Problems of Religious Language
Problems of Religious Language
Contemporary work in the philosophy of religion has been much occupied with
problems created by the distinctively religious uses of language. The discussions
generally center around one of two main issues. One, which was familiar to medieval
thinkers and which is being actively investigated with new philosophical techniques
today, concerns the special sense that descriptive terms bear when they are applied to
God. The other question, which also has a long history but which has been given fresh
sharpness and urgency by contemporary analytical philosophy, is concerned with the
basic function of religious language. In particular, do those religious statements that
have the form of factual assertions (for example, "God loves mankind") refer to a
special kind of fact -- religious as distinguished from scientific fact -- or do they fulfill
a different function altogether? These questions will be discussed in the order in
which they have just been mentioned. It is obvious that many, perhaps all, of the terms
that are applied in religious discourse to God are being used in special ways, differing
from their use in ordinary mundane contexts. For example, when it is said that "Great
is the Lord," it is not meant that God occupies a large volume of space; when it is said
that "the Lord spake unto Joshua," it is not meant that God has a physical body with
speech organs which set in motion sound waves which impinged upon Joshua's
eardrums. When it is said that God is good, it is not meant that there are moral values
independent of the divine nature, in relation to which God can be judged to be good;
nor does it mean (as it commonly does of human beings) that God is subject to
temptations but succeeds in overcoming them. There has clearly been a long shift of
meaning between the familiar secular use of these words and their theological
employment.
It is also clear that in all those cases in which a word occurs both in secular and in
theological contexts, its secular meaning is primary in the sense that it developed first
and has accordingly determined the definition of the word. The meaning that such a
term bears when it is applied to God is an adaptation of its secular use. Consequently,
although the ordinary, evevyday, meaning of such words as "good," "loving,"
"forgives," "commands," "hears," "speaks," "wills," and "purposes" is relatively
unproblematic, the same terms raise a multitude of questions when applied to God. To
take a single example, love (whether eros or agape) is expressed in behavior in the
speaking of words of love, and in a range of actions from lovemaking to the various
forms of practical and sacrificial caring. But God is said to be "without body, parts, or
passions." God has then, it would seem, no local existence or bodily presence through
which to express love. But what is disembodied love, and how can we ever know that
it exists? Parallel questions arise in relation to the other divine attributes.
THE DOCTRINE OF ANALOGY (AQUINAS)
The great Scholastic thinkers were well aware of this problem and developed the idea
of analogy to meet it. The doctrine of "analogical predication" as it occurs in
Aquinas1 and his commentator Cajetan,2 and as it has been further elaborated and
variously criticized in modern times, is too complex a subject to be discussed in detail
within the plan of this book. However, Aquinas's basic and central idea is not difficult
to grasp. He teaches that when a word such as "good" is applied both to a created
being and to God, it is not being used univocally (that is, with exactly the same
meaning) in the two cases. God is not good in identically the sense in which human
beings may be good. Nor, on the other hand, do we apply the epithet "good" to God
and man equivocally (that is, with completely different and unrelated meanings), as
when the word "bat" is used to refer both to the flying animal and to the instrument
used in baseball. There is a definite connection between divine and human goodness,
reflecting the fact that God has created mankind. According to Aquinas, then, "good"
is applied to creator and creature neither univocally nor equivocally
but analogically. What this means will appear if we consider first ananalogy
"downwards" from man to a lower form of life. We sometimes say of a pet dog that it
is faithful, and we may also describe a man as faithful. We use the same word in each
case because of a similarity between a certain quality exhibited in the behavior of the
dog and the steadfast voluntary adherence to a person or a cause that we call
faithfulness in a human being. Because of this similarity, we are not using the word
"faithful" equivocally (with totally different senses). On the other hand, there is an
immense difference in quality between a dog's attitudes and a person's. The one is
indefinitely superior to the other in respect of responsible, self-conscious deliberation
and the relating of attitudes to moral purposes and ends. Because of this difference,
we are not using "faithful" univocally (in exactly the same sense). We are using it
analogically, to indicate that at the level of the dog's consciousness there is a quality
that corresponds to what at the human level we call faithfulness. There is a
recognizable likeness in structure attitudes or patterns of behavior that causes us to
use the same word for both animals and people. Nevertheless, human faithfulness
differs from canine faithfulness to all the wide extent that a person differs from a dog.
