Sensing the Sacred: Recovering a Mystagogical Vision of Knowledge and Salvation
By Hanna J. Lucas and Simon Oliver
()
About this ebook
Hanna J. Lucas
Hanna J. Lucas (PhD) is a lecturer in theology and ethics at College of the Resurrection in Mirfield, UK. She is a research fellow of the Catechesis Institute, and is the editor of Koinonia, the journal of the Anglican and Eastern Churches Association.
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Sensing the Sacred - Hanna J. Lucas
Introduction
A theology of learning: homo capax Dei
It is through deification that all things are reconstituted and achieve their permanence; and it is for its sake that what is not is brought into being and given existence.
—Maximus the Confessor, The First Century on Love
I
n John 17, Jesus
prays for his disciples in what is known as the high priestly prayer. At the beginning of this prayer, Jesus says, And this is eternal life, that they may know You, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom You have sent
(John
17
:
3
). What does it mean to know the one true God? To know Jesus Christ? How is this knowledge of God that is eternal life acquired? How does it relate to Christian practice and teaching? And how does this knowledge relate to ordinary human knowing? This book explores these questions in the light of early Christian initiation. In the early church, initiation was known as illumination
or enlightenment.
And thus, the church’s historical practices of initiation and the teaching surrounding these practices provide an especially fruitful ground upon which to build a theology of learning. This book seeks to articulate a theological epistemology in conversation with the early Christian catechesis that concerns the rites of initiation. This kind of catechesis is called mystagogy: or, an interpretation of the mysteries. Mystagogy sets out to explain the Christian rites to new converts; but it also implicitly touches on the questions asked above, especially the final question: what relation does ordinary human knowing have to the knowledge of God?
In the early centuries, Christian initiation was understood as the entry into heavenly mysteries and union with Christ by means of sacraments and symbols. In the rites of baptism and eucharist, through embodied acts bearing multiple layers of symbolism, the initiates encountered the narrative of salvation, they encountered Christ Himself, and they also encountered the world in a particular way. They encountered creation as that which can bear and mediate communion with God; they encountered the world as sacrament. The kind of education offered in mystagogy seeks to enable the neophyte to enter fully into the union with God mediated in the sacraments, and it bears a certain implicit vision of knowledge and learning—of how ordinary human knowing and embodied life relate to knowledge of God, and how all of these serve the telos of union with God. A mystagogical epistemology takes account of human embodiment, it orients around the sacraments of the church, it reserves an irrevocable place for divine agency, and holds these in an integrated vision ordered toward a beatific end.
Some of the earliest mystagogical material we have comes from the fourth century, in the catechetical homilies of Ambrose of Milan (339–97), Cyril of Jerusalem (313–86), John Chrysostom of Constantinople (347–407), and Theodore of Mopsuestia (350–428). This book reads the mystagogies of these four bishops in search of an account of what it means to learn in light of the end of knowing God and sharing in divine, eternal life. It endeavors to articulate and recover a theological sensibility drawn from the pedagogies of these four mystagogues,
and to construct a theology of learning that builds on the epistemologies inherent in their teachings. This theology of learning conceives of knowledge in terms of soteriology: as intelligible within the wider grace of salvation and theōsis. And it envisions earthly knowledge in relation to the reality of divine providence that draws all of creation toward its end in God.
From the beginning, Christianity has conceived of knowledge of God as something much deeper and more intimate than the mere accumulation of information. The enlightenment that mystagogy envisions bears little resemblance to the rationalist vision of knowledge and learning we have inherited in the modern period. The intertwined pursuit of union with God, eternal life, and illumination that we observe in the sacraments of initiation, and in the mystagogical catecheses that interpret them, departs markedly from the intellectualized vision of salvation offered in the competing religious philosophies of the mystagogues’ day. Christian enlightenment was something wholly other than, for instance, the gnostic promise of secret knowledge or the Manichaean flight from matter.
