Wednesday 27 March 2019

Indian Orthodox thinking on the Trinity- Introduction to Christian Theologies in India (ICTI)


Indian Orthodox thinking on the Trinity

The Trinity gives us more space for pluralistic ways of understanding of God in the Indian context. The Indian context is polytheistic. The early church used epithets like ousia, hypostasis and Logos. And even by the apostles from the Greek philosophical thought highlights their venture in interpreting Trinity in that context. John Hick’s basic contention is that we are required to undergo a ‘Copernican revolution’ in our theology of religion: shift from the Ptolemic world view to a Copernican world view. This means a paradigm shift from a Christ-centered or Jesus-centered to a God-centered model. The God of the Bible is not only transcendent but also immanent. He is primarily and originally transcendent, and secondarily and derivatively immanent.

Keshab Chandra Sen expounded the meaning of the Trinity in the light of the Vedantic understanding of Brahman as Sachidananda. He suggests that the Father is sat (being), the still God; son is sit (knowledge), the journeying God and Holy Spirit is Ananda (joy) the returning God. But here we see a tendency towards modalism and some argue that Brahman does not exist as an empirical object and its existence has no being, consciousness and bliss according to Upanishads. R. Panikkar argues that the Trinity is the junction where the spiritual dimensions of all religions meet. All religions have mystery and the Christian language for that mystery of God is Trinity. Panikkar finds in this more room for interreligious dialogue.

Brahmabandhav Upadhyaya redefined KC Sen understanding of Trinity on Satcitananda and argues that the Trinity remains a mystery which can only be grasped via revelation. It is beyond human comprehension to understand how “God begets in thought his infinite Self-image and reposes on it with infinite delight,” never losing “blissful communication and colloquy within the bosom of Godhead” without creating “any division in the divine Substance.

Sadhu Sunder Singh, says that to know the Father (sic) is only through the Son and by the power of the Holy Spirit. A.J. Appasamy challenges the monistic interpretation of Trinity already in the Indian scene. He refuted the Vedanta-based idea that God the Father, Christ, and finally, the believers are all identical and ultimately one. For him all these were united only in moral relationship of love and obedience.

Raimond Pannikar Cosmotheandric “trinity” offers, a concept, both dynamics and coherence: the Cosmotheandric Reality is a differentiated reality which is in movement and holds together the three dimensions of God, Man and World. This “trinity” is relation; it is not monism or dualism but difference-in-relation: this aspect is shared by Panikkar on elaborations of the doctrine of the Trinity. He holds a hermeneutical approach to reality in which God, Man and World are connected to each other deeply.

Swami Abhishiktananda Christian Advaitic sannyasa life in genuine Indian religious style is a challenge. He lived the symbiosis of two tradition and both became part of him. He tried to present the Advaitic experience as compatible with the Christian experience of Trinity.

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