our generation, essentially pantheist because evolutionist".33

 

But will this kind of Cosmic Christ be anything more than Christie in name? Can he correspond in any fundamental way to the Saviour-figure emerging from the New Testament? Do we not need to reckon with only a novel Pantheos - one who Vedantically is the universe-constitutive aspect of a transcendent Reality and is the All even while being more than the All? If so, why should basic Teilhardism, with its root-function to save humanist pantheisms from remaining vague-visioned about their God-sense and to give their central truth a revelatory name, be tied up with Christianity?

 

32.Letters to Leontine Zanta, p. 36.

33.Human Energy (Collins, London, 1969), p. 67.


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(2)

 

 

 

Teilhard has many moments when he believes that his Cosmic Christ cannot be conceived except in an initial relation to the historical Jesus, even though, once we reach the Universal Presence, the individual who lived in ancient Judea is of very minor importance. His importance for Teilhard lies simply in supplying the religious consciousness with a starting-point for its arrival at a Christic universality. Teilhard once vehemently underlines this importance in an assertion quoted by Rideau:' "While it is indeed Christ-Omega who maintains the universe in motion, on the other hand it is from his seed, the Man of Nazareth, that (both in theory and in historical fact) the Christ-Omega draws for us his consistence.... The two terms are intrinsically part and parcel of one another and in a Christ who is truly total they cannot vary except simultaneously" (Christianisme et evolution, 1943). "I find myself so placed that 1 cannot breathe apart from our Lord - and that I realize that without the historical and traditional revelation, our Lord vanishes" (Ibid).

 

Here Teilhard proceeds from a capital confusion. Identifying Christ with Omega Point, he has slurred over the fact that the chief drive of his masterpiece, The Phenomenon of Man, as well as of all those writings of his by which he hoped to reconcile Science and Religion, seeks to establish Omega Point independently of Christ. Rideau,2 laying out for us the different phases Teilhard distinguishes in man's approach to God, states: "Phase I, reflection on the phenomenon of man, leading up to a transcendent Omega Point, the universal centre that brings spirit together, i.e. God (conceived as uniting the world to himself, rather than creating it). Phase II, evolutionary creation, in which God is seen as the motive force of the universe and as revealing himself in it. Phase III, the Christian phenomenon, the incarnation. Phase IV, the

 

1.Op.cit., p. 531.

2.Ibid., p. 503.


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living Church. It is only at this point that Christ can be identified with Omega. 'Nothing now remains of the conflict that seemed, ever more dangerously, to range against one another the majesty of the universe and the primacy of God.'" Omega is reached on phenomenological reflection and is not necessarily identical with Christ. Elsewhere Rideau,3 by way of a summing-up, says: "Omega Point, which reason accepts as God, is, for faith, none else than Christ in his glory, the head of the Mystical Body." It is reason that finds God in Omega. In another place Rideau4 speaks of "Omega Point" as "what is known through rational reflection on the ultimate significance of evolution". Rideau also quotes Teilhard directly. Teilhard writes: "...Christ (provided he is seen in the full realism of his Incarnation) is a perfect parallel to the Omega Point our theory led us to anticipate and tends to produce exactly the spiritual totalization we are awaiting" (L'energie humaine, 1937, in L'energie humaine, p. 192).5 Theoretical search and not acceptance of Christ discerns Omega. We may in addition remember that, as Rideau shows in his chapter on Teilhard's Phenomenology and as he6 later reminds us, Omega, as argued rationally and without any Christ-presupposition, possesses "the attributes of divinity: personality, presentness, transcendence, unity, distinctness". So there is no question of a historical Incarnation being required for the existence of a divine pole of attraction, personal as well as universal, transcendent no less than immanent, who sets all things in motion and finally totalises them.

 

What the historical Incarnation does for the Christian evolutionist is to give Omega a concrete certainty over and above reasoned deduction. But, for the evolutionist as such, for the modem consciousness apart from Christianity and face to face only with the majesty of the progressive universe,

 

3.Ibid., p. 180.

4.Ibid., p. 233.

5.Ibid., p. 380.

6.Ibid., p. 150.


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there is no self-evidence of divinity in the Jesus of history and, even if he accepts the Man of Nazareth as divine, he is not bound to him as the sole divine manifestation in humanity: there could be other Avatars and Christ is not the inevitable religious datum by which to feel a triumphant touch given to the action of Omega Point. Omega by itself will surely not vanish "without the historical and traditional revelation". What will vanish is Omega as the Cosmic Christ whom Teilhard calls "Our Lord" and considers inseparable from the Man born in Nazareth. "Our Lord" vanishes only in the sense that, if one sets aside Jesus, the name "Christ" for "Omega" will have no raison d'etre. If Omega, being cosmic, can be named "Our Lord", there is no vanishing. And as long as Omega stands, basic Teilhardism, which consists in bringing a fully realised formulation to the more or less amorphous religious intuition of modern Evolutionism, will stay intact.

 

There is also the question: "Whereas Omega's existence and function, in Teilhard's thought, are independent of any Christian religious datum, can the Cosmic Christ stand on his own, needing only the Man of Nazareth for his seed? If there were no Omega deducible on its own, would the Man of Nazareth suffice for Teilhard to think of the Cosmic Christ?" We can draw from Rideau7 a very positive answer by Teilhard: "The Christian Universal-Christ would be inconceivable if the Universe, which it is his function to gather into himself, did not in virtue of some evolutionary structure have a natural centre of convergence from which the Word, becoming incarnate, could radiate its influence over, the whole of the universe" (Introduction au Christianisme, 1944).

 

Clearly, according to Teilhard, although the Nazarene seed has to be once present for the Cosmic Christ to flower, the flowering of cosmicity cannot automatically follow from that seed. This must signify that Christ's cosmicity as visioned by Teilhard is not innate to the religion built upon the historical Jesus. It must also mean that whatever cosmicity

 

7. Ibid., pp. 528-29, n. 83.


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such a religion may attribute to Jesus is different from the Teilhardian vision - for the plain reason that no "evolutionary structure" leading to "a natural centre of convergence" -that is, to an Omega - could be conceived before modern times. So, actually, the designation - "the Christian Universal-Christ" - is a misnomer: we can speak only of "the Teilhardian Universal-Christ", And then the concept cannot refer to any possible direct flowering from the Nazarene seed. A Christic flowering from an evolutionary world-seed has been wrongly linked "both in theory and in historical fact" with Jesus. The mistake has been prompted by the function Scripture ascribes to Jesus of gathering up the universe into himself. But this gathering-up is not at all related to evolution and, if we are true to the spirit of Scripture, should never be related to it: the Parousia, the Re-appearance, of Jesus for that gathering-up can come at any moment and was first expected in a generation or two immediately after his death: it is essentially a non-evolutionary expectation. The Christ of Teilhard, except for the name, is rooted outside of Christianity.

 

Our paradox is not neutralised by pointing out that Teilhard, after asserting the inconceivableness of the Universal Christ without evolutionism's Omega, adds a counterpoise to suggest how "evolutionism and Christianity need one another to support and complete each other".8 He writes: "unless some universal Christ were, positively and concretely, plain at the term of evolution, as now disclosed by human thought, that evolution would remain nebulous and uncertain, and we would not have the heart to surrender ourselves to its aspirations and demands."9 And Teilhard sums up: "Evolution, we might say, preserves Christ (by making him possible), and at the same time Christ preserves evolution (by making it concrete and desirable)."10

 

8. Christianity and Evolution (Collins, London, 1971), p. 155,

9. Ibid.

10. Ibid., pp. 155-56.


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The two scales do not actually have equal weights in them. "The term of evolution" - "a natural centre of convergence", as the first half of the passage puts it - is said to be "now disclosed by human thought". It is conceivable and conceived as an existence without recourse to Christianity, and it alone makes the Universal Christ "possible": it alone affords him ground for existence. The Universal Christ, on the other hand, has no say as to the possibility of this Omega: he contributes nothing to its existential status. What he is alleged to do is really to invest it with the features we would associate with a Christ universalised from an accepted human starting-point: we would think of it as a magnified human being with a grandiose appealing face. Absence of such a visualisable heart-moving divinity - a historical figure amplified - at the centre of convergence is what Teilhard means by evolution's remaining "nebulous and uncertain" without "some universal Christ" and by this Christ's making evolution "concrete and desirable". The meaning is clarified in a paragraph coming soon after:11 "Only to the Christian is it given to locate at the summit of space-time not merely a vague, cold something but a warm and well-defined someone; and so hic et nunc only he in all the world is in a position to believe utterly in evolution - evolution that is no longer simply personalizing, but is personalized - and (what is psychologically even more important) to dedicate himself to it with love." Yes, the basic meaning is rendered clear, but to give it cogency Teilhard has had to obfuscate his own vision. He seems to thrust into the background the enormous difference still left between Omega's relation to Christ and Christ's to Omega. Leave out Omega, and there is no Universal Christ: leave out the Universal Christ, and Omega is yet there. The balance tilts tremendously to one side. And even the lack seen of concreteness and desirability or, as in the clarifying passage, of achieved personalisation and lovable ne ss is more than just exaggerated: it is fundamentally imaginary. Have we not

 

11.Ibid., p. 156.


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quoted Rideau as reminding us that Teilhard's Omega possesses all the attributes of divinity, not only transcendence and unity but also distinctness, presentness and personality -attributes which essentially save it from being "nebulous and uncertain" and substantially make "it both "concrete and desirable"? No "vague, cold something" at the space-time summit of an evolution "simply personalizing" is located by the Omega-arguer. What is located may not be so "well-defined" as the postulated universalisation of a Jesus: still, we have surely "a warm someone", fully "personalized", and therefore capable of putting us "in a position to believe utterly in evolution" and to dedicate ourselves to it "with love".

 

Nor can we be taken in by Teilhard12 writing in his Comment je crois, an earlier essay than his Introduction to Christianity: "By disclosing a world-peak, evolution makes Christ possible, just as Christ, by giving meaning and direction to the world, makes evolution possible." A parity is asserted - at the cost of logic. What is the meaning and direction given to the world? Simply the world's moving towards the disclosure of a peak. But, if Christ effects this, why say evolution leads to that disclosure? Why not just say: "Christ makes Christ possible"? A little before his assertion of parity, Teilhard13 has written: "If we Christians wish to retain in Christ the very qualities on which his power and our worship are based, we have no better way - no other way, even - of doing so than fully to accept the most modern concepts of evolution. Under the combined pressure of science and philosophy, we are being forced, experientially and intellectually, to accept the world as a co-ordinated system of activity which is gradually rising up towards freedom and consciousness. The only satisfactory way of interpreting this process...is to regard it as irreversible and convergent. Thus, ahead of us, a universal cosmic centre is taking on definition, in which everything

 

12.Ibid., p. 128. We have already cited the passage in an earlier chapter and commented on it, but not in full and not in the total context of the question involved in its terms.

13.Ibid., p. 127.


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reaches its term, in which everything is explained, is felt, and is ordered." Well, where does Christ come in to make possible this Omega? We conceive this Omega by "the combined pressure of science and philosophy". Not religiously, not Christianly, but "experientially and intellectually" we accept Omega Point, the evolutionary "world-peak". And, if there "everything is explained, is felt, and is ordered", evolution gets its "meaning and direction" without reference to Christ.

 

Teilhard14 even goes on to tell us: "It is, then, in this physical pole of universal convergence that we must, in my view, locate and recognize the plenitude of Christ. For in no other type of cosmos, and in no other place, can any being, no matter how divine he be, carry out the function of universal consolidation and universal animation, which Christian dogma attributes to Christ." And here Teilhard15 appends the footnote: "In other words, Christ needs to find a world-peak for his consummation just as he needed to find a woman for his conception." A footnote16 on the previous page runs: "Whatever may be the precise positive content of the term 'supernatural', it cannot mean anything except 'supremely real', in other words 'supremely in conformity' with the conditions of reality which nature imposes on beings. If, then, Christ is to be able to be the saviour and the life of souls in their supernatural developments, he must first satisfy certain conditions in relation to the world, apprehended in its experiential and natural reality."

 

The situation is unmistakable. Evolution's Omega, conceived in relation to the experientially apprehended natural world, is needed by Christ as a sine qua non for his universalis-ing work. He would not be able to do this work unless we posit a "physical pole of universal evolution" - and to posit such a pole we resort to science and philosophy, "the most modern concepts of evolution", and are aware of no depen-

 

14.Ibid., pp. 127-28.

15.Ibid., p. 128, fn. 11.

16.Ibid., p. 127, fn. 10.


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dence on Christ. Within Teilhard's own scheme it is illogical to think of Christ making evolution possible by giving meaning and direction to the world. As regards "possibles", no parity can be set up between Evolution and Christ. In Teilhard, the Universal Christ is rooted in Evolutionism and not vice versa. And, if so, this Christ cannot be rooted inside of Christianity. Our paradox stays unneutralised.

 

Perhaps it will be objected: "Has not Teilhard, at the end of his most famous book,17 written about Christ: "By a personal act of communion and sublimation, he aggregates to himself the total psychism of the world.... The universe fulfilling itself in a synthesis of centres in perfect conformity with the laws of union. God, the Centre of centres. In that final vision the Christian dogma culminates. And so exactly, so perfectly does this coincide with the Omega Point that doubtless I should never have ventured to envisage the latter or formulate the hypothesis rationally if, in my consciousness as a believer, I had not found not only its speculative model but also its living reality?" We may be told that this reference of Teilhard to the Christian dogma indicates the rootedness of Omega Point in the Universal Christ rather than the other way around.

 

But all we have here is Teilhard's autobiographical admission that he thought of Omega Point in the wake of his religious faith in a Christ who gathers up the universe's psychisms. What we must note in the first place is the word "rationally" when Teilhard says he has been prompted by the feeling of this Christ "to formulate the hypothesis". Omega is accepted because Teilhard has arrived at its concept by means of logic, by a rational reflection on the facts of evolution. At the end of his most famous book he18 has clearly said of the need of Omega if reflective life is to continue to function and progress: "That is the postulate to which we have been led logically by the integral application to man of the experi-


17.The Phenomenon of Man (Collins, London, 1960), p. 294.

18.Ibid., p. 291.


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mental laws of evolution." And, if "the experimental laws of evolution" were involved, the logical process had nothing to do with the Christian religion. This religion provided no reason for Omega - and if Teilhard could not have reasoned out Omega he would never have accepted it.

 

Secondly, he accords so much importance, such primacy, to his scientific logic that when he comes to talk of "the Christian phenomenon" at the end of his most famous book he19 tries his best to banish suspicion of a religious bias by assuring us: "As I am living at the heart of the Christian world, I might be suspected of wanting to introduce an apologia by artifice. But, here again, so far as it is possible for a man to separate in himself the various planes of knowledge, it is not the convinced believer but the naturalist who is asking for a hearing." These phrases unequivocally imply that the coinciding, in Teilhard's mind, of the Parousiac Christ of faith with the Omega Point of reason guided by experimentally found evolutionary laws makes for him no odds to the truly scientific character of the latter discovery. As a "naturalist" he would accept Omega even if it did not coincide with the Parousiac Christ.

 

Thirdly, we may well question: "Would he accept Christ if Christ did not coincide in his mind with Omega?" The answer can only be "No". For, he is an Evolutionist or nothing. He20 has laid it down about Evolution: "...it is a general condition to which all theories, all hypotheses, all systems must bow and which they must satisfy henceforward if they are to be thinkable and true. Evolution is a light illuminating all facts, a curve that all lines must follow."

 

In the fourth place, before Teilhard formulated Omega he was not merely a Christian: he was also a World-worshipper. And he was instinctively a World-worshipper before he was consciously a Christian. In La Table Ronde of June 1955 Claude Cuenot has reported: "From the age of four or five - so he

 

19.Ibid., p. 292.

20.Ibid., p. 218.


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told us in a conversation (12 July 1950) - he already had a 'general cosmic sense (the consistency of the whole)'. And later 'the cosmic came to be concentrated in the human, in the Christly'."21 Teilhard himself has written in Le Coeur de la Matiere (1950): "1 was certainly no more than six or seven when when I began to feel myself drawn by Matter - or more exactly by something that 'shone' at the heart of Matter. At this age when I suppose other children feel their first 'sentiment' for a person or for art or for religion, I was affectionate, well-behaved, even pious. That is, catching it from my mother, I loved 'the little lord Jesus' dearly. But in reality my genuine self was elsewhere."22 Then Teilhard speaks of "this instinctive movement which made me truly speaking worship a little piece of metal" and he adds that in this movement "there was a strong sense of self-giving and a whole train of obligations all mixed up together and my whole spiritual life has merely been the development of this".23 At the back of his discovery of Omega lay his pantheist tendency, his "general cosmic sense", to whose developed form the entire structure of his belief has been traced by him in the famous declaration we have discussed elsewhere24 of his fundamental faith: "The world (its infallibility and its goodness) - that, when all is said and done, is the first, the last, and the only thing in which I believe."25 This faith "in a world that is one and infallible -wherever it may lead me"26 is the background and basis, even more than the Parousiac Christ, of his search for Omega after he realised the essentially evolutionary character of the World he had worshipped for "something that 'shone' at the heart of Matter". The role of Christianity is really minor, if not marginal. Omega has its source beyond the Christian religion


21.Quoted in Pierre Teilhard de Chardin; His Life and Spirit by Nicholas Corte (Barrie & Rockliff, London 1960), p. 3.

22.Ibid., p. 4.

23.Ibid., pp. 4-5.

24.I, ch. 5,

25.Christianity and Evolution, p. 99.

26.Ibid., p. 103.


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and deeper than it. So the objection raised has to be overruled on a number of counts.

 

In the face of our four arguments we may well wonder what precisely Teilhard could have intended by his palpably inapposite autobiographical admission about Omega. We need a bit of subtlety to see through it. On the one hand was his oft-expressed desire to equate Pauline and Johannine Christianity with his own concept of the Universal Christ. On the other was his occasional truth-sense that his concept was at bottom a novelty, as well as the fact-sense he had throughout his life that the Church looked askance at his Omega-Christ as a camouflaged Neo-Pantheos. He wished intensely at the same time to be regarded as assimilable to orthodoxy and to stick fast to his own conviction of what should be deemed orthodox. Naturally he endeavoured both to auto-suggest that his Omega-Christ was not un-Christian and to induce, by repeated Christification of Omega, the Church to take him as a genuine interpreter of Pauline and Johannine Christianity.

 

Our paradox has met with no authentic challenge. And it can be sustained no matter if Rideau27 has a Teilhardian statement like: "If you take away from Christ the quality of having existed as a real element, the Christian movement collapses. The historic Christ constitutes an element of reality, of a concrete involvement in the cosmos" (Cuenot's notes of a conversation on 3 September 1950). Of course, the movement historically called Christian must fail and lose sense of reality without the acceptance of a historic Christ, but a Christ.like Teilhard's should not require the Man of Nazareth to give Teilhardism a sense of God's concrete involvement in the cosmos. And in fact we get glimpses from Teilhard of a different source for such a sense. Does he28 not speak of "the absolute value of a cosmic drama, in which it is just as though God, even before his incarnation, were ontologically invol-

 

27.Op. cit., p. 531.

28.Ibid,, p. 511.


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ved"? Has he29 not written: "The prodigious expanses of time that preceded the first Christmas were not empty of Christ: they were imbued with the influx of his power"? Have we not Rideau's mention30 of Teilhard's belief in "a spirit that since all time, but more particularly since Christ, has animated the world and man in order to advance them towards their transition [into the Pleroma]"? To be sure, everywhere here Teilhard brings in the historic Christ, but that is because he keeps connecting his Cosmic Christ with the Christian movement. What we have to mark is how in each case the Christie is extended backward beyond the life of Jesus and made out to be a spiritual force, a divine presence, from the beginning of the world, a cosmic dramatis persona ontological-ly involved and therefore "an element of reality, of a concrete involvement in the cosmos". It is as if there were already the flower of a Christic cosmicity at work prior to the life of Jesus and as if this pre-existent flower gave rise to a special seed of itself in that life and then became more intensely flowery. Thus, while the historic Christ is retained and even endowed with importance, the real Cosmic Christ does not depend on him for his seed and has his original subsistence elsewhere than in the life of Jesus and is connected with Christianity not essentially but accidentally - that is to say, purely because for Teilhard, with his peculiar narrowness of approach to a sense of divine world-wideness, Jesus was the sole possible God-Man and St. Paul's doctrine of a Christie Mystical Body as a universal gatherer-up gave the sole possible revelation of a Cosmic Personal Godhead holding all things together and enfolding all beings in His Light and Love.

 

Yes, the Teilhardian Christ, however Christian he may look, has really his roots outside of Christianity. Discerned in depth, he is basically Omega under a Christie nomenclature. Consequently, it is Omega who is in the last analysis Teilhard's "Our Lord". And it is with our eyes fixed on

 

29.Ibid., p. 532.

30.Ibid., p. 649.


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Omega and not on a Universal Figure enlarged from the historic Jesus that we can penetrate to the ultimate heart of an exclamation like the one in Teilhard's letter of January 10, 1926:31 "If I cease to believe desperately in the animation of all things by our Lord,...the world, that hitherto has held me up, will engulf me or crush me, or simply fall into dust in my hands." This exclamation means just that a world which is not felt as evolutionarily infused with Omega and drawn ever higher towards an all-consummating unification in Omega's personal no less than universal divinity is not the world Teilhard has always held as an absolute - "that of experience", equal to that which "Revelation" claims: "the transcendent God"32 - and has considered wonderfully worth living in and adored ever since he was a child. To interpret the exclamation merely in the Christian sense which at first it suggests is to read the Teilhardian Cosmic Christ on his surface instead of in his profundities.

 

A point necessary to stress here in order to de-Christianise "Our Lord" in the ultimate view with a glance backward as well as forward from Jesus, is that the Cosmic Christ a la Teilhard is inconceivable not only if the cosmos lacks an "evolutionary structure" leading at the end to a supreme centre of convergence such as Christianity does not organically imply: he is "inconceivable" also if the cosmos is wanting in an "evolutionary structure" maintained from the very beginning by a gradually formative act of God such as Christianity does not organically require. Catholic theologians seem ready to accept the "creation" by God of an evolving world rather than of a world static and all-at-once, but they shy away from going the whole course with Teilhard in this respect. Thus N.M. Wildiers, D.D.,33 discussing Teilhard's treatment of the problem of Evil, explains his case approvingly as follows: "We live in a universe of evolution....

 

31.Ibid., p. 297.

32.Rideau, op. cit., p. 328 quoting from Ecrits du temps de la guerre, p. 278.

33.An Introduction to Teilhard de Chardin (Collins, The Fontana Library, Theology and Philosophy, London, 1968), pp. 142-43.


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In a world of this sort evil is no fortuitous occurrence.... On the contrary it is an essential aspect of an evolutionary process which has to pick its way through a maze of errors and miscarriages of effort. Since God willed to create a world that must grow to its completion via an evolutive process, imperfection and evil were bound to occur in this creation." The implication of Wildiers's concluding sentence is: God created an evolutionary universe by His will but He could as well have willed a non-evolutionary one. In other words, within the Christian sphere of discourse, evolution is not intrinsic to the very creation by God of a world. But is this Teilhardism? Teilhard34 unequivocally affirms: "Creation can be effected only by an evolutive process.... God cannot create except evolutively." And the reason why he does so is: Teilhardism departs from Christian theology in conceiving the "nothingness" out of which the God of Christianity creates. In orthodoxy, this nothingness leaves God totally free to exercise His will: it does not stand in the way of any type of world-making: it affords Him scope for an evolutionary or a non-evolutionary world. Naturally, then, that sentence of Wildiers has the implication we have read in it. But Teilhard35 declares: "Not from any lack of power, but in virtue of the very structure of nothingness upon which he will act, God, in order to create, can proceed in only one way: by arranging, by gradually unifying, a multitude of elements...." And He can so proceed because Teilhard's nothingness, which is defined not as pure non-being but as "positive non-being", a completely dissociated multiplicity, will give only a small initial purchase-point for development. By a slow series of such diminutive holds evolution accumulates. Thus creation becomes a long-drawn-out continuous instead of an instantaneous single act. All in all, when we look backward from Jesus, we find Teilhard's Cosmic Christ in a context of world-beginning with an entirely evolutionist rather than a comple-

 

34.Christianity and Evolution, p. 179.

35.Rideau, op. cit., p. 541: quotation from Comment je vois, 1948, No, 30.


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tely Christian theology. "Our Lord", to Teilhard, is not really identifiable with any aspect of the Holy Trinity in world-making action. At Creation as at the Parousia, He is a non-Christic Omega with a Christian exterior lent by the limited focus of Teilhard's religious devotion.

 

Doubtless, Teilhard wants to believe he can legitimately Christianise his natural World-worship and his later-developed religion of evolution. He cherishes the sense that the universalised Christ whom he parallels with Omega is truly there in the religion in which he was brought up. Thus he36 writes of "the psychological process by which, ever since I have known myself (seven or eight years [old]), a certain obscure attraction for the Earth and Matter has, in conjunction with my religious training, gradually changed into a well-defined and all-consuming love for some 'Universal  Center' whose type and reality are provided for me by the Christian God". But quite often Teilhard lets us have the impression that his Christianity is all his own and falls outside his Church's understanding of its religion even in its
most liberal moods. As late as October 12, 1951, by which time several Biblical exegetes have with the Church's blessing expounded St. Paul's cosmic Christianity and, as de Lubac" notes, Pere Emile Mersch, belonging to Teilhard's own Jesuit Order, has written "his books on the mystical body bringing out, in accordance with tradition, its physical and not simply its moral reality", and Pope Pius XII has himself issued an Encyclical on the Mystical Body to emphasise the more-thanmoral significance of that doctrine of Christ's universal gathering-up of Creation - as late as October 12, 1951, Teilhard finds himself still playing a lone hand and moving under the suspicion of heterodoxy. For, he writes to the Very Reverend Father Janssens, General of the Society of Jesus: " ...obviously I cannot abandon my own personal quest - that would involve me in an interior catastrophe and in dislo yalty

 

36.Letters to Two Friends, 1926-1952, p. 111.

37.Op. cit.,


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to my most cherished vocation; but (and this has been true for many months) I have ceased to propagate my ideas and am confining myself to achieving a deeper personal insight into them."38 And in the same letter Teilhard alludes to his natural World-worship, which grew subsequently into his religion of evolution, as having been the continuous stumbling-stone for his ecclesiastical superiors: "What might have been taken in my attitude for the last thirty years for obstinacy or disrespect, is simply the result of my absolute inability to contain my feeling of wonderment."39

 

This feeling leads Teilhard along such ways of thought that the Christianity he preached fails to tally with any modernisation the Church allows itself. Whatever Universal Christ emerges from the sanctioned Roman Catholic theology of his time or even from Pius XII's Mystici Corporis Christi does not answer to the cosmic dimension and involvement of his Christ. Else, with all that contemporary authoritative religious literature behind him, would he write, as Rideau40 reports him doing, to the Abbe Breuil on December 13,1952: "If only I were Pope for just long enough to write one encyclical on 'the universal Christ'"?

 

Nor is his isolation surprising when we see how his Christ's peculiar universality made the immanent universe more and more urgent in his view than the transcendent God in spite of neither of them having complete justification without the other. On October 16,1947, he41 writes from Paris to an American friend: "As I have been repeating constantly for the past year, the great event of modern times is the discovery that for Man, imprisoned within himself, there is a way out ahead (by self-development of something beyond Man), whereas previously the only way out we saw was above (by escape into God), It is the dawn of this 'faith in Man' that appears about to eclipse the traditional faith in God. Under

 

38.Rideau, op. cit., p. 257.

39.Ibid., p. 626.

40.Ibid., p. 295, n.

41.letters to Two Friends, 1926-1952, p. 102.


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these conditions, my conviction is that if 'ahead' (carried to the limit) cannot be understood without 'above', conversely 'above' is even less understandable without 'ahead', which means that the Christian faith can recover and survive only by incorporating faith in human progress."

 

Still more radically in the same direction is Teilhard's statement42 from Peking on August 5, 1941, after the typescript of The Phenomenon of Man "has been under consideration in Rome (!) for the past three months": "Fundamentally, the only thing I believe in, the only thing I have chosen, is that one must believe in a Future of the Earth which will coincide with a 'totalization' of Humanity."

 

A "neo-humanist mysticism of an ahead",43 with its vision "essentially pantheist because evolutionist",44 but lit up in its depths by the onward attraction of a supreme "pole" at the same time personal and universal, an Omega Point pulling towards a future in which a super-organic super-conscious unification will take place on earth of a mankind converging upon a "Soul of the world"45 that is both a Divine Centre and a Divine Milieu, a God who is, as Rideau46 tells us in a phrase from Teilhard, "complete in himself while for us he is continually being born" or, as Rideau47 puts it in his own words, a God whose "eternity coexists with a temporal act of emergence" - there, variously viewed, we have Teilhardism in its basic form behind the appearance of a pan-Christism wishing to be in tune with but actually divergent from traditional Christianity.

 

42.Ibid., p. 99.

43.Rideau, op. cit., p. 315.

44.Human Energy (Collins, Londoa 1969), p. 67.

45.Rideau, op. cit., p. 319.

46.Ibid., p. 149.

47.Ibid., p. 150.


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(3)

 

 

 

Out of all of Teilhard's writings, perhaps the ones that most lucidly and decisively catch up the modern religious intuition into a light at the same time revealing to it its own depths and laying bare Teilhardism in a basic form are made up of the essay he wrote in March 1937 while crossing the Pacific - The Phenomenon of Spirituality - and a few passages from two other essays - The Spirit of the Earth (March 1931) and Human Energy (October 1937) which are relevant to some issues arising in the first-named piece but not wholly solved there.1

 

This piece is so forthright in its general thesis that not much ambivalence and self-contradiction, not much of the pull-devil-pull-baker double-mindedness recurring in Teilhard's work is possible to it. We can easily take the few hurdles he sets up here and there, and reach in a remarkably easy canter our goal: his fundamental vision of World and God.

 

His general thesis is the most terrific of his startlers for traditional Christian thought:

 

"For some, heirs to almost all the spiritualist philosophies of former times, the spirit is something so special and so high that it could not possibly be confused with earthly and material forces which it animates. Incomprehensibly associated with them, it impregnates them but does not mix with them. There is a world of souls and a world of bodies. Spirit is a 'meta-phenomenon'.

 

"For others, on the contrary, more or less belated representatives of nineteenth-century thought, spirit seems something so small and frail that it becomes accidental and secondary. In face of the vast material energies to which it adds absolutely nothing that can be weighed or measured, the 'fact of consciousness' can be regarded as negligible. It is an 'epi-phenomenon'.

 

1. All the three essays are in the collection entitled Human Energy.


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"I propose in these pages to develop a third viewpoint towards which a new physical science and a new philosophy seem to be converging at the present day: that is to say that spirit is neither super-imposed nor accessory to the cosmos, but that it quite simply represents the higher state assumed in and around us by the primal and indefinable thing that we call, for want of a better name, the 'stuff of the universe'. Nothing more; and also nothing less. Spirit is neither a meta-nor an epi-phenomenon; it is the phenomenon."2

 

Let us briefly take stock of the implications here. First, of the word "phenomenon". Its bearing emerges from the opening passage of the essay: "Around us, bodies present various qualities: they are warm, coloured, electrified, heavy. But also in certain cases they are living, conscious. Beside the phenomena of heat, light and the rest studied by physics, there is, just as real and natural, the phenomenon of spiritua- lity."3

 

"Bodies" and the "various qualities" which they "present" to us - bodies presenting themselves with certain behaviours as part of the world we commonly consider "real and natural", the world of nature which modernism is most preoccupied with and which is the object of scientific observation and the subject of scientific thinking or "natural philosophy" - these constitute "phenomena". When we try to reduce the "real and natural" to its ultimate form, we arrive at "the primal and indefinable thing" which Teilhard dubs "the stuff of the universe". This stuff manifests itself to us phenomenally. According to Teilhard, its manifestation is all in the direction of evolving a "higher state" of itself from a lower one. That state is "spirit". And as to defining "spirit", Teilhard equates it with "the fact of consciousness" which he finds the epiphenomenalists neglecting. He also says at almost the beginning of his essay: "We are coincidental with it. We feel it from within. It is the very thread of which the

 

2.Ibid., pp. 93-94.

3.P. 93.