What we find in mystagogy is an account of this knowledge of God that is eternal life in which humanity is suffused, intimately, with God’s presence through every last point of relationality and receptivity belonging to our nature: from the intellective and spiritual down through the humbly material. We can see this in the fact that Christians gathered to seek and live in this knowledge and salvation not only in the Apostle’s teaching,
but also in ritual, through liturgy and sacrament: in the breaking of bread and the prayers
(Acts 2:42). They gathered in communities of fellowship, worship, and ritual, to adore the incarnated, resurrected, and ascended God in Christ, and to come into union with Him in the ruddy humility of matter: in water, oil, and bread and wine. This book endeavors to explore the sacramental side of knowing God
: how, in the Christian rites, we come to know and commune with the True, the Holy, and the ultimate, in the noble humility of creation and embodiment.
At the same time, the journey to knowledge and communion with God through worship and ritual is not in competition with the journey of discourse. I must dissuade at the outset the mistake of confusing the distinction between matter and intellect/spirit, or the distinction between the experiential and the abstract, with opposition. As we move through the mystagogies, it will become apparent that embodied ritual experience and didactic catechetical training belong to one logic of divine instruction.
In the early church, those coming to faith and preparing for baptism underwent a rigorous process of catechumenal formation which included, first, a thorough instruction in the doctrines of the church and the scriptures (preserved in the creed-based, de fide homilies of many church fathers), and second, a separate set of teachings explaining the rites of baptism and the eucharist. This latter teaching is the mystagogy. A particular sensitivity to the Christological and divinizing nature of pedagogy rests close to the surface of the mystagogical catecheses of the fourth century, and I seek to draw this sensibility to the fore.
The argument I offer is, in a way, a contemplation on the subjunctive clause in Jesus’ high priestly prayer: that they may know You, the one true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent.
¹
This book is about our capacity and our capacitation for that knowledge: about our movement through that subjunctive into its fulfillment—this is eternal life
—and how the order of creation and the order of the human intellect are coherently drawn into the grace of capacitation
for the knowledge that is eternal life.
²
I will read the initiates’ journey through illumination
—their progression through the sacraments of initiation toward union with God—as the archetype for the journey of learning. In this way, learning and the sacramental capacitation of our nature for union with the divine—better known as theōsis—are linked together analogically.
One would be forgiven if the proposal to analogize theōsis with the notion of learning sparks an immediate dis-ease in the modern reader. It may, understandably, sound suspiciously like the intellectualized visions of salvation I have just rejected. What surely comes to mind when we hear the word learning
today, however—formed as we are in the patrimony of modernity
³
—departs fundamentally from the participative, theological vision of learning and knowing in which, and out of which, the mystagogues preached their homilies. And, thus, a corollary of my argument will, I hope, be a certain rehabilitation of our understanding of learning in light of the true end of knowledge, namely union with Christ—in Whom, alone, salvation is found. Mystagogy promotes a vision of learning in which to know and to learn is not to accumulate quantities of knowledge, but to come into the intimate communion with God that gathers and fulfills the order of creation—including the order of our own human nature. My reading of the mystagogues’ teachings on the sacraments will highlight particular intuitions and emphases that gesture toward this integrative and holistic vision of learning, embodiment, and theōsis. Through a constructive engagement with these patristic texts, I will show how all learning—from the rudimentary knowing we do by means of the senses, through the discursive knowledge of the intellect, and the intimate, spiritual knowing of Christ in the sacraments—belongs to one divine process of capacitation for union.
A sublime intelligence
Mystagogy is an education. The mystagogue walks his hearers sequentially through the rites and liturgy of initiation, explaining their meanings in relation to scripture, creation, doctrine, ethics, and eschatology.
⁴
Mystagogy is concerned with imparting knowledge, certainly. As Theodore of Mopsuestia says: Indeed what can mortal words say that is worthy of immortal, heavenly and unspeakable things? It was necessary, however, to speak of them to your hearing, so that you might not remain completely ignorant of the greatness of the gift.
⁵
It is immediately apparent, however, that the knowledge the mystagogue hopes to foster goes beyond the merely cognitive. The purpose of mystagogy does not lie simply in passing on an interpretive key for cracking the code
of Christian symbolism or solving
the puzzle—or the mystery—of the sacraments. Mystagogical education is given for the purpose of plunging the learner into an even greater mystery: the mystery of theōsis, the mystery of uniting to Christ and being transformed into His likeness.
Theodore continues,
It behoves you now to make use of an intelligence consonant with these sublime things of which you have been rendered worthy, and to think well, according to the measure of the greatness of a gift such as this, what we were and into what we have been transformed: that we were mortal by nature and we expect to receive immortality, that from being corruptible we shall become incorruptible, from passible impassible, from mutable, forever immutable . . . and that we shall enjoy all the good and delightful things found in heaven.