There is thus both similarity within difference and difference within similarity of the
kind that led Aquinas to speak of the analogical use of the same term in two very
different contexts.
In the case of our analogy downwards, true or normative faithfulness is that which we
know directly in ourselves, and the dim and imperfect faithfulness of the dog is
known only by analogy. However, in the case of the analogy upwards from humanity
to God the situation is reversed. It is our own directly known goodness, love, wisdom,
and so on that are the thin shadows and remote approximations, and the perfect
qualities of the Godhead that are known to us only by analogy. Thus, when we say
that God is good, we are saying that there is a quality of the infinitely perfect Being
that corresponds to what at our own human level we call goodness. In this case, it is
the divine goodness that is the true, normative, and unbroken reauty, whereas human
life shows at best a taint, fragmentary, and distorted reflection of this quality. Only in
God can the perfections of being occur in their true and unfractured nature: only God
knows loves, and is righteous and wise in the full and proper sense.
Since the deity is hidden from us, the question arises of how we can know what
goodness and the other divine attributes are in God. How do we know what perfect
goodness and wisdom are like? Aquinas's answer is that we do not know. As used by
him, the doctrine of analogy does not profess to spell out the concrete character of
God's perfections, but only to indicate the relation between the different meanings of a
word when it is applied both to humanity and (on the basis of revelation) to God.
Analogy is not an instrument for exploring and mapping the infinite divine nature; it is
a account of the way in which terms are used of the Deity whose existence is at this
point, being presupposed. The doctrine of analogy provides a framework for certain
limited statements about God without infringing upon the agnosticism, and the sense
of the mystery of the divine being, which have always characterized Christian and
Jewish thought at their best. The conviction that it is possible to talk about God, yet
that such talk can be carried to its destination only on the back of the distant analogy
between the Creator and his creatures, is vividly expressed by the Catholic lay
theologian, Baron von Hugel (1852-1925).3 He speaks of the faint, dim, and confused
awareness that a dog has of its master, and continues as follows:
The source and object of religion, if religion be true and its object be real, cannot
indeed, by any possibility, be as clear to me even as I am to my doe. For the cases we
have considered deal with realities inferior to our own reality (material objects, or
animals), or with realities level to our own reality (fellow human beings), or with
realities no higher above ourselves than are we, finite human beings, to our very finite
dogs. Whereas, in the case of religion -- if religion be right -- we apprehend and
affirm realities indefinitely superior in quality and amount of reality to ourselves, and
which, nevertheless (or rather, just because of this), anticipate, penetrate, and sustain
us with a quite unpicturable intimacy. The obscurity of my life to my dog, must thus
be greatly exceeded by the obscurity of the life of God to me. indeed the obscurity of
plant life -- so obscure for my mind, because so indefinitely inferior and poorer than is
my human life -- must be greatly exceeded by the dimness, tor my human life, of God
-- of His reality and life, so different and superior, so unspeakably more rich and alive,
than is, or ever can be, my own life and reality.4
1 Summa Theologica, Part I, Question 13, Art 5, Summa Contra Gentiles, Book 1,
Chaps. 28-34.
2 Thomas De Vio, Cardinal Caietan. The Analog of Names, 1506, 2nd ed. (Pittsburgh.
Duquesne University Press, 1959).
3 Friedrich von Hugel's principal works are The Mystical Element in Religion and
Eternal Life, and the two volumes of Essays and Addresses on the Philosophy of
Religion, each of which is a major classic on its subject.
4 Friedrich von Hugel, Essays and Addresses on the Philosophy of Religion, First
Series (New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc, and London: J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd.,
1921), pp. 102-3.
