This is the second in a series of blogposts reflecting on my
current research on how difference has been understood in Christian history. In
this post, I’m thinking about the human need for order and fear of chaos, as
powerful driving forces as we seek to understand and make sense of difference.
Consider the well-known creation story in Genesis 1. Here,
God’s act of creation is portrayed first in terms of creating a series of
distinctions. In the beginning, there is ‘a formless void’ (Gen 1:1). God’s
activity first separates light from
dark, then sky from what lies below, then land from sea. This creates a series
of diverse habitats, and the next stage of God’s creative activity is to call
forth from those habitats a wide variety of life appropriate for each – first
vegetation, and then living creatures to populate the sea, sky and earth
respectively. The teeming variety of such creatures is deftly evoked: ‘every
living creature that moves, of every kind, with which the waters swarm, and
every winged bird of every kind….cattle and creeping things, and wild animals
of the earth of every kind’ (Gen 1:21,24).
In this creation account, difference is presented first as being
about bringing order out of chaos by acts of separation and arrangement. Secondly,
it is presented as generative. Once order has been established by the
separation of different elements, these can become fruitful (note that this is
not, at this stage, about sexual difference
but about diversity of habitat). And thirdly, diversity – in all its creeping,
squawking, splashing abundance – is presented as a fundamental feature of God’s
intention in creation, an indicator of God-given abundance. These three dimensions
of difference – order, fruitfulness and diversity - will recur again and again
as we look at how difference has been understood theologically.
Early Iron Age grave in South India |
There seems to be a deep human craving for order which
transcends most cultural, political or religious divides. Psychologists have
repeatedly shown that much of our sense of beauty is driven by an appreciation
for symmetry –the more symmetrical a face is, the more beautiful it is rated by
test subjects. Chaos seems to be a deep primal fear, and the earliest human
societies are often marked (or diagnosed) by features of arrangement – of
structures, mark-making, deceased bodies, and so on.
It seems to me, as I’m doing this work on the history of how
theology has thought about difference, that most of what I’m seeing consists of
elaborations and different systematisations all aiming to fulfil this basic
human desire – to arrange chaos, so
that it emerges into an order which is found to be, at all levels, life-giving.
Furthermore, it is disagreements about what is most fruitful, generative and
life-giving that lie at the root of most of the disagreements which have ensued
about difference and diversity. This applies not just to our sexual arguments
in the church (which so often circle around not simply questions of
procreation, but also and even more fundamentally a desire for ordered
relationships, which will create a stable society, and so allow human life to
flourish). It also can be seen much more widely in society, where arguments and
debates about cultural diversity so often turn on a deeply felt desire or need
for social stability and communities of belonging that we feel comfortable and
safe in. We want order, not chaos.
Our deep human fear of chaos is foundational to arguments
about difference, and is why such arguments are so deeply felt – we feel
viscerally that these arguments matter,
because they are all that lies between us and our primal fears of chaos.
This is also, I suggest, why such arguments can seem petty,
trivial and even pathetic to those who see the ‘thin blue line’ between chaos
and order in a completely different place. Because all such arguments are
fundamentally about arrangement they very easily be characterised as
‘rearranging the deckchairs on the titanic’, or re-arranging the books on the
shelves by colour or height rather than by subject. Arrangements of things
almost inevitably feel trivial to those whose preoccupation is with arranging
something else! It is worth briefly considering different hobbies, and how
absorbing and
important they seem to their adherents – from stamp collecting,
model railways, football, knitting, dog breeding and showing…… their rules seem
arcane and trivial to those outside, but are very important to those inside.And this is where societal blindness comes into play – it is very difficult indeed for a society which just assumes a particular arrangement of things is a given to see that as just one set of possible arrangements. This is one of the key insights of liberation/black/feminist thought – the need to problematize assumptions and see ‘common sense’ as a particular societally bound way of thinking. So, to those for whom the line between order and chaos lies in getting religion right, stamp collecting is a ridiculously trivial example whilst heresy is literally a matter of life and death. Whereas to those who see the line between order and chaos in politics and policing, for example, religion can seem a dangerous triviality.