⁶
Theodore expresses here a sensibility shared among all four mystagogues. Their catechesis is given in service of the divine gifts encountered and received in the sacraments. These primary gifts are those of salvation and divinization—or, as Theodore says, the transformation
of our human nature by which we become capable of partaking in the delights of heaven and sharing in attributes that belong properly to God: immortality, incorruptibility, impassibility, immutability.
⁷
Mystagogy concerns, at its heart, the susceptibility of our nature to this gracious change: from what we were into what we have been transformed.
In the space of the didactic, the space of explicit catechesis on the rites, mystagogy seeks to shape in the baptized a renewed mind (Rom 12:2), the mind the Christ (1 Cor 2:16), or, as Theodore says above, an intelligence consonant with these sublime things.
To come to possess an intelligence that is consonant
⁸
with the gracious transformation of our nature is something far beyond simply the ameliorating of ignorance. This intelligence,
or learning, concerns our capacity to receive this transfiguration; to receive union with Christ and to be subject to the sublime work of theōsis. And, in this sense, the significance of learning lies not simply in what the neophyte comes to know, but in what they become.
The disciplina arcani
Learning, thus, relates closely with the space of becoming—the movement between what we are and what we will be through union with Christ. As such, learning is intimately related to, or even becomes indistinguishable from, capacitation: the capacity to receive and the capacity to change. The theme of capacitation is not explicit in the mystagogical homilies, but rather moves beneath the surface, guiding certain emphases in the mystagogues’ teachings. The significance of capacitation is especially discernible in their attentiveness to the sensory aspects of the rites and their discussions of the empowering of our human faculties to receive Christ in the sacraments.
The idea of capacitation involves a sense of openness, acuity, and receptivity; a sense of power and clarity; and a sense of being suited to or made capable of heavenly participation. Cyril of Jerusalem’s first mystagogical homily opens with a striking section that gestures toward this sensibility. Here, Cyril introduces his pedagogical and pastoral aims:
I long ago desired, true-born and dearly beloved children of the Church, to discourse to you concerning these spiritual and heavenly Mysteries; but knowing well, that seeing is far more persuasive than hearing, I waited till this season; that finding you more open to the influence of my words from this your experience, I might take and lead you to the brighter and more fragrant meadow of this present paradise; especially as you have been made fit to receive the more sacred Mysteries, having been counted worthy of divine and life-giving Baptism. It remaining therefore to dress for you a board of more perfect instruction, let us now teach you exactly about these things, that you may know the deep meaning of what was done to you on that evening of your baptism.
⁹
Cyril, like Theodore, acknowledges that his role as teacher is subservient to, and cooperative with, the divine power working in the sacraments.
¹⁰
Here we also find a reference to the disciplina arcani: the practice of admitting only the baptized to participate in and have knowledge of the sacraments of the church.
¹¹
In the fourth century, not only was the liturgy of the faithful
(the eucharistic liturgy) kept secret from the uninitiated, but the candidates coming for baptism entered into initiation not knowing what exactly would be done to them. While a robust curriculum of catechumenal instruction—normally a sequential explanation of the Nicene Creed—did precede the rites of initiation, instruction on the sacraments themselves had to wait until the candidates had experienced these first-hand. Only then could the neophytes understand their meaning. Though there were different approaches to this practice in the early church depending on regional traditions, it is worth noting the conviction among those who adhered to the disciplina arcani that the sacraments themselves performed a vital function in preparing a person to receive knowledge of, and communion with, heavenly things.
¹²
Among our four mystagogues, Ambrose and Cyril followed the discipline of secrecy, while the Antiochenes, Chrysostom, and Theodore included mystagogical teaching in the pre-baptismal catechesis.
¹³
The reason for the Antiochene inclusion of mystagogy before baptism was not due to any notion that a rational assent or full cognitive grasp of the meanings of the rites was prerequisite for participation in them. Chrysostom, for instance, explains that his reason for informing the candidates of what they are about to experience is so that they will be carried on by the wings of hope and enjoy the pleasure
of heavenly things.