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other phenomena are woven for us. It is the thing we know best in the world since we are itself, and it is for us everything."4 In other words, spirit is consciousness in the condition in which we know it in ourselves. And, for Teilhard, the achievement of this condition by the mysterious weltstoff, world-stuff, is the one single overall phenomenon with its roots in the whole past of the universe and its branches, so to speak, thrusting towards the whole future. Hence the universe may be defined as spirit in the making.

 

Teilhard fully bears us out in this reading. "What are the dimensions of the magnitude that we call 'spirit', if we take it as a whole? 1 am going to show that, rightly regarded, they are the dimensions of the universe itself."5 Teilhard starts with human beings and says: "If we wish to discern the phenomenon of spirit in its entirety, we must educate our eyes to perceiving collective realities.... Like drops of water scattered in the sand and subjected to the same pressure, that of the layer to which they belong; like electrical charges distributed along a single conductor and subjected to the same potential; so conscious beings are in truth only different local manifestations of a mass which contains them all. To the extent that it is subject to experiment, the phenomenon of spirit is not a divided mass; it displays a general manner of being, a collective state peculiar to our world. In other words, scientifically speaking, there are no spirits in nature. But there is a spirit, physically defined by a certain tension of consciousness on the surface of the earth. This animated covering of our planet may with advantage be called the biosphere - or more precisely (if we are only considering its thinking fringe) the noosphere."6

 

So much for the spirit's present. When we look into the past, we can follow the spirit's traces "with certainty backwards as far as the eye can reach, in the wake of the

 

4.Ibid.

5.Pp. 94-95.

6.P. 95.


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movement that is drawing us forward. It is as if no planet can reach a certain stage in its sidereal evolution without breaking into life. But this is not all. The consciousness that we see filling the avenues of the past, does not flow simply like a river which carries an unchanging water past ever changing banks. It transforms itself in the course of its journey; it evolves; life has a movement of its own".7 This evolutionary movement starts with "a swarm of living particles that are hardly separate from molecular energies".8 Then, "step by step, with a growth in complexity, consciousness increases its powers"9 of "interiorization". Teilhard sums up: "Taken as a whole, in its temporal and spatial totality, life represents the goal of a transformation of great breadth, in the course of which what we call 'matter' (in the most comprehensive sense of the word), turns about, furls in on itself, interiorizes, the operation covering, so far as we are concerned, the whole history of the earth. The Phenomenon of spirit is not therefore a sort of brief flash in the night; it reveals a gradual and systematic passage from the unconscious to the conscious, and from the conscious to the self-conscious. It is a cosmic change of state."10

 

Here Teilhard makes a very pregnant pronouncement: "This irrefutably explains the links and also the contradictions between spirit and matter. And in a sense they are both fundamentally the same thing, as the neo-materialists allege; but between them lies also a point of deflection which makes them in some way the opposite of one another, as the ancient spiritualists maintained. All antinomy between souls -and bodies disappears in the hypothesis of a movement that has reached its 'critical point'."11

 

N.M. Wildiers, the Churchman-editor of Teilhard's book, makes a footnote to the words "same thing": " 'From a purely

 

7.p.96.

8.Ibid.

9.Pp. 96-97.

10.P. 97.

11.Ibid.


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scientific and experimental standpoint', as is said in the preceding paragraph." In picking out just one part of the pronouncement, Wildiers has voiced a special warning, as much as to say: "The sameness posited is on a superficial impression, valid only for pragmatic purposes. It cannot be posited on a true envisagement of things. The true envisage-ment will show 'a point of deflection' which makes spirit and matter 'the opposites of one another'."

 

But Wildiers forgets that if Teilhard's first declaration is to be considered in a certain limited context, the second is equally so to be considered - and it has the qualifying words "in some way", matching those in the first: "in a sense." What Teilhard intends is that neither declaration holds in toto. Such an intention should be obvious, for surely he cannot be grouped with either the neo-materialists or the ancient spiritualists. The view he himself embraces is in the sentence where he talks of all antinomy between souls and bodies disappearing. The precise drift here is best approached by our harking back to "the preceding paragraph" where the "standpoint" which Wildiers reminds us of is mentioned. There we read: "...from a purely scientific and empirical standpoint, the true name for 'spirit' is 'spiritualization'."12 And this is followed by the sentence already quoted, containing the expression: "what we call 'matter'." The purport which emerges from both the paragraphs taken together may be expressed thus:

 

There is no "matter" as a real opposite of "spirit". It is merely the farther end of a process of "spiritualization" - the end at which the weltstoff looks as if it were the opposite of spirit but in truth is just the hidden form of spirit, a covered-up starting-point of "spiritualization". The hidden form has led to spirit along a rising evolutionary line, but round about the spiritualizing process of evolution the hidden form persists and continues and still appears as the spirit's opposite and gives the ancient spiritualists their cue. Similarly, the

 

12. P. 96.


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neo-materialists get their cue from the fact that spirit seems to be a development of matter: they make matter the fundamental reality, Teilhard does not agree with them and Wildiers's footnote-warning is unnecessary. How could Teilhard ever be at one with the neo-materialists? But, while he is utterly against the ancient spiritualists who deemed spirit a "meta-phenomenon", he has a point of contact with the neo-materialists. For, although he can never subscribe to their view of spirit as an "epi-phenomenon", he concurs with them that matter seems to develop spirit, and that is why, along with the qualified tone of "in a sense", he has here the unqualified "fundamentally" which he does not use when, in referring to the other party, he echoes the earlier qualified tone by now saying "in some way". What he implies by his "fundamentally" is that, while the neo-materialists are wrong, they are wrong not quite in their fundamental but in their taking hold of the stick by the wrong end: matter seems to develop spirit not because matter as such is fundamental but because spirit is fundamental and matter is the deep disguise it has worn: matter is reality's fundamental mask rather than face. And because spirit is the fundamental face it is termed by Teilhard "the phenomenon". He concedes only a degree of truth to the ancient spiritualists on the one side and to the neo-materialists on the other. His own position, which is hinted at in his "fundamentally", does not come before he talks of "a movement that has reached its 'critical point'". On the strength of the hypothesis of such a movement he declares: "All antinomy between souls and bodies disappears." So the central operative Teilhardian term is "critical point".

 

What is that point? It is simply the point at which, time and again, there occurs what Teilhard has already named "a transformation" or, more frequently, "a change of state". Immediately after mentioning "critical point", he writes: "And the horizon is then swept clear for new perspectives. Recognition that the phenomenon of spirit is a change of state greatly simplifies our views of the universe. But this dis-


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covery has another advantage: it lights the forward march of the world around us."13 The concept of "critical point" does for us exactly the same opening up of vistas ahead as is done by the concept of "change of state". The two concepts are identical. Hence basic Teilhardism is: "Fundamentally the weltstoff is secret spirit appearing in a first phase as matter and evolutionarily disclosing its real nature by means of critical points or changes of state, by which a growth in complexity is accompanied by a greater 'interiorization', until 'self-conscious' man is produced, the acme of 'interiorization' in an individual form looking forward to a further progress."

 

Teilhard himself, towards the conclusion of his essay, provides us with a clear-cut formulation of his basic vision: "To situate the stuff of the universe in consciousness, and to see in the development of this same consciousness the essential fact of nature, seems the only way not only of satisfactorily explaining the present and past aspects of the world around us, but also of organizing the hesitant energies of the earth in view of a possible future."14

 

We have yet to see the shape of the Teilhardian future. But, before we do so, we must mark some momentous issues arising from Teilhard's text.

 

*

 

When we describe the process of spiritualization as "a cosmic change of state", "a gradual and systematic passage" running from the very dawn of the world, we are throwing into relief the chief intrinsic characteristic of matter in its universal existence: "being or not being interiorized."l5 "In other words, matter undergoes animation...simply because it is matter" and "no external cause seems experimentally assignable for the transformation's occurence".16 "We are in

 

13.P. 97.

14.P. 110.

15.P. 97.

16.Ibid.


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the presence of a kind of autonomous process and inner spontaneity...."17 But Teilhard at once continues that what we are here in the presence of is "comparable alone in its universality to the mysterious dissipation of energy recognized in the cosmos by modern physics". The two movements are sheer contraries - on the one hand the building up of organisation and complexity, with their accompanying "interiorization", and on the other the break-down of ordered energy to an unutilisable dead-level. They show themselves as symmetrical counter-currents of the universe: the universe is undergoing ever more concentration of interiority and pointing through the stage of individual human thought to something beyond it, while simultaneously it is undergoing ever more disintegration into amorphous non-workable heat. What shall we say about this duality of cosmic movements? Do we not have two fundamentals instead of one, a trend of matter against a trend of spirit?

 

Teilhard's answer is certainly contained in this essay but not quite directly set forth. Its initial statement has a curious blend of slight hesitation and overemphatic assertion and neither element is exactly argued out. Thus we read about "the phenomenon of spirit": "...since, very probably, these two contrary movements...are merely the opposite poles of a single cosmic event of which the positive or synthesizing term is the most significant, it is finally the outstanding cosmic movement, the movement on which everything depends and which nothing explains...."18

 

As we proceed in the essay, more light can be thrown on the statement by picking out phrases here and there. We are told: "Matter is habitually regarded as inanimate, and this is the source of all our difficulties in understanding it."19 Then there is the suggestion about matter: "it may simply correspond (to the extent that it exists) to a state of consciousness so

 

17.Ibid.

18.P. 98.

19.P. 101.


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extended and fragmentated that its elements are only visible to us in their statistical properties, that is to say in the form of inflexible, completely 'dis-animated' laws. From this viewpoint, material determinisms cease to provide the skeleton of the world; they are only a secondary effect in the cosmos..."20 Almost at the end of the essay we are told that the dualism between spirit and matter "is simply and harmoniously resolved...in a world in which consciousness and its appearance are regarded as the phenomenon. Every thing then takes its natural place in a universe in process of changing its spiritual state. Beneath the superficial veil of mechanised processes thrown over it by the laws of great numbers, matter shows itself to be a swarming of elementary consciousness ready to enter into the higher combinations of the organic world. By this fact it ceases to be irreducible to life, the first appearance of which on earth simply corresponds to an emergence of the spontaneous individual into the field of our experience from the inorganic mass. And hominization merely marks a decisive and critical point in the gradual development of this change of state."21

 

All the ideas playing here obtain a more connected expression in the essay Human Energy. "For obvious reasons of intellectual and practical convenience, science has always tried, from its beginning, to explain the world (that is to say to give it a coherent total pattern) with matter as its starting-point. Now in this effort of synthesis it has more and more palpably come up against an insurmountable obstacle: life... The animals, and more especially man, in whom the phenomena of spontaneity and immanence definitely emerge, cannot possibly be integrated into a purely mechanistic natural system. But it would be impossible to leave them out of our picture; this omission would prove science bankrupt. How do we get out of the quandary? A single way out presents itself; to reverse direction.... Now our task is to rejoin

 

20.Pp. 101-02.

21.p. 111.


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and reconstitute matter by an opposite process, by coming down from spirit accepted as the primal substance of things. Let us assume as an axiom that only spontaneity and consciousness (masked though they may be by a state of extreme division and diffusion) exist at the beginning. Then the determinisms which we choose to consider as essential to the world would be no more than an inelastic veil cast over a mass of elementary freedoms by the play of great numbers. If we follow this line, the difficulties disappear; the road becomes level, and movement becomes possible between the two poles of the universe, the conscious and the unconscious. If the cosmos were basically material, it would be physically incapable of containing man. Therefore, we may conclude... that it is in its inner being made of spiritual stuff."22

 

Here we may remark that Teilhard goes beyond what Wildiers, in his Foreword to the volume including the three essays we have named, ascribes to him: "the theory of the dual character of the weltstoff,...the hypothesis that everything has a without and (virtually at least) a within, and that these two aspects of reality evolve throughout history towards an ever growing complexity/consciousness...."23 By the words "inner being" in his own passage, Teilhard does not mean just the "within" as a counterpart to the "without". The "within" would always, in one degree or another, be "spiritual stuff": it does not need to be so described. When Teilhard talks of "inner being" he is referring to the question: What "basically" is the cosmos? Is it material or spiritual? And Teilhard's answer is that it is the latter. He wants "spirit accepted as the primal substance of things". Wildiers's formulation falls short of basic Teilhardism.

 

The falling short becomes even sharper when we cull passages from The Spirit of the Earth which is six years earlier than The Phenomenon of Spirituality. There Teilhard anticipates his later contraposition, in our universe, of simultaneously

 

22 Pp. 119-20.

23. P. 11.


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concentrating interiority and disintegrating energy. He says that once life has appeared and started its progressive evolution, "only one reality (in so far as it truly exists) remains to confront it, and can be compared to it in size and universality: this is entropy, that mysterious involution by which the world tends progressively to refurl on itself, in unorganized plurality and increasing probability, the layer of cosmic energy.24 And then, before our enquiring minds, a final duel is fought between life (thought) and entropy (matter) for the domination of the universe. Are life and entropy the two opposite but equivalent facts of a single fundamental reality in eternal equipoise? Or radically has one of them the natural advantage of being more primal and durable than the other?"25 Then Teilhard argues that the acceptance of matter "as the primordial stuff" leads nowhere:

 

"Not only does matter, the symbol for multiplicity and transience, escape the direct grasp of thought, but more disadvantageously still, this same matter shows itself incapable by its very nature of giving rise to the world that surrounds us and gives us substance. It is radically impossible to conceive that 'interiorized' and spontaneous elements could ever have developed from a universe presumed, in its

 

24.Elsewhere in Teilhard the term "involution" is used at times for the very reverse of entropy: the centring process of "radial energy", the folding back of being on itself, its in-turning, which raises rather than lowers the organisational level. Teilhard has also the word "convolution" or "coiling" for this folding-back. It may be of interest to compare Teilhard and Sri Aurobindo here. Sri Aurobindo mostly uses "involution" to connote either the movement by which the plenitude of the transcendent Divine manifests an increasingly lesser degree of itself in a descending hierarchy of cosmic planes or else the total submergence of all the powers of the Spirit in a sort of zero-level called the Inconscient, from which all the powers gradually emerge, the process of emergence being designated an evolution from the involution. Instead of "involution" in the first sense Sri Aurobindo once speaks of "devolution". At one place he also speaks of a highest involution of the Spirit - "Superconscience" - from which everything evolves downward just as from the lowest involution - " inconscience" -everything evolves upward. (K.D.S.)

25.P. 22.


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initial state, to have consisted entirely of determinisms.... On the other hand, from a cosmos initially formed and made up of elementary 'freedoms', it is easy to deduce, by virtue of the effect of large numbers and habitual behaviour, all the appearances of exactitude upon which the mathematical physics of matter is founded. A universe whose primal stuff is matter is irremediably fixed and sterile; whereas a universe of 'spiritual' stuff has all the elasticity it would need to lend itself both to evolution (life) and to involution (entropy)...,

 

"No, the cosmos...is fundamentally and primarily living, and its complete history is ultimately nothing but an immense psychic exercise; the slow but progressive attaining of a diffused consciousness - a gradual escape from 'material' conditions which, secondarily, veil it in an initial state of extreme plurality. From this point of view man is nothing but the point of emergence in nature, at which this deep cosmic evolution culminates and declares itself. From this point onwards man ceases to be a spark fallen by chance on earth and coming from another place. He is the flame of a general fermentation of the universe which breaks out suddenly on the earth. He is no longer a sterile enigma or discordant note in nature. He is the key of things and the final harmony. In him everything takes shape and is explained."26

 

Far-reaching suggestions have been made in these passages. We begin with "a universe of 'spiritual' stuff", a cosmos "fundamentally and primarily living".

 

26. Pp. 22-24.


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in secret, of the same order as the human consciousness.

 

Our conclusion is spotlighted by Teilhard himself some pages later: "Under penalty of being less evolved than the ends brought about by its own action universal energy must be a thinking energy."27

 

But this anthropocentric and anthropomorphic conclusion is not the end of the story. The above assertion by Teilhard is meant to have a deeper substance. According to him, "we are confronted with two theoretical possibilities: either from man onwards life comes to an absolute peak and scatters in a plurality of reflective consciousness, each of which is its own final reason; or beyond man (beyond the area of hominiza-tion), and despite the decisive and definitive value of 'personality', the unity of the evolutionary front remains intact and the value of the world continues to be built ahead by a communal effort....28 Precious though it is, the human monad remains vitally subjected to the law that, before his coming, obliged units to preserve and promote the whole in preference to themselves.... Thus on the level of man...the progressive advance of earthly life does not fragmentate. Unities of a new kind are formed, to act as more perfect constituents and intended for a superior organization. The general convergence which constitutes universal evolution, is not completed by hominization.... But...we twentieth-century humans are indeed, scientifically speaking, nothing but the elements of a soul seeking itself through the cosmos..."29

 

If a greater than man the individual thinker is sure to emerge by the very drive of cosmic evolution - if that Soul of souls is the reality of the future and is even now seeking itself via evolution, then the evolutionary cosmos in its secret origin must be a concealed consciousness greater than the one we know of as man today. This consciousness can be said to be of the same order as ours in only the sense that it too is a power

 

27.P. 45.

28.P. 30.

29.Pp. 30-31.


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of "reflection" - the bending back in awareness upon the centre which is aware, what Teilhard often speaks of as the knowing that one knows. Characteristically, he calls the coming greater consciousness "co-reflective".

 

Here we may revert to The Phenomenon of Spirituality. If the beginning and the end, the Alpha and the Omega is a Super-consciousness, it goes without saying that the current of evolutionary life should be, on the whole, "irresistible (that is to say infallible)" and "irreversible" and "totalizing".30 Considering the last property, "if we try to imagine the final condition towards which the spiritual transformation taking place is apparently guiding the world, we find ourselves impelled to express it in the form of a monocen trism: the All, becoming self-reflective upon a single consciousness",31 But now a problem presents itself. "We are moving towards a higher state of general consciousness, which is linked with a further synthesis of our particular consciousness.... In man, by virtue of reflexion, a fragment of cosmic consciousness is definitely individualized. But how can we imagine that this portion once shaped can afterwards join other like fragments in the building of a super-consciousness? To become super-conscious, it must unite itself with others.... But precisely in order to give itself, must it not decentre, that is to say become less conscious of itself?... The solution of this paradox is to be found by making a distinction between two entirely opposite sorts of union: union by dissolution and union by differentiation."32 In the former, according to Teilhard, the uniting parts break down into "an imagined homogeneous unconsciousness": in the latter "all the lower centres unite, but by inclusion in a more powerful centre"33 - "a supreme centre in which all the personal energy represented by human consciousness must be gathered and 'super-personalized' "34 - "a

 

30.P. 98.

31.P. 100.

32.Pp. 102433.

33.P. 104.

34.P. 103.


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distinct and autonomous centre...which is itself personal and radiates over the myriad of inferior personalities".35 As distinguished from union of "relaxation", "union of concentration (the only true union) does not destroy but emphasizes the elements it swallows. Reflective human units can therefore undergo this operation without being destroyed or distorted. Despite appearances, persons can still serve as elements of a further synthesis, because the precise result of their union is to differentiate them".36

 

Teilhard is here in the domain of mysticism, and it is evident from his talk of "an imagined homogeneous unconsciousness" that his understanding of this domain is imperfect. The closest he comes to the heart of the matter is when he says: "to complete ourselves, we must pass into a greater than ourselves" - and adds: "Survival and also 'super-life' await us in the direction of a growing consciousness and love of the universal."37 But surely we cannot pass into a greater than ourselves and, by that very act, complete ourselves unless the greater and ourselves are essentially one and therefore capable of either an utter fusion or a unity-in-diversity. In both cases, essential oneness has to be posited. And then the two sorts of union which Teilhard lists - that by "dissolution" and that by "differentiation" - wear a look other than the one he gives them. What seems dissolution is no "imagined homogeneous unconsciousness": it is the transcendence of a smaller and lower self-hood by becoming a greater and higher selfhood. There is really no dissolution: there is an infinitisation of the essence by the breaking down of the boundary-lines developed within the essence, the removal of what the ancient Indian seers termed "name and form" whereby the infinite One took on the appearance or the play of manyness. When the "name and form" are gone, a liberation occurs of the self-limited into its own illimitable-

 

35.P. 105.

36.P. 104.

37.P. 105.


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ness. Ultimately, such liberation would tend to take the mystic out of the cosmic process, but not to dissolution: the end would be an extra-cosmic status, the unparticularised Unmanifest. On the other hand, union by differentiation implies merely that the multiple statuses assumed by the One remain in their general "name and form" while being freed from the ignorance attached to this condition. Aware of the One who has assumed this condition, the person is not bound any more to his own "name and form": all other "names and forms" are his by empathy and intuition and he knows too that he is more than every "name and form". There is in addition a consciousness of the Truth of namehood and formhood, so to speak: an Original Divine Super-Person, "Para-Purusha" of the Upanishads, "Purushottama" of the Gita, is realised, who is Himself and yet All and with whom the persons have a play of ideal relationship in love, knowledge and work, and through whom they are also ideally related and at play among themselves,

 

Teilhard does not understand that any sort of real union implies essential oneness. He speaks of "the unification without confusion of...unmixable centres".38 Unmixable centres can collect and combine and be organised around a greater centre, and even have profound contacts of consciousness, but we shall have no more than a common-centred community: where will union in any true connotation come in? Conversely, "inclusion in a more powerful centre" would destroy the lower centres if they were not essentially one with it. Only when they are such can the lower find themselves "emphasized" while being "swallowed" - "emphasized" in the sense of getting intensified, deepened, sublimated, divinised, super-personalised by the experience that they are diversifications of the Being who serves centrally as their focal point.

 

But, whatever his intellectual blinkers, Teilhard instinctively drives towards such an experience as the authentic

 

38. Ibid.


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version of his "union of differentiation" on coming to the topic: "God's Spiritual Function."

 

Talking of the spirit's future, he writes: "Examined in its external development, the phenomenon of spirit appeared to us to depend on a common centre of total organization. Observed now in its internal functioning, it brings us - as was inevitable - face to face with this pole of attraction and total determination."39 That means a movement inclining us "towards the future, in pursuit of a God".40 Then Teilhard reaches his climax of inspiration in the essay:


"I think it necessary to state two conditions, cohering to the views developed in this essay, which the God we are seeking must satisfy, if He is to be capable of sustaining and directing the phenomenon of spirit.

 

"The first condition is that He shall combine in his singularity the evolutionary extension of all the fibres of the world in movement: a God of cosmic synthesis in whom we can be conscious of advancing and joining together by spiritual transformation of all the powers of matter.

 

"And the second condition is that this same God shall act in the course of this synthesis as a first nucleus of independent consciousness: a supremely personal God, from whom we are the more distinguishable the more we lose ourselves in Him.


"These two in no way contradictory conditions immediately result from the characteristics recognized above in the cosmic genesis of the spirit: a universal God to be realized by effort, and yet a personal God to be submitted to in love. If the world is really moving within consciousness, He is the indispensable 'mover' of all further progress of life.

 

"In short, humanity has reached the biological point where it must either lose all belief in the universe or quite resolutely worship it. This is where we must look for the origin of the present crisis in morality. But it is necessary also

 

39.P. 109.

40.Ibid.


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for the religions to change themselves in order to meet this new need. The time has passed in which God could simply impose Himself on us from without as master and owner of the estate. Henceforth the world will only kneel before the organic centre of its evolution.

 

"What we are all more or less lacking at this moment is a new definition of holiness."41

 

Evolution - and evolution alone - is the basis of Teilhardism. And it is a process with a centre to it. This centre is Teilhard's God. And the God-centre is organic to the process - that is to say, it is not extrinsic, posed side by side, acting from without as something or someone radically different: it is intrinsic and in-built, a master-function co-ordinating everything as if everything were a projection of its own being and found in that being the full evolutionary extension of all force and form, the very life of their life. Because of this centre the process is one developing whole: the centre is its seed-power, its growth-principle, its flower-and-fruit realiser. The process seems to radiate from the God-centre and to be held together by it and to culminate in it: the process is as if an emanation of it, a going out of it to come back to it while that, which the process goes out of and comes back to, remains complete in the midst of all this movement. Here we must take the organicity of action very literally, for, as we saw earlier, spirit in diverse phases is all that is. But to be the organic centre of the world's evolution implies for God both universal existence and personal existence. And in His universal existence He is a secret omnipresence as well as a manifest activity. Active, He is spirit manifesting at the same time as matter running in an ever increasingly complex mould for consciousness, for interiority, and as matter running down in an ever increasingly simplified and unusable form of energy. But the rising or evolutionary manifestation of universal spirit has the upper hand of the falling or involutionary manifestation and so, predominantly, the

 

41. Pp. 109-10.

 


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universe faced by twentieth-century man is matter under the transforming pressure of the truth of itself that is spirit -matter charged with God, transparent to God, bodying forth God. That is why present-day humanity, if it realises at all the value of the universe, must not do anything save "quite resolutely worship it". The God of evolution, comprehended by the modern religious intuition, is to be loved as a Person but with a holiness which is best defined as love of Him for and through and across and in and even as the universe.

 

Teilhard's worship of the universe is no gross idolatry of matter, no "materialistic pantheism" bowing "before the god 'energy'".42 Nor is it a pantheism excluding the Personal God. It is born of "a certain 'cosmic sense', by which each one of us tends to be habitually and practically conscious of his links with the universe in evolution".43 And Teilhard goes on to say: "In this active participation of our beings in a collective task (a task whose reality is visible at the end of every scientific avenue) the nebula of ancient pantheisms condenses and takes shape at the heart of the modern world."44 The universe as spirit turned matter - spirit that is both Pantheos and Person - is what Teilhardism worships.

 

There is nothing here to be shocked at: on the contrary, it is religion at its widest and deepest and highest. It is also a religion standing self-justified by its "new definition of holiness". That the new definition assimilates a pantheist strain should not astonish us. Has not Teilhard rejected "the spiritualist philosophies of former times", which made a stark dualism of spirit and matter, regarded the former as a "meta-phenomenon" and sought to look down upon and subdue the latter? Has not Teilhard appreciatively written: "Pantheistic aspirations towards a universal communion are as old in man as his 'spiritualistic' attempts to conquer matter" - and has he not added as a modernist: "But only lately, thanks to the precise data provided by science concerning the unity of

 

42.P. 45.

43.P. 158.

44.Ibid.


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matter and energy and the reality of a cosmogenesis, have these vague desires begun to take the rational form of definite intellectual discoveries. In every realm we are beginning habitually to live in the presence of the All and with some attention to it. Nothing seems to me more vital, from the point of view of human energy, than the spontaneous appearance and, eventually, the systematic cultivation of such a 'cosmic sense'"?45 Even at the start of his writing career, Teilhard, as a quotation by Rideau46 shows, recorded, with his whole self vibrant, "the fundamental, lived, incurable yearning for total union that gives life to all poetry, all pantheism, all holiness" (La lutte contre le multiple, 1917, in Ecrits du temps de la guerre, p. 118).

 

Teilhardian pantheism needs no such cautious deprecation as Wildiers makes in a footnote to the phrase about worshipping the universe: "The author was to explain later in the autobiographical pages entitled Le Coeur de la Matiere, how the universe became adorable in his eyes in the person of the Son of God, who assimilated it totally to himself as a result of the Incarnation."47 The footnote is absurd and impertinent as well as executive of a hysteron-proteron. Le Coeur de la Matiere was written in 1950, The Phenomenon of Spirituality in 1937. Are we to believe that Teilhard left this earlier essay of his without its proper key for thirteen years? Opening the "Conclusion" of his essay, Teilhard recalls the mode of approach he proposed in his "Introduction": "As we said at the beginning, if the interpretation of the phenomenon of spirit here presented is correct, its truth can only be established by the greater coherence it establishes in our perspectives. To see more clearly into the past and foresee the future in better outline."48 What was said at the beginning reads: "...my only form of argument will be that universally employed by modern science, that and that alone: by which I mean the argument of

 

45.P. 130.

46.Op. cit., pp. 446-47, note 83,

47.P. 110.

48.Ibid.


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'coherence'. In a world whose single business seems to be to organize itself in relation to itself, that is by definition the more true, which better harmonizes in relation to ourselves a larger body of facts. If therefore I can succeed in showing that, regarded from the point of view I have chosen, the universe harmonizes better with our experience, thoughts and actions than the two contrary viewpoints, I shall have established in so far as is possible the truth of my thesis."49 Surely the essay is self-contained and neither presupposes nor requires "the Son of God" and his "Incarnation".

 

We do not have to deny the Christian side of Teilhard, which often busied itself with creating a Christianity to match his Evolutionism, even inclined at times to push the former into the forefront and repeatedly sought to water down what another essay in the same volume has called "my profound tendencies towards pantheism",50 But it is in his Evolutionism that we strike the Teilhardian bedrock, and this bedrock is built on Teilhard's modern religious intuition.

 

For, what exactly is the religious intuition Teilhard as a true modernist felt in his very blood and bones except the pantheist-tempered scientific neo-humanism whose growing with the Catholic Church he51 has vividly sketched in the following passage? -

 

"During the first, and much the longest, phase, the hostility between experience and Revelation was seen almost entirely in local difficulties encountered by exegesis in its attempt to reconcile Biblical statements with the results of observation: the immobility of the earth, for example, and the seven days of Creation. Gradually, however, with progress in physics and natural sciences, a much more general and much deeper schism ultimately became apparent. By force of circumstances (in view of the date of its birth) the best that Christian dogma could do, originally, was to express itself in the dimensions and to the requirements of a universe that in

 

49.P. 94.

50.Sketch of a Personalistic Universe, p. 91.

51.Science and Christ, pp. 187-88.


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many respects was still the Alexandrine cosmos; a universe harmoniously revolving upon itself, Limited and divisible in extension and duration, made up of objects more or less arbitrarily transposable in space and time. At the time we are speaking of, this view, under the effort of human thought, was beginning to change. Space was becoming limitless, Time was being converted into organic duration. And within this vitalised domain the elements of the world were developing so close an interrelationship that the appearance of any one of them was inconceivable except as a function of the global history of the whole system. In man's eyes a universe in genesis was irresistibly taking the place of the static universe of the theologians. Inevitably again, a specific form of mysticism was emerging from this new intuition: faith, amounting practically to worship, in the terrestrial and cosmic future of evolution. Thus, from beneath exegetical difficulties in matters of detail, a fundamental religious antinomy ended by coming to the surface: the conflict that was involved (though this was not clearly realised) in the Galileo controversy. With the universe rescued from immobility, a kind of divinity completely immanent in the world was progressively tending to take the place in man's consciousness of the transcendent Christian God."

 

Pointers to all the terms we have used are in the passage: "this new intuition" - "faith, amounting practically to worship, in the terrestrial and cosmic future of evolution". And in the phrase - "a kind of divinity completely immanent in the world" - we get "a specific form of mysticism" whose essence basic Teilhardism involves and whose expression it corrects. The correction may be said to lie in substituting "truly" for "completely". Complete immanence of the world's divinity would, as in the general modern trend noted by Teilhard, push out the transcendent God towards whom Christianity aspires; but if the immanence is merely what Christian theology gives to its God - that is, an immanence which has no ultimate oneness-of-being with the universe and represents only the ever present preservative action of the trans-


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cendent God in a universe created by Him as different from Himself - then it is not a true immanence such as the modem religious intuition feels. True immanence, in accord with this intuition, must imply that the divinity in the world is one-in-being with the world and that the latter has been put forth or exteriorised by the former and is the former itself in an evolutionary mode of spirit-matter. Unlike Christianised immanence, true immanence would permit - nay, demand -worship of the universe as a consequence of faith in evolution's terrestrial and cosmic future. But, unlike complete immanence, it would leave room for a transcendent God who is to be loved as a Supreme Person while through the immanent God we are one self with Him and with all.

 

Teilhard cannot lay claim to being a genuine modernist without subscribing to true immanence. But his claim is also to look into the heart of modern Evolutionism and discern there the necessity of an already existent Perfect Pole of attraction, that is a Super-Person and by which alone evolution can pass from synthesis to greater synthesis and reach the human personal level where the persistent cry for a Super-Person is as much a natural fact as is "the fundamental, lived, incurable yearning for total union" that characterises pantheist mysticism and arises in a form most valid and justified against the background of the progressive infinite unity that is modem science's worshippable universe of inwardly impelled evolution.

