Wednesday 27 March 2019

Salvation as Humanization and Salvation as Deification- Introduction to Christian Theologies in India (ICTI)


Salvation as Humanization

Indian Christian Theologians like K.C. Sen, Chenchaiah, Chakkarai, and P.D. Devanandan understood Christ as the bearer of New Humanity. M.M. Thomas builds his Christological understanding on this foundation- Salvation as Humanization and thus salvation in Christ signifies Christ as the bearer of a new community. Salvation will lead one to be part of a new community i.e. in Christ.

The quest for salvation is the search for ultimate meaning of human existence. Thomas identifies three dimensions. The first one involves a desire for selfhood, self identity and group identity. It is human awareness of one’s selfhood as distinct from nature. Secondly it involves a search for historical consciousness and purpose in history. Human seeks to understand themselves as subject of a dynamic and linear history. Thirdly it involves a search to realize the new ideal community based on freedom, equality and fraternity. On the basic of the vision of the ideal community, it implies a struggle to break oppressive structure of caste, class and patriarchy, which undermine the assumption of establishing the community.

The humanization of our common life becomes a common concern, a common medium of communication and even a common criterion for evaluation of the various meaning of salvation. This common concern for humanization finds expression in the struggle for fuller humanity. M.M. Thomas book Salvation and Humanization begins with a crucial question of relation between gospel of salvation and the struggle of men (sic) everywhere for their humanity. Thomas interprets salvation as being glorified in humanity of Jesus Christ or as being incorporated into the glorified humanity of the risen Christ, and therefore salvation is closely related to the struggle of the oppressed for a richer and a fuller human life or to the process of humanization. Salvation is historical corporate and universal and eternal life is a present possession since the timeless God entered into time.

Salvation remains eschatological, but the historical responsibility within the eschatological framework cannot but include the task of humanization of the world in secular history. The mission of salvation and the task of humanization are integrally related to each other. The glorified humanity of Risen Christ is to be realized not after death but within the historical process, not by isolated individual to society but by men (sic) in the corporateness of their relation to society and to the cross. The traditional understanding of salvation has to do with the inward character of individual but Thomas brought it par with the life setting and challenged the salvation of individual to influence the salvation of the society. Thomas affirms that Christ and His kingdom are present within the human quest of humanization. The secular ideology of humanism is itself to be transformed in the light of the prophetic understanding of history as fulfillment in Jesus Christ, if they are to serve humanity. Thus the theology of mission should help the Christian church to participate in struggles of secularism and secular men (sic) for an historical task of humanizing the world, and with the radical demand to enter into dialogue with them, opening secular men (sic) and secular ideologies to an awareness of the relevance of the gospel of Christ.
M.M. Thomas made struggle for the humanization as the cornerstone of his theology. His theology can be summarized as Humanization: humanizing the dehumanized and peopling the de-peopled.

Salvation as Deification

Deification (also known as theosis or divinization) sees salvation not merely as divine pardon but rather as a process of spiritual transformation that culminates in mystical union with God. In other word, it is a transformative process whose aim is likeness to or union with God.  According to C.S. Lewis “human beings could one day enter into the very beauty and energy of God and become true and everlasting and really divine persons.” Deification, then, is the restoration of the divine likeness that humanity lost along with its beauty, purity, and in-corruption. Deified human beings forever remain human while at the same time sharing in divine grace or energy, just like blazing iron in the fire shares the properties of flame but doesn’t cease to be iron.

S.K. George says “the deification of Christ is something parallel to the deification of other gods in India and hence does not belong to the essence of Christianity. Therefore he also does not deal with the crucial issues such as atonement and the Cross and Resurrection. His approach to the Bible is liberal in the sense that he does not see that God’s full and final revelation is to be found in Christ and that he finds that God speaks in other religious scriptures also.
Swami Abhishiktananda his contemplation was the seeing of his existence in the heart of Trinity. His meditation of human as the image of God signifies the unfolding of “the mystery of the divine presence in the inner-most sanctuary of human’s being.”

According to K.P Aleaz, The insight that Brahman/Atman pervades, illumines and unifies all he levels and layers of human personality as well as the whole of creation enables Eastern Christian theology to arrive at new insights regarding the energies of God through which God is knowable and through which deification is actualized. The divine willing, the ideas of created things, the logoi, the words, are in the energies of God and not in His/Her essence. The Advaita Vedantic view that before creation this universe pre-existed in Brahman as potential seed (bijasaktih) and undifferentiated name and form (avyakrtanamarupa) clarifies this understanding of creation in the energies of God. This energies of God which deified humanity can actualized only through Salvation in Jesus Christ.

Salvation as Deification means is to be like Christ, the perfect image of God(Col. 2:9; II Cor. 4:4) which is possible through salvation by Jesus Christ.

Human beings, created in God’s image, by having communion with the Source and Perfecter of life, are supposed to progress in this process till the end of their life  and even in the life after life. This theme taught by the Orthodox churches all over the world of all ages seems to be in tune with the Indian spirituality also.

1 comments:

Methodologically regarding Deification, at least you have to refer an Eastern Christian thinker,

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