¹⁴
In this he is in company with Cyril, who intends in his mystagogy, as he says above, to set for his hearers a board of more perfect instruction.
The operative imagery in Cyril’s explanation is not intellectual, but gastral—a τράπεζα: a table, or a feast!
¹⁵
I will leave the point here, but the idea that the aim of mystagogical learning is joy and delight, rather than information-acquisition, will be revisited throughout.
Chōrētikos theou
Returning to the notion of capacity, I want to attend to Cyril’s phrase regarding the receptivity to heavenly mysteries that, he claims, the neophytes have acquired through initiation: you have been made fit to receive the more sacred Mysteries.
¹⁶
The Greek reads: τε καὶ χωρητικοὶ τῶν θειοτέρων κατέστητε μυστηρίων.
¹⁷
The term Cyril uses, translated by R. W. Church as fit to receive,
is χωρητικός (chōrētikos), which literally means able to contain,
or having the capacity
for something. Straightforwardly, Cyril simply means to say that after initiation the neophytes were able, or rather allowed, to participate in and hear about the hidden parts of Christian worship. Though Cyril does not dwell upon the word in any deliberate way, I propose to take his term chōrētikos and the idea of being made fit to receive
the heavenly mysteries as the central theme of this work. I will argue that the greater end for the sake of which Cyril and his fellow mystagogues undertake the task of instruction is uniquely signalled in the concept of chōrētikos. The end, or telos, of the sacraments and the mystagogy that interprets them is that humanity is made fit to receive
heavenly mysteries. In initiation, one is made capacious: receptive, open, worthy, sensitive, and susceptible to the transfiguration of our nature that draws us into and fits us for union with the divine.
This capacitation occurs in the sacraments, which are as irrevocably tied to materiality and creatureliness as they are to Christology. The baptismal candidates put on Christ,
recapitulate His passion, and come into union with Him in the humble mundanity of water, oil, bread, and wine. In the liturgy, there is a sense in which all of creation is entailed in this salvific movement toward heavenly things. And, thus, the notion of capacitation also reflects upon the order and end of creatureliness itself, and the order and end of human knowledge. And, indeed, I will argue that chōrētikos signals the teleological principle that underlies both learning and creation itself. I propose that creaturehood, knowledge, and the particularity of mystagogical teaching relate to each other and are intelligible within this overarching grace of capacitation.
It is not, we should note, that one is educated into a fitness to receive.
As Cyril says, it is in the sacraments, by which humanity is united to Christ, that one is made fit to receive the more sacred mysteries.
¹⁸
Mystagogical instruction serves the receptivity of the baptized to that receptivity which is a divine gift. The theology of learning that I offer here will thus articulate what it means for humanity to become chōrētikos theou: capable of receiving God.
At the root of the word chōrētikos is chōra/chōros: place or space. Although the word chōrētikos itself does not appear in scripture, the seeds of early Christian discussions around capacity for God lie in the biblical metaphors of becoming a dwelling place or vessel of God’s presence: new wineskins to hold new wine (Matt 9:17), the body as a temple of the Holy Spirit (1 Cor 6:19), treasure held in jars of clay (2 Cor 4:7), the body filled with light (Matt 6:22; Luke 11:34). The verb chōreō (to contain
) does appear in scripture. Aside from its literal usage (e.g., the ten stone jars at the wedding at Cana containing water for purification, or John’s Gospel’s concluding comment that the world could not contain enough books to record all of Jesus’ deeds), chōreō features in relation to the idea of being capable of receiving a difficult teaching or the call to repentance: e.g., in Matt 19:11–12, Jesus says, The one who is able to accept this [word], let him accept it
(ὁ δυνάμενος χωρεῖν χωρείτω), and 2 Pet 3:9 says that God does not delay in His promises, but wills that all may come to repentance
(εἰς μετάνοιαν χωρῆσαι).
In Classical Greek philosophy, chōrētikos featured, especially when paired with anthrōpos, to highlight the unique intellective capacity of human nature. Unlike other animals, humans have the capacity for speech and reason, being chōrētikos logismou.
¹⁹
While the Greek philosophical concept tended to be somewhat dualistic, focussing on the potentialities of the intellect in opposition to the merely animal
faculties of the body, the early Christian understanding affirmed a sense of the noble calling and capacity of the body to receive the grace of salvation. This was intimately tied to the eucharistic theology of the early church and to the Christian commitment to the doctrine of bodily resurrection.