One of the themes I’m going to keep coming back to as I
explore different models of difference is to think about how that model defines
‘good’ and ‘bad’ difference. It is a very notable feature of that creation
account of Genesis 1, that God repeatedly affirmins the goodness of what has
been ordered, separated and created in all its diversity. ‘And God saw that it
was good’ runs as a repeated refrain through the whole of the first chapter of
the Bible. The first mention of anything not
good comes in 2:9, with the mention of the tree ‘of the knowledge of good
and evil’ – around which, of course, the action of the next chapter centres.
Moral judgements and morally good and bad behaviour do exist in this milieu,
but they are secondary and subsequent to the basic goodness of what has been
created in and of itself.
It is also important to note that the divine activity of
arrangement or separation, creating difference, in Genesis 1 is not about dualism.
It is not the case that one of each pairing is good and bad, as so often in our
way of speaking in pairs or in ‘binaries’. It emphatically is not the case that,
for example, the light is good and the darkness bad, or the sea bad and the
land good, as is so commonly the case in later discourse and metaphor. In
Genesis, the arrangement itself, and all that has been arranged, is good.
The typical explanation in Christian theology for the basic
question ‘why a Good God would make a world in which there is so much pain and
suffering and hardship’, is that everything God made was originally good, but
that the option of bad enters the world with the Fall. The created order is
good, but human choices can be bad – and as a result of bad human choices, the
created order is to some extent turned against humanity and becomes a place of
toil, pain and hardship. Things have become disordered as a result of human
disobedience, runs the argument.
However, this
strand of theological thought does not simply map onto a theory of difference.
In theory, perhaps, the idea would be that differences that bring order are
good, differences that bring disorder, bad. But the concept of the Fall
problematizes that, because disorder is in some sense seen as part of the new
natural order, God’s dispensation, and it may be disordered to seek to bring order!
This idea can be seen, for example, in the Victorian debates over pain relief
in childbirth, where some religious authorities argued that seeking to remove
pain in childbirth was against God’s will since God mandates such pains in
Genesis 3:16. It can also be seen, I gather, in some right-wing American arguments
against international peacekeeping.
I’m aiming to discuss various different paradigms for
difference that have existed over the course of Christian history. The
discussion of one after another shouldn’t be taken to mean that one supercedes
or replaces another, nor that one stops when another starts. In the history of
thought, it is generally the case that as one model or paradigm rises to
prominence, others continue in the background. It is not even the case that
most people move from one to the other and a few conservative or backward souls
cling stubbornly to the previous model – ‘flat earthers’ – rather, most people
are not fully aware of the incongruities or incompatibilities between different
models, and often will assent to a new one whilst still having elements of
older patterns of thinking very much underlying their beliefs and practices –
their ‘gut feelings’ or idea of ‘common sense’.
Order is not so much a theory in itself, I suggest, (unlike
the specifically hierarchical theory of an ordered universe which I have
already outlined here), but is a fundamental human desire which underlies all
of our theories, and gives so much visceral strength to them and to our
response to them being threatened.
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Thank your for your reply, it is really most insightful. What is the basis of your theological contention here?
DeleteIt's good to see some wrestling with this kind of issue using the Genesis 1 stary as a foil. I was concerned at one point that you might be about to equate the primal chaos with what is not good, but I think you were saying that in fact it has to be understood as a good in primal terms (so to say). Perhaps talking about misorder as the sinful dimension of disorder could help, retaining 'disorder' for a more 'neutral' (not the right term really but it'll serve for now) conceptualisation. I mindful in reflecting on this of the insights from chaos/complexity physics seeing order as islands of regularity in a more fundamentally chaotic reality. I don't want to cnflate the two accounts (that of Gen1 and that of physics) but it does seem to me that their insigts can be mutually helpful.
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