An important element in the thought of Paul Tillich is his doctrine of the "symbolic"
nature of religious language.5 Tillich distinguishes between a sign and a symbol. Both
point to something else beyond themselves. But a sign signifies that to which it points
by arbitrary convention -- as for instance, when the red light at the street corner
signifies that drivers are ordered to halt. In contrast to this purely external connection,
a symbol "participates in that to which it points."6 To use Tillich's example, a flag
participates in the power and dignity of the nation that it represents. Because of this
inner connection with the reality symbolized, symbols are not arbitrarily instituted,
like conventional signs, but "grow out of the individual or collective
unconscious"7 and consequently have their own span of life and (in some cases) their
decay and death. A symbol "opens up levels of reality which otherwise are closed to
us" and at the same time "unlocks dimensions and elements of our
soul"8 corresponding to the new aspects of the world that it reveals. The clearest
instances of this twofold function are provided by the arts, which "create symbols for
a level of reality which cannot be reached in any other way,"9 at the same time
opening up new sensitivities and powers of appreciation in ourselves.
Tillich holds that religious faith, which is the state of being "ultimately concerned"
about the ultimate, can express itself only in symbolic language. "Whatever we say
about that which concerns us ultimately, whether or not we call it God, has a symbolic
meaning. It points beyond itself while participating in that to which it points. In no
other way can faith express itself adequately. The language of faith is the language of
symbols."10
There is, according to Tillich, one and only one literal, nonsymbolic statement that
can be made about the ultimate reality which religion calls God -- that God is Being-
itself. Beyond this, all theological statements -- such as that God is eternal, living,
good, personal, that God is the Creator and that God loves all creatures -- are
symbolic:
There can be no doubt that any concrete assertion about God must be symbolic, for a
concrete assertion is one which uses a segment of finite experience in order to say
something about him. It transcends the content of this segment, although it also
includes it. The segment of finite reality which becomes the vehicle of a concrete
assertion about God is affirmed and negated at the same time. It becomes a symbol,
for a symbolic expression is one whose proper meaning is negated by that to which it
points. And yet it also is affirmed by it, and this affirmation gives the symbolic
expression an adequate basis for pointing beyond itself.11
Tillich's conception of the symbolic character of religious language can -- like many
of his central ideas -- be developed in either of two opposite directions, and it is
presented by Tillich in the body of his writings as whole in such a way as to preserve
its ambiguity and flexibility. We shall, at this point, consider Tillich's doctrine in its
theistic development, indicating in a later section, in connection with the view of J. H.
Randall. Jr.. how it can also be developed naturalistically.12
Used in the service of Judaic-Christian theism, the negative aspect of Tillich's doctrine
of religious symbols corresponds to the negative aspect of the doctrine of analogy.
Tillich is insisting that we do not use human language literally, or univocally, when
we speak of the ultimate. Because our terms can be derived only from our own finite
human experience, they cannot be adequate to apply to God; when they are used
theologically, their meaning is always partially "negated by that to which they point."
Religiously, this doctrine constitutes a warning against the idolatry of thinking of God
as merely a greatly rmagnified human being (anthropomorphism).
These are some of the many questions that Tillich's position raises. In default of
answers to such questions, Tillich's teaching, although valuably suggestive, scarcely
constitutes at this point a fully articulated philosophical position.
6 Paul Tillich, Dynamics of Faith (New York: Harper & Row, Publishers), p. 42
7 Ibid, p 43.
8 Ibid, p 42.
9 Ibid, p 42.
10 Ibid, p. 45.
It is claimed by some that the doctrine of the Incarnation (which together with all that
follows from it distinguishes Christianity from Judaism) offers the possibility of a
partial solution to the problem of theological meaning. There is a long-standing
distinction between the metaphysical attributes of God (aseity, eternity, infinity, etc.)
and God's moral attributes (goodness, love, wisdom, etc.). The doctrine of the
Incarnation involves the claim that the moral (but not the metaphysical) attributes of
God have been embodied, so far as this is possible, in a finite human life, namely that
of the Christ. This claim makes it possible to point to the person of Christ as showing
what is meant by assertions such as "God is good" and "God loves his human
creatures." The moral attitudes of God toward mankind are held to have been
incarnated in Jesus and expressed concretely in his dealings with men and women.