In the second century, Irenaeus wrote concerning the capacity
of the flesh to receive resurrection. He argued that flesh (sarx) is capable
(epidektikos) of both corruption and incorruption, of life and of death,
²⁰
and that the same flesh that God creates and sustains by His wisdom is also capable of receiving
(chōrētikos) the divine power of resurrection.
²¹
Writing in the third century, Origen introduced the compound term chōrētikos theou to speak of the possibility of becoming capable of God.
²²
For Origen, this possibility related closely with contemplation and spiritual knowledge; and he was thus somewhat less positive in his estimation of the body’s participation in capacity for God.
²³
The mystagogues, on the other hand, express a fundamental confidence that the body, no less than the mind or the spirit, can be made-capable of communion with God.
I do not intend to argue for any conceptual or etymological genealogy directly linking the concept through Irenaeus, Origen, and the fourth-century mystagogues, but simply to say that the question of having, acquiring, and training one’s receptivity to God was in the water, so to speak, when these catecheses were written. It serves in the present work not as a textual inquiry, but rather as a thematic anchor. I endeavor to show how the mystagogues concern themselves not merely with information-delivery or ritual exegesis, but with chōrētik-izing: with tending and guiding all the faculties of our human nature to receive God. My investigation will highlight the ways in which each of the four mystagogues turn their teachings to this end and how mystagogy, when read in terms of divine capacitation, reveals a set of fundamentally Christian intuitions regarding creation, embodiment, knowledge, and theōsis.
Already is there on you the savor of blessedness
While the mystagogues’ catecheses are explicitly about the sacraments as those indispensable mysterious acts whereby humanity is joined to Christ, they also contain a profound affirmation of the role of creation in that movement toward divine communion. In a way, mystagogy bears, alongside its explicit exegesis of the liturgy, a parallel and implicit exegesis of creation itself; one that reveals the created order as essentially entailed in the gift of theōsis. The education of mystagogy has something to say about the nature of creatureliness, just as it has something to say about the nature of blessedness. And the mystery of learning, I suggest, resides precisely in the space (chōra) between these two.
The profound sense of the entailment of creation in theōsis is an aspect of early Christian mystagogy that is often passed over or altogether missed in the academic discourse, which tends to be more interested in analyses of liturgical provenance and doctrinal development, and I intend to afford this affirmation the careful attention it has generally lacked. I seek to highlight how the telos of capacitation for divine communion is constituent in the character of mystagogical pedagogy itself, how it is written into the very logic of creation, and how creation and earthly knowing mediate and participate in the grace of theōsis. The mystagogies alert us to how truly comprehensive the grace of coming-to-know God really is.
The gift of transfiguration that makes humanity chōrētikos theou is both an extrinsic gift of divine grace, making us capable of receiving realities inestimably beyond our nature, and also an indigenous anticipation written into our natural faculties and pervading all of creation. In the mystagogies of Ambrose, Cyril, Chrysostom, and Theodore we can observe the interplay between their repeated appeals to analogies from nature and their fundamental focus on Christ and the paschal mystery. The sacraments are explicitly and indissolubly about Christ, about His passion and His resurrection; and yet, they are intimately about creation too, precisely because they are about Christ, by Whom, through Whom, and for Whom all things were made.
Here again, Cyril affords us a phrase that captures this sensibility. Cyril’s Procatechesis—a homily given just before initiation—opens with these words: Already is there on you the savor of blessedness, O you who are soon to be enlightened, . . . already are you at the entrance-hall of the King’s house, may you be brought into it by the King!
²⁴
I suggest that Cyril’s already is there on you the savor of blessedness
provides an image of mystagogy’s confidence in the prevenience of pedagogy—the propaedeutic heart of the created order, in which lies the rudimentary instruction of humanity through the senses of the body. This rudimentary education gives a hint, a scent, or savor,
of the telos of blessedness which trains us to recognize, and whets our desire for, the things of heaven.
²⁵
The itinerary of this book will trace the itinerary of mystagogy, as it interweaves between the already
of creatureliness and the divine work of salvation: the gift of being brought in by the King.