 

Perhaps in the phrase, already quoted, which makes all individual human persons "nothing but the elements of a soul seeking itself through the cosmos"52 we have the most felicitous summary suggestion of a Pantheos who is also a Super-Person, both aspects rendering worship-worthy the cosmos through which they are beckoning us to their single secrecy.

 

 

One may go on to say that a universe like Teilhard's must ultimately call, both naturally and supernaturally, for a

 

52. p. 31.

 


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Divine Incarnation such as Wildiers's footnote draws our attention to. Teilhard even prepares us for an incarnational corollary. But his preparing, we should mark, follows and does not precede the demonstration of his scientifico-religi-ous thesis and is never said to underline or explain it. Here also Wildiers's footnote puts the cart before the horse. Provided the horse is in its right place we may appropriately listen to Teilhard's indirect incarnational allusion:

 

"If it is true, as we have been led to imagine, that cosmic developments of consciousness depend on the existence of a higher and independent centre of personality, there must be a means without leaving the empirical field, of recognizing around us in the personalized zones of the universe, some psychic effect (radiation or attraction) specifically connected with the operation of this centre, and consequently revealing its positive existence.

"The definitive discovery of the phenomenon of spirit is bound up with the analysis (which science will one day finally undertake) of the 'mystical phenomenon', that is of the love of God."53

 

Yes, a "Son of God" may be expected in the Teilhardian universe where God is the Alpha and Omega of evolution. But this universe is not conceived on the strength of a religious dogma. Also, it has no connection with accepting Jesus Christ as the one and only Son of God. The Phenomenon of Spirituality is independent of Christianity and stands on its own legs. The verity it offers is bom of a scientifico-religious insight. This insight, for all its wearing the hypothetical look proper to a confrontation in the field of science, is the core of Teilhard - Teilhard who, even in 1951, a year after Le Coeur de la Matiere, declared during an interview: "I am neither a philosopher nor a theologian, but a student of the 'phenomenon', a physicist (natural philosopher) in the old Greek sense."54

 

53.P. 112,

54.Nouvelles Litteraires, January 11, 1951.


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(4)

 

 

 

On a close analysis of the various elements constituting Teilhardism we have discovered his Christianity to be a fine superstructure rather than an inalienable part of the foundation, leave aside its being the sole and whole foundation. We have de-centred Teilhard's Cosmic Christ from the historical Jesus so that the name "Christ" becomes merely an individual preference and, while finding the historical Jesus a medium of the former, we have seen no cause to consider this medium necessarily unique: it has the appearance of uniqueness simply because of Teilhard's religious milieu and cultural limitation. A Pantheos who is also a Person, a Universal Godhead who is also a Transcendent Divinity, form the basis of Teilhardism, and this many-sided Ultimate is inseverably linked with an evolutionary world-vision and reveals the true heart of the religious intuition striving to take shape in the modern consciousness that is charged with the scientific sense of a unitary developing cosmos. Teilhardism is best summed up in the multi-faceted concept of Omega, evolution's Final Term which is really the Prime Mover ahead, drawing to a super-state of collective Uranimity His own aspect of a Spirit in physical evolution. The historical Jesus is an expression of Omega, but Omega exists independently of him and would suffice Teilhard, no matter how coloured with Jesus's historicity Omega might seem at first glance. Teilhard speaks of the Mystical Body of Christ, but that is only the concrete omnipresence of a World-God, the subtle stuff in which this Soul of the World functions as a formative power in the midst of the gross substance which is its evolutionary emanation.

 

One shade, however, of the Teilhardian movement to relate the Cosmic Christ with the historical Jesus remains to be assessed. Teilhard1 argues that it is to the latter that we have to apply "the long series of Johannine - and still more Pauline - texts in which the physical supremacy of Christ

 

1. Science and Christ, p. 54.


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over the universe is so magnificently expressed" - texts answering to "the very definition of Omega". He2 continues: "I am well aware that there are two loopholes by which timid minds hope to escape the awesome realism of these repeated statements. They may maintain that the cosmic attributes of the Pauline Christ belong to the Godhead alone; or they may try to weaken the force of the texts by supposing that the ties of dependence that make the world subject to Christ are juridical and moral, the right exercised by a landowner, a father or the head of an association." Teilhard3 declares himself against the "juridicists," who "will always understand 'mystical' (in 'mystical body') by analogy with a somewhat stronger family association or association of friends". He4 puts himself among the "physicalists", for whom "the beauty of life consists in being organically structured" and who "will see in the word mystical the expression of a hyper-physical (super-substantial) relationship...." At the moment we are not concerned with Teilhard's physicalism. Our concern is with the first of what he has dubbed "two loopholes". He5 remarks: "As regards the first subterfuge, all I need to do is to refer to the context, which is categorical: even in Col. 1: 15ff. St. Paul quite obviously has in mind the theandric Christ; it was in the incarnate Christ that the universe was pre-formed."

 

A further gloss on this subtlety occurs in a passage where Teilhard6 asserts the very exceeding of the Jesus-fact by the Christ-truth: "Even before the Incarnation became a fact, the whole history of the universe (in virtue of a pre-action of the humanity of Christ, mysterious, but yet known to us through revelation) is the history of the progressive information of the universe by Christ." The gloss comes in the phrase: "a pre-

 

2.Ibid.

3.Ibid., p. 55.

4.Ibid.

5.Ibid., pp. 54-55.

6.The Prayer of the Universe: Selected from Writings in Time of War, translated by Rene Hague (Collins, Fontana Books, 1973), p. 21.


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action of the humanity of Christ" - and the central operative expression is "humanity". The human Christ, the Word Incarnate, the "theandric" or God-Man Jesus, is said to preexist in the eternal Second Person of the Holy Trinity and to pre-act within the universe. This puzzling notion derives, as Teilhard indicates, from St. Paul. Christopher Mooney7 refers to the Pauline origin thus: "Paul seems clearly to affirm a pre-existence for Christ, and apparently it is always the concrete, historical God-Man of whom he is thinking, never the Word independent of his humanity. How this is to be explained theologically is a question for which there is as yet no satisfactory answer."

 

Whether theology has a satisfactory answer or not, the doctrine - for one who adheres to it - stamps on the Cosmic Christ the personality of the historical Jesus. If Teilhard can convincingly put his contention across instead of repeating what St. Paul appears to have preached, our interpretation of him will suffer a setback. Does he do so?

 

Mooney8 reports, without any endorsement, Teilhard's attempt to render St. Paul intelligible: "Teilhard's own theory is that 'every cosmic particle, even the tiniest electron, is rigorously coextensive with the totality of space and time.' Hence 'the body of a living being, far from limiting it inside the universe, is simply the expression and gauge of its inferiority and its "centreity".' But 'in the case of Christ, this coextension of coexistence has become a coextension of domination,' and the reason Christ's Body has such a privileged position in the universe is to be traced to 'the transforming effect of the Resurrection'."

 

We are afraid there is here a slip into a serious bit of obscurum per obscurius. Surely the dark is rendered darker by the talk of the Resurrection bringing about the pre-existence of the human Jesus as a dominating World-Body. The expla-

 

7.Teilhard de Chardin and the Mystery of Christ, p. 170.

8.Ibid. The quotations from Teilhard are from Comment je vois (1948), note 4, note 35.


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nation attributed to Teilhard can make the human Jesus bear such a World-Body after his death and resurrection but not before. The point at issue is pre-existence and not post-existence of domination. The rising of the body of Jesus from the dead can mark a particular moment of time dividing the past from the future: it cannot have a retroactive effect on all duration prior to it. Even the action on the future - as expressed in a citation de Lubac9 gives from Teilhard: "Christ in his theandric being gathers up all creation" - this "theandric" action itself hardly yields satisfactorily to theological essays at explanation. But it is a conceivable conclusion. The other, as Keats would have said, "dodges conception". Teilhard has provided no shred of plausibility for the cosmic all-time supremacy Paul enigmatically ascribes to the historical Jesus. The "pre-action of the humanity of Christ" stays what Teilhard has designated it: "mysterious". It is a dogma of "revelation" for which, as Mooney implies, he offers no rationale any more than professional theologians have done. It cannot be assimilated into basic Teilhardism, which rests systematically on Omega.

 

Nor does Teilhard himself always hold to it as if it were a vital component of his Weltanschauung. Mooney has quoted from Comment je vols (1948), but even this document seems to show a different face to George A. Maloney10 who says that here Teilhard distinguishes "between the pre-existing Word on the one hand and the historical, incarnate Man-Jesus on the other". Maloney adds: "Between these two aspects, Teilhard distinguishes, as he did in Le Christique (1955), a sort of 'third nature',... - that emerges. This is the aspect of Christ that St. Paul writes about, the full, total Christ whose activity consists precisely in 'recapitulation' or in bringing the universe to its ultimate centre through the transforming energies of his resurrection." The "third nature" is, of course, the

 

9. Teilhard de Chardin; The Man and His Meaning, p. 43, fn. 25.

10. The Cosmic Christ: From Paul to Teilhard (Sheed & Ward, New York, 1968), pp. 201-02.


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"cosmic", which Teilhard also described as the "Christie" in Comment je vois.

 

Perhaps the most clear-cut freedom from the idea of Jesus's theandric pre-existence is seen in a letter written by Teilhard as early as February 2,1918". In connection with the problem of other heavenly bodies than the earth being inhabited ones, he11 says: "It is astonishing that it is only two days back that I have been vividly struck by the difficulty of reconciling my doctrine of the cosmic Christ with the plurality of worlds. - Since the Cosmos is certainly indivisible, and Christianity is not smaller than the Cosmos, one must admit a certain 'polymorphous' manifestation of the cosmic Christ upon various worlds, according to. the aptitude of these worlds for being integrated into the celestial Universe. The human Christ would then be but one aspect of the cosmic Christ. - Otherwise, Christ (if he upheld only the earth) would be smaller than the World."

 

Here the suggestion goes beyond making Christ overflow the boundaries of a tiny earth and consummate the evolutionary process of other planets or stars. It goes so far as to make him deviate from such a form as he assumed upon earth. It asserts "a certain 'polymorphous' manifestation": this means that he could have many kinds of form and that we should not think of "Jesus" as the one and only form for him. Still further, the passage tells us that even the "human" incarnation proper to earth might be ruled out elsewhere: one aspect alone of the cosmic Christ is said to be the Christ who was

 

11. Teilhard de Chardin: Lettres Intimes a Auguste Valensin, Bruno de Solages, Henri de Lubac, Andre Ravier, 1919-1955. Introduction et notes par Henri de Lubac (Aubier Montaigne, Paris - IV, 1974), p. 40, note 7. The original French runs: "Il est curieux que je n'ai ete vivement frappe que depuis deux jours de la difficulte de concilier ma doctrine du Christ cosmique et la Pluralite des Mondes. - Etant donne que le Cosmos est certainement inseparable, et que le Christianisme n'est pas plus petit que le Cosmos, il faut admettre une certaine manifestation 'polymorphe' du Christ cosmique sur divers mondes, suivant l'aptitude de ces mondes a etre integres dans l'Univers celeste. Le Christ humain ne serait alors qu'une face du Christ cosmique. - Autrement, le Christ (s'il ne soutenait que la Terre) serait plus petit que le Monde."

 


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human. The unique position of the historical Jesus is negated. There is no emphasis now on the theandric Incarnation: "a pre-action of the humanity of Christ" is not merely ignored, it is openly denied sole right and deprived of the privilege of exclusively characterising Christ's cosmic function.

 

Further, if life and mind could develop in other parts of the Universe than our earth, they would do so not always in a period after their terrestrial development: they could flourish centuries and thousands and even millions of years before their epoch here. So the manifestation of the Cosmic Christ in those parts would in several cases precede the appearance of Jesus on our planet. This must mean that the Cosmic Christ is precedent to Jesus's appearance. If so, why employ the term "Christ" which is associated with the Son of Mary? The only excuse is the assumption that "Christianity is not smaller than the Cosmos" and Christ not "smaller than the World". But, even granting this assumption, there remains no reason to tie up Jesus inseparably with what Teilhard knows as Cosmic Christ.

Rationally, this is the unescapable position to take up once we have a Cosmic Christ anterior to the historical Jesus as well as passing through him and once we follow the far-flung thought of Alice Meynell's Christ in the Universe:12



With this ambiguous earth

His dealings have been told us. These abide: .

The signal to a maid, the human birth,

The lesson, and the young Man crucified ...

 

But in the eternities

Doubtless we shall compare together, hear

A million alien Gospels, in what guise

He trod the Pleiades, the Lyre, the Bear.

 

12. English Religious Verse: An Anthology compiled with an Introduction by G. Lacey May (Everyman's Library, J.M, Dent & Sons Ltd., London, 1937), pp. 259, 260.


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O, be prepared, my soul!

To read the inconceivable, to scan

The million forms of God those stars unroll

When, in our turn, we show to them a Man.

 

Our quotation from Teilhard is Meynellian through and through, though the "organic" and "physical" nature Teilhard's Evolutionism would discern in Christ's cosmicity was beyond the imaginative ken of the Victorian poet.

 

A little clarification, however, of the two adjectives -"polymorphous" and "human" - is required. We get an appropriate pointer in a letter by Teilhard to Bruno de Solages on February 16, 1955:13 "In virtue of its whole biochemistry, the Universe is of 'poly-human' (poly-thinking) nature. Possible (?) that, because of the distances, contacts are never established between noospheres. Still, the probability of the existence of n Noospheres has become such that a religion excluding (or even not admitting positively) by structure the eventuality of a plurality of thinking focuses would no longer cover the dimensions of the world we know. That is, I insist, the reason why we shall sooner or later need a new Nicaea defining the cosmic aspect of the Incarnation."

 

Our "polymorphous" gets equated to "poly-human". And what "poly-human" connotes is indicated by Teilhard's bracketed "poly-thinking". The precise connotation emerges in the footnote to a passage in his essay: A Sequel to the Problem of Human Origins: The Plurality of Inhabited Worlds.14 The

 

13.Lettres Intimes..., p. 459. The original French runs: "En vertu de sa bio-chimie tout entiere, l'Univers est de nature 'poly-humaine' (poly-pensante). Possible (?) que, a cause des distances, les contacts ne s'etablissent jamais entre noospheres. Reste que la probabilite de 1'existence de n Noospheres est de venue telle q'une religion excluant (ou mime n'admettant pas positivement) par structure l'eventualite d'une pluralite de foyers pensants ne couvrirait plus les dimensions du Monde que nous connaissons. Voila pourquoi, j'insiste, il nous faudra, tot ou tard, un nouveau Nicee definissant la face cosmique de 1'Incarnation."

14.Christianity and Evolution, pp. 229-36.


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passage15 is: "...considering what we now know about the number of 'worlds' and their internal evolution, the idea of a single hominized planet in the universe has already become in fact (without our generally realizing it) almost as inconceivable as that of a man who appeared with no genetic relationship to the rest of the earth's animal population." The footnote16 elucidates the epithet "hominized" as being "synonymous with 'psychically reflected life'", and adds: "We have, it is true, no idea either of the chemistry or the morphology peculiar to the various extra-terrestrial forms of life. However, there is every reason to believe that should material contact be effected between two 'hominized' planets, they would be able, at least through their noospheres, to understand one another, combine and be synthesized with one another."

 

"Polymorphous", then, stands for some development of life which, whether or not assuming a human form like ours, has a mentality akin to that of homo sapiens and is, in that respect, human or "hominized". So what Teilhard envisions, in contrast to the human Christ whom he classes as but one aspect of the Cosmic Christ, is simply a reflectively conscious incarnation, hominized in a broad sense, elsewhere than on earth and therefore unlike the one in terrestrial history who is known to us as Jesus Christ.

 

But, truly speaking, it is not the chemistry or the morphology of the extra-terrestrial Incarnation that is important. What is important, in regard to Alice Meynell's "million forms" and Teilhard's "'polymorphous' manifestation", is the existence of a non-Jesus Incarnate Word. The crucial question involved is: "If Jesus is not the single instance possible of the Incarnate Word and there must be others in the several inhabitable worlds modern astronomy feels bound to posit, why should we at all employ for that Word and for its cosmicity the name 'Christ' which is tied up with Jesus?" The name has an aptness only insofar as it denotes the Omega that

 

15,Ibid,, p. 231.

16.Ibid., fn. 4.


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is taken to have manifested in the figure we have called Jesus Christ, but the moment other figures are acceptable as Incarnations the name becomes irrelevant. And with its irrelevance Christianity loses its claim to be the core of Teilhardism.

 

A suggestion similar to that in the letter about Christ's polymorphousness meets us when Teilhard, in the essay from which we have quoted a passage and a footnote, scans the various modes of dealing, in terms of Christianity, with the new situation. In one alternative he17 envisages that a theologian "can assume that the Incarnation was effected only on earth, the other mankinds being, in addition, duly 'informed' of it in some way (!?)." Teilhard18 rejects this alternative as "'ridiculous', particularly when one considers the enormous number of stars to be 'informed' (miraculously?) and their distance from one onother in space and time".

 

How exactly are we to construe Teilhard's comment? Of course, as he19 says at the end while giving a general solution, we have to bring in a Christ who is the centre of the universe and has not only a humano-divine nature but also a third nature which is cosmic, "enabling him", as the editorial footnote20 puts it, "to centre all the lives which constitute a pleroma extended to the galaxies". Yet, within the operation of this cosmic nature, more than one Incarnation to cover the plurality of inhabited worlds could be brought about. Does not the condemnatory word "ridiculous" apply to the phrase: "the incarnation was effected only on earth"? If it does, as it must since the condemnation applies to everything in the alternative supposed, it would confirm our thesis that the core of Teilhardism cannot be Christian.

 

We may add that as soon as we grant polymorphous Incarnations in other planets we bring up the general possibility of non-Jesus manifestations of Omega on this very earth as implicit in the Teilhardian concept of the Cosmic Christ.

 

17.Ibid., p. 232.

18.Ibid., p. 235.

19.Ibid., p. 236.

20.Ibid., fn. 12


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All in all, this Godhead is Christ in no more than name. The features of Jesus cannot be seen indelibly marked on him and, in the absence of any valid ground for welding the two together, our reading of Teilhardism as Omegalic rather than Christian must be allowed, along with our reading of Omegalic Teilhardism as including, even while exceeding, the essence of that most un-Christian doctrine: Pantheism.


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(5)

 

 

 

As more and more writings of Teilhard's get published, an increasingly clearer picture emerges of the fundamentals of his faith. The most illuminating aid comes from his letters. From the fact that he kept no copies of his communications and destroyed whatever his friends wrote to him we may infer that he expected his own communications to be destroyed by his friends. So he must have written his letters without any thought of their publication. Naturally, then, we may hope to find in them his most uninhibited self-expression - disclosures of his mind and heart free of whatever little reservations of speech he might have deemed desirable in order not to deepen still further the division that already lay between him and his Church and even his own religious Order, the Company of Jesus, except for a few intimate members of it.

 

There have already been two sets of correspondence which have seemed to us to exhibit the greatest freedom and frankness: Letters to Leontine Zanta and Letters to Two Friends. We have drawn upon the former mainly in another book1 yet to be published and upon the latter in the present one. Now a third set has come to hand, in the original French at the moment, a series of letters to four fellow-Jesuits to whom he felt closest.2 In English its title would run: Intimate Letters of Teilhard de Chardin to Auguste Valensin, Bruno de Solages, Henri de Lubac, Andre Ravier, 1919-1955, with Introduction and Notes by Henri de Lubac. All the themes dealt with in Teilhard's books are touched upon here in one form or another, just as they are in those two earlier-published series, but the chief interest for us of this latest compilation lies in the emphatic and ultimate confirmation it provides of our reading of basic Teilhardism from the previous volumes

 

1.The Spirituality of the Future: A Search apropos of R.C Zaehner's Study in Sri Aurobindo and Teilhard de Chardin.

2.Teilhard de Chardin: Lettres Intimes a Auguste Valensin, Bruno de Solages, Henri de Lubac, Andre Ravier, 1919-1955.


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of correspondence as well as from the various books.

 

Our reading showed Teilhard to be - for all his attempts to establish contacts with the Church's traditional teaching and with certain passages of St. Paul - centrally unorthodox, formulating a Christianity sui generis. It also demonstrated as mostly mistaken and sometimes perverse the attempts of his co-religionist admirers to assimilate him into established Roman Catholicism and reduce his differences to merely an adaptation of old dogmas to new conditions and climates of thought, so that those differences would amount finally to a matter of nomenclature, a mode of using words. Again, while taking due note of Teilhard's avowals of devotion to Rome, we have stressed a certain inner independence radical in nature. And we have thrown into some relief his constant hope of Teilhardianising Rome by means of his very presence within its orbit. Not that Roman Catholic exegetes fail to record instances of what they consider wrong-headedness on Teilhard's part, but on the whole they discern in him a true son of orthodox Christianity putting in evolutionary terms the traditional Christian religion in order to convert the scientific non-believers amongst whom his lot as a researcher in palaeontology was cast.

 

How wrong-headed are these exegetes themselves should have been clear from much of Teilhard's correspondence published in the past. Perhaps the most pointed and positive statement by him of his personal religious stance is in a letter from China to Leontine Zanta on January 26, 1936:3 "What increasingly dominates my interest and my inner preoccupations, as you already know, is the effort to establish within myself, and to diffuse around me, a new religion (let's call it an improved Christianity, if you like) whose personal God is no longer the great 'neolithic' land-owner of times gone by, but the Soul of the world - as demanded by the cultural and religious stage we have now reached.... My road ahead seems

 

3. Letters to leontine Zanta (Collins, London, 1969), pp. 114-15.


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clearly marked out; it is a matter not of superimposing Christ on the world, but of 'panchristising' the universe. The delicate point (and I touched on part of this in Christology and Evolution) is that, if you follow this path, you are led not only to widening your views, but to turning your perspectives upside down; evil (no longer punishment for a fault, but 'sign and effort' of progress) and matter (no longer a guilty and lower element, but 'the stuff of the Spirit') assume a meaning diametrically opposed to the meaning customarily viewed as Christian. Christ emerges from the transformation incredibly enlarged (at least that is my opinion - and all the uneasy contemporaries with whom I have spoken about it think like me). But is this Christ really the Christ of the Gospel? And if not, on what henceforward do we base what we are trying to build? I don't know whether, among the many of my colleagues who are in front of me or behind me on the road I'm travelling, there are any (or even a single one!... that seems incredible) who realise the importance of the step that all are taking. But I'm beginning to see it very clearly. One thing reassures me: it is that, in me, the increase of light goes hand in hand with love, and with renouncement of myself in the Greater than me. This could not deceive."

 

We may recall here the comment we made after quoting the passage in an earlier book: "This declaration should settle all controversy. Teilhard is after a new religion, which can stand in its own right. It need not be un-Christian, but it can be Christian only if Christianity undergoes an improvement. The improvement does not lie just in extending, heightening, intensifying what we have been accustomed to as Christian: it lies basically in a complete revolution, an entire inversion -the head has to be put where the feet were and vice versa: no mere patch-up or expansion along the same line will do. But Christ still remains the core of the new religion, even though the Church's outlook on evil and matter has to be turned topsy-turvy or taken to a sheer antipodes. And Christ is now the Soul of the world, the Cosmic Person who is the animating principle of all matter: he is as wide as the universe: he is the

 


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universe itself in its true inner reality, the One Spirit whose outer stuff, as it were, is the world of matter, the sphere of a difficult, often erring yet ever advancing evolution. There can be no going back on this view, whether or not it agrees with the picture of Christ given by the Gospel. But if we gauge the true temper of the Gospel's Christ - the revealer of love for God's children and of the mystical resort of our whole self to the Divine Infinite - we may be sure he is not negated by this Panchristism which the trend and mood of our modern age with its discovery of universal evolution demands."

 

An additional point we may repeat from the same book. We are often told, on the basis of several "faithful" confessions by Teilhard, that at no time was there any question of his quitting his Order and his Church. Fearing the possibility of a recantation or a revolt, he4 once appealed to Leontine Zanta to pray that he might never break either with the Church or his own truth. In one occasion he5 even contemplated calmly the possibilty of a break: "... I am more and more determined to put my trust in Life, without letting anything surprise me. And then I feel that I haven't the least apprehension about anything that could happen to me, provided that it is 'in the service of the world'." The calm contemplation had for its background a situation which, under ordinary conditions, would inevitably have led to a rupture with the Vatican: "... in my heart I haven't changed, except along the same lines. One consequence of this movement is that I am gradually finding myself more and more on the fringe of a lot of things. It's only thanks to the exotic life I'm leading that this drift doesn't develop into a break." These words can mean only one thing: if Teilhard had been in Europe and not in far-away China, the conflict between his own truth and the Vatican's position would have been acute enough to force him to cut himself away from his Order and his Church for the sake of his "new religion."

 

4.Ibid., pp. 79-80.

5.Ibid., pp. 110-11.


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A third point to make from past epistolary sources concerns the motives for Teilhard's sincere struggle, despite his "new religion", to remain in the traditional fold. In the first place, a strong sense was his that here was an institution founded by Christ himself and charged with a great office. Next, he was deeply enamoured of the doctrine at the heart of this institution that there was a Divine Incarnation, an insertion of the Personal Godhead into matter, and that at the end of time the Resurrected Christ would complete his Mystical Body of faithful followers and form with their spiritually glorified physical beings a Plenitude, a Pleroma, with himself and carry this Cosmic Fullness into the bosom of the Transcendent God. Lastly, he had the conviction that he could bring home to his Church his evolutionary vision of that wonderful doctrine and lift Roman Catholicism out of an old-fashioned interpretation taking no stock of modern evolutionism which, with its view of a unitary and organic cosmos, was to him the truth of truths. It is the last motive that needs underlining. It has been denied, smacking as it may of fifth-column tactics. But the spirit of the fifth column resides in wanting to destroy by stealth what one hates. Here the aim would be to destroy that which would kill what one loves. Granted the vital distinction, we cannot deny Teilhard's faithfulness as partly fed by the desire to hold on because, from outside, it would have been impossible to have any influence for change. In his letters in English to an American woman, Lucille Swann, he states this desire three times.

 

On March 21, 1941 he 6 writes from Peking: "According to my own principles, I cannot fight Christianity; I can only work inside it, by trying to transform and 'convert' it. A revolutionary attitude would be much more easy and also much more pleasant, but it would be suicidal. So I must go on step by step, tenaciously. I know that the tide is rising, which supports me." Again, from Peking, on June 22, he7 declares: "I

 

6.Letters to Two Friends, 1926-1952, p. 155.

7.Ibid., p. 158.


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have well received your long and so good letter in which you urge me to force more strongly my way towards a freer expression of my Weltanschauung. You must be sure that I understand perfectly your point of view. The only and great difficulty, as I told you many times, is that I am convinced that my best efforts could be useless if I should break with the religious current which the problem is not to fight but to transform. On such a battlefield, I can only act from inside, and this not by politics, but by sheer conviction. Let us hope." Finally, from Paris on February 8, 1949, we have the words: "Leaving the Order, a ce point des choses, would be suicidal, as far as the success of my 'gospel' is concerned. In addition to the bad effect of the gesture on my 'followers', don't forget that my whole spiritual construction is genuinely built on (or rather culminating into) an enlarged and 'rejuvenated' figure of Christ; so that I can do nothing in the way of parting from the 'Church' which is, biologically speaking, the 'phylum' of Christ. The only thing I can do is to work 'from inside ."


None of the three points we have spotlighted are quite brought into focus by de Lubac in his copious and often extremely competent notes. Here and there they are allowed to emerge, but some counterpoise is always added and the total result in the annotation is a Teilhard with his sharp edges blunted. Fortunately, the text of the correspondence -the major contents of which have already been accessible to Teilhardian students, especially Emile Rideau and Claude Cuenot - offers almost an embarros de richesse to whoever is minded to prove de Lubac in error.

 

The intense disparity between the official Roman Catholicism and Christianity a la Teilhard hits us in the eye in a letter to Auguste Valensin from Tientsin on 13 October 1933:8

 

8. Lettres Intimes..., pp. 253-54, The original French runs: "A Rome, essaiera-t-on de s'entendre avec moi, - ou simplement de me faire sentir qu'on me donne une nouvelle chance' (vous avez sans doute raison: one explication orale la-bas serait dangereuse)? - J'attends, et je suis decide a aller dans la direction d'un accord avec un maximum de sincerite et de bonne volonte. Mais, pour vous dire le fond de ma pensee, je redoute un peu, a I'avance, tout ce qui ressemblerait & un


Page 253


"In Rome, will they try to come to an understanding with me - or simply make me feel that they are giving me 'a new chance' (you are undoubtedly right: there, an oral explanation would be dangerous)? -I am waiting, and I am determined to go towards an agreement with a maximum of sincerity and good will. But, to tell you what I truly think, I rather fear in advance anything that would resemble a pact. There is, between the Roman authorities and myself, more than a misunderstanding of words. All of us dream of one and the same Christ; - and that is the fundamental thing, thanks to which we can remain associates without disloyalty or dupery. But, this capital point set apart, we differ, Rome and I, by two representations of the World, and two practical attitudes towards the World, which are not merely complementary but contrary. It is, at bottom, a merciless fight, - between a static pessimism and a progressive optimism. That, you see, is what we should frankly acknowledge, rather than cheating oneself with words. - Under these conditions, can I really hope for, or even desire, an agreement? Would it be frank? And would it

 

pacte, Entre les autorites romaines et moi, il y a plus qu'un malentendu de mots. Les uns et les autres, nous revons d'un seul et meme Christ; - et c'est la chose fondamentale grace a quoi nous pouvons rester associes sans deloyaute et sans duperie. Mais, ce point capital mis a part, nous differons, Rome et moi, par deux representations du Monde, et deux attitudes pratiques vis-a-vis du Monde, qui ne sont pas seulement compiementaires, mais contraires. C'est, au fond, une lutte sans merci, - entre un pessimisme starique et un optimisme progressif. Cela, voyez-vous, je crois qu'il vaut mieux se 1'avouer franchement, plutfit que de se tromper avec des mots. - Dans ces conditions, puis-je vraiment esperer, ou meme desirer, un accord? serait-ce franc? et serait-ce solide? - Je finis par penser que la seule solution, dans mon cas, est de continuer a vivre en 'free lance', au moins provisoirement. Si le Seigneur me donne encore assez longtemps force et vie, j'arriverai peut-etre a mettre au point une oeuvre spirituelle plus viable, ou a contempler 1'avenement, dans I'Eglise, d'un esprit nouveau. - En attendant, ce que je puis promettre au P. de B. c'est d'essayer (plus que je ne l'ai sans doute fait dans le passe) de conserver le maximum des vues et des attitudes traditionnelles de I'Eglise et de la Cie dans mes constructions personnelles, - Mais il serait vain, vous le sentez vous-meme, de la part de 1'autorite, de vouloir me limiter a la recherche scientifique seule, - 'sans philosophie', comme on dit. La Science pour moi est morte sans un certain esprit (= esprit de recherche, - la recherche sacree): et c'est precisement de cet esprit qu'on ne veut pas, et dont on redoute la diffusion."

 


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be solid? - In the end, I think that the only solution, in my case, is to continue to live as a 'free lance', at least for the time being. If the Lord still gives me force and life long enough, I shall perhaps succeed in setting together a more viable spiritual work or in contemplating the advent, in the Church, of a new spirit. - In the meantime, what I can promise P[ere] de B[onneville] is try (more than I perhaps did in the past) to keep the maximum of the traditional views and attitudes of the Church and the Company in my personal constructions. But it would be vain, as you feel it yourself, on the part of authority to want to limit me to scientific research alone, -without 'philosophy', as they say. - For me, Science is dead without a certain spirit (= the spirit of research, - sacred research): and it is precisely that spirit that they do not want, and whose diffusion they dread."

 

Nothing could be more plain, more trenchant, in its admission of an uncrossable gulf, Teilhardism and the Roman Catholic faith are "contrary" to each other: the fight between them does not revolve around nomenclature. Teilhard's is not just a modern phraseology for ancient truths: the fight is far deeper and can give no quarter. Nor did Teilhard find the division into two opposite camps a temporary one. Sixteen years later - on 10 January 1949 - he9 wrote: "Since I returned from China, I clearly distinguish that I am becoming more and more firm and intransigent about some points of divergence; and this cannot change." Eight months afterwards (8 September 1949) he composed The Heart of the Problem. Cuenot,10 drawing privately upon the documents collected in Intimate Letters, records in connection with that essay: "The fundamental theme is:

 

The urgent necessity for Christian faith in the 'Above' to incorporate the human neo-faith in a 'still to come'. This latter is born (and this is

 

9. Ibid., p. 383, note 5: "Depuis que je suis rentre de Chine, je distingue clairement que je deviens de plus en plus ferme et intransigeant sur quelques points de divergence; et cela ne peut plus changer." .