The already
and the being brought in
belong to one gracious, divinizing reality; the latter consummating the former. In the mysteries of the church, the mystery of creation and the mystery of learning are enlisted in God’s salvific work to draw all things to Himself.
Reading mystagogy as the mystagogues read the mysteries
My approach to the mystagogical texts aims to recover and build creatively upon the theological pedagogy of the mystagogues, in content and in form. This book is, therefore, not primarily a work of historical reconstruction. Rather, I approach the mystagogies as sources within which to explore, and out of which to expound, a wider theological sensibility. This extrapolative exercise aims to give an account of the divinizing grace that spans from creation to eschaton and makes humanity chōrētikos theou. This breadth of consideration arises precisely because the mystagogies are commentaries on the sacraments; commentaries on the earthly, ecclesial acts that unite us to Christ. The first object of mystagogical discourse is this union, and second the rites that mediate it.
²⁶
The mystagogues treat the liturgy itself as a pedagogy oriented toward ultimate ends, toward union with Christ. And they read the details of the rites, particularly details of sensation and embodiment, as invitations for wider contemplation on the role of creation and human knowledge in heavenly ends.
Mystagogical exegesis heartily embraces the allegorical—and, in this, it bears distinct affinities with patristic patterns of reading scripture. The mystagogues’ embrace of allegory and analogy as pedagogic and homiletic tools is a formal feature of these texts that I endeavor to emulate in my own reading of their them. The form, or method, of mystagogy, no less than its theological content, conveys a sacramental vision of reality. And so, just as the patristic exegetes felt free to expand theologically on the words and poetics of scripture, and just as the mystagogues felt free to take some detail of the rites as an invitation to launch into a tangential contemplation on divine providence, I, also, will take the invitation of various words and phrases in the mystagogies to offer my own theological contemplations on the sacramentality of learning.
I take these homilies, and the rites they interpret, as sources of a liturgical metaphysic in the light of which the theological nature of knowledge and learning is to be understood. My investigation thus fits most comfortably within the modern theological tradition of ressourcement, having particular affinity with the movement’s orientation toward the retrieval of patristic sources and the constructive re-appropriation of classical metaphysics.
²⁷
I seek to set forth this liturgical metaphysic not only as an artifact of historical theology, but also to bring this perspective into critical and constructive dialogue with modern thought; especially in relation to contemporary understandings of creation, knowledge, and learning. As such, my method and aims also share similarities with the projects of retrieval and critique offered under the banner of Radical Orthodoxy.
²⁸
This book also engages with the growing interest within contemporary patristics and systematic theology in concepts of embodiment, materiality, and sensation, which can be seen in the work of Wendy Mayer, David Grummett, Adam Serfass, and Georgia Frank.
²⁹
Chapter outline: the capacitation of the senses
The divine capacitation of our nature for union with God, which humanity receives in the mundanity of the sacraments, affirms the gracious entailment of matter in the gift of salvation. And, particularly in the mystagogies, we also see an affirmation of the mediative role of the senses. Union with God is the consummation of our nature—even and especially our bodiliness—rather than an escape from it. If union with God is the consummation of human being, then it is equally the ultimate end of human knowing. Learning and knowing are thus primarily intelligible within the grace of capacitation for union. I propose, therefore, to read the ritual journey of initiation as a parallel analogy for the journey of knowledge. The movement toward Christ in the sacraments, ritually performed and mystagogically interpreted, affords a hermeneutic that helps to uncover the theological nature and end of learning.
The theology of learning that I will sketch in the following chapters suggests that the telos of union with God, styled strikingly in the mystagogies as an embrace, is a reality that penetrates and beckons through the entire order of our nature, through every faculty.
³⁰
Thus, I will consider initiation as, in one sense, the capacitation of our senses for the most sacred mysteries.
I will trace the mystagogical progression through the rites alongside a parallel progression through the capacitation of our senses for union with Christ.
³¹
My argument will not focus solely on the physical senses, but will consider more broadly the capacitation of all our human faculties—those of the body and the intellect. There are four faculties
or senses that I will take as themes in the first four chapters of this book: hearing, speech, sight, and touch. I explore these sensory themes in terms of their literal, embodied order, and also as symbolic expressions of intellective knowledge. For instance, my discussion of sight will consider seeing
in terms of physical sight, but also in terms of knowing—to perceive and to understand—and I will explore how these capacities are made capable-of-receiving Christ. The four faculties I take as themes will be paired alongside four stages of initiation: the pre-baptismal rite of the opening
(the Ephphatha); the renunciation of the devil and adherence to Christ; baptism, robing, and anointing; and, finally, the eucharist.