10. Teilhard de Chardin: A Biographical Study (Helicon, Baltimore, 1965), pp. 270-71.


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something that has happened and nothing

can change) of the objective emergence of the ultra-

human (releasing a neo-humanism, and automati-

cally entailing a neo-Christianity)."

 

Most significantly, Cuenot11 footnotes the word "neo-Christianity" thus: "By neo-Christianity should be understood a transcending of Christianity." Clearly, Cuenot's explanation is inspired by Teilhard's own phrase after writing the word in question which terminates his report of what he has penned to a fellow-priest in a high position. Teilhard's phrase12 after "neo-Christianity" runs: "I have naturally not used this last word." The word would obviously be a terrific startler to orthodoxy.

 

Cuenot continues, quoting from the same letter of Teilhard's (dated 29 October 1948) to de Lubac:


"The reaction [at Rome] was characteristic:

At Rome they see neither the timeliness nor the

reliability of an apologetics based on faith in man.

For the Church, the only thing that makes an

assured future worthwhile is eternal life.


"To this Teilhard replied:

The synthesis of the two forms of faith in Christo

Jesus is not an arbitrarily chosen tactical move ad

usum infidelium. It represents hic et nunc a condition

of survival for an increasing number of Christians.

We have to choose right now between the Christia-

nizing of neo-humanism and its condemnation.

The problem is with us now, and time is short."

 

The same want of sympathy in Rome with neo-humanism Teilhard 13 underscores when writing, about a year earlier, to

 

11.Ibid., p. 271, fn. 2.

12,Op. cit„ p. 382: "Je n'ai naturellement pas employe ce dernier mot."

13,Ibid., p. 377: " ...ce centre ou foyer de spiritualisation manque complete-ment de connexions avec le Monde humain en mouvement autour de lui. Autour de Rome, ce n'est pas le rideau de fer, mais un rideau de ouate, amortissant tout bruit des discussions et des aspirations humaines: le Monde s'arrete aux portes du Vatican."


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de Lubac concerning the Church: "This centre or focus of spiritualisation completely lacks connections with the human World in movement around itself. Around Rome, there is not an Iron Curtain, but a curtain of cotton-wool padding, deadening all noise of human discussions and aspirations: the World stops short at the gates of the Vatican." No doubt, Teilhard was told on 9 November of the same year by a representative of Rome14: "Do not believe, above all, that we are uninterested in neo-humanism, and do not think that we see only a dilemma: either to admit or condemn it. We wish first to study it before judging it. Surely, this is normal." But, even as late as October 1954, after a conference organised to mark the bicentenary of Columbia University, Teilhard, as Cuenot15 tells us, "noted with dismay the 'immobilist' attitude of too manv Christians". Teilhard wrote:16 "... in the course of animated discussions, I was struck by the realization that those who were most vigorous in rejecting the existence in the future of a global ultra-human were in fact Christians (of all denominations)."

 

Teilhard, optimist that he was, exercised optimism even about the pessimistic stand of the Church whose origin and function he always venerated. But he never forsook either his realistic view of the Church as it actually existed or his effort to convert it rather than himself be converted. Thus on 8 August 1950 we find him17 writing to Valensin:

 

14.Ibid., pp. 383-84, note 8: "Ne croyez pas surtout qu'on se desinteresse du neo-Humanisme, et ne pensez pas qu'on ne voie qu'un dilemme: ou 1'admettre ou le condamner. On veut l'etudier d'abord, avant de le juger. C'est bien normal."

15.Op. cit., p. 360.

16.Ibid.

17.Lettres Intimes..., pp. 391-92: "Il y a evidemment conflit radical entre ma vision du Divin et celle de I'autorite officielle. Mais j'ai toujours confiance que nous convergeons. Je suis de plus en plus ardemment convaincu qu'il n'y a pas d'issue a l'Humain sinon en prolongement du Dieu chretien. C'est seulement sur la facon de concevoir les rapports du Christ et du Monde que 1'opposition apparait. Or, on ne m'enlevera pas de la tele et du coeur que 'de mon point de vue' Christ et Monde grandissent simultanement, Tout mon effort va a maintenir


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"There is evidently a radical conflict between my vision of God and that of the official authority. But I have always the confidence that we shall converge. I am more and more ardently convinced that there is no issue to the Human except in prolongation of the Christian God. It is solely over the way of conceiving the relations of Christ and the World that the opposition appears. But nobody will take away from my head and heart that 'from my point of view' Christ and the World grow simultaneously. All my effort goes towards maintaining a Christ as vast and organic as the Universe: is this not the very definition of orthodoxy?

 

"The source of all the annoyances, at the moment, is that the theologians do not see the World and Man as they disclose themselves henceforth to us. The theologians present us with a God for a World finished (or finishing) while from now on we can adore only a God for a World 'beginning'. I am increasingly sure of it: all the difficulty and all the grandeur of the modern religious problem lie there.

 

"I have no desire or idea to separate myself [from the Church], But I also know that nothing, absolutely nothing, could turn me away from a vision, outside of which I feel that all my faith would fall to pieces, - because it (this vision) is born of my very faithfulness to living and thinking what has always been taught to me."

 

 

Teilhard has the feeling that what he has learned of Christianity is in its truth not contradictory of his special

 

le Christ aussi vaste et organique que 1'Univers: n'est-ce pas la definition meme de I'orthodoxie?

 

"La source de tous les ennuis, en ce moment, est que les theologiens ne voient pas le Monde et 1'Homme comme ils se decouvrent desormais a nous, Ils nous presentent un Dieu pour Monde fini (ou finissant) alors que nous ne saurions plus adorer qu'un Dieu pour Monde 'commencant'. J'en suis de plus en plus sur: toute la difficulty et toute la grandeur du probleme religieux modeme sont la.

 

"Je n'ai aucune envie ni idee de me separer! Mais je sais aussi que rien, absolument rien, ne saurait me detourner d'une vision en dehors de laquelle je sens que toute ma foi s'ecroulerait, - parce qu'elle (cette vision) est nee de ma fidelity meme a vivre et a penser ce qu'on m'a depuis toujours enseigne."

 


Page 258


vision: he believes he is being truly Christian by holding to a view which runs in the teeth of the official doctrine.

 

The same stand, which amounts to a simultaneous Yes and No, meets us in a more suave form in a letter hel8 wrote on March 1955, hardly a month before his death, to Jeanne Mortier: "I have never felt more essentially bound to the Church, nor more certain that this Church, by rethinking more thoroughly its Christ, will be the religion of tomorrow."

 

Everywhere we have two sides juxtaposed explicity or subtly. Although Teilhard is pledged to the prolongation of the Christian God in the ultra-human, he is convinced that the Church misconceives that God by not realising the proper implications of what it preserves as orthodoxy. Unlike the Church's conception, this implication is realised by seeing Christ and the World as sharing a single growing vastness and organicity, each in their own manner. Devoted though he is to the Church, Teilhard swears he will never give up his own Weltanschauung, which is not the Church's at present but is, according to him, the genuine meaning of its teaching. This Church alone, which now owns his adherence, will develop the religion of the future, yet on condition that it thinks anew, from beginning to end, the role of Christ - a role over which he and the masters of the Church are at variance not just superficially but at the very roots, and whose true form is discerned only by Teilhard. In such cirmumstances, it is his duty to strain every nerve to bring the authorities round to his "truth". De Lubac 19 himself, annotating a letter of as late as 2 January 1955, admits: "Teilhard has not stopped seeking a dialogue with the authorities of his Order; he never gave up converting them to his point of view. In these last years, he became even more pressing."

 

18.Ibid., p. 393, note 7; "Je ne me suis jamais senti plus lie, par le fond, 3 l'Eglise, ni plus certain que cette Eglise, en repensant plus a fond son Christ, sera la religion de demain."

19.Ibid., p. 451: "T n'a cesse de chercher le dialogue avec les autorites de son Ordre; il n'a jamais renonce a les 'convertir'


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Here we may appropriately bring in the evidence of Intimate Letters about Teilhard's finding it necessary to stay within the Roman Catholic fold if he wanted to convert it. He20 writes on 2 January 1927 to his cousin Marguerite Teilhard-Chambon: "1 should do all that is possible for me to shake up immobilism, but, by working and pushing 'from inside', 1 sometimes tell myself that it is perhaps my role, my particular vocation, to find myself shut up in the heart of the ecclesiastical organism with the most anticonfessional and the most desperately human temperament one could imagine.21 The legitimate fusion of the loves of Heaven and Earth can get established in the Church, I think, only after numerous conflicts of this kind, accepted and surmounted." About two and a half years later - on 15 July 1929 - we read in Teilhard's letter22 to Valensin: "I no more feel, - since a long time back, in fact, - either for the Church or for the Company, the sort of naive and filial attachment (have I, Indeed, ever felt it?) which is, without doubt, the treasure of many. But I am aware of feeling myself thoroughly tied to the one and to the other for new and higher reasons, - in the sense that I should believe I would be a traitor to 'the World', by getting away from the

 

20.Ibid., p. 150: "..Je dots faire mon possible pour secouer 1'immobilisme, mais, en travaillant et en poussant 'from inside', je me dis parfois que c'est peut-etre mon role, mon espece de vocation, de me trouver enferme au cceur de 1'organisme ecclesiastique avec le temperament le plus anticonfessionnel et le plus desesperement humain qu'on puisse imaginer. La fusion legitime des amours du Ciel et de la Terre ne doit pouvoir s'etablir dans I'Eglise, je pense, qu'a la suite de nombreux conflits de cet ordre, acceptes et surmontes."

21.Cf. de Lubac in his Preface (Avertissement), pp. 10-11: "He was...,by birth, 'the most anticonfessional' of men. This means that a certain spiritual anarchy was lying in wait for him." ("Il etait..., de naissance, Te plus anticonfessionnel' des homines. C'est dire qu'il etait guette par une certaine anarchie spirituelle.")

22.Ibid,, pp. 194-95: "Je n'eprouve plus, - depuis longtemps, en fait, - ni pour I'Eglise, ni pour la Cie, cette sorte d'attachement naif et filial (l'ai-je jamais eprouve en fait?...) qui est sans doute le tresor de beaucoup, Mais j'ai conscience de me sentir foncierement lie a I'une et a I'autre pour des raisons superieures et nouvelles, - en ce sens que je croirais trahir 'le Monde', en m'evadant de la place qui m'a ete assignee. En ce sens, je les aime l'une et I'autre, et je veux travailler, atomiquement, a les parfaire, da dedans, - sans antagonisme."


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place which has been assigned to me. In this sense, I love both and I want to work, atom-like, to perfect them, from within, -without antagonism."

 

Besides the disclosure of a reformatory attitude towards the religion whose minister Teilhard was, we have here a beam of light thrown on a commitment central to his life. He is not serving the Company of Jesus and through it the Church because of common religious sentiments. The World, as an all-encompassing, all-governing presence, is what primarily commands his loyalty. He feels he is a Jesuit by the will of this presence and his whole religious service lies in carrying out the Church-transformative mission given him by a cosmic divinity. That divinity is the true Christ to him and what he meant by calling for a rethinking of Christ is the need of the orthodox mind to get steeped in the sense of this divinity and share with modern evolutionists, with scientific pantheists, their urge towards the World's fulfilment by the revelation and realisation of the ultra-human.

 


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(6)

 

 

 

How much Teilhard was himself imbued with what we may term the religious intuition of the modern scientific consciousness may be gathered from the words in his letter1 to Auguste Valensin on 31 December 1926: "Instinctively, and especially in the last ten years, I have always offered myself to Our Lord as a sort of testing-ground, where, on a small scale. He might bring about the fusion between the two great loves, of God and the World - for without that fusion I am convinced no Kingdom of God is possible. - Is it perhaps for this that He makes me share so intensely the spirit of those whom we call free-thinkers, heretics and pagans?... But may He in return for it give me the force to baptise this soul of the World which has become my true soul (supposing it was not always that)!"

 

The profound change, cutting down to bedrock, which intense affinity with the World-soul would imply in the rethinking of Christ which Teilhard wished the Church to do, can be guessed in general from a letter a year earlier than the one to Jeanne Mortier, which we quoted in the previous chapter. Claude Cuenot'2 cites this letter dated 20 April 1954: "We have been forced to abandon the static Aristotelian cosmos and introduced (through the whole physico-chemico-biological system) into a universe still in a state of cosmo-genesis. In future, therefore, we have to rethink our Christology in terms of Christogenesis (at the same time as we

 

1.Lettres Intimes..., p. 144: "Insrinctivement, depuis dix ans surtout, je me suis toujours offert a N(otre) S(eigneur), comme une sorte de champ d'experience, pour qu'Il y opere, en petit, la fusion entre les deux grands amours de Dieu et du Monde, - fusion sans laquelle je suis persuade qu'il n'y a pas de Regne de Dieu possible. - Peut-etrc- est-ce pour cela qu'Il me fait parliciper aussi intense merit a l'esprit de ceux que nous appelons les libres-penseurs, les heretiques et les paiens?... Mais qu'en revanche Il me donne la force de baptiser cette ame du Monde qui est devenue ma vraie ame (a supposer qu'elle ne l'ait pas toujours ete)!" The first half of our English translation is from the introduction (p. 39) of Letters to Leontine Zanta (Collins, London, 1969).

2.Teilhard de Chardin: A Biographical Study, p. 362.


Page 262


rethink our anthropology in terms of anthropogenesis). And such an operation is not simply a matter of slight readjustment of certain aspects. As a result of the introduction of a new dimension, the whole thing is to be recast (just as when you move from plane to spherical geometry) - a tremendous effort: and from it, I assure you, Christ will emerge in triumph, the saviour of anthropogenesis."

 

Positive pointers to the extreme implication of recasting Christology abound in Intimate Letters. They are at their sharpest where we find, for the first time (as far as I know) in Teilhard's writings, the terms: "trans-Christie", "Trans-Christ", "trans-Christian", "trans-Christianised Christianity". On the very face of them they cannot but get linked with the "transcending of Christianity" which, as we saw in the preceding article, Cuenot reads, for a good reason, in Teilhard's "neo-Christianity". We shall quote in chronological order the passages where the terms occur. They all belong to the last nine years of Teilhard's life.

 

On 20 April 1948 a letter3 to Valensin contained the following: "...I have never felt at the same time more full of 'my gospel', and more integrally dependent, body, soul and mind, upon Jesus Christ. I have a feeling both sweet and painful that I can do absolutely nothing without Him. And

 

3. Op. cit., pp. 371-72: "...je re me suis jamais senti en meme temps plus plein de 'mon evangile', et plus integralement dependant, corps, ame et esprit, du Christ-Jesus. J'ai un sens a la fois doux et douloureux que je ne puis absolument rien sans Lui. Et simultanement je suis effraye de voir combien je l'apercois toujours plus loin et plus haut sur 1'axe (j'espere!) de 1'orthodoxie. Un peu comme les etoiles que 1'astronomie nous montre toujours plus liees a notre systeme et cependant toujours plus vertigineusement loin que nous ne pensions. - En fait, mon pan-Christisme est en quelque facon "trans-Christique'. Et c'est la seule position coherente avec mon Humanisme qui, biologiquement, est celui d'une Humanite encore tres imparfaitement centree sur soi, individuellement et col-lectivement.

"Cette idee d'une sur-evolution en cours de l'Humanite devient de plus en plus ma plate-forme scientifique...

"Presentement le grand dommage est que, pour une majorite encore de catholiques (pretres surtout) la religion est une lunette prise par le mauvais bout: elle diminue la grandeur et la valeur du Monde, au lieu de les exalter!"


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simultaneously 1 am frightened to see how much I perceive him always farther and higher upon the axis (I hope!) of orthodoxy. A little like the stars that astronomy shows us always more tied to our system and yet always more vertiginously distant than we thought. - In fact, my pan-Christicism is somewhat 'trans-Christie', And it is the only position coherent with my Humanism which, biologically, is that of a Humanity still very imperfectly centred upon itself, individually and collectively.

 

"This idea of a super-evolution of Humanity in process is more and more becoming my scientific platform....

 

"At present the great pity is that still for a majority of Catholics (especially priests) religion is a field-glass held by the wrong end: it diminishes the greatness and value of the World, instead of exalting them!"

 

De Lubac4 annotates the phrase "upon the axis (I hope!) of orthodoxy" thus: "New expression of what Teilhard often repeated. He wrote, 14-2-1949: 'Between my way of thinking and the "orthodox" (I do not say "official" but "practical") Christian vision of the World, there is not such a big gulf as you think.'" The note seems completely to miss the point of both pronouncements of Teilhard's. Whatever "practical" may denote, his "way of thinking" is definitely set over against the orthodoxy of the "official" Christian vision: that is, the declared stand of Rome. This is the central significant point. And even as regards the "practical" Christian vision's orthodoxy the difference is not denied; the difference is still a "gulf", but the gulf is less big than one might conceive at first sight. As for the phrase glossed by de Lubac, the bracketed exclamation "I hope!" has a double shade: it simultaneously suggests the wish to be orthodox and the uncertainty of really being so. The accent of doubt breaks in because Teilhard has recorded his dismay at finding his Christ moving ever more

 

4. Ibid., p. 373, note 5: "Expression nouvelle de ce que T a souvent repete. Il ecrira, 14-2-1949: 'Entre ma maniere de penser et la vision chretienne du monde "orthodoxe" (je ne dis pas "officielle" mais "pratique") l'abime n'est pas si grand que vous imaginez' (Acc, 241)."


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far and high than one would customarily set him in his divine role vis-a-vis the world. The role Teilhard assigns him is increasingly more remote, more grandiose than the Church has given him by its interpretation of scripture. Teilhard would like to believe that the same scripture essentially justifies his position and that therefore his position cannot be called quite unorthodox; but the two interpretations, despite referring to the identical Jesus Christ and having certain terms and approaches in common, tend to differ toto coelo. The simile of the stars seeming aligned with our galactic system but really lying incalculably beyond it is surely an index to this difference, no matter what the apparent relationship.

 

If we keep this simile in mind we shall also see the irrelevance of de Lubac's next annotation5 - the one to Teilhard's "trans-Christie": "Some days later, 1st May, he transcribed into his notebook the text of St. Ambroise: 'The world resurrected in Him, heaven resurrected in Him, the earth resurrected in Him. Indeed a new heaven and a new earth resurrected,' ...And on the 7th, day of the Ascension: 'All my mysticism: the ascensional force of Christ...'"

 

Just because Teilhard quoted a traditional text and summed up his mystical message in terms of Christ's act of Ascension, it does not follow either that Teilhard was directly referring to the particular theme with which his letter had dealt a few days earlier or that, if he was, we have to understand the entries in his notebook in the conventional Christian sense. We must never forget how he put heady-new wine into old bottles: in the letter itself he has clearly referred to the strikingly unusual function he has attributed to the

 

5. Ibid., note 6: "Queiques jours plus tard, le 1" mai, il transcrira dans son cahier le texte de saint Ambroise: 'Resurrexit in Eo mundus, resurrexit in Eo coelum, resurrexit in Eo terra. Resurrexit enim coelum novum et terra nova' (Lect. 7. 5 dim. apres Paques). Et le 7, jour de 1'Ascension: 'Toute ma mystique: la force ascensionnelle du Christ...'"


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Christ of Roman Catholicism. As he6 says elsewhere to Valensin in Intimate Letters (on 27 June 1926 from China): "I believe...that, God helping, I am always upon the profound Christian axis..,. But, side by side with that, I cannot hide from myself that there has come about, developing within me, an in-horn and deep opposition to what is habitually regarded as the Christian form, hopes, and interests. You see - in the 'Christian world', as presented to us in ecclesiastical documents and Catholic gestures or conceptions, I altogether 'suffocate' physically. We gave, a thousand years ago, a compass-measurement which claimed to encircle the world of physical and moral possibilities; - and now the whole of reality is beyond. We are no longer 'Catholic' in fact; but we are defending a system, a sect. Hence, as I believe I have already told you on my first arrival in China, Christianity now appears to me much less a closed and established whole than an axis of progression and assimilation. Apart from this axis, I cannot see any guarantee or any way out for the world. But around this axis, I can glimpse an immense quantity of truths and attitudes for which orthodoxy has not yet made room, - If I dared use a word which could be given inaccept-able meanings, I feel myself irreducibly 'hyper-Catholic'."

 

6. Ibid., pp. 136-37; "Je crois..., Dieu aidant, etre toujours sur 1'axe Chretien profond... Mais, a cote de cela, je ne puis me dissimuler qu'il va, se developpant en moi, une opposition native et profonde pour ce qui est regarde habituellement comme la forme, les esperances, et les interets Chretiens. Que voulez-vous: dans le 'monde chretien' tel qu'il se presente A nous dans les documents ecclesiasti-ques et les gestes ou conceptions catholiques, 'j'etouffe' absolument, physique-ment. Nous avons donne, il y a mille ans, un tour de compas qui pretendait encercler le monde des possibilites physiques et morales; - et maintenant toute la realite est au-delA. Nous ne sommes plus 'catholiques' en fait; mais nous defendons un systeme, une secte. Alors, comme je vous le disais deja, je crois, a ma premiere arrivee en Chine, le Christianisme m'apparait maintenant beaucoup moins comme un ensemble ferme et constitue que comme un axe de progression et d'assimilation. Hors de cet axe, je ne vois au monde aucune garantie, aucune issue, Mais, autour de cet axe, j'entrevois une immense quantite de verites et d'attitudes auxquelles l'orthodoxie n'a pas encore fait de place - Si j'osais employer un mot qui peut avoir des sens inacceptables, je me sens irreductible-ment 'hyper-catholique'." The closing part of our English translation is from the Introduction (p. 36) of Letters to Leontine Zanta.


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Here we have a clear light with which to see the implications of the twenty-two-year later passage. Teilhard accepts in essence the axis of Christianity, the orthodox axis, but would like it to be no fast-shut final doctrine: he visions immense vistas of new spiritual revelation to which he wants it to open up instead of constituting a stifling old-world creed. Not orthodoxy as it is but orthodoxy changing itself enormously is what makes his religion. As such, it cannot help exposing itself to the accusation of not being orthodox at all: Teilhard, by saying he is farther and higher - "hyper" - along the Catholic Une, without any chance of reducibleness to the customary Christian gestures or conceptions, might have the charge laid at his door that by centring his Catholicism in the Universal Christ, the Christ of pan-Christism, who is intimately linked with the idea of Humanity's "Super-evolution", with the envisagement of the "ultra-human," which is not accepted by the Church, Teilhard in some way is going in for the "trans-Christic", a Christianity basically transposed.

 

Indeed we get the very word "transposed" in a context closely resembling the one in which he is "frightened" to see how much he perceives Christ always farther and higher than does the Church to which he has pledged himself. And in that second context he even brings in themes related to that which de Lubac mentions as supplying the key to our passage -Christ's Ascension after his Resurrection. On 17 December 1922 a letter7 to Valensin says: "I am sometimes a little frightened when I think of the transposition I have to impose, within myself, upon the common notions of creation, inspiration, miracle, original sin, Resurrection, etc., to be able to accept them."

 

And has not Teilhard written to de Lubac himself of the novel shape required of old dogmas and indirectly warned him against doing the. transposing act by halves? On 9

 

7. Ibid, p, 90: "Je suis parfois un peu effraye quand je songe a la transposition que je dois faire subir, en moi, aux notions vulgaires de creation, inspiration, miracle, peche originel, Resurrection, etc., pour pouvoir les accepter."


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December 1933 de Lubac was told:8 "I have quite a number of friends, and you know some of them, who admit at the same time that Christ is the Centre of things and that the ensemble of things is of an evolutive form; - but they do not seem to see what are the reactions organically and psychologically necessary of this situation upon: the notion of Redemption, the notion of Incarnation, and the moral Evangelical ideal."

 

On 27 June 1934 Teilhard 9 speaks even directly of transposition to de Lubac apropos of the Christian idea of the Supernatural face to face with the old pre-evolutionary idea of Nature: "...the most serious defect of the 'Supernatural' is to stand opposite a static notion of 'nature' which suffices no longer. The whole theory of the Supernatural (like all the rest of the theological theses which express themselves by 'substances' and 'accidents') moves about in a domain of thought which the majority of the modems have deserted. It is essential to transpose it to a system of representations which will be intelligible and living for us."

 

How radical and definitive the general transposition of Christianity was to be in Teilhardism can be gauged from the uncompromising declaration he made in the essay "Christology and Evolution"10 written in the same period as the above letters and sent to both Valensin and de Lubac to be read: "...nothing can any longer find place in our constructions which does not first satisfy the conditions of a universe in process of transformation. A Christ whose features do not adapt them-

 

8.Ibid., p. 259; "J'ai bien des amis, et vous en connaissez, qui admettent a la fois que le Christ est le Centre des choses, et que 1'ensemble des choses est de forme evolutive; - mais ils ne semblent pas voir quelles sont les reactions organiquement et psvchologiquement necessaires de cette situation sur: la notion de Redemption, la notion d'Incarnation, et 1'ideal moral Evangelique."

9.Ibid., pp. 277-78: "...le plus grave defaut du 'Surnaturel' est de s'opposer a une notion statique de 'nature' qui ne suffit plus. Toute la theorie du Surnaturel (comme du reste toutes les theses theologiques qui s'expriment en 'substances' et 'accidents') s'agite dans un domaine de pensee que la plupart des modernes ont deserte. Il est essenttiel de le trattsposer dans un systeme de representations qui soit pour nous intelligible et vivant."

10. In Christianity and Evolution, p. 78.


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selves to the requirements of a world that is evolutive in structure will tend more and more to be eliminated out of hand - just as in learned societies today articles on perpetual motion or squaring the circle are consigned to the waste-paper-basket, unread. And correspondingly, if a Christ is to be completely acceptable as an object of worship, he must be presented as the saviour of the idea and reality of evolution."

 

About this very essay Teilhard11 wrote to Valensin on 28 December 1933: ".,.1 am sending you...a new paper which, in itself, would have in it all that is wanted for me to be treated as a heretic."

 

In the face of such pronouncements it would be misguided to suggest a different view with the help of a quotation dating to 1954 which de Lubac12 makes at nearly the end of Intimate Letters: "The essential of my position: to integrate Evolution into Christification. (Nature into Supernature)...." Here, despite appearances, we do not have the earlier position reversed. What is said is simply that Evolution and Christification are inseparable. The emphasis is laid on Christification, but it is a Christification which is to be seen in evolutionary terms: these terms have to become part and parcel of it, be integrated into it, at the same time that they are not to be understood except as implying a process of the World being more and more changed into Christ-stuff, so to speak. What Teilhard intends to convey is his desire to reconcile with the Christian Pleroma or complete Christification of the universe the evolutionary attainment of the ultra-human, the Omega-Point, the peak of the progression on earth, so that there would be a fusion of the God Above with the God Ahead. The proper elucidation of de Lubac's extract is to be obtained by looking at some words in Teilhard's very last letter,13 the one

 

11.Op. cit,, p. 261: "...je vous.envoie.,.un nouveau papier qui, in se, aurait tout ce qu'il faut pour me faire traiter en relaps."

12.Ibid., p. 464, note 6: "L'essentiel de ma position: integrer ('Evolution dans la Christification. (La nature dans le Surnaturel.)"

13.Ibid., p. 465: "Un Dieu de Involution: c'est-a-dire un Dieu divinisant, christifiant, a la fois 1'En Haut et 1'En Avant..."


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to Andre Ravier two days before his death: "A God of Evolution: that is to say a God divinising, christifying, simultaneously the Above and the Ahead...."

 

As to the second part of de Lubac's citation - "nature into Supernature" - we may seek light at two places in Intimate Letters. First, in a phrase to Valensin on 12 December 1919:14...the Supernatural forms itself continually by super-creation of our nature." Second, a phrase to de Lubac on 29 October 1949.15 "...Ultra-human and Supernatural: the two complementary terms of a total experience of the Universe." Here, as with Evolution and Christification, we find an indivisible pair - Nature and Supernature playing into each other's hands, the former getting super-created into the latter, the latter completing by that super-creation the former's development of the ultra-human. Evolution is again the conditio sine qua non. As the letter" just before Teilhard's death puts it: "Evolution, that is to say ultra-Creation!" And, when Evolution is concerned, we must have a Supernature no longer of the old type, the type hit off by Teilhard in the letter to de Lubac on 27 June 1934, where he speaks of "re-thinking the Supernatural"17 and then, as we have already seen, he mentions that "the gravest defect of the Supernatural" is its being coupled with "a static notion of 'nature' which no longer suffices".18 So, when he writes of integrating Nature into Supernature, he means a new dynamic evolutionary Nature-notion getting assimilated into a vision of the Supernatural, in which the Supernatural is found to prolong and perfect, complete and crown the natural rather than rejecting it as something that has no issue in itself, no earthly developmental fulfilment.

 

14.Ibid., p. 33: "...le Surnaturel se forme continuellement par sur-creation de notre nature."

15.Ibid., p. 382: "Ultra-humain et Surnaturel: les deux termes complemen-taires d'une experience totale de l'Univers."

16.Ibid., p. 465: "Evolution, c'est-a-dire ultra-Creation!"

17.Ibid., p. 277: "...de re-penser le Surnaturel."

18.Ibid:, "...une notion statique de 'nature' qui ne suffit plus."


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Neither part of de Lubac's quotation changes the basic stand emerging from the various pronouncements we have underlined. And directly to counterbalance it we have two statements in a letter to de Lubac himself on 15 August 1936. There Teilhard19 first savs: "Thus 1 succeeded in re-integrating the historic Christ, - as a structural condition for the universal equilibrium." Obviously, the central figure of Christianity could not be taken up in his own traditional right: he had to form a reasoned necessary part of a new cosmic outlook. Such a change is further clarified in more general and clean-cut terms when we further read:20 "It is a great point of force for me, in any case, to recognise that the whole effort of 'evolution' is reducible to the justification and development of a love (of God). It is already what my mother used to tell me. But it will have taken me a lifetime to integrate this truth into an organic vision of things. I imagine that it is this effort of integration that the World must make in order to be converted...." The words unmistakably show that to Teilhard Christianity, as it is, cannot be primary and convincing: he needs to reconcile it with an evolutionary view of the world for it to be credible and acceptable. The integration of it into Evolutionism is always the "essential" of his "position", whether made the frontal or the background theme and whatever the verbal shape it may assume.

 

So the pronouncements we have underlined earlier should bear out our contention contra de Lubac's hints for interpreting Teilhard's "trans-Christie". And our contention will be found totally supported by each of the several passages we shall produce as companions to the one where that new word catches our eye. These passages have no play of any counterpoint but are quite straightforward in their tune.

 

19.Ibid., p. 315: "Ainsi arrive-je a. re-integrer le Christ historique, - comme une condition structurelle de l'equilibre universel."

20.Ibid:. "Ce m'est une grande force en tout cas de reconnaitre que tout I'effort de 'revolution' est reductible a la justification et au developpement d'un amour (de Dieu). Cest deja ce que me disait ma mere. Mais il m'aura fallu une vie pour integrer cette verite dans une vision organique des choses. J'imagine que c'est cet effort d'integration que le Monde doit faire pour se convertir..."


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(7)

 

 

 

 

On 17 January 1954 Teilhard1 writes to Bruno de Solages:

 

"...the 'sin' of Rome (in spite of its blessings bestowed haphazardly upon Technique and Science) is not to believe in a future, in an achievement (for Heaven) of Man upon Earth. This I know because for the past sixty years I have stifled in this sub-humanised atmosphere. And I know it also because, in 1948, in Rome itself, the Father General himself said it to me with a perfect candour...

 

"Far from discouraging or embittering me - a strange thing - this evidence that the 'Anti-Christ' can only be vanquished by a Trans-Christ both calms and excites me. Something magnificent is in sight. And one cannot escape (both humanly and Christianly) from falling upon that very position. From this point of view, the Church's present resistances to the movement seem to me simply a little ridiculous. The movement is already carrying it away."

 

Here we can be in no doubt of what Teilhard means by "Trans-Christ". It indicates a Christianity transcending the one the Church seeks to perpetuate. The latter is found by Teilhard to be an obscurantism which not only represses and chokes his own finest self but also fails to appreciate the true human condition and discourages its legitimate aspiration towards the attainment of the Ultra-human, the great evolutionary future fulfilling life and establishing the Kingdom of

 

1. Lettres Intimes..., p. 434: "...le 'peche' de Rome (malgre ses benedictions prodiguees au hasard sur la Technique et la Science) est de ne pas croire a un avenir, a un achevement (pour le Ciel) de l'Homme sur Terre. Cela je le sais, parce que depuis soixante ans j'etouffe dans cette atmosphere sous-humanisee. Et je le sais aussi parce que, en 1948, a Rome meme, le Pere general lui-meme, avec une parfaite candour, me l'a dit...

"Loin de me decourager, ni de me rendre amer - chose curieuse - cette Evidence que 1' 'Ante-Christ' ne peut etre vaincu que par un Trans-Christ me calme et m'excite a la fois. Quelque chose de magnifique est en vue. Et on ne peut pas eviter (a la foi humainement et chretiennement) de tomber sur cette position-la. De ce point de vue, les resistances presentes de I'Eglise au mouvement me paraissent simplement un peu ridicules. Le mouvement 1'entraine deja."


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Heaven upon Earth. Teilhard goes to the extent of stigmatising religious Rome as Anti-Christ, a hostile force to be subdued, a retrograde frame of mind which would yet not be ultimately of any avail in face of the general drive of evolution and would itself be converted to the fundamentally transposed and modernised Christianity a la Teilhard -Teilhard the scientific "Neo-Humanist" no less than the Jesuit "Hyper-Catholic".

 

Again to de Solages he2 writes on 2 January 1955, the last year of his life: "...I am considering to take up again (in a way more concentrated and more centred?...) my Weltanschauung more concentrated and more centred?...) my Weltanschauung in an essay on 'The Christie', - unpublishable, of course, - but it might eventually help the birth of the 'trans-Christian' God we are waiting for. Toynbee is right, I think, when he writes that, unsuspectingly, we have already come out of 'the Christian era'. But where he is mistaken (in my opinion) is when he qualifies our epoch as 'ex-Christian' - It is 'trans-Christian' (I repeat) that he should have said. - I am more and more convinced that the Church will only start again upon its conquering march when (taking up once more the great theological effort of the first five centuries) it will set itself to rethink (to ultra-think) the existing relationship, no longer between Christ and the Trinity, - but between Christ and a

2. Ibid,, pp. 449-50: "...je medite de reprendre (en plus concentre et plus centre?...) ma Weltanschauung dans un Essai sur 'Le Christique', - impubliable, naturellement, - mais qui peut eventuellement aider a la naissance du Dieu 'trans-chretien' que nous attendons, Toynbee a raison, je crois, quand il ecrit que, sans nous en douter, nous sommes deja sortis de 'l'ere chretienne'. Mais la ou il se trompe (a mon avis) c'est quand il qualifie notre epoque d"ex-chretienne'. -C'est 'trans-chretienne' (je repute) qu'il aurait du dire. - Je suis de plus en plus convaincu que I'Eglise ne reprendra sa marche conquerante que lorsque (repre-nant le grand effort theologique des cinq premiers stecles) eile s'attachera a repenser (a ultra-penser) les rapports existant, non plus entre le Christ et la Trinite, - mais entre le Christ et un Univers devenu fantastiquement immense et organique (un trillion au moins de galaxies contenant presque surement chacune de la Vie et de la Pensee...). Le Christianisme ne peut survivre (et super-vivre), je le sens, qu'en subdistinguant dans la 'nature humaine' du Verbe Incarne une nature 'terrestre' et une nature cosmique. Autrement, notre Foi et notre Charite ne couvrent plus le Phenomene..."


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Universe become fantastically immense and organic (at least a trillion galaxies each almost certainly containing Life and Thought...). Christianity can only survive (and super-live), I feel, by sub-distinguishing in the 'human nature' of the Incarnate Word a 'terrestrial' nature and a cosmic nature. Otherwise, our Faith and our Charity no longer cover the Phenomenon.

 

Teilhard makes five emphatic points, from which the true sense of the ''trans-Christian'' may be caught. First, Christianity as it has been held by the Church is utterly out of date: the era of its credibility is over for good. But, unlike Toynbee who sees no future for Christianity, Teilhard discerns in it, behind the dead form Rome still clings to, a living essence capable of re-birth, possible to activate in a new form. This is the second point. The third is that the renovated religion, passing as it does clean beyond the present unrealistic old-world vision, is to be termed "trans-Christian". This means that no mere touching up of the existing orthodoxy will do. A total change is requisite, without which the Church will disappear. Its life today is stagnant: to live at all it has to "super-live": else there is no hope of its survival. And here comes the fourth point. The super-living has to be the rethinking of a certain central factor in Christianity. Teilhard equates rethinking with ultra-thinking: that is to say, there should not be a wholesale replacement of what is associated with Christ but what is associated must be carried far beyond its accepted version and seen in a wholly novel light. To be precise, Christ's relationship with the Universe demands to be formulated differently.

 

Fifthly and finally, we are given the lines of the different formulation. It is intimately bound up with the modern view of the cosmos, a view that cannot help revolutionising all our religious approaches in a manner that could never have been anticipated in its true urgency. We are faced by a cosmic All, infinitely large, innumerably diverse, organically unified and developing an increasing synthesis of complexity and consciousness - a trillion galaxies in constant evolution and

 


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bound to contain conditions conducive to the appearance of a vitality and mentality similar to ours. A Christ whose role has been taken as confined to suffering for and saving an erring humanity on a tiny planet is outmoded in the presence of the phenomenal reality as laid bare by science. In the nature of this Christ we have to see, besides a specifically terrestrial component, a component which would not only cover the needs of the cosmos but also be physically and organically coextensive with all space-time. This component would make for Teilhard's famous Cosmic Christ who would include the terrestrial Christ of past orthodoxy yet entirely alter our notion of his essential character and fit him fundamentally to an evolutionary universe. The Cosmic Christ of Teilhard, unlike the traditional God of Christianity, is, first and foremost, the God of evolution on a universal scale and therefore a "'trans-Christian' God". Such a God is the only one whom modern man can worship under the aspect of Christianity, and without Him the coming age will neccessarily be, as Toynbee phrases it, "ex-Christian". Such a God will trans-Christianise not only our "faith" but also our "charity", our self-giving in love. Charity would no longer be confined to binding up our neighbours' wounds and consoling our fellows in distress. It would gain a meaning that would make all collaborative research and all unifying world-work the most important activity of self-giving in love, since these would expedite the universe's evolutionary aim: collective self-convergence. Charity has to be "veritably propulsive of the universe."3

 

Teilhard4 touches centrally on the same theme in a letter to

 

3.Ibid., p. 443, Lettre a de Solages, 3 aout, 1954: "Une 'Charite' veritablement motrice de 1'Univers."

4.Ibid., p. 452: "...je voudiais profiter de I'hiver pour rediger 'ad usum privatum' une sorte de resume (final?..,) de mes idees (et de mes aspirations) concernant 'le Christique': la rencontre 'implosive' du Chretien et de 1'Evolutif. -Comme je I 'ecrivais encore demierement a Mgr. de Solages, il me semble que nous revivons, de 1500 ans de distance, les grandes luttes de l'Arianisme; - avec cette difference qu'il ne s'agit plus aujourd'hui de preciser les rapports entre le


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Andre Ravier on 14 January 1955: "...I would like to take advantage of the winter to write up 'ad usum privatum' a sort of resume (final?...) of my ideas (and of my aspirations) concerning 'the Christie': the 'implosive' meeting between the Christian and the Evolutive. - As I wrote only lately to Mgr. de Solages, it seems to me that we are living again, at a distance of 1500 years, the great fight of Arianism; - with this difference that it is no longer a question today to make precise the relation between the Christic and the Trinitarian, - but between Christ and a Universe suddenly become fantastically great, formidably organic, and more than problably poly-human (n thinking planets, - perhaps millions...). - And to express myself brutally (but expressively) I cannot see any noble and constructive issue to the situation outside of the sub-distinction for the theologians of a new Nicaea to work out in the human nature of Christ, between a terrestrial nature and a cosmic nature, - What do you think of it?... In any case, one tiling seems evident, more and more so: and it is that only a trans- (or ultra-) Christianised Christianity is henceforth capable of satisfying our increased powers and demands of adoration!"

 

Once more we have an unmistakable stress laid on changing Christianity to meet the exigences of an evolutionary view of the world. Teilhard makes no bones about Christianity in its present form being a complete failure, though not lacking in promise of self-renewal. This promise can only be fulfilled if Christ is endowed with a cosmic nature that would make

 

Christique et ]e Trinitaire, - mais entre le Christ et un Univers soudainement devenu fantastiquement grand, formidablement organique, et plus que probable-ment poly-humain (n planetes pensantes, - peut-etre des millions,..). -Et, pour m'exprimer brutalement (mais expressivement) je ne vois pas de noble et constructive issue a la situation en dehors de la sub-distinction a operer par les theologiens d'un nouveau Nicee, dans La nature humaine du Christ, entre une nature terrestre et une nature cosmique. - Qu'en pensez-vous?... Dans tous les cas, une chose me parait evidente, de plus en plus: et c'est que seul un Christianisme trans- (ou ultra-) christianise est capable desormais de satisfaire nos puissances et exigences accrues d'adoration!"


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him a far different and a far greater divinity than Roman Catholicism has conceived. This divinity would be capable of giving a supreme sense to the process of evolution by which a multi-aspected yet unitary cosmos carries on the development of life and mind in countless parts of its immensity - a development moving in the direction of a collective super-mankind. The Cosmic Christ cannot but trans-Christianise Christianity out of all recognition even while starting from the historic figure of Jesus of Nazareth and remaining within the cadre of the traditional dogmas. All these dogmas would wear a non-traditional face and the doctrines based on them undergo a metamorphosis.

 

Our next quotation is from a tetter to de Solages on 16 February 1955. At the same time it sustains our thesis and introduces a note corrective of a certain exaggeration in the matter of Teilhard's faithfulness to the Church. The passage5 runs: "You end your discourse on Progressivism with the text: 'Seek ye first the Kingdom of God, and all these things shall be added unto you.' Have you thought that this text (like the one: 'Render unto Caesar...') is at present the major difficulty encountered by a throng of minds within the Church - and that it represents (like the plurality of 'Mankinds' in the Cosmos) one of those points urgently calling for the dogmatic and mystic emergence of the 'Trans-Christian'?... The achievement of the Earth is not a simple addition but an essential co-condition for the Parousia. And, in this

 

5. Ibid., p. 460: "Vous terminez votre discours sur le Progressisme par le texte: 'Cherchez le royaume de Dieu, et le reste vous sera donne par surcroit.' Avez-vous songe que ce texte (comme celui: 'Rendez a Cesar...') est presentement la difficulty majeure rencontree par une foule d'esprits dans J'Evangile, - et qu'il represente (comme la pluralite des 'Humanites' dans le cosmos) un de ces points appelant d'urgence l'emergence dogmatique et mystique d'un 'Trans-Chretien'?... L'achievement de la Terre n'est pas un simple surcroit, mais une co-condition essentielle de la Parousie. Et, dans cette nouvelle perspective, le Christ n'est ni deforme, ni diminue, mais vrairnent 'ressuscite'. Voila ce qu'il m'est impossible de ne pas voir et admettre. Autrement je quitterais (moi et bien d'autres) I'Eglise, - immediatement: parce que mon besoin d'adorer et aimer y etoufferait..."


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new perspective, Christ is neither distorted nor diminished, but verily 'resuscitated'. This is what I find impossible not to see and admit. Otherwise I would leave (I and many others) the Church, - immediately: because my need to adore and love would stifle in it."

 

Teilhard hits out once again at the Church's stress on the Supernatural to the neglect of earth's evolutionary concerns -the division of the Kingdom of God from terrestrial achievement, the things that are God's from those that are Caesar's. Perhaps the best comment here would be some lines 6 from an earlier letter (17 January 1954) to the same correspondent: "I am hurt and wounded...in noticing that for Rome Work is still regarded, at bottom, as a Punishment, and Research (however blessed verbally) as an accessory, an addition and a fashion; -while, in both cases (Work and Research), it is a question of functions essential to the World's Christification (O this 'supernatural' - one should say this 'Extra-natural' - dehumanising -!... who will deliver us from this theological poison which paralyses us in all our movements?).... Christianity, as I will not stop crying out to the end, is essential as a sequel to 'hominisation', to the extent that it is alone capable of rendering 'Cosmogenesis' ultimately loving and lovable. -But it cannot any longer continue without integrating most quickly into its Faith in Heaven a real Faith in Earth..."

 

The burden of Teilhard's song is Rome's refusal to make the Supernatural go hand in hand with the Ultra-human, the religious aspiration with the evolutionary vision - a refusal of

 

6. Ibid., pp. 433-34: "...je suis heurte et blesse,..en constatant que pour Rome le Travail est encore regarde, au fond, comme une Punition, et la Recherche (si verbalement benie soit-elle) comme un accessoire, un surcroit et une mode; -alors que, dans les deux cas (Travail et Recherche) il s'agit de fonctions essentielles a la Christification du Monde (0 ce 'surnaturel' - il faudrait dire cet 'Extra-naturel' - des-humanisant qui nous delivrera de ce poison theologique qui nous paralyse dans tous nos mouvements!),... Le Christianisme, je ne cesserai pas de le trier jusqu'a la fin, est essentiel a la suite de 1"hominisation', dans la mesure ou il est le seul capable de rendre 'la Cosmogenese' ultimement aimante et aimable. - Mais il ne peut plus continuer sans integrer au plus vite dans sa Foi au Ciel une reelle Foi en la Terre..."

 


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the Cosmic Christ or, as Teilhard7 often puts it, "Christ the Evolver". This refusal companions the other which limits Christ within the earth's history and will not see the near-certainty of "hominisation" in numberless planets of the infinite universe of science and will not recognise what Teilhard8 calls "the Christ of all the Galaxies". Evolution everywhere: that is Teilhard's message - and evolution on earth beyond the present human stage is the sine qua non for the arrival of God's Kingdom: without it Christ cannot reappear to gather the world together into his divinity: the logical natural basis for the supernatural advent would be missing. To get rid of the obstacle in the way of the double reason for accepting his Cosmic Christ, Teilhard wants to develop Roman Catholicism beyond itself. The situation to be coped with is thus focused by him 9 elsewhere: "Decidedly, there is something that no longer turns round in the Christian Weltanschauung called orthodox at the moment." In short, the "Trans-Christian" has to be effected, both as an intellectually formulated dogma and as a mode of mysticism by which our whole consciousness would move towards realising the state of collective maturation necessary for that culminating cosmic event, the Parousia.

 

The capital importance of the "Trans-Christian" to Teilhard's personal life springs into relief towards the end of our passage. Perhaps nowhere else in his writings does he show his cosmos-Christic vision to be such a decisive factor for a parting of the ways. He declares himself ready to quit the Catholic fold unless this vision can find living room.- He checks himself from cutting himself loose because, to his mind, the revelation originally basic to the Church is such that his new perspective not only is permissible but also has the possibility of being accepted by the Church at some time or other. If, however, the Church took up a position more

 

7.E.g. Ibid., p, 412: "le Christ universel (ou 'evoluteur')..."

8.Ibid., p. 445: "...un Christ cosmique (un Christ de toutes les Galaxies...).

9.Ibid.: "Decidement, il y a quelque chose qui ne tourne plus rond dans la Weltanschauung chretienne qualifiee d'orthodoxe en ce moment."


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anti-Teilhard than merely checking him from propagating his message - if it insisted on his retracting it - he would free himself at once from the Vatican. All this proves his adherence to have never been unconditional. The close of our passage is like Luther's "Here I stand, I can no other." Vigorously and forthrightly it stipulates the sole terms under which Teilhard can remain loyal. The usual talk of his not ever dreaming of a rupture makes too much play of his frequent assertions of attachment to the historic Church. Our quotation helps us to remember all the more the occasion nearly twenty years earlier, in June 1934, when he10 wrote from China to Leontine Zanta: "...in my heart I haven't changed, except along the same lines. One consequence of this movement is that I am gradually finding myself more and more on the fringe of a lot of things. It's only thanks to the exotic life I'm leading that this drift doesn't develop into a break."

 

In connection with that occasion when a severing of relations with Rome was prevented just by Teilhard's having been far away from Europe, we must cull from Robert Speaight11 a letter of Teilhard's where he says: "Some people feel happy in the visible Church, but for my part 1 think I shall be happy to die in order to be free of it - and to find our Lord outside of it..." Actually this communication is found in Intimate Letters and dated 10 January 1926.12 Intimate Letters also gives us the same death-wish, now expressed by means of two famous words of St. Paul, in a letter13 to the same correspondent, Valensin, on 17 December 1922: "As I was

 

10.Letters to Leontine Zanta, pp. 110-11.

11.Teilhard de Chardin: A Biography (Collins, London, 1968), p. 140.

12.Lettres Intimes..., p. 132: 'Il y a en a qui se sentent heureux dans I'Eglise visible; - moi, il me semble que je serai heureux de mourir pour en etre debarrasse, c'est-a-dire pour trouver Dieu N[otre] S[eigneur] en dehors d'elle."

13.Ibid., p. 90: "Comme je vous le disais, je crois, une autre fois, je suis pris interieurement entre deux forces divergentes qui sont, 1'une la vue toujours plus 'brutale' qu'il n'y a pas d'autre issue a la vie que N(otre) S[eigneur| - et 1'autre le sentiment toujours plus accentue, peut-etre, de ce qu'il y a de lourd, etroit, et caduc dans I'Eglise actuelle. - Cela me fait penser parfois: 'cupio dissolvi', pour echapper a ce tiraillement."


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telling you of it, I believe, some other time, I am inwardly caught between two divergent forces which are, one the ever more 'brutal' view that there is no other issue to life than our Lord, - and the other, the perhaps ever more accentuated feeling of what there is of the heavy, narrow, and obsolete in the present Church. - That sometimes makes me think: 'Cupio dissolvi' [T desire dissolution'], to escape from this tearing apart."

 

Nor could the urge to liberate himself from the Church's heaviness, narrowness and obsoletism and enter the true light of his Lord in an afterlife have been a mood of merely two moments in the 1920s. It must have been a background presence throughout his life, for his relations with the Church never changed: if anything, they grew worse. On 22 August 1947 he was commanded to confine himself to pure science, not venture into religion or philosophy, and at the beginning of the next years this order was repeated,14 along with a warning that otherwise very serious measures might be taken against him. De Lubac15 also tells us that in 1949 Teilhard was more suspected than ever by Rome, that Valensin in the autumn of 1950 was deeply concerned about the storm gathering over his friend's head and that already on 10 January 1949 Teilhard had written: "...since I am back from China, I can clearly notice that I am becoming more and more clear-cut and adamant on a few dividing positions; and that cannot change any more."

 

We may add as further confirmation the fact that two days before his death Teilhard expressed his disillusionment with the Company of Jesus to which he belonged. In a letter16 to

 

14.Ibid., p. 384, bottom.

15.Ibid., pp. 9, 8 of Avertissement and p. 383, note 5: "Deja le 10-1-1949 T ecrivait: 'Depuis que je suis rentre de Chine, je distingue clairement que je deviens de plus en plus ferme et intransigeant sur quelques points de divergence; et cela ne peut plus changer." Our "translation" is really the original, written by Teilhard in English, and is taken from Letters to Two Friends, 1926-1952 (Collins, The Fontana Library of Theology & Philosophy, London, 1972,) p. 192.

16.Ibid., p. 463: "Je dois enormement a la Cie: mais j'hesiterais fort avant d'inviter qui que ce soit a y entrer. - Caveant consulesL."


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Andre Ravier, a fellow-Jesuit, on 23 March 1955 he confessed: "I owe a lot to the Company: but I would hesitate a lot before inviting anybody to enter it. - Let the counsellors beware!" This, at his life's end, gives a final echo to a downright disillusioned statement in his earlier period, ten years after the "Cupio dissolvi". A letter17 to Valensin of 20 October 1932 said: "In reality, I don't dare and have never dared to push anyone to make himself Christian. The weight is becoming too heavy to carry."

 

17. Ibid., p. 235: "En realite, je n'ose et n'ai jamais ose pousser personne a se fairs? chretien. Le poids devient trop lourd a porter. ."


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(8)

 

 

 

Teilhard died on 25 March 1955. On 22 March Andre Ravier heard from him:1 "...it is not only apostles of a new type that we require: but indeed (for the use of these apostles) a Gospel of a type that is 'new'. - It is inexact, I am increasingly more sure, to repeat that Society is de-Christianising itself.... It is solely and desperately awaiting to be super-Christianised.... The Christianity presented to us does not satisfy us any more, because its Christ is not great enough."

 

De Lubac2 annotates this statement by saying that, already, Teilhard wrote to Claude Riviere on 20 October 1943: "What is it that Christianity awaits then for developing its possibilities of the Universal Christ or, as I am beginning to call him, the Evolver Christ? I indeed feel, and definitively, that it is the unique and final form of the objective to which the close of my life should consecrate itself." De Lubac is evidently sympathetic to Teilhard. At the same time he wants to set off the wholly critical attitude of our quotation by another from Teilhard himself, which attributes to the criticised Christianity of the Church inherent powers to bring forth the very Christ found missing in it at present. Doubtless, Teilhard is talking in two voices when he says through the two passages that, while the Church is gravely wanting in the Teilhardian religion, this religion is its own true unsuspected and concealed message which will come through (owing to Teilhard's persistence). But surely, whether he is right or

 

1.Lettres Intimes..., p. 463: "...ce re sont pas seulement des apotres d'un nouveau type qu'il nous faut: mais bien (a 1'usage de ces apotres) un Evangile d'un type 'nouveau'. - Il est inexact, j'en suis de plus en plus stir, de re peter que la Societe se de-christianise... Elle attend seulement et desesperement qu'on la sur-christianise... Le Christianisme qu'on nous presente ne nous satisfait plus, parce que son Christ n'est plus assez grand."

2.Ibid., pp. 463-64, note 4: "Deja, T ecrivait a Claude Riviere, le 20 oct. 43: 'Qu'est-ce que le Christianisme attend donc pour developper ses possibilites du "Christ-Universel" ou, comme je commence a 1'appeler, du "Christ-Evoluteur". Je sens bien, et definitivement, que c'est la forme unique et finale, de 1'objectif auquel doit se consacrer la fin de mon existence.'"


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wrong about the Church's future, he knows fully the nature of his Christ. Does de Lubac realise what exactly the Teilhardian Christ means?

 

He was friendly with the older man from 1922 onward.3 Yet fourteen years later - on 26 January 1936 - Teilhard 4 complains to Leontine Zanta: "I don't know whether among the many of my colleagues who are in front of me or behind me on the road I'm travelling, there are any (or even a single one!... that seems incredible) who realise the importance of the step that all are taking." This must mean some lack in the progressive mentality of Teilhard's sympathisers, and his sweeping assertion disqualifies de Lubac from being at the heart of Teilhardism - at least up to 1936. What Teilhard5 writes to Ravier in his very last letter extends the disqualification to the end of his life: "...it has often been my disappointment to discover that minds as penetrating as an Auguste Val [ensin], a Grandmaison, or even a de Lubac (?...), still think and pray in 'Cosmos' and not in Cosmogenesis."

 

The adverb "even" before the mention of de Lubac indicates that, although from among fellow-Jesuits he had intellectually the most affinity with Teilhard, his insight into his older associate's mind was yet imperfect. And its imperfection would stay affirmed in spite of the interrogation-mark within brackets after his name. The interrogation-mark could not, in this particular context, show anything more than a passing doubt about completely placing him on a par with Valensin and Grandmaison. It would not exonerate him from the suspicion of a "Cosmos"-sense lurking in his mind and heart.

 

As if to set a seal on our fear that Teilhard, at his life's termination, stood unaccepted in toto by anyone, we have the

 

3.Ibid., p. 8, Avertissement "(je connaissais le Pere depuis 1922)."

4.Letters to Leontine Zanta, p. 115.

5.Lettres Intimes..., p. 466: "...mon desappointement a ete souvent de decouvrir que des esprits aussi penetrants qu'un Auguste Val[ensin], un Grandmaison, ou meme un de Lubac (?...), pensaient et priaient encore en 'Cosmos' et non en Cosmogenese."


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passage 6 in the "Conclusion" of his Le Christique, whose last pages were penned a couple of days before his death: "How is it...that as I look around me, still dazzled by what 1 have seen, 1 find that I am almost the only person of my kind, the only one to have seen? And so, I cannot, when asked, quote a single writer, a single work, that gives a clearly expressed description of the wonderful 'Diaphany' that has transfigured everything for me." The absence noted in the Zanta-letter of "even a single one" is just as emphatically recorded here. The negative implication of "even a de Lubac" in the other communication finds also a perfect echo.

 

Teilhard's utter isolation leads us to question whether with Rome or even with his most intimate sympathisers he really had anything "Christie" in common. We may recall that in the letter to Valensin on 13 October 1933 he7 said: "There is, between the Roman authorities and myself, more than a misunderstanding of words. All of us dream of one and the same Christ; - and that is the fundamental thing, thanks to which we can remain associates without disloyalty or dupery. But, this capital point set apart, we differ, Rome and I, by two representations of the World, and two practical attitudes towards the World, which are not merely complementary but contrary. It is, at bottom, a merciless fight, - between a static pessimism and a progressive optimism. That, you see, is what we should frankly acknowledge, rather than cheating oneself with words." Now we are disposed to ask: "Is it at all

 

6.Lei me Explain, Text selected and arranged by Jean-Pierre Demoulin, translated by Rene Hague and others (Collins, London, 1970), p. 156,

7.Lettres Intimes..., pp. 253-54: "Entre les autorites romaines et moi, il y a plus qu'un malentendu de mots. Les uns et les autres, nous revons d'un seul et meme Christ; - et c'est la la chose fondamentale grace a quoi nous pouvons rester associes sans deloyaute et sans duperie. Mais, ce point capita] mis a part, nous differons, Rome et moi, par deux representations du Monde, et deux attitudes pratiques vis-a -vis du Monde, qui ne sont pas settlement complementaires, mais contraires, Cest, au fond, une lutte sans merci, - entre un pessimisme statique et un optimisme progressif. Cela, voyez-vous, je crois qu'il vaut mieux se l'avouer franchement, plutot que de se tromper avec des mots."


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true that all of them are dreaming of one and the same Christ? Are they not cheating themselves with a word?"

 

To Teilhard, Christ the Evolver who is also the Christ of all the Galaxies is the only Christ we moderns can henceforward adore. But right up to the present moment what he wrote despairingly in 1920 about fellow-Jesuits holds true, with reference to the urgency of illimitably enlarging Christ and, by cosmifying him, making him the organic centre of all things. He8 noted on 28 February of that year: "I fail to understand how so many of the most learned people - even a Father Marechal - do not realise this situation in which the knowledge of the real puts us by all its observations." In 1967 de Lubac 9 carefully hedged his own recognition of Teilhard's vision: "...the road he followed with such determination is, and cannot but be, only one of the converging roads that lead to Christ: the road, maybe, that best answers the expectations of our own days, but that must fail to reach its destination if it claims to be the only road." We may point out that Teilhard claimed his road - the one of Christian evolutionism or of cosmogenesis that is Christogenesis - to be the only road, whereas de Lubac insists that what cosmogenesis dictates is not all-binding at all even though, according to him,10 "Pere Teilhard's 'vision' is integrated in the great Christian experience". Again in 1974, the Preface to Intimate Letters expresses reservations about the "Neo-Humanism" which Teilhard considered absolutely necessary for Christianity to adopt along with his Universal Christ, both of them being indivisib-ly linked on the basis of the fact of evolution which, in his eyes, was now indispensable to religion and alone gave Neo-Humanism and the Universal Christ their true sense. Assessing Teilhard and the spiritual situation of our times, de

 

8.Ibid., p. 57: " Je n'arrive pas a comprendre combien les gens les plus instruits, - meme un P. Marechal - ne realisent pas celie situation ou nous met, par toutes ses observations, la connaissance du reel."

9,Teilhard de Chardin: The Man and His Meaning, p. v.

10. Ibid.

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Lubac11 writes: "Should we be surprised that his analysis was not complete, or that ageing sometimes simplified excessively its outlines? Let us confess it, he persuaded himself a little too readily that he had 'put his finger on the exact and central point of the religious crisis' or, as he also calls it, the 'human crisis' of the century. There are, he sometimes wrote, 'those who do not see and those who see', - and once he had formed his concept of 'neo-Humanism', whoever hesitated to adopt it as such risked being rejected as amongst those 'who do not see'. It was not easy for him to imagine that others could see also other things, things which his own vision, right but partial, left in the shadow."

 

The precise state of Teilhard's mind and the particular attitude he had towards both evolution and Christianity can best be educed from two passages put together. One is an entry on 20 July 1947 in his diary:12 "No longer to live, really, except for Christ, or more exactly the super-Christ, glimpsed by the Church. To consecrate my end to making the most of my vision...." The second13 is one we have already cited about Teilhard's feeling definitively that "the unique and final form of the objective" to which he should "consecrate" "the close of his life" was to help Christianity develop "its possibilities of the 'Universal Christ' or, as I am beginning to call him, the 'Evolver Christ'". Clearly what Teilhard termed super-Christ, Universal Christ and Evolver Christ was the form in which

 

11.Lettres Intimes..., p. 10, Avertissement: "Faut-il s'etonner que son analyse n'ait pas ete complete, ou que I'age en ait parfois simplifie les lignes a 1 'exces? Avouons-le, il s'est un peu trop aisement persuade qu'il avail 'mis le doigt sur le point exact et central de la crise religieuse' ou, comme il dit encore, de la 'crise humaine' du siecle. 11 y a, lui est-il arrive d'ecrire, 'ceux qui ne voient pas, et ceux qui voient', - et lorsqu'il eut forme son concept du 'Neo-Humanisme', quiconque hesitait a 1'adopter tel quel risquait d'etre rejete parmi ceux 'qui ne voient pas'. Il ne lui etait pas facile de supposer que d'autres pouvaient voir aussi d'autres choses, des choses que sa propre vision, juste mais partielle, laissatt dans l'ombre."

12.Ibid., p. 358, note 1: "... - Ne plus vivre, reellement, que pour le Christ, ou plus exactement le super-Christ, entrevu par I'Eglise. Consacrer ma fin a exploiter ma vision..."

13.Ibid., pp. 463-64.


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what others termed Christ was fundamentally and ultimately significant for him. Christ, as conceived by others, had himself no value for Teilhard. Only if connected with the Teilhardian Christ, who had concrete cosmic dimensions and was the soul of evolution, could that Christ have any status. Teilhard found the Church unreceptive of this greater Christ, since it did not encourage or even recognise the prospect of the ultra-human which inevitably went with the evolutionary world-vision of Teilhardian Christianity, the ultra-human whose complementary extension or prolongation was Teilhard's Supernature. The Pleroma, the divine fullness into which the universe is to be taken up by Christ at the end of history, cannot come for Teilhard unless the ultra-human has been first developed on the earth and has an affinity to it. The Church's Pleroma had nothing organically to do with evolution: the Church's Supernature stood opposed to Nature and implied no drive or need of Earth's self-achievement: the Church stopped with a merely moral preparation for an afterlife and had no sense of the earth's intrinsic worth as a field of divine development and as a reality capable of creating in space-time an initial basic counterpart to that after-life. Therefore the Church, though acknowledging evolution as a fact of the material cosmos, could not be said to have the same Christ as Teilhard's. Both it and Teilhard take Jesus of Nazareth as their point de depart for use of the title "Christ"; but, unlike Teilhard, the Church fails to see the Cosmic Evolver in him, the Being who is equal in vastness to the universe and organically involved in its evolution as the World-Soul by whom and in whom all human entities reach the fulfilment of their personal essence in a supreme unity without losing their diversity. Christ, to the Church, is not "the axis and summit of a universal maturation".14 Teilhard and the Church thus stand poles apart.