Chapter 1 explores the capacitation of hearing alongside the pre-baptismal rite called the Ephphatha, or the opening.
This rite, found only in the Latin tradition, is performed to open the ears and mouths of the candidates, enabling them to participate in the baptismal rite, and, as Ambrose says, to hear and speak of the heavenly mysteries.
³²
In this chapter, I consider what it means for the ears to become chōrētikos theou, capable of receiving God. What anticipatory clues lie in the ordinary, earthly order of hearing that might echo and participate in the end of hearing Christ the Word? This chapter explores how hearing relates to humanity’s knowledge of God and of creation. I propose that the baptized are opened
to Christ the Word not merely in an abstract, spiritualized, sense, but in a sacramental sense that turns even our earthly hearing toward divine speech and attunes us to the eschatological. The opening of the ears includes being opened and restored to the logocity
of being; that is, the communicative and pedagogical essence of creation, grounded in its participation in the divine Logos.
In chapter 2, I consider the capacitation of speech alongside the rite of renunciation and adherence, or the apotaxis and syntaxis. Here I highlight Chrysostom’s teaching that, through initiation, the baptizands gain a divinely-empowered confidence
or freedom of speech.
Chrysostom uses the word parrhēsia to describe the freedom and confidence received through initiation. He says that the baptized are freed from the diabolical servitude that had rendered humanity unable to speak
(aparrhēsia). In the rite of renunciation and adherence, the candidates renounce the devil and speak words of allegiance to Christ; and they do this with their voices and their bodies in collaboration with the order of nature. This chapter establishes how the capacitation of speech extends beyond the formally linguistic to include the speechfullness
of the body and of the wider created order. It explores the relationship between speech and truth—logos and aletheia—and how, in the liturgy, this relationship is drawn toward its fulfillment when the human logos is employed for words of union and words of eschatological participation.
Chapter 3 considers the capacitation of sight in relation to baptism and illumination.
In this chapter, I again highlight a particular phrase from Chrysostom’s mystagogy. Chrysostom says that the grace given in baptism enables the illumined to see things as they really are,
met’ akribeia—which translates as with precision.
This chapter presents illumination in terms of acquiring a Christologically anchored precision
of knowledge founded in the theophanic truth of Christ and as an unveiling of the sacramental epiphany of creation. In my reading of the mystagogues’ interpretations of the white baptismal robes, I argue that illumination involves not only an empowerment of sight and knowledge, but, ultimately, the drawing of the baptized into the divine Light of Christ itself, the divine radiance and clarity of the Son.
Chapter 4 considers the capacitation of touch in relation to the eucharist. This chapter reflects on touch as the fundamental sense, following Aristotle. In the intimate embrace of Christ in the eucharist we discover what sensation is for. Here, I highlight the mystagogues’ preference for nuptial analogies, and I argue that this joyful and consummatory intimacy with Christ also models the true end of knowledge. In the mystagogues’ teachings on the epiclesis, and the touch of the Holy Spirit that transforms the elements of bread and wine, we encounter capacitation in terms of humanity likewise being transformed and made-fitting for union with the divine.
In these first four chapters, I assemble a series of theological intuitions that mystagogy imparts concerning the order and end of creation, and the order and end of human knowing. In these we discern the mystagogical understanding of learning. Epistemology, interpreted through the framework of the liturgy, becomes part of the capacitation for heavenly mysteries that Cyril spoke of. Earthly learning is a movement toward communion with Christ, in Whom, and for Whom all things were made; and initiation is to come to know
Christ in the intimacy of union. The mystagogues operate out of a liturgical and sacramental metaphysic that sees coming-to-know, or learning, as intelligible only within a greater order of divine providence that suffuses and moves creation toward beatitude and that authors and consummates the indigenous capacities of creatureliness.
This sacramental, participatory, and eschatologically oriented vision of learning diverges markedly from the ontological and epistemological commitments that dominate modern and postmodern metaphysics. Thus, the final chapter of