 

However, he has the phrase we have cited about the

 

14. Ibid., p. 140, note 8: "L'axe et le sommet d'une maturation universelle."


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Universal Christ: "glimpsed by the Church."15 He also looks forward to "a recasting of Theology" which would automatically happen when "Christian thought will apply itself to disengage the features of the Universal Christ as it has always adored him, but without understanding explicitly enough what the immense value of this attribute was".16 And he spotlights the place in the Church's tradition where the Universal Christ is to be first discerned: "...this Christ universal and transformative who showed himself, I believe, to St. Paul and of whom our generation has felt so invincibly the need."17

 

De Lubac too traces the Teilhardian Christ to the same source. One of his notes has a passage speaking of "the affirmations at the same time Christic and Cosmic of Saint Paul".18 Yet there is a deep difference between de Lubac's back-look and Teilhard's. Although Teilhard never completely loses sight of Jesus of Nazareth, he puts in a very minor place the historic earthly manifestation of God as compared with the cosmic omnipresence of Christ the Evolver. As long as the name "Christ" is employed, Jesus can never be ignored: in fact there can be no cosmic reality recognisable under that name without the Christ of history. And, as Teilhard was unaware of any other Incarnation who would endow a Universal Presence with the sort of reality he wished for it, he repeatedly dwells on the importance of the Man of Galilee. But the latter has not at all an all-round importance: he has only the importance of a starting-point for something which is the essential for Teilhard and which, once affirmed, throws that starting-point entirely into the shade - even to the extent

 

15.Ibid., p. 358: "entrevu par I'Eglise."

16.Ibid., p. 139, note 8: " ..la pensee chretienne s'appliquera a degager les traits du Christ-Universe) tel qu'elle l'a toujours adore, mais sans comprendre assez explicitement quelle etait l'immense valeur de cet attribut."

17.Ibid., p. 78, note 8: "...ce Christ universel et transformateur qui s'est montre, je crois, a saint Paul, et dont notre generation eprouve si invinciblement le besoin..."

18.Ibid., p. 453, note 8: ...affirmations a la fois christiques et cosmiques de saint Paul."


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of blotting it out. This perspective, ignored by exegetes like de Lubac, can be proved for Teilhard with the utmost ease. Even as far back as 1926 and 1927 we see him brushing aside the human perfections of Jesus, out of which his co-ministers made much capital. His heart makes no response to Jesus as an ideal man having various relationships of love with his fellows. Teilhard cares nothing for the picture of "the charm and goodness"19 of Christ's past human life: he prefers actual present relationships such as he can establish with dear ones living around him. And he comes out with an outburst of what is the decisive need in him: "why should we turn to Judaea two thousand years ago?"20 Not the man Jesus, incarnate God though he be, but Someone vaster, a Real Universal Godhead, is what he yearns for. The divine Christ built around the Man of Galilee is too small for a religious scientist whose eyes have been brimmed with the glory of the infinite evolutionary universe thrusting towards a super-humanity. A super-Christ, adequate to this ever-developing Godliness of a trillion-galaxied space-time, is all that Teilhard truly craves. The historic Jesus as such, the Son of Mary in himself, whom de Lubac along with the Church keeps stressing, is a nullity for Teilhard if a cosmic nature cannot explicitly be brought forward from his being. And, even when this nature is completely explicitated, its source in antiquity matters little to Teilhard. That is the central issue for us to focus our minds upon.

 

This issue, which meets us openly in the book The Divine Milieu written in the period we have mentioned, springs into the clearest prominence in a letter of 30 October 1926. He21 writes to Marthe Vaufrey that though the first three gospels have an "irreplaceable value...in presenting the real, historical beginnings of Christ (with a practical code of moral comparison with him)", he has no need of an "evangelism

 

19.The Divine Milieu, an Essay on the Interior Life (Harper and Brothers, New York, 1960) p. 106.

20.Ibid., p. 107.

21.Letters to Two Friends, 1926-1952, p. 52.


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which limits itself to a glorification of the purely human or moral qualities of Jesus". And he adds; "in a sense the past does not interest me. What I 'ask' of Christ is that He be a Force that is immense, present, universal, as real (more real) than Matter, which I can adore; in short, I ask Him to be for me the Universe: complete, concentrated, and capable of being adored.... Have you read...the beginning of the Epistle to the Colossians (Chapter I, verses 12-23) and tried to give it the full, organic meaning it requires? Here Christ appears as a true soul of the World. It is only thus that I love Him."

This passage sheds light on three points. First, the man Jesus who once lived on earth is not needed in his own right by Teilhard, Secondly, Teilhard has love only for the ever-present Cosmic Christ who, according to him, is preached by St. Paul. Thirdly, this Pauline Christ as understood by Teilhard and as understood by the Church are two different Godheads. The last point is not immediately apparent, but the very fact that Teilhard speaks of St. Paul's famous verses as requiring a full organic meaning indicates the absence of this meaning in the Church's interpretation of the divine cosmicity celebrated there. Thus Teilhard, out of his own mouth, suggests that even if the Church has not been devoid of a Cosmic Christ, the Church's Universal Godhead has had a different status from the one Teilhard would accord to him.

 

A different status is unavoidable in the very nature of the case. The Teilhardian Cosmic Christ has no substance apart from the framework of an evolutionary world-vision. Whatever meaning St. Paul's Cosmic Christ can have will never coincide with the Teilhardian sense. The Church is more logical in interpreting the Christ of the Epistle to the Colossians. But, in being more logical, it reveals an impassable gulf severing its Christianity from that of Teilhard. There can be, for all that Teilhard may wish, no dialogue between the two Christianities.

 

Teilhard's unconventional and even scandalous attitude to the historical Jesus, on whom both St. Paul and the Church build, comes through most pointedly in a passage of Intimate


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Letters. On 18 January 1936, three years after the mention of "the one and the same Christ" to Valensin, Teilhard22 wrote to that fellow-Jesuit:

 

"I shall, I imagine, remain tied till the end to research work, which is my platform - and also "my lot. But more than ever I feel my life's deep interest migrate elsewhere: towards the rebirth of a Religion which would really make of faith in a personal God a wheel of the World in activity {and not a supererogatory ornament - or a weight - as it happens, in fact, now. It is about this, particularly, that I should have liked to talk with you. At bottom my attitude is always a rather illogical mixture of faithfulness and unfaithfulness. I can less and less do without Christ (and indeed my life of 'prayers' tends to become more regular and intense).


"But at the same time the figure of the historical Christ becomes to me less and less firm and distinct, misted as it is with all the historical unlikelihood and all the moral inadequacies of the Gospel. Here reappears the basic disposition: what is past is dead and no longer interests me."

 

The identical turn of thought is here as in the letter to Marthe Vaufrey and, though "the soul of the World" is not mentioned, the implication is certainly there in the phrase about a religion making "of faith in a personal God a wheel of the World in activity". The implication may be affirmed with still more conviction when we realise that the letter was

 

22. Lettres Intimes..., p. 312: "Je resterai, j'imagine, lie jusqu'au bout a un travail de recherches qui est ma plate-forme, - et aussi mon lot. Mais plus que jamais je sens l'interet profond de ma vie emigrer ailleurs: vers la renaissance d'une Religion qui ferait vraiment de la foi en un Dieu personnel un rouage du Monde en activite (et non un ornement - ou un poids - surerogatoire, comme cela a lieu, en fait, maintenant). C'est de cela, particulierement, que j'aurais aime a vous parler, Au fond, mon attitude est toujours un melange assez illogique de fidelite et d'infidelite. Je puis de moins en moins me passer du Christ (et meme ma vie de 'prieres' tend a devenir plus reguliere et plus intense).

"Mais en meme temps la figure du Christ-historique me devient de moins en moins ferme et distincte, embrumee qu'elle est de toutes les invraisembiances historiques, et de toutes les inadequations morales de l'Evangile. Ici reparait la disposition de fond: ce qui est passe est mort, et ne m'interesse plus..."


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written only eight days before the one to Leontine Zanta where Teilhard23 talks of "a new religion (Let's call it an improved Christianity if you like), whose personal God is no longer the great 'neolithic' landowner of times gone by but the Soul of the world - as demanded by the cultural and religious stage we have now reached..."

 

Nor does the letter, any more than this of 26 January, have a reference to St. Paul. One may seek an indirect hint of him in the term "rebirth" in connection with the Teilhardian religion which is other than the current Christian in which the personal God is "a supererogatory ornament - or a weight" to "the World in activity". But the original French noun "renaissance" from the verb "renaitre" is to be construed in the light of Teilhard's habitual usage, "thus, at one place in intimate Letters (7 January 1934), he,24 deploring the common methods the Church adopts to effect conversions in Asia, says to de Lubac: "In order to convert, the Church must first be re-born. That is what should be told to the Missionologists. This parenthesis, you understand, is not in the least directed at your communication to the Congress of Missions, - which is, on the contrary, a very successful example of legitimate rebirth. Thanks for sending me these pages, which show how simply a lot of very new views can make their entry into the Christian world." Here the sense is obviously of a "new birth": the mention of "very new views" clinches it. At another place (25 July 1933)25 we are told: "I am more and more persuaded that a Christian rebirth is in process, under

 

23.Letters to Leontine Zanta, p. 114.

24.Lettres Intimes..., pp. 265-66: "Pour convertir, I'Eglise doit d'abord re-naitre. Voila. ce qu'il faudrait dire aux Missiologues. Cette parenthese, vous le com-prenez, ne s'adresse en rien a votre communication au Congres des missions, -laquelle est au contra ire un exemple. tres reussi de legitime renaissance. Merci de m'avoir envoye ces pages, qui montrent combien simplement des vues tres neuves peuvent faire leur entree dans le monde chretien."

25.Ibid., p. 249: "Je suis de plus en plus persuade qu'une renaissance chretienne est en cours, sous 1'influence de facteurs intellectuels et moraux irrepressibles, - qui se ramenent toujours au meme point: necessity d'un Christ plus grand pour un monde plus grand."


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the influence of irrepressible intellectual and moral factors, -which reduce themselves always to the same point: necessity of a greater Christ for a greater world." Here also Teilhard is referring to a vanguard of progressive Christian thinkers who seem to be working for a "new birth" of their religion in the wake of the modern scientific world-perspective. Teilhard's "renaissance" is charged with a sense of present conditions and does not suggest any revival of past ones.

 

An earlier letter (28 August 1926)26 brings us further insight into this term: "As regards 'conversions', Christianity is visibly marking time. It is obviously not along current lines that God's Kingdom will be established - but by some rebirth, some 'revelation', which (once again in human history) will spread through the human mass like fire and water. That is what we must wish for and prepare for," Now "rebirth" is coloured by the shade which goes with "revelation". And the sense of the total clause where it figures is that just as in the past a new revelation made a religion go naturally and swiftly everywhere, so too Christianity, by having a new message revealed to it and thereby getting re-born, will obtain a second new birth comparable to the occurrence of its first revelatory entry into the world. In short, the connotation of "renaissance" is general and can refer to the advent of any religion in human history - Christianity or any other - which carries a revelatory content: it does not narrow down to any specific subject-matter of Christianity itself or of Christianity alone in the historical past.

 

"Renaissance" in our passage has the same general bearing as here and everywhere else: it stands for self-renovation by means of a novel vision. It harks back to no Pauline preaching. As in the Zanta-letter, "a new religion" is invol-

 

26. Ibid., p. 266: "En matiere de 'conversions', le christianisme pietine visible-ment sur place. Ce n'est pas par les voies actuelles, visiblement, que s'etablira le regne de Dieu, - mais par quelque renaissance, quelque'revelation', qui (une fois de plus dans l'histoire humaine) se repandra dans la masse humaine comme de 1'eau et comme du feu. C'est cela qu'ils nous faut desirer et preparer." Our translation is from Letters to Leontine Zanta, p. 69.


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ved, "an improved Christianity" with a re-visioned Christ.

 

Besides, the sentence where we hear of "renaissance" links up with another in the same letter. There Teilhard,27 judging by what was going on in himself and looking at the response his mode of thought was secretly having around him, senses behind the rigidities and old-fashioned gestures of current Christianity his own brand of religious vision taking shape: "I am more and more convinced that a great thing is getting born now at the heart of the Church - something which will contagiously convert the Earth. And to this alone I feel myself really pledged. A mass of weights and of restrictions have ceased to affect me - because they no longer exist in my eyes and no longer have a hold on me - as if I have inwardly escaped from them," The word we have to note is the French "nait" ("getting born"): there is no soupcon of any old world-view being revived or taking rebirth. And the whole phrase links up also with the phrase where the Church, to get the power to effect conversions, has to get re-born. "New birth" again is the sense that emerges for our passage's "rebirth".


Perhaps the most direct path to the correct nuance of Teilhard's "renaissance" is through a word in a letter of 25 February 1929 to Valensin, where occur expressions which de Lubac28 has elsewhere considered "what may well be the harshest judgement [Teilhard] ever made" on the Church. These expressions29 run: "The only thing that I can be: a

 

27.Ibid,, p. 312: "Je suis de plus en plus convaincu qu'une grande chose nait maintenant au coeur de I'Eglise, - quelque chose qui convertira contagieusement la Terre. Et a ceci seulement je me sens reellement voue. Une masse de poids et de restrictions ont cesse de m'affecter - parce qu'ils n'existent plus a mes yeux et n'ont plus prise sur moi, - comme si je leur avais interieurement echappe."

28.Letters to Leontine Zanta, p. 34, Introduction. The English translation is from pp. 34-5.

29.Lettres In times..., p. 184: ."La seule chose que je puisse etre: une voix qui repete, opportune et importune, que I'Eglise deperira aussi longtemps qu'elle n'echappera pas au monde factice de theologie verbale, de sacramentarisme quantitatif et de devotions subtilisees oil elle s'enveloppe, pour se reincarner dans les aspirations humaines reelles... Naturellement, je discerne assez bien ce que cette attitude a de paradoxal: si j'ai besoin du Christ de I'Eglise pour sauver


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voice that repeats, opportune et importune, that the Church will waste away so long as she does not escape from the factitious world of verbal theology, of quantitative sacramentalism, and over-refined devotions in which she is enveloped, so as to reincarnate herself in the real aspirations of mankind.... Of course I can see well enough what is paradoxical in this attitude: if I need the Christ of the Church to save my World, I should accept Christ as he is presented by the Church, with its burden of rites, adniinistrations and theology. That's what you'll tell me, and I've often said it to myself. But now I can't get away from the evidence that the moment has come when the Christian impulse should 'save Christ' from the hands of the clerics so that the world may be saved." The illuminative word for us is "reincarnate", involving as it does in the context a past-free fresh religious start with a Christ seen in a novel way. Its noun-form "reincarnation" would give the true sense of the "renaissance" in our passage.

 

Everything considered, our passage is a tremendous eye-opener by playing down the historical Jesus entirely and suggesting that Teilhard has no psychological need of him: his "life of 'prayers'", that "tends to become more regular and more intense" is addressed only to a Cosmic Godhead who, "'panchristising' the universe" (as another portion of the Zanta-letter of 26 January 1936 puts it), has no concrete acknowledged role in orthodox Christianity. Indeed, one cannot affirm, except in a purely verbal form, that the Church and Teilhard are talking of "one and the same Christ" or even that anything in the Christian scripture talks of the Christ to whom Teilhard, the uncompromising religious evolutionist, prayed ever more devotedly, neglecting altogether the Jesus of history.

 

A further idea of how decisively Teilhard's way of thought

 

mon Monde, je dois prendre le Christ tel que me le presente I'Eglise, avec son fardeau de rites, d'administration et de theologie. Voila ce que vous me direz, et ce que je me suis dit bien des fois. Mais maintenant je ne puis echapper a l'evidence que le moment est venu ou le sens Chretien doit 'sauver le Christ' des mains des Clercs, pour que le Monde soit sauve."


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on Christ-historical and Christ-universal diverged from the Church's Christology is forced upon us by the manner in which he dissociates Mary from the fundamental aspect of his Jesus. We are often told of Teilhard's fervour for Jesus's mother, just as he frequently refers to the Jesus of history as serving a certain initial purpose in his all-importance scheme of the Cosmic Christ, he has several "faithful" allusions to Mary. But he is totally at loggerheads with the Church's magnification of her part in salvational activity. Whatever cosmic function the Church attributes to Jesus is not in the least incompatible with the status it assigns to his mother. Teilhard, however, cannot put together the cosmicity of his Christ and the elevated position given to Mary by the Church. Mary, according to him, can hold that position only in regard to the historical Jesus divorced from his Teilhardianly cosmic function and focused only on terrestrial concerns. The letter driving home this highly unorthodox point in its concluding part is to Ravier on 24 October 1954:30

 

"At bottom, you know, it is this question of re-thinking Christianity (and more specially Christology) which absorbs me more and more. And on this subject, shall I tell you that yesterday I shuddered when 1 saw the announcement of the

 

30. Ibid., p. 445: "Au fond, vous le savez, c'est cette question d'une re-pensee du Christianisme (et plus specialement de la Christologie) qui m'absorbe de plus en plus. Et, a ce sujet, vous dirai-je que j'ai fremi hier en voyant annoncee la nouvelle fete de 'Marie Reine'...qui risque de nous enfoncer encore un peu plus dans la conception mortelle d'un Christianisme specifiquement terrestre, -alors que nous ne pouvons plus adorer qu'un Christ cosmique (un Christ de toutes les Galaxies...). Car enfin, s'il est pensable que, d'ici quelques generations, le Christ-Roi soit vraiment universalise, - Marie, elle, est definidvement 'terrienne' et ne peut etre Reine du Monde (a moins qu'on ne 1'eleve en symbole du Feminin..,). - A mon avis, il y a, dans cette poussee incontrolee du 'Marial', un immense danger pour le plus grand 'Christique', - celui-ci se trouvant limite et paralyse par celui-la dans la mesure ou on veut les maintenir 'semblables' entre eux. - Decide merit, i! y a quelque chose qui ne toume plus rond dans la Weltanschauung chretiervne qualifiee d'orthodoxe en ce moment. - Nos dirigeants religieux n'ont pas conscience de ce que, depuis un siecle, 1'Univers est devenu: a La fois spatiale-ment, temporellement et organiquement. - 'Leaf Incarnation et Redemption ne couvrent plus le Phenomene..."


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new feast of 'Mary the Queen'...which creates the risk of our sinking still deeper in the mortal conception of a specifically terrestrial Christianity, - while we can now adore only a cosmic Christ (a Christ of all the Galaxies...)? For, after all, if it is conceivable that, in a few generations from now, Christ-King would be truly universalised, - Mary, in herself, is definitely 'terrestrial' and cannot be the Queen of the World (unless one elevates her as a symbol of the Feminine..,) - In my opinion, there is, in this uncontrolled push towards the 'Marian', an immense danger for the greater 'Christie', - the latter finding itself limited and paralysed by the former -inasmuch as one wants to maintain them as 'similar'. -Decidedly, there is something that no longer turns round in the Christian Weltanschauung called orthodox at the moment. - Our religious directors are not conscious of what for a century the Universe has become for us: at the same time spatially, temporally and organically. - "Their' Incarnation and Redemption no longer cover the Phenomenon..."

 

It cannot be denied that the Mary-born Christ of Teilhard and that of the Church, in their universal dominating and divinising power, are very far indeed from being "one and the same Christ". This fact also distances off de Lubac from basic Teilhardism.

 


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What we have concluded so far from the most challenging portions of the new book of letters leads us to a crucial challenge: "A Soul of the World taking evolution forward is the central truth to Teilhard. All else is subordinate and, for his personal life, even insignificant and inutile. This includes the historical Jesus himself - because the past does not concern Teilhard. Could it then be that he is deceiving himself in making out, as he does at some places, the historical Jesus to be an irreplaceable beginning for his Cosmic Christ? Is not a Universal Godhead, who is also a Supreme Person, the primary reality, whose manifestation is the historical Jesus and whose name is Christ simply because that manifestation, bearing this appellative, made the primary reality concrete and recognisable for men like Teilhard?"

 

We have to seek for an answer from the new book. Teilhard plays on the theme from several sides which do not always cohere. But the key to his basic position is supplied by what we have already noted about the relationship between his Christianity and his Evolutionism. The fact of Evolution is to him all-important. Christianity must be adapted to it. His attempt at its adaptation and his pleasure at his success are reflected in the passages where he speaks of his re-integrating the Personal God of Christianity into his evolutionary Weltan -schauung. We have quoted parts of a long passage in this connection. Now we may look at it again in our present context.

 

The full relevant passage1 occuring in a letter to de Lubac

 

1. Op. cit., pp. 314-15: "...ma grande decouverte {?!) actuelle est d'apercevoir 1" que tout le probleme humain se ramene a la question de I'amour de Dieu, - mais aussi, 2° que la legitimite, la possibility psychologique (partout contestee, a ma grande surprise), et le triomphe de cet amour dependent de la compatibilile (ou mieux de t'association essentielle) des deux termes: Universe) et Personnel... L'essentiel chretien, a mon avis, ce n'est precisement aucun des ideals humani-taires et moraux si vantes par les croyants et les incroyants: mais c'est de


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on 15 August 1936 runs: "...my great present discovery (?!) is to perceive (1) that the whole human problem resolves into the question of the love of God - but also (2) that the legitimacy, the psychological possibility (everywhere contested, to my great surprise), and the triumph of this love depend on the compatibility (or, better, on the essential association) of two terms: Universal and Personal... The Christian essential, in my opinion, is not precisely any of the humanitarian and moral ideals so vaunted by believers and unbelievers, but to maintain and to save 'the primacy of the Personal', extended analogically to the All - and also to put positively the World in relation with the supreme Personal, that is to say, to name him. - Thus 1 succeeded in re-integrating the historic Christ -as a structural condition for the universal equilibrium. I had need of that.... It is a great point of force for me, in any case, to recognise that the whole effort of 'evolution' is reducible to the justification and development of a love (of God). It is already what my mother used to tell me. But it will have taken me a lifetime to integrate this truth into an organic vision of things. I imagine that it is this effort of integration that the World must make in order to be converted: 'in the mass, our World denies the Personal and God, because it believes in the All: everything comes back to showing it that, on the contrary, it ought to believe in the Personal because it believes in the All"

 

maintenir et de sauver 'le primat du Personnel', etendu analogiquement jusqu'au Tout, - et aussi de mettre positivement le Monde en relation avec le Personnel supreme, c'est-a-dire de le nommer. - Ainsi arrive-je a re-integrer le Christ historique, - comme une condition structurelle de l'equilibre universel. j'avais besoin de cela... Ce m'est une grande force en tout cas de reconnaitre que tout 1' effort de 'revolution' est reductible a la justification et au developpement d'un amour (de Dieu). C'est deja ce que me disait ma mere. Mais il m'aura fallu une vie pour integrer cette verite dans une vision organique des choses. J'imagi ne que c'est cet effort d'integration que le Monde doit faire pour se convertir: dans 1'ensemble, notre Monde nie le Personnel et Dieu, parce qu'il croit au Tout: Tout re vient a lui montrer que, au contraire, il doit ( croire au Personnel parce qu'il croit au Tout."


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The passage is somewhat complicated. Apropos of "reintegrating the historic Christ'', de Lubac- has the comment: "This constant reference to the historic Christ, to Jesus of Nazareth, is one of the 'notes' which radically differentiate the Teilhardian Christology from all the 'gnostic' or gnosticising Christologies. Personal God, historic Jesus: these are the two fixed poles of all his effort of intelligent faith (whence the constancy, in his spiritual life, of the prayer, the love, and the fidelity to the Church which preserve for us the presence of Christ). To tell the truth, we notice no fundamental evolution in his thought in this regard. When he speaks of 're-integrating' the one or the other of these two verities into his synthesis, that does not signify that he has more or less lost sight of them or allowed them to get blurred in his mind, but that he finds his way to justify them better intellectually. He has already done the same for the idea of 'person'."

 

De Lubac admits Teilhard's urge and need to arrive at an intellectual basis for the existence of Jesus as God-Man no less than for the existence of God as Person and for the value of the person-element in the world-plan. What de Lubac fails to bring forward is the nature of the intellectual basis. We have a clue to it in Teilhard's own expressions: "the whole effort of 'evolution'", "an organic vision of things" - and in his reference to the modern world's belief "in the All".

 

Teilhard's overmastering intellectual preoccupation is with an immeasurable unitary evolving universe, a gigantic "All" organically moving in the direction of an ever greater

 

2. Ibid., pp. 316-17, note 5: "Cette reference constante au Christ historique, a Jesus de Nazareth, est l'une des 'notes' qui differencient radicalenent la christologie teilhardienne de toutes les christologies 'gnostiques' ou gnostici-santes. Dieu personnel, Jesus historique: ce sont les deux poles fixes de tout son effort d'intelligence de la foi (d'ou la Constance, dans sa vie spirituelle, de ['adoration, de la priere, de l'amour, et de la fidelite a I'Eglise qui nous conserve la presence du Christ). A vrai dire, on ne constate aucune evolution fonciere dans sa pensee a cet egard. Quand il parle de 're-integrer' l'une ou 1'autre de ces deux verites dans sa synthese, cela ne signifie pas qu'il les ait plus ou moins perdues de vue ou laisse s'estomper dans son esprit, mais qu'il parvient a les mieux justifier intellectuellement. Ainsi en allait-il deja pour l'idee de 'personne'."


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physical complexity and psychological centreity - in the direction, that is, of the physically organised "personal" consciousness and, beyond it, to the physical organisation of a unified collectivity of persons, a psycho-social ensemble on an earth-wide scale, charged with a "cosmic sense", inspired by a love of the Universal, the All, who is felt to be a supreme Person attracting them from "ahead". By Him and in Him the various collected and harmonised persons get universalised without losing their distinctive beings. The Universal person, as the' final focus of the converging cosmos, is called by Teilhard "Omega Point". In Intimate Letters, de Lubac3 quotes from Teilhard's book, The Phenomenon of Man: "Like the Omega which attracts it, the element only becomes personal when it universalises itself." Teilhard's letter to Bruno de Solages on 2 September 19474 speaks of "the passage of the Phenomenon of man to Point Omega". Teilhard's Omega, the Universal Person, is at the same time self-existent in Himself and emergent from the evolutionary process as the latter's Term and Climax. He is the Soul of the World, the God of Evolution, the cosmic culmination and fullness, the only Deity acceptable to the religious mood of the modern scientific age with its faith in an increasing human progress and its drive towards a complete earthly fulfilment.

 

Teilhard's problem as a Christian was to find a natural and logical place for the historic Christ, the human-divine Saviour, in his scientifically religious cosmic scheme. Unless he could thus "re-integrate" Jesus of Nazareth, he could not rest satisfied - both because he felt the necessity to give Omega, the Cosmic Person, an identifiable name in order to render Him thoroughly lovable and because the historic Christ would lack a meaningful reality if not understood in a universal evolutionary framework. The background of the reintegration would broadly be the argument we find in a letter

 

3.Ibid., p. 316, note 4: "A l'image d'Omega qui 1'attire, ['element ne devient personnel qu'en s'universalisant."

4.Ibid., p. 356: "...passage du Phenomene humain au point Omega..."


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to Leontine Zanta on 23 August 1929, to which de Lubac 5 refers when annotating Teilhard's earlier mention of re-finding the value of the "person" after a long "journey". In that letter Teilhard6 writes: "...if the Universe needs, by the very structure of Being, to fulfil itself in 'person', there must be some Revelation of the Centre-Person to the 'elementary-persons'; as no one can penetrate to the core of the Centre save the Centre itself." To Teilhard the historic Christ is this "Revelation": he discerns there all the signs that Omega has expressed Himself: "Only Christ, who is conscious of his situation, can say of the universal labour: 'Hoc est Corpus meum' ['This is my Body']."'7 Thus Teilhard could declare: "I have rediscovered the exact Christian perspective, but grafted (as it should be) onto a universal and evolutive perspective."8

 

The upshot of the Teilhardian dialectic is: the universal and evolutive perspective involves a Universal Person who is the Prime Mover ahead, effecting the upward gradient of evolution - an upward gradient which expresses His own cosmic labour - and in the course of this gradient He manifests Himself in a concentrated form in the person of the historic Jesus. Considering Jesus the sole manifestation of the Universal Person, Teilhard calls that Universal Person "Christ" and thus repeats in his own world-view the function he deems as part of the "Christian essential" - that is, to relate the World to the Supreme Personal by naming Him. But the Teilhardian world-view stands on its own feet independently as a scientific religion, a spiritual Evolutionism: that is why the task of re-integrating the historic Christ arose and Teilhard said, "1 had need of that." Omega, not Christ, is the ultimate ground of Teilhardism.

 

No doubt, Teilhard often speaks of Omega and Christ as one: again and again we come across the compound "Christ-Omega". An example is .the phrase in a letter to de Lubac on 4

 

5.Ibid., p. 198, note 8.

6.Letters to Leontine Zanta, p. 95.

7.Ibid.

8.Ibid.


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December 1947:9 "...a new Faith, which appears to me precisely to be that which one obtains by combining, as I was saying, the Above with the Ahead, upon Christ-Omega." But actually there are two entities for him, each an Omega by being final in its own field and endowed with the same all-gathering function, and his work as a Christian who is also a scientist lies in unifying them. We perceive this activity clearly in a quotation de Lubac makes in a note to Teilhard's letter to Auguste Valensin on 12 June 1925.10 The quotation is from Teilhard's essay, "The God of Evolution," written in 1953: "Is there not a revealing correspondence between the shapes (the patterns) of the two confronting Omegas: the one postulated by modern Science and the one encountered by Christian mysticism?... Drawn together by a fundamental identity, the two Omegas, I repeat (that of Experience and that of Faith), are certainly on the point of reacting upon each other in human consciousness and finally of being synthesized."

 

The moment we have two entities designable as Omegas, we see that the historic Christ who is Omegalic in his own sphere is not irreplaceable as the starting-point for belief in a Cosmic Person: this belief can be based on the data of modern science, and the historic Christ is irreplaceable only if we want to call the Cosmic Person the Universal Christ. Steeped in Roman Catholicism and unable to think of any incarnate divinity other than Jesus, Teilhard could never quite free himself from Christifying the Cosmic Person; but his sense of that Person's independence of Christ made him repeatedly feel the historic God-Man of Nazareth to be a vague and vanishing figure that could hardly draw his love and adora-

 

9. Lettres Intimes..., p. 362: "...une Foi nouvelle, laquelle me parait precisement etre ce qu'on obtient en combinant, comme je disais, 1'En Haul et 1'En Avant, sur le Christ-Omega,"

10. Ibid., p. 124, note 4: "La correspondance n'est-elle pas revelatrice entre la figure (le 'pattern') des deux Omegas en presence: celui postule par la Science moderne, et celui eprouve par la mystique chretienne?... Attires I'un vers 1'autre par une identite de fond, les deux Omegas, je repete (celui de 1' Experience et celui de la Foi) s'appretent certainement a reagir I'un sur I'autre dans la conscience humaine, et finatement a se synthetiser."


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tion: none except the Universal Christ whom he built out of that figure could he love and adore - and, in loving and adoring Him, he tacitly knew that his love and adoration really went to the Cosmic Person who had nothing radically to do with Christianity.

 

His tacit knowledge peeps out pretty openly at times. In an earlier chapter we have cited a letter written on 24 February 1918. De Lubac himself has it in one of his notes. There Teilhard is dealing with the difficulty of reconciling his doctrine of the Cosmic Christ with the plurality of inhabited worlds in our universe.11 And there the uniqueness of Jesus as a Divine Incarnation is denied by Teilhard when he talks of the Cosmic Christ's "'polymorphous' manifestation" and of "The human Christ" - that is, Jesus - being "only one aspect of the cosmic Christ".

 

Another glimpse of the Cosmic Person in His own right and without necessary association with the historic Christ is afforded by another quotation 12 from Teilhard by de Lubac, dating to 1946: "I have often the impression that our Christ is only a veil or an outline behind which there awaits us and desires us Someone or Something incomparably greater."

 

Teilhard's tacit knowledge that he loved and adored a Cosmic Person with whom Christianity was not radically connected was the product at the same time of his scientific consciousness and another factor which played a decisive part in the totality of his life as a man of religion and a man of science. Before he conceived Omega Point he was already enamoured of a unitary cosmos. His letter of 12 October 1951 13

 

11.Ibid., p. 40, note 7.

12.Ibid., p. 216, note 12: "J'ai souvent 1'impression que notre Christ n'est qu'un voile et qu'une ebauche derriere quoi nous attend et nous desire Quelqu'un ou quelque Chose d'incomparablement plus grand..." (1946).

13.Ibid., p. 399: "...la qualite (ou la faiblesse) congenitale qui fait que, depuis mon enfance, ma vie spirituelle n'a pas cesse d'etre completement dominee par une sorte de 'sentiment' profond de la realite organique du Monde; sentiment originairement assez vague dans mon esprit et dans mon coeur, - mais sentiment graduellement devenu, avec les annees, un sens precis et envahissant d'une convergence generate sur soi de l'Univers..."


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to John Janssens, General of the Jesuits, speaks of "the congenital quality (or weakness) which brings it about that, since my childhood, my spiritual life has not ceased being completely dominated by a sort of profound 'feeling' of the organic reality of the World; a feeling originally rather vague in my mind and heart, - but a feeling gradually grown, with the years, a precise and overflowing sense of the general convergence of the Universe upon itself...". Doubtless, he 14 goes on to speak of "this convergence coinciding and culminating, at its summit, with the One 'in whom all things hold together', Him whom the Company [of Jesuits] has taught me to love". But that does not negate the prior power in Teilhard of World-worship nor the fact that at all times his spiritual life was completely dominated by his deep and in-born cosmic "feeling". This feeling evidently constituted the root of his religion and flowered both into the concept of Omega and into that of the Cosmic Christ - Christ in his aspect of the World's omnipresent holder-together and ultimate all-gatherer, the Christ of St. Paul whom Teilhard strove to identify with his own Christ the Evolver. Such a feeling Teilhard saw not only as his root-religion but also as the essence of all mysticism. De Lubac15 quotes a writing of Teilhard's from the winter of 1951: "Essentially, the mystical feeling is a sense and a presentiment of the total and final Unity of the World, beyond the present and felt multiplicity; a cosmic sense of Oneness." And, when a name is to be given to the fundamental intuition of the World's Oneness, Teilhard writes on 15 September 1934 to de Lubac:16 "It seems to me...that there

 

14.Ibid.: "cette convergence coincidant et culminant, k son sommet, avec Celui 'in quo omnia constant', que la Cie m'a appris k aimer."

15.Ibid.: p. 275, note 3: "Essentiellement, le sentiment mystique est un sens et un pressentiment de l'Unite totale et finale du Monde, par-dela sa multiplicity presente et sentie; sens cosmique de 1' Oneness."


16.Ibid., p. 295: "Il me semble...qu'il y a, dans le grand phenomene religieux (en quoi s'exprime la substance de I'histoire humaine, et meme universelle), un consensus fundamental qui peut (doit) servir de base k toute apologetique: la foi 'pantheiste' en I'unite finale,"


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is, in the great religious phenomenon (in which the substance of human and even universal history expresses itself), a fundamental consensus which can (must) serve as the basis of all apologetics: the 'pantheist' faith in the final unity,"

 

"Pantheism" is "the quality (or weakness)" that was "congenital" in Teilhard, And it is to the focusing of the true posture, so to speak, of this quality that we have to bring the light shed by Intimate Letters.

 


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Teilhard kept distinguishing throughout his life between "false" and "true" pantheisms and pledging himself to the "true". Apropos of his essay, How I Believe, where he had sketched his notion of the "Person", he remarked to de Lubac on 23 June 1935:1 "It is all the question of the true pantheism which lies there in its root." And how are we to distinguish the true variety from the false?

 

After mentioning "the 'pantheist' faith in the final unity", Teilhard2 writes: "All the 'play' consists in recognising (showing) that there cannot be a true unification outside a personalising fusion of the elements in the bosom of a maximum of consciousness (that is to say, of personality)." On 3 April of the same year (1934) he voices the same idea in another context to Valensin:3 "Either indeed the spiritual phenomenon is an unintelligible accident (and then there is the death of Action). Or indeed it absorbs everything, and it imposes fundamental conditions on the structure of the Universe around us. And, among these fundamental conditions, is the conservation of the Personal. No means of escaping it, - despite the (apparent) unlikelihood of Survival and the pseudo-repugnance which a mind of the 'pantheist' turn always feels to giving a definitive value to an element of the Universe." Thus the crucial difference is that true pantheism posits a total unity within which personal beings

 

1. Lettres lntimes..., p. 304: "C'est toute la question du vrai pantheisme qui git la dans sa racine."

2.Ibid., p. 295: "Tout le 'jeu' consiste a reconnaifre (montrer) qu'il ne saurait y avoir d'unification vraie hors d'une fusion PERSONNALISANTE

3.Ibid., p. 269: "Ou bien le phenomene spirituel est un accident inintelligible (et alors c'est la mart de l'Action). Ou bien il absorbe tout, et il impose des conditions fondamentales a la structure de 1'Univers autour de nous, Et, parmi ces conditions fondamentales, est la conservation et l'accroissement du Personnel Pas moyen d'y echapper, - en depit des invraisemblances (apparentes) de la Survie et des pseudo-repugnances qu'un esprit de tournure 'pantheiste' eprouve toujours a donner une valeur definitive a un element de 1'Univers."


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become universalised in relation to a Universal Person without losing their self-existence in the All, whereas in false pantheism the All submerges the elements uniting with it.

 

According to Teilhard, what philosophically goes by the name "pantheism" is the latter kind. De Lubac4 has the note: "For him pantheism is 'the defective explanation of a quite justified (and for the rest perfectly ineradicable) tendency of the human soul.'" But the common Christian rejection of pantheism, bag and baggage, has no validity for Teilhard, because the Christian explanation of that which is an absolute desideratum to him - namely, the Unity of the world - fails to satisfy his mind. De Lubac5 refers to Teilhard's essay of 1919, The Universal Element and summarises its conclusion: "There must be a unity of the World: but from where does it get that unity? After setting aside 'the pantheist solution', Teilhard considers as insufficient the explanations by 'the Will of God' or by His 'creative Action' and he indicates as a principle of unity 'the cosmic influence of Christ'." It is because these orthodox explanations also are set aside that in introducing the Cosmic Christ, Teilhard,6 in a letter of 17 December 1922 to Valensin, alludes to a discourse intended by him "on the pantheist aspect of Christianity". His Cosmic Christ, therefore, pantheises Christianity at the same time that it Christianises pantheism. And in Intimate Letters as nowhere else, except that Rideau7 in his book has already culled the central passage from it, we get the most exact delineation of Teilhard's pantheist poise. The delineation is all the more impor-

 

4.Ibid., p. 94, note 8: "Pour lui, le pantheisme est 'I'explication defectueuse d'une tendance tres justifiee (et du reste parfaitement inderacinable) de I'ame humaine'."

5.Ibid., p. 49, note 5: "Il doit y avoir une unite du Monde: mais d'oCi lui vient cette unite? Apres avoir ecarte 'la solution pantheiste', Teilhard considerait comme insuffisantes les explications par 'la Volonte de Dieu' ou par son 'Action creatrice' et il indiquait comme principe d'unite 'l'influence cosmique du Christ'."

6.Ibid., p. 89: "...sur la face pantheiste du Christianisme."

7.Teilhard de Chardin: A Guide to His Thought, translated by Rene Hague (Collins, London, 1967), p. 528.


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tant since it comes by way of criticising an article of Valensin' s, written in a vein proper to Roman Catholic orthodoxy, on the subject in the Dictionnaire apologetique de la foi catholique (Vol. 3). Teilhard8 speaks out his mind to his friend:

 

"1. You are in the wrong in scorning the pantheism of the poets. This pantheism is the mysticism of which Spinoza and Hegel have been the theologians. It represents a psychological force, and it contains a considerable lived truth: it is the living pantheism. You are acting like a man who, in Christianity, 'disdains St. Theresa in order to busy himself only with St. Thomas or Cajetan.

 

"2. You leave the reader with the impression that Spinoza's position, for example, is simpliciter mala, falsa. -How is it that you have not suggested that between Spinoza's 'Incarnation', in which the whole is hypostatically divine, and the 'Incarnation' of the over-cautious, extrinsicist theologians, in which the Pleroma is no more than a social aggregate, there is room for an Incarnation that culminates in the building up of an organic Whole, in which physical union with God is at different levels? - You contrast Christian morality with the

 

8. Lettres Intimes..., pp. 89-90: "1° Vous avez tort tie mepriser le pantheisme des poetes. Ce pantheismela est la mystique dont Spinoza et Hegel ont ete les Theologiens. Il represente une force psychologique, et il contient une verite vecue considerable: il est le pantheisme vivant. Vous faites comme un horn me qui, dans le Christianisme, dedaignerait Ste Therese pour ne s'occuper que de St Thomas ou de Cajetan.

"2° Vous laissez le lecteur sous 1'impression que la position spinozienne, par exemple, est simpliciter mala, falsa. - Comment n'avez-vous pas laisse entrevoir qu'entre 1"Incarnation' spinozienne ou Tout est divin hypostatiquement, et l"Incarnation' des Theologiens extrinsecistes et timides ou le Plerome n'est qu'un agregat social, il y a place pour une Incarnation se terminant a l'edification d'un Tout organique, ou 1'union physique au Divin a des degres? - Vous opposez la morale chretienne k la morale spinozienne en disant que la premiere nous dit seulement de devenir 'semblables a Dieu'. Je n'accepte pas l'opposition. - Pour le Chretien, etre summorphos Christo, c'est participer sous la similitude de conduite, k un etre commun; - c'est reellement 'devenir le Christ', 'devenir Dieu,'

"Notez que je comprends parfaitement les reserves que vous irnposait le Dictionnaire. - Mais, tout de meme, on a le droit de parler comme St Paul! - Ceci soit dit, je le repete, sans prejudice du profond interet que m'a cause votre article. Mais, je vous enprie, ne refutez pas seulement! assimilez, construisez!"


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morality of Spinoza by saying that the former tells us only that we must become Tike unto God'. I don't accept the distinction. For the Christian, to be summorphos Christo is to participate, under a similarity of behaviour, in a common being; - it is really 'to become Christ', 'to become God'.

 

"Note that I perfectly understand the reserves which the Dictionary has imposed on you. - But, all the same, one has the right to talk like St. Paul! - That may be said, I repeat, without prejudice to the profound interest your article has created in me. But please do not only refuse! assimilate, construct!"

 

There we have Teilhard at his most Teilhardian. He takes a cue from St. Paul's concept of Christ's union with his followers when they are associated with him as members of his mystical body. Fernand Prat,9 a fellow-Jesuit, has well expressed the concept while commenting on Romans VI:3-5: "Ineffable union compared by St. Paul to the grafting, which intimately mingles two lives even to the point of blending them, and absorbs into the life of the trunk the life of the grafted branch; a marvellous operation which makes both Christ and ourselves symphytoi (animated by the same vital principle), symmorphoi (animated by the same active principle), or as St. Paul says elsewhere, clothes us with Christ and makes us live by His Life." Unfortunately, orthodoxy, as evinced by Valen-sin's article, takes a more or less metaphorical view of Pauline thought. Teilhard, proceeding from that thought, outdoes it in literal organic implication. He comes as close as a Christian possibly can to the arch-pantheist Spinoza to whom universal being is one with God's own self - divine, as Teilhard suggests, in the same way that Christ's humanity was divine by the Word forming a single entity with it (hypostatic union) and not loosely linking itself to it. He openly declares that Spinozism is not "simply evil, false" and that a true Christ-

 

9. Tlie Theology of St. Paul, Vol. 1, p. 223, quoted by Dom Eugene Boy Ian, O.C.S.O., in The Mystical Body and the Spiritual Life [The Merder Press, Cork, 1964), pp. 38-39,


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ianity is but a slight modification of the Spinozist stand and worlds away from official Christianity which drives a complete wedge between the being of God and that of man. True Christianity is in a real sense pantheism, but it is the pantheism of the poets more than that of a philosophical logician like Spinoza. What the latter does is to theorise the former into an extreme position, yet in its essence it is not far out. In the final union, we are a part of Christ, a part of God, but without being dissolved in them. As they are a Person, our becoming part of them can only hyperpersonalise our own personal consciousness in the act of its growing universa-lised. That is the sole difference Teilhard would accept between his own Weltanschauung and Spinoza's.

 

Strangely enough, he compares Spinoza as well as Hegel, in connection with the pantheist poets, to St. Aquinas and Cajetan in connection with St. Theresa. The two latter philosophers are not commonly supposed to have distorted in intellectual version the reality experienced by the mystic of Avila. If Teilhard's comparison has force, it would seem that they have pushed the authentic implications of St. Theresa's "living" Christianity into an exaggerated form which would not be altogether acceptable. Either this is an indirect dig at orthodox theory or it is an indirect welcome to Spinoza in spite of his apparent extremism. Teilhard is indeed most advanced in heterodoxy in this letter to Valensin.

 

At any rate, it is worth marking that nowhere in these passages or anywhere else in Intimate Letters do we have a clear statement that man is created by God, from nothing, as a substance quite distinct from Him - a statement which would divide Teilhard from Spinozism as trenchantly as Christian orthodoxy divides itself. All he insists on is that the human person be not submerged in the ultimate unity with the Divine and that the Divine be not only cosmic but also transcendent.

 

In how genuinely pantheist a sense Teilhard's God could be cosmic we may gather from three pronouncements in Intimate Letters. The earliest is a Note of 1 May 1921, quoted by de


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Lubac:10 "The two religions of the future: - that of the cosmic Christ; - naturalist pantheism." Teilhard means: Two religions most likely to be adopted because of their common content of a Universal Godhead. Doubtless, a choice is posited because the common content can have somewhat different shades and emphases. Naturalist pantheism would not yield a Universal Person who would also transcend the universe; its Godhead would be a single impersonal World-substance with no transcendence of the world. But if it is just by the personal character that the Universal Godhead who is the Cosmic Christ has the quality of being transcendent, then in its cosmicity as such it need not be altogether a Person: it could share with naturalist pantheism an impersonality of One World-substance. The pair of religions, for all their difference of shades and emphases, may truly have a common content. Rather, the religion of the Cosmic Christ may subsume naturalist pantheism without excluding his transcendent nature.

 

The same point arises in de Lubac's quotation11 of a Note of Teilhard's on 12 October 1921: "Even though all men were to succeed in arriving at a concerted understanding about a religious attitude (for instance, pantheist), this accord (however well-founded it might be upon internal tendencies and the deep experience of the Cosmos) would be vain as regards informing us about the true nature of the Term. - There

 

10.Op. cit., p. 102, note 1: "Les deux religions de I'avenir: - celle du Christ cosmique; - le pantheisme naturaliste."

11.Ibid., p. 297, note 2: "Quand meme tous les horn mes arriveraient a s'entendre sur une attitude religieuse (v.g, pantheiste), cet accord (si fonde fut-il sur les tendances internes et 1' experience profonde du Cosmos) serait vain pour nous renseigner sur la veritable nature du Terme, - 11 faudrait encore qu'il y ait une 'reponse', un contact objectifa\ec l'Omega qui vienne corroborer et confirmer cette grande aspiration de nos ames. - Le Christianisme, je continue & le croire, a actuellement besoin d'une forte infusion de seve humaine. Mais toute sa valeur, -toute so force pour sou lever les ames tient a ce qu'il se presenre comme un Impose d'en haut, comme de I'Autre, non seulement pressenti, desire, naltre de nos efforts reunis', - mais dej£ aclue constitute extra nos. Telle est I'essence de i'idee de Revelation."


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would still be necessary an 'answer', an objective contact with Omega which should corroborate and confirm this great aspiration of our souls. - Christianity, 1 continue to believe, needs at present a strong infusion of human sap. But all its value - all its force for uplifting souls lies in its presenting itself as Imposed from above, as from the Other, not only felt, desired, 'to be born from our united efforts', - but already actuated, constituted extra nos. Such is the essence of the idea of Revelation." Here the transcendent Omega is considered the essence of Christian revelation and the indispensable condition for the final fulfilment of humanity. Without asssuming its touch on us as of an independent Being outside ourselves, we shall never have a proper insight into what Omega, the End or Term of evolution, is. However, the complementary of this much-required transcendence is a unifying Omega intrinsic to the Cosmos and realised through a pantheist religion shared as a great aspiration by all souls, a religion full of a human life-interest which Christianity with its eyes principally fixed on an Above badly lacks and must acquire. Clearly, this side of the evolutionary consummation, this Cosmic Omega, is compassed by a pure pantheism which is indeed incomplete without that transcendence but is not annulled by the latter: in fact it goes along with it as part of a larger ultimate Reality.

 

Again, take Teilhard's complaint to Ravier on 3 August 1952 about a newspaper's misrepresentation of him - inspired, as he asserted, by Rome's tactics - that "the God of Teilhard was becomming a God immanent to the evolution of the world".12 The complaint13 runs: "What annoys me in the

 

12.Ibid., p. 410: "Le Dieu du P. Teilhard devertait un Dieu immanent a revolution du monde..."

13.Ibid:. "Ce qui me vexe, dans l'affaire, c'est cette maniere elementaire de me faire jeter par-dessus bord une 'transcendance' divine que j'ai au contraire passe ma vie a defendre, - tout en cherchant il est vrai (comme tout le monde, mais en utilisant les nouvelles proprietes d'un Univers en etat de Cosmogenese) a l'harmoniser avec une immanence a laquelle personne ne doute plus qu'il faille donner une part de plus en plus importante et explicite dans notre philosophie et notre religion."


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affair is this elementary manner of making me throw overboard a divine 'transcendence' which I, much to the contrary, have spent my life in defending, - while seeking, it is true (like everybody, but using the new properties of a Universe in a state of Cosmogenesis), to harmonise it with an immanence to which nobody any longer doubts we should give a more and more important and explicit part in our philosophy and our religion." What do we find in these words? At once a corrective to the canard that Teilhard was exclusively an evolutionary immanentist and an admission that his stress does fall on evolutionary immanentism. But if his philosophy and his religion do give primacy to "a God immanent to the evolution of the world" he surely subscribes, even though he does not confine himself, to "naturalist pantheism" and he subscribes to it in a most prominent way in the very act of explaining that he is more than a subscriber to that belief alone.

 

After all this, it would be foolish to make much of his occasional declarations that his highly disturbing doctrines could be couched in more orthodox language in the future and be absorbed into Catholic thought when the need to employ shock-tactics was over and Rome had made its peace with him.14 He was always eager not to be thrown out of the Church if he could help it and he also coddled a dream that his drastic-seeming innovations could be defended as a development from certain affirmations of St. Paul. His self-deceptions were natural in the context of his faith that, no matter how wrong and perverse the contemporary Church and even historical Christianity were, they were the bearers of a precious truth and that it was his mission to reveal to them the full meaning of this truth. His mission, according to him, could best be carried out by making his convictions active in the most subtle and potent way possible - that is, from within the Roman Catholic fold itself. What he sought to bring about

 

14. Ibid., pp. 314, 319.


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was "the 'implosive' encounter, in the human consciousness, of the sense of the 'ultra-human' and the Christie sense (or, as I often say, of the Ahead and the Above)"15 - or, in other words, "the 'implosive' encounter of the Christian and the Evolutive".16 The result would be the interplay and inter-miscence of "naturalist pantheism" with transcendentalist Christianity, involving the "re-thinking of Revelation and Christology, in terms of a Universe recognised as convergent."17


15.Ibid., p. 448, note 8: "la rencontre 'implosive' dans la conscience humaine du sens de I' 'ultra-humain' et du sens Christique (ou, comme je le dis souvent, de 1'En avant et de 1

16.Ibid., p. 452: "la rencontre 'implosive' du Chretien et de 1

17.Ibid., p. 404: "re-pensee de la Revelation et de la Christologie, en fonction d'un Univers reconnu comme convergent" (30 Novembre 1951).


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(11)

 

 

 

 

Our survey of Intimate Letters and of de Lubac's numerous Notes to it has picked out from the divers mood-expressions over the years 1919-1955 the main persistent lines of Teilhard's attitudes and commitments. The lines show themselves in summary under two aspects. These aspects the Roman Catholic Church did not seem to accept. He hoped to make it accept them by a constant struggle not against its basic existence but with the narrow old-worldly non-evolutionary form under which it presented the meaning of Jesus's life and the ultimate nature of his role in the universe. What he' said as early as 11 August 1920 to Auguste Valensin held true up to the end: "...I cannot avoid pouring out, with all the force of my personality (small or great, it matters little), ideas on evolution which, I know it, are essentially repugnant to the teaching authority! - We shall then have always to love the Church, the true Church, through the one speaking to us, the one we are in touch with - and to serve it by forcing its hand?"

 

The two aspects come forth very well in a quotation from a letter of October 1953, which de Lubac makes in a note:2 "...1 should like to use as intensely as possible the last years left to me in 'Christifying' (as I say) Evolution (which implies both the scientific work of establishing the 'convergence' of the Universe, and the religious work of disengaging the Universal Nature of the Christ of history). This, - and then to end well -

 

1.Lettres Intimes..., pp. 67-68: "...je ne puis eviter de repandre, de toute la force de ma personnalite, (petite ou grande, peu importe), des idees sur 1'evolution qui, je le sais, repugnent essentiellement a I'autorite docens! - IL faudra donC toujours aimer I'Eglise, la vraie, a travers celle qui nous parle et que nous touchons, - et la servir en lui forcant la main?"

2.Ibid., p. 432, note 1: "...je voudrais employer aussi intensement que possible les derreres annees qui me restent a 'christifier' (comme je dis) 1'Evolution (ce qui suppose a la fois le travail scientifique pour etablir la 'convergence' de 1'Univers, et le travail religieux pour degager la Nature Universelle du Christ de l'histoire). Cela, - et puis bien finir - c'est-a-dire mourir en temoignage de cet 'evangile.'"


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that is to say to die in witness to this 'gospel'." Also, the two aspects fuse in another citation by de Lubac in the same note:3 "On this feast of St. Peter: My dream: to be able to confess, profess my answer to the question: 'Who do they say is the Son of Man?' ...Ans [wer]: ...The coolutive focus of a (the) convergent universe."

 

The traditional answer - the one returned by Peter to Christ's question - is: "you are the Christ, the Son of the living God." Teilhard has surely transposed his own mind and heart to a theological context quite other than that of the Gospel of St. Matthew where the original conversation (16:1516) occurs. So we may enunciate his full position thus: "The universe is to be taken as evolutionary and as converging or coming together upon itself to evolve ever new outer syntheses and ever new interiorisations, which will culminate in a supreme state of unified collective humanity. This state we may call Point Omega. But Omega is also a present Reality, an actual perfection and plenitude attracting evolution towards itself as to a culminating point. Christ who is figured in scripture as a perfection and plenitude that will gather up everything at the end of history into itself is to be identified with both the actual Omega and Point Omega. He is the converging universe's focus - at the same time the final evolutionary concentration and the present power within the universe driving it towards that end. As Evolver as well as Evolving, he is the Universal or Cosmic Christ, the only form of Godhead that can issue momentously and ultimately, for the modern science-expanded consciousness, from the historic Jesus who emerges as a Divine Incarnation from ancient documents like St. Matthew's Gospel."

 

We have already dealt with the numerous facets of this theme. But one particular persistent nuance which Teilhard gives to it remains to be clarified. We mentioned that nuance when we commented on the incomprehensible Pauline idea

 

3. Ibid.. "En cette fete de St Pierre: Mon reve: pouvoir confesses professer ma reponse a la question: 'Quem dicunt esse Filium Hominis?' ...Rep[onse]: ...Le foyer evolulif d'un (de l')univers convergent."


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Teilhard reiterates without being able to weave it rationally into his system - the pre-existence and pre-action not of Christ as the Divine Logos in his own status but Christ in his incarnate form, the "theandric" Jesus - that is, the God-Man in an earthly body. The nuance came in Teilhard's phrase about "the physical supremacy of Christ over the universe" and in his declaring himself a "physicalist" as against the "juridicists" and asking for a Christ who is related to the cosmos not as a landowner, a father or the head of an association, exercising moral rights, but as a sort of super-organism in whom the cosmos has its coherence and its evolution and by whom it will constitute a unity without sacrificing the individuality of its component parts. On that occasion we said: "at the moment we are not concerned with Teilhard's physicalism."4 Now we are brought back to the issue by certain expressions in Intimate Letters. One of them occurred in our last chapter itself where we quoted Teilhard on Spinozism, the orthodox extrinsicist theology and his own position: "...there is room for an Incarnation that culminates in the building up of an organic whole, in which physical union with God is at different levels."

 

Two statements from the same book in tune with this expression may serve to focus minds on the issue. There is de Lubac's quotation:5 "The Universal Christ, that is the Christ influencing everything physically" - and there is Teilhard's phrase to Valensin in a letter on 12 December 1919:6 "0[urJ L[ord] has physically the role of stabilising the World at all its levels."

 

Such statements remind us of the countless instances when Teilhard employs the term "physical" in relation to his Universal Christ. We may review the most significant of them and set alongside them several from Intimate Letters which

 

4.See page 239 of this book.

5.Op. cit., p. 50, note 6: "Le Christ Universel, c'est le Christ influencani tout phystquemeiit."

6.Ibid., p. 35: "N. S. a physiquement le role de stabiliser le Monde a tous ses degres."


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tend to illuminate the content of the three statements we have just reproduced from the book. The precise bearing of the physicality of the Teilhardian Christ's cosmicity has never been formulated. Let us attempt to clutch this still "inviolable shade".

 

*

 

Piet Smulders, S.J., after quoting from The Divine Milieu (p. 101) the passage - "All the good that I can do, opus et operatio, is physically gathered, by something of itself, into the reality of the consummated Christ" - explained in a note7 that the word "physically" is opposed to a purely "moral" or "juridical" influence and that here it signifies "really". If this is true, what is meant by something being "really" gathered into something else's "reality"? Not much revelatory light seems thrown on the term used.

 

Christopher Mooney, S.J., tells us: "Perhaps the closest equivalent to Teilhard's 'physical' in current theological usage is the word 'ontological', which may be applied to whatever has existence in the present concrete order of things. 'Physical' is thus opposed to all that is juridical, abstract, extrinsic to reality."8

 

The above text is referred to by Bruno de Solages, S.J., and Henry de Lubac, S.J., after remarking on a certain passage thus: "Here, as often elsewhere, Pere Teilhard uses 'physical' simply as opposed to 'juridical'."9 The passage in question is: "If things are to find their coherence in Christ, we must ultimately admit that there is in the nature of Christ, besides the specifically individual elements of Man - and in virtue of

 

7. The Design of Teilhard de chardin. An Essay in Theological Reflection, translated by Arthur Gibson (The Newman Press, Westminster, Maryland, 1967), p. 304, note 119. The passage form The Divine Milieu is quoted on p. 225.

8.Teilhard de Chardin and the Mystery of Christ, p. 85.

9.The Prayer of Teiihard de Chardin: Selections from Writings in Time of War, translated by Rene Hague (Collins, Fontana Books, London, 1973), p. 175, note 3. The passage quoted is from p. 20.


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God's choice - some universal physical reality, a certain cosmic extension of his body and soul."

 

Well, if "physical" signifies, as explains Mooney whom de Solages and de Lubac follow, "ontological" or the opposite of "all that is...extrinsic to reality", we shall have Teilhard connoting by "some universal physical reality" a universal reality that is real or ontological. Again very little penetrating light appears to be cast on the word.

 

De Lubac10 has also the remark elsewhere: "Teilhard's realism was always hard (sometimes excessively so) on the theology that, in general, preferred what are called 'moral' or 'juridical' rather than 'physical' links ('physical' here meaning 'organic', and not being used as opposed either to 'supernatural' or 'metaphysical')".

 

Mooney has a statement that supports de Lubac and gives a more comprehensive and positive presentation. He11 writes: "In Teilhard's system of thought all created reality is 'physical' and 'organic', and he applies these words equally, though analogically, to the material and personal, as well as to the natural and supernatural."

 

It is certain that "physical", contrasting to "juridical" and "moral", carries the sense of "organic". Teilhard has turns of expression like "organic or physical meaning",12 "physical relationships and organic connections",13 "organic and physical analogies".14 We may also keep in countenance Mooney's suggestion of "ontological" and therefore too Smulders's "real". In Intimate Letters15 we read: "All my effort has been precisely, for years, to criticise these juridical and vague terms and to rediscover for them an organic and ontological sense."

 

10.Teilhard de Chardin: The Man and His Meaning, p. 41, fn. 20.

11.Op. cit., p. 85,

12.Christianity and Evolution, p. 58.

13.Ibid., p. 70,

14.Science and Christ, p. 55.

15.lettres In times..., p. 274: "Tout mon effort est precisement, depuis des annees, de critiquer ces termes juridiques et vagues, et de leur retrouver un sens organique et ontologique."


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Yes, all the commentators belonging to the same religious Order as Teilhard - the Society of Jesus - are not wrong when they thus understand "physical". But within some of their comments there is a sign of the inadequacy of their explanations. As we have indicated, an element of facile tautology is at play at times if we confine ourselves to such glosses. They are too general and do not take us to any crystalline centre of significance which would add to our understanding of Teilhard. Surely some other focus of vision is needed in addition to them?

 

The first ray of genuine illumination comes in the opening half of a footnote by the editors of Teilhard's earliest compositions:"16 "Pere Teilhard often uses 'physical' in its original Greek meaning: e phusis=nature: phusikos=pertaining to nature, or, we might say, organic." But there follows the confusing phrase: "It is used as opposed not to 'supernatural', but to 'superficial, artificial, or simply moral.'" How do the editors arrive at such a conclusion? If "physical" points us to "nature" and indicates "pertaining to nature", why should it just mean "organic" and not be opposed to "supernatural"?

 

Actually, in the sentence cited by de Solages and de Lubac we have the phrase "a cosmic extension of his body and soul" to clarify the words "some universal physical reality". Does not Teilhard mean: "his body and soul extended in cosmic nature"? In that case, "physical" by itself would just denote "nature", and the contents of nature would be "body and soul" (ensouled embodiment). Then, with "organic" in mind, we may say that body and soul must be taken to form the structure of a natural organism, in which all the parts are close-knit and unified. Our entire universe, which Teilhard as a scientist looked upon as an evolving unitary system, is an organism in this sense, an organic whole manifesting various levels or degrees of body and soul or, to use another Teilhardian combination, outer synthesis and inner centra-tion.

 

16. Writings in Time of War, p. 171, fn. 16.


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It is curious how all the commentators we have named either ignore or else fail to see properly the significance which stares them in the face: "natural" balancing "supernatural". Numerous instances of such a usage can be cited, where this meaning is either emphatically implied or undeniably explicit.

 

Take the assertion:17 "Christ is the terminal point at which, supernaturally but also physically, the consummation of humanity is destined to be achieved." Put by its side this other:18 "By the incarnation, which redeemed man, the very becoming of the universe, too, has been transformed. Christ is the term of even the natural evolution of living beings; evolution is holy." We can at once observe that the second quotation's "term" and the first one's "terminal point" mean the same, so that the former's "physically", which is counterpoised to "supernaturally", denotes the latter's "natural evolution", which is equivalent to "the very becoming of the universe". The suggestion of "naturally" by "physically", the coincidence of the two in meaning, as well as their contrast to "supernaturally", is as clear as anything can be.

 

Moreover, we have a direct equivalence in the following, which offers a reason "for the stagnation, since the time of St. Paul, of the concept of the Universal Christ": "this is the excessive emphasis in philosophy on logical, moral and juridical relationships. It is simpler, safer (tutius), more convenient (as our Lord's example shows) to express the relations between God and man as family or domestic relationship. Such analogies are true inasmuch as union in Christ is effected between persons, but they are incomplete. If we are to express the whole truth, we must correct them by analogies drawn from realities that are specifically natural and physical. The friendship of God and adoption of God are expressions that include an adaptation of the universe, a transformation, a recasting, that are organic and cannot be cancelled."

 

17.Ibid.

18.Science and Christ, pp. 18-19.


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Perhaps this passage is the most comprehensive covering of the issue. We have not only the opposition of "juridical" and "moral" to "physical", but also the parity of the two former with "logical" and the parity of "physical" with "natural" as well as the parity of these two with "organic" and so the opposition of "logical, moral and juridical" to all these three.

 

In an inspired moment a recent Jesuit commentator has pointedly framed, though merely en passant, the former trio. Speaking of Teilhard's view that the "confluence of thought" which terminates in a collective super-consciousness is the prolongation of the "mega-synthesis" which has dominated evolution over its entire course and is the application, at the human thought-level, of the law of higher complexity engendering a higher consciousness, Jan Feys, S.J.,19 writes of that view of Teilhard's: "This permits him to attribute an operative value in the building of future humanity to social structures, cultural exchange, economic co-operation or common scientific research projects. For, these are the 'hominised version' of natural, physical or organic factors of complexifka-tion."

 

These three factors are again brought together and made to play into one another by Teilhard's statement:20 "...the elect would be physically incorporated in the organic and 'natural' whole of the consummated Christ."

 

Here the suggestion is that those who have lived in tune with Christ's presence in the universe will, at the end of history, be taken up by and made part of his Mystical Body which is an organic reality like the realities of nature and that they will reach such a destiny just as physical things are taken up and made part of nature's realities. Here the identical plane of the organic, the natural and the physical emerges.

 

The single plane of the last two comes to the fore even better - nay, in the most convincing manner - in the phrase


19. The Philosophy of Evolution in Sri Aurobindo and Teilhard de Chardin (Firma K.L. Mukhopadhyaya, Calcutta,1973) p. 208.

20. Christitmity and Evolution, p. 70.


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which throws light also on the ultimate sense of "supernatural" and its relation to "nature":21 "The Incarnate Word could not be the supernatural (hyperphysical) centre of the universe if he did not function first as its physical, natural, centre."

 

A double point is made. "Physical" and "natural" are mentioned as mutually explanatory synonyms and the balance between "supernatural" and "physical" is from the start set up by defining the former as "hyperphysical". That is to say, the "supernatural" differs from the "physical" and stands over against it but by being a higher or greater degree of the latter. This proves "physical" to be a substitute-term for "natural", the usual antonym of "supernatural". That is the first aspect of Teilhard's point. The second is the removal of the difficulty set up by the common orthodox question: "How could Christ be ever conceived as a reality 'physical' in the sense of 'natural' or 'belonging to nature'?" If the "supernatural" is only the "physical-natural" raised to a superior pitch or, conversely, the "physical-natural" is itself the "supernatural" at an inferior pitch, then there is no barrier to Christ's being the one just as appropriately as the other. According to a phrase of Teilhard22 elsewhere, the difficulty, the barrier, arises "in consequence of a subtle and pernicious confusion between 'super-natural' and 'extra-natural'". The same confusion is bewailed in a communication in Intimate Letters23 to de Solages on 17 January 1954: "O this 'supernatural' - one should say this 'Extra-natural' - de-humanising - !.., who will deliver us of this theological poison which paralyses us in all our movements?" In the book which castigates the confusion we are also told24 about "many experts in the theory of Catholicism": "Without realizing it, they make the very

 

21.Ibid., p, 71.

22.Ibid., p. 242.

23.Lettres Intimes..., pp. 433-34: "6 ce 'surnaturel' - il faudrait dire cet 'Extra-naturel' - des-humanisant - ! ...qui nous delivrera de ce poison theologique qui nous paralyse dans tous nos mouvements!"

24.Ibid., p, 68.


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common mistake of regarding the spiritual as an attenuation of the material, whereas it is in fact the material carried beyond itself: "it is super-material." Again, we learn25 that, while "the juridicists...will always understand 'mystical' (in 'mystical body') by analogy with a somewhat stronger family association or association of friends", "the physicalists...will see in the word 'mystical' the expression of a hyper-physical (super-substantial) relationship - stronger, and in consequence more respectful of embodied individualities, than that which operates between the cells of one and the same animate organism."

 

In the last quote we mark that "mystical", being "hyperphysical", is synonymous with "supernatural", which we have already seen to be "hyper-physical", and that, in view of the stronger relationship affirmed than the one between an organism's cells, "supernatural", "mystical", "hyper-physical" and "super-substantial" are identical with what may be called "hyper-organic". Further, all these emerge as "super-material" and so the "physical" and the "material" get paired.

 

*

 

Teilhard nowhere coins the term "hyper-organic" and he employs the common expression even where he talks of the supernatural, but the positing of it is in the logic of his thought. And it is obviously implied when in a letter to Valensin he stresses the complementary characters of the supernatural and the natural. In stressing them he also implies the pairing of the "material" with the "physical" in the course of pairing the latter with the "natural". On 10 January he26 bewails Father Marechal's non-comprehension of

 

25.Science and Christ, p. 55.

26.Lettres Intimes..., pp. 47-48: "Il pense que le thomisme bien compris... apprend a unifier le Monde sans autres facteurs que 1'acte divin, - et il hesite a voir dans la Tradition les lineaments d'un Christ-Universel. - Je lui ai repondu... en insistent sur ces deux points: 1" necessite, pour l'acte divin unifiant, de nous trouver (ou


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his stand about the Universal Christ and he insists on two points relevant to this stand: "He thinks that Thomism well understood...teaches how to unify the World without other factors than the divine act - and he hesitates to see in Tradition the lineaments of a Universal Christ. - I have replied to him.,.insisting on these two points: 1. the necessity, for the divine unifying act, of finding us {or making us) all one same thing...(...it must seize us - or constitute us - all together under some created form of unity) that is to say, to the unifying action of God there ought to correspond a unified aspect of the created Universe. - 2. the impossibility of understanding a Christ who would be (organically) central in the supernatural Universe, and physically juxtaposed in the natural Universe."

 

The passage is a little complicated, but the main idea shines through: "There has to be a natural focus to hold the Universe together and Christianity should put at such a focus a Christ whose function would be the holding together of the Universe. Unless there is a Universal Christ representing a unified aspect of the Universe the divine act cannot do its unifying work in the world of nature any more than there could be a unified world of supernature without a Christ who is the internal organic centre of it and not just an external presence side by side with it."

 

The vision behind the main idea is that the world of nature has to be seen in the same way that the world of supernature is seen. Both are grades of a single reality in which Christ is a universal Being intrinsic to their structure, and to speak of his being "physically juxtaposed" instead of being intrinsic to the natural world is to talk nonsense. The meaning emerging for the word "physical" from this vision is, on the one hand, that it applies only to the natural world and, on the other, that it is

 

de nous faire) tous une meme chose...(...il doit nous saisir - ou nous constituer -tous ensemble sub aliqua forma creata unitatis) c'est-a-dire, a faction unifiante de Dieu, il doit correspondre une face unifiee de 1'Univers cree. - 2° impossibilite de comprendre un Christ qui soit (organiquement) central dans 1'Univers surnaturel, et physiquement juxtapose dans 1'Univers naturel."


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there compatible only with such organicity, intrinsic central-ity and unifying universality as we attribute to the supernatural world: it can never be compatible with the juxtaposition which traditional Christianity implies for Christ if it does not view him as Teilhardianly Universal.

 

Intimate Letters further sets "physical" and "material" in rapport while giving us Teilhard's discussion of his own view of the "possible" as against the view of Scholasticism. He27 writes to Valensin on 19 November 1919: "For Scholasticism, the 'possible' represents a group of abstract characters reconcilable among themselves, studied without taking any account of their physical conditions of realisation; each 'possible' is considered like a little All, holding by itself, and realisable immediately and in isolation. This has for me the air of 'geometry', not of Reality. - Side by side with the 'intellectual' possibility of a being (that is to say the non-contradiction of its abstract traits), it seems to me that there is its physical possibility (as demanding as the other, - to which, nevertheless, that other ought to return, and will return on the day when one will have better understood the structure of the

 

27. Ibid., pp. 24-25: "Pour la Scolastique, il me semble, le 'possible' represente un groupe de caracteres abstraits, conciliables entre eux, etudies sens tenir aucun compte de leurs conditions physiques de realisation; chaque 'possible' est eonsidere comme un petit Tout, tenant par lui-meme, et realisable immediatement et tsole-ment. Ceci m'a l'air de 'la geometrie', non de la ReaUte. - A cote de la possibility 'intellectuelle' d'un etre (c'est-a-dire de la non-contradiction de ses notes abstrai-tes), il me semble qu'il y a sa possibilite physique (aussi exigeante que 1'autre, -dans laquelle du reste elle doit rentrer, et rentrera du jour ou on aura mieux compris la structure du reel), c'est-a-dire I'impossibilite de cet etre a exister en dehors de certaines lois de developpement, et de certaines associations avec un Multiple.

"Supposons Dieu resolu a creer. En vertu des lois de possibility physique, Il n'a pas seulement a choisir des termes a son action parmi un groupe d'entites coherentes en elles-memes et coherentes entres elles. - Il se voit lie (ex natura entis participati) pour obtenir un etre determine (un individu), a mettre en train le developpement d'un Univers tout entier. Et ce n'est pas encore tout. On entrevoit que les divers developpements de I'Etre participe ne sont pas absolu-ment arbitraires ni independents les uns des autres, Il est possible qu'ils soient assujettis, tous, a quelques memes lois tres generales, c'est-a-dire qu'il n'y ait qu'un seul processus de creation concevable pour 1'etre participe (par exemple simplification progressive d'un Multiple, emersion de la <quelque> matiere)."


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real), that is to say the impossibility for that being to exist outside certain laws of development, and certain associations with a Multiple.

 

"Let us suppose God resolves to create. In virtue of the laws of physical possibility, He does not only have to choose the terms for his action among a group of entities coherent in themselves and coherent among themselves. - He sees himself bound (by the nature of participated being), in order to obtain one determined being (one individual), to set going the development of a Universe whole and entire. And that is still not all. One glimpses that the diverse developments of participated Being are not absolutely arbitrary or independent of one another. It is possible they may be subject, all, to some very general laws which are the same, that is to say that there is only one sole process of creation conceivable for participated being (for example progressive simplification of a Multiple, emersion from <some> matter...),"

 

By "participated being" Teilhard means what is created by God and the context involves that the creation is the world of nature whose origin is, in his terminology, "a pure multiple"28 that is reduced or simplified, stage after stage, by a unifying process. This multiple he calls "matter". Teilhard is mostly ambivalent about the significance of that "matter". He would like it not to be considered "an antagonistic co-eternal",29 a pre-existent "stuff"30 but inasmuch as he is always at pains to distinguish it from "pure Nothingness",31 which he regards as "an empty concept, a pseudo-idea",32 and inasmuch as he calls his Multiple "true nothingness, physical Nothingness"33 no less than "creatable Nothingness"34 and regards it as "a 'gate',

 

28.Ibid., p. 27, note 5.

29.Ibid., p. 25.

30.Ibid.

31.Ibid., p. 27, note 5.

32.Ibid.

33.Ibid.

34.Ibid., p. 279, note 3.


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an obligatory entrance (channel)",35 for God, he does refer not only to a restraining or limiting condition for God's creative act but also to a sort of primordial shadow-state at the opposite pole to God's absolute unity of being. In any case the Nothingness that is "physical" is essentially linked with the material cosmos, the universe of organic nature within which and as part of which we exist. So, "physical possibility", in opposition to "intellectual possibility", focuses the sense of "physical" on this universe as a Real and does not have merely a broad Ontological bearing.

 

*

 

We have found Teilhard employing the term "physical" to denote "reality", but his context makes it clear that he does not have in mind every kind of reality but rather the reality possessed by our evolutionary universe - the universe of nature, commonly described as "material" and pictured by Teilhard as a cosmogenesis that is also Christogenesis,

 

To culminate and clinch our line of thought we may bring forward four other pronouncements of his. The first two36 are:

 


"Projected, then, on the screen of evolution, Christ, in an exact, physical, unvarnished sense, is seen to possess those most awesome properties which St. Paul lavishly attributes to him."

 

"In Scripture Christ is essentially revealed as invested with the power of giving the world, in his own person, its definitive form. He is consecrated for a cosmic function. And since that function is not only moral but also (in the most real sense of the word) physical, it presupposes a physical basis in its humano-divine subject."

 

Let us note the two strokes of emphasis. Teilhard speaks of "an exact, physical, unvarnished sense". Also, the term "physical" is said to be meant "in the most real sense of the

 

35.Ibid,, p. 25.

36.Christianity and Evolution, p. 88; The Prayer of the Universe, p. 17.


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word". Evidently, the intention is that we should understand "physical" in an absolutely literal connotation. Taken most literally, the word points - as any dictionary will tell us - to material existence, the existence which confronts us in the world of nature, the universe in which we live and of which our bodies, with their souls, are a part.

 

The unseverable linking of the word's content to material nature is fully supported by Teilhard himself when we read the phrase:37 "...the resurrection of the flesh - taken in its literal, physical sense." And the sentences coming fairly close on the heels of that phrase completely bear out our notion that the two strokes of emphasis we have marked drive home the appropriateness of taking the literal sense - namely, materiality - to be always contained in "physical". The sentences38 read: "...the mystical body of Christ is something more than a totality of souls; because, without there being present in it a specifically material element, souls could not be physically gathered in Christ.... In this regard, there is no difference between the lower natural world and the new world that is being formed around Christ."

 

Now the picture is distinct: "physical", implying "organic", refers to the material universe of nature. It may not in every context coincide with "material", but the two adjectives show the same thing under two faces: the substance that acts as "physical" is "material" - the "material" substance in its organicity is "physical". And both the faces - the substantial and the organic - are subsumed under the cosmically "natural". On this showing, the Cosmic Christ proves to be intrinsically connected and subtly to overlap with the organic world of matter.

 

To get this intrinsic connection and subtle overlapping into greater focus we may present a few more extracts. The first we may draw from Mooney's book.39 There we have

 

37.Ibid., p. 34.

38.Ibid., p. 35.

39.Op. cit., p. 70. The reference given is La Vis cosmique, 1916, in Ecrits du temps de la guerre, pp. 39-40,


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Teilhard saying:

"Minds who are timid in their conceptions...dangerously weaken scriptural thought and render it incomprehensible or banal to people enthusiastic over connections that are physical and relationships properly cosmic... No, the Body of Christ must be understood boldly, as it was seen and loved by St. John, St. Paul and the Fathers. It forms in nature a world which is new, an organism moving and alive in which we are all united physically, biologically...."

 

The next extract, from Teilhard's "Introduction to the Christian Life",40 speaks of divine "grace" as the "organic" power of "a state of union with God": "from the Christian Catholic and realist point of view, grace represents a physical super-creation. It raises us a further rung on the ladder of cosmic evolution. In other words, the stuff of which grace is made is strictly biological."

 

These two extracts are more or less parallel and both bring in an addition to the terms we already have: "biological." It has obviously to do with organisms, as the first extract shows, and is akin to "organic". But the chief interest of the extracts is not here. It lies in what is asserted about the Body of Christ, the state of grace which is union of souls with God. We are told that, despite its being "a world which is new" (a phrase echoing an earlier quotation's "new world that is being formed around Christ"), this body is still within "nature" and, for all its being a "super-creation", is yet a part of "cosmic evolution". It is a higher "physical" and "organic" or "biological" step in the evolutionary cosmos of material nature. But this is one side of the situation. The other side is that, though the Body of Christ is not out of "nature" and "cosmic evolution", it is nonetheless a "new" world, a "super-creation", "a further rung on the ladder".

 

We may speak of two conditions of organic nature - an ordinarily material-physical and an extraordinarily material-physical. The two must not be confused but at the same time

 

40. Christianity and Evolution, pp. 152-53.


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they must not be split quite apart. They are the same material-physical medium. And there is even a meeting-point of the two. This is Teilhard's famous "Omega", the terminal point of evolution which the universe is bound to reach by a play of increasingly "centred" or "interiorized" synthesis, which we have come to know as Teilhard's law of developing complexity-consciousness. How this Omega serves as a meeting-point between the ordinary and the extraordinary condition of organic nature we may see from statements like the following:

 

"...ahead of us a universal cosmic centre is taking on definition in which everything is explained, is felt, and is ordered. It is, then, in this physical pole of evolution that we must, in my view, locate and recognize the plenitude of Christ.... I am only too well aware how staggering is this idea of a being capable of gathering all the fibres of the developing cosmic into his own activity and individual experience. But, in conceiving such a marvel, all I am doing (let me repeat) is to transpose into terms of physical reality the juridical expressions in which the Church has clothed her faith."41

 

"Having noted that the Pauline Christ (the great Christ of the mystics) coincides with the universal term, Omega, adumbrated by our philosophy - the grandest and most necessary attribute we can ascribe to him is that of exerting a supreme physical influence on every cosmic reality without exception."42

 

"Since Christ is Omega, the universe is physically impregnated to the very core of its matter by the influence of his super-human nature."43

 

"The pressure of facts is now such that it is time to return to a form of Christology' which is more organic and takes more account of physics. A Christ who dominates the history of heaven and earth not solely because these have been given to him, but because his gestation, his birth and gradual consummation constitute physically the only definitive reali-

 

41.Ibid., pp. 127-28.

42.Science and Christ, pp. 56-57.

43.Ibid., p. 57.


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ty in which the evolution of the world is expressed: there we have the only God whom we can henceforth worship. And that is precisely the God suggested to us by the new aspect the universe has assumed."44

 

"It is essential for us to get back to the soundest currents of Catholic tradition and at last offer men a theology in which Christ will be seen to be linked to the development of the whole universe, a universe as physical and as great as he."45

 

"There is only one centre in the universe: it is at once natural and super-natural: it impels the whole of creation along one and the same line, first towards the fullest development of consciousness, and later towards the highest holiness: in other words towards Christ Jesus, personal and cosmic."46

 

Let us start with the astonishing phrase making the universe "as physical and as great as" Christ. It is the converse of the one we find in Intimate Letters:" 47All my effort goes to maintain a Christ as vast and organic as the Universe,..." Both imply the same "truth": Christ's is the basic physicality and greatness, the basic vastness and organicity: the universe's physicality and greatness, its organicity and vastness, are an expression of it. And to say this is to proclaim "in terms of physical reality" the primacy with which the Church has endowed Christ in "juridical expressions". These terms have to be taken in a literal sense, pertaining to the realm of nature, because Christ coincides with Omega, "the universal cosmic centre", the supreme focus ahead by which every atom of matter is impregnated and by whose influence it is attracted, Omega that is "the physical pole of evolution". Surely, if Christ is "located and recognized" in that physical pole, those "terms of physical reality" cannot be construed as merely "ontological" ones which reduce "physical" to a generality like "real": the term "reality", already present,

 

44.Christianity and Evolution, p. 89.

45.The Prayer of the Universe, p. 17.

46.Ibid., pp. 23-24.

47.Lettres Intimes..., p. 391: "Tout mon effort va a maintenir le Christ aussi vaste et organique que 1'Univers..," (8 aout 1950).


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supplies all that we need of "real", and therefore "physical" tells us what kind of "real" is here. This "real'"s physicality has to be absolutely literal and involve material nature. What else can it be and do if Teilhard's Christology "takes more account of physics", the science of the domain of material nature, than does the Christology of his fellow-Catholics?

 

So, finally, we need not be surprised when Christ's "gestation, his birth and gradual consummation" are said to be "physically the only definitive reality" of cosmic evolution, and when Christ is called both the "natural" and the "supernatural" centre of the universe: that is, one who is physically "cosmic" and supernaturally "personal".

 

To sum up: in several contexts Christ's being "physical" means his being the universal process of material nature in the basic truth of all its aspects: the evolutive form, the evolver drive, the evolutionary goal - though his being this does not prevent him from being also something "new" in nature and from being hyper-physical and hyper-cosmic.

 

*

 

What is different from and in excess of material nature with its universal process and constitutes the basis of the hyper-physical, the hyper-cosmic, is best indicated by Teilhard apropos of the passage that evoked from de Solages and de Lubac their own comment and their reference to the comment by Mooney, The passage is: "If things are to find their coherence in Christ, we must ultimately admit that there is in the nature of Christ, besides the specifically individual elements of Man - and in virtue of God's choice - some universal physical reality, a certain cosmic extension of his body and soul."

 

A little after the passage Teilhard48 tells us:

 

"We should note...that there is nothing strange about this idea of a universal physical element in Christ.

 

48. "In the Form of Christ", The Prayer of the Universe, pp. 20-21.


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"Each and every one of us, if we care to observe it, is enveloped - is haloed - by an extension of his being as vast as the universe. We are conscious of only the core of ourselves. Nevertheless, the interplay of the monads would be unintelligible if an aura did not extend from one to another: something, that is, which is peculiar to each one of them and at the same time common to all.

 

"How, then, may we conceive Christ to be constituted as the cosmic centre of creation?

 

"Simply as a magnification, a transformation, realized in the humanity of Christ, of the aura that surrounds every human monad.

 

"Just as one sees in a living organism elements, originally indistinguishable from the others, suddenly emerge as leaders so that they are seen to be centres of attraction or points at which a formative activity is concentrated.

 

"So (on an incomparably larger scale) the man, the Son of Mary, was chosen so that his aura, instead of serving simply as the medium in which interaction with other men might be effected in a state of equality, might dominate them and draw them all into the network of its influence.

 

"Even before the Incarnation became a fact, the whole history of the universe (in virtue of a pre-action of the humanity of Christ, mysterious, but yet known to us through revelation) is the history of the progressive information of the universe by Christ."

 

Mooney49 cites the first half of this long statement (in a translation of his own) and precedes it with an earlier text which "describes the cosmic Body of Christ, 'whose principal attributes are sketched by St. Paul' as 'the Point towards which [beings] converge or just as equally the Milieu in which they are immersed'".50 Then Mooney makes his comment: "Whatever meaning 'physical' is to have, therefore, it will have to be situated in the realm of the human and the

 

49.Op. dr., p. 79.

50.Mooney's Note: L'Union creatrice, 1917, in Ecrits du temps de la guerre.


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personal. Teilhard is not going to 'confuse naively the planes of reality and make of Christ a physical agent of the same order as organic life or the ether. That is what is blamable and ridiculous.' This is simply to become a visionary, whose 'real error...is to confuse the different planes of the world and consequently to mix up their activities'."51

 

What Mooney argues is well founded and, as he remarks just a little later, Christ's "supremely physical influence over the total reality of the cosmos", as Teilhard52 puts it, is of a personal presence - and, we may add, it preserves in a sublimated form the "person" of each human monad which it gathers up. But, while Christ's "personal presence" is not of "the same order as organic life or the ether" (or, as instead of "the ether" Teilhard would have said at a later date, "energy"), it is still "a physical agent" and its different order is within the same world, and the order which does not comprise it is still a lower pitch of the different order. This comes home to us from a passage in Intimate Letters 53 where Teilhard notes his distinction from Maurice Blondel vis-a-vis the Universal Christ: "...between him and me there is perhaps only a difference of tendency, or at least of accent - he insisting especially on the Transcendence of the Universal Christ, I on his 'physicity'. These attitudes are complementary." Teilhard's remark shows that the order which is not the same "as organic life or the ether" is at the same time transcendent and physical. The Universal Christ has both Blondellian "transcendence" and Teilhardian "physicity". Christ supernatural has yet a natural and therefore "physical" character: although his "physicity" cannot be equated to that of ordinary phenomena, he has nonetheless to be called "physical". If this were

 

51.Mooney's Note: Letter of May 25, 1923 to Father Auguste Valensin.

52.Mooney's Note: Mon Univers, p. 86.

53.Op. cit., p. 35: "...entre lui et moi il y a peut-etre seulement une difference de tendance, ou au moins d'accent, - lui insistant surtout sur la Transcendance du Christ-Universel, moi sur sa 'physiceite.' Ces attitudes doivent se completer."


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not so, Teilhard54 could never have written in the same letter: "...Christ is the Centre of the Universe, even in its zones called 'natural'."

 

We arrive at the identical conclusion when we see that Mooney's statement about Teilhard not confusing the planes of reality is based on a communication in Intimate Letters,55 where Teilhard criticises to Valensin a thinker named Sedir. The conclusion is forced on us by what Teilhard56 goes on to say: "But, as regards what is basic (the aspiration towards a total Christ and a religion mixed with the whole of life), he seems to me to carry more of the true religious sap, in his disorderly lucubrations, than Father Janvier, in all his dead prose, where one finds only the truths already a hundred times digested, without any living juice," The suggestion is that we must not separate Christ from the physical reality within which we commonly live. The danger to guard against is simply to think, as Sedir does, all physical reality to be of a single kind - the ordinary external one. This kind too, as Sedir basically believes, is open to Christ but it is not directly one with him. What is directly one with him is a subtler kind. Still, for all its subtlety, it cannot be denied the Sedirian description "physical".

 

And this point hits us in the eye most forcibly if we probe a certain phrase in the long quotation we have made about "a universal physical element in Christ". The phrase comes almost at the end: "in virtue of a pre-action of the humanity of Christ." It gives the ground of Teilhard's assertion: "Then before the Incarnation became a fact, the whole history of the universe is the history of the progressive information of the universe by Christ." The ground is indeed, as Teilhard says,

 

54.Ibid.: "...le Christ est Centre de l'univers, meme dans ses zones dites 'natur-elles'."

55.Ibid., p. 105.

56.Ibid:. "Mais, pour le fond (aspiration vers un Christ total et une religion melee a toute vie) il me parait apporter plus de vraie seve religieuse, dans ses elucubrations desordonnees, que le P. Janvier, dans toute sa prose morte, oil on ne trouve que des verites deja cent fois digerees, sans aucun sue vivant."


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"mysterious", and can be accepted only on the authority of "revelation". Its mysteriousness has been stressed and its scriptural source recognised by Mooney too. The doctrine of the "pre-action of the humanity of Christ" is Teilhard's legacy from St. Paul, who does not confine the Incarnate Christ, the Divine in his form of "humanity", to one period of time but sets him in eternity: it is, surprisingly, the Incarnate Christ about whom Paul says (Colossians 1:19-20): "all things were created by him, and for him;/And he is before all things, and by him all things consist." Mooney57 observes that here is "an aspect of St. Paul's thought which...is receiving considerable attention today", an aspect where "apparently it is always the concrete, historical God-Man of whom he is thinking, never the Word independent of his humanity". Mooney adds: "How this is to be explained theologically is a question for which there is as yet no satisfactory answer." Nor does he tell us that whatever explanation Teilhard essays is satisfying. But the fact of Teilhard's Pauline attitude stands. And, corresponding to the pre-action of Christ's humanity, we have the world's pre-formation in that humanity, when Teilhard58 writes: "St. Paul quite obviously has in mind the theandric [God-Man] Christ: it was in the Incarnate Christ that the universe was pre-formed." This signifies that, for Teilhard as for Paul, the universe of our experience exists in its fundamental form from all eternity in the very God-Man who took birth at one period of time in the universe of our experience. Now, if such is the case, there is implied for Christ as well as for the universe an eternal physicality over and above a physicality that is phenomenal and experiential. In ultimate terms, we should have to say, on the one hand, that the universe we know as physical has a transcendence of its own and, on the other, that the transcendent Christ is also physical in the same essential sense as the universe we know. No wonder that in the context of Teilhard's self-comparison with

 

57.Op. cit., p. 170.

58.Science and Christ, pp. 54-55.


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Blondel we are told of "transcendence" and "physicity" being complementary aspects of the Universal Christ. The Universal Christ's "physicity" is thus no more than a higher order of the same reality whose lower order is "organic life or the ether".

 

Hence the lower order cannot but be considered Christ himself in disguise. Here he is completely concealed so far as his proper person is concerned. Nevertheless he is fundamentally identical with it. So "the total Christ" of Teilhard has three- pitches, so to speak: he is the cosmos constituting ordinary "nature", he is the immanent Omega who is extraordinary "nature" on a cosmic scale, he is Omega transcendent who is supernature in the sense of being already and ever existent rather than emerging through the aeons as the last step in the series of evolutionary syntheses. And the second pitch - natural physicality in an extraordinary mode -makes the basis for the hyper-physical, the hyper-cosmic, which is the third pitch-Surely, these three pitches make a blend of Christianity and pantheism? Teilhard was always in two minds about the latter: a love-hate relationship with it is found throughout his writings. His Christ, unlike in the pantheism he was afraid of, is more than the combination of natura naturans and natura naturata, in which God is wholly nature (Deus sive natura) and lacks transcendence. But, inasmuch as he is cosmic, he seems indissolubly related to the order of nature, the world of matter, and is in such relation to it as the World-Soul in pantheism, having the cosmos as its body. And this is precisely the true significance of certain assertions of Teilhard's.

 

Thus he59 says: "If we are to effect the synthesis between faith in God and faith in the world, for which our generation is waiting, there is nothing better we can do than dogmatically bring out in the person of Christ the cosmic aspect and

 

59. Christianity and Evolution, p. 180.


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function which make him originally the prime mover and controller, the 'soul' of evolution."

 

Again, there is his pronouncement:60 "We cannot pin down the point at which the hand of God is apparent. It acts upon the whole body of causes without making itself evident at any point: thus, externally, there is nothing so like the action of the Prime Mover as the action of a soul of the world...."

 

Gnce again, we have the words:61 "When life in its lower stages is moving towards consciousness, when men are passionately striving for the complete freedom and unanimity of their spirit, when thinkers and poets thrill with excitement at the emergence of a 'world-soul', it is in fact Christ whom they are all seeking - Christ who still keeps hidden his personal and divine being, but nevertheless Christ himself, who must be the first object of desire as the keystone that holds together the effort of the universe - Christ who must effectively fulfil this natural function before he can reveal himself to us through the more intimate parts of his being, and, in those depths, undertake the supernatural work of our sanctifica-tion."

 

Then there is the brief but suggestive phrase62 about the revealed God the Christian worships and the material universe whose dimensions are increasing immeasurably to the eyes of science: "How could either of these two majestic grandeurs dim the radiance of the other? The one is but the peak - the soul, we might say - of the other."

 

Or take the following two confessions of faith: "To this faith, Jesus, I hold...: You are the cosmic being who envelops us and fulfils us in the perfection of his own unity. It is, in all truth, in this way, and for this that I love you above all things."63 "Lord Jesus,... I love you as a world, as this world which has captivated my heart; and it is you, I now realize,

 

60.Ibid., p. 26.

61.The Prayer of the Universe, p. 22.

62.Christianity and Evolution, p. 75.

63.The Prayer of the Universe, p. 83.


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that my brother-men, even those who do not believe, sense and seek throughout the magic immensities of the cosmos."64

 

Lastly, we may consider:65" "Judging from first appearances, Catholicism disappointed me by its narrow representation of the world and its failure to understand the part played by matter. Now I realize that, on the model of the incarnate God whom Christianity reveals to me, I can be saved only by becoming one with the universe. Thereby my deepest 'pantheist' aspirations are satisfied, guided, and reassured. The world around me becomes divine. And yet the flames do not consume me, nor do the floods dissolve me. For, unlike the false monisms which urge one through passivity into unconsciousness, the 'pan-Christism' which I am discovering places union at the term of an arduous process of differentiation. I shall become the Other only by being utterly myself. I shall attain spirit only by bringing out the complete range of the forces of matter. The total Christ is consummated and may be attained, only at the term of universal evolution. In him I have found what my being dreamed of: a personalized universe, whose domination personalizes me. And I hold this 'world-soul' no longer simply as a fragile creation of my individual thoughts, but as the product of a long historical revelation, in which even those whose faith is weakest inevitably recognize one of the principal lines of human progress."

 

We may ignore, in this last passage, all the prejudiced misunderstanding of pantheism that sees the pantheist as wanting to merge into unconsciousness instead of wanting, as he actually does, to realise the beatitude of a total union with his own supreme Truth, the Universal Self, the World-Soul whose individual phase or aspect he is. What is of moment to us is the affirmation of a certain pantheistic presence, a "pan-Christism" in which the Godhead is both cosmic and personal and which enables each human person to discover his own highest truth of personality, his own widest solidarity with

 

64.Ibid., p. 104,

65.Christianity and Evolution, pp. 128-29.


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the cosmos and a vision wherein the "world around...becomes divine". A fusion of genuine pantheism with genuine personalism sub specie Christi is what we reach as the fundamental of fundamentals in the faith of Teilhard de Chardin through the analysis of the use to which he frequently puts the term "physical".

 

*

 

If we may weave this conclusion into all that we have expounded so far, we may add that the Christ-aspect in the religion of the basic Teilhard is, but for the name, quite dissimilar to traditional Christianity. The Teilhardian panthe-ism-personalism is rather akin to the ancient comprehensive Vedanta of the early Upanishads which continued the esoteric side of the still older Rigveda. And the Christ-aspect links up vitally with that Vedanta as revived in the Bhagavad Gita where a Divine Incarnation such as would come from age to age in many forms focuses the cosmic-cwm-transcendent God in human history. Modernise this revived Vedanta by setting it in the context of Evolutionism, with many of whose religious overtones it will be in tune, and you have the prototype of the full world-view of Teilhard, to which the proper understanding of his favourite term "physical" can be a most suggestive line of approach.


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