The Incarnation doctrine involves the claim that, for example, Jesus' compassion for
the sick and the spiritually blind was God's compassion for them; his forgiving of sins,
God's forgiveness; and his condemnation of the self-righteously religious, God's
condemnation of them. On the basis of this belief, the life of Christ as depicted in the
New Testament provides a foundation for statements about God. From God's attitudes
in Christ toward a random assortment of men and women in first-century Palestine, it
is possible to affirm, for example, that God's love is continuous in character with that
displayed in the life of Jesus.14
The doctrine of the Incarnation is used in relation to the same problem in a somewhat
different way by Ian Crombie. "What we do [he says in the course of an illuminating
discussion ot the problem of theological meaning] is in essence to think of God in
parables." He continues as follows:
The things we say about God are said on the authority of the words and acts of Christ,
who spoke in human language, using parable; and so we too speak of God in parable
-- authoritative parable, authorized parable; knowing that the truth is not literally that
which our parables represent, knowing therefore that now we see in a glass darkly, but
trusting, because we trust the source of the parables, that in believing them ana
interpreting them in the light of each other we shall not be misled, that we shall have
such knowledge as we need to possess for the foundation of the religious life.15
14 For a criticism of this view, see Ronald Hepburn, Christianity and Paradox, Chap.
5.
When we assert what we take to be a fact (or deny what is alleged to be a fact), we are
using language cognitively. "The population of China is 800,000,000," "This is a hot
summer," "Two plus two equal four," "He is not here" are cognitive utterances.
Indeed, we can define a^cognitive (or informative or indicative) sentence as one that
is either, true or jalse. |
There are other types of utterance, which are neither true nor false because they fulfill
a different function from that of endeavoring to describe facts. We do not ask of a
swearword, or a command, or the baptismal formula whether it is true. The function
of the swearword is to vent one's feelings; of the command, to direct someone's
actions; of "I baptize thee . . . ," to perform a baptism. The question arises whether
theological sentences such as "God loves mankind" are cognitive or noncognitive.
This query at once divides into two: (1) Are such sentences intended by their users to
be construed cognitively? (2) Is their logical character such that they can, in fact,
regardless of intention, be either true or false? The first of these questions will be
discussed in the present and the second in the following chapter.
There is no doubt that as a matter of historical fact religious people have normally
believed such statements as "God loves mankind" to be not only cognitive but also
true. Without necessarily pausing to consider the difference between religious facts
and the facts disclosed through sense perception and the sciences, ordinary believers
within the Judaic-Christian tradition have assumed that there are religious realities and
facts and that their own religious convictions are concerned with such.
Today, however, a growing number of theories treat religious language as
noncognitive. Three of these theories, of somewhat different types, will be described
in this and the next two sections. A clear statement of the first type comes from T. H.
Randall, Jr. in his book, The Role of Knowledge in Western Religion.16 His exposition
indicates, incidentally, how a view of religious symbols that is very close to Tillich's
can be used in the service of naturalism.17
Randall conceives of religion as a human activity which, like its compeers, science
and art makes its own special contribution to human culture. The distinctive material
with which religion works is a body of symbols and myths. "What is important to
recognize [says Randall] is that religious symbols belong with social and artistic
symbols, in the group of symbols that are both nonrepresentative and noncognitive.
Such noncognitive symbols can be said to symbolize not some external thing that can
be indicated apart from their operation, but rather what they themselves do, their
peculiar functions."18
According to Randall, religious symbols have a fourfold function. First, they arouse
the emotions and stir people to actions; they may thereby strengthen people's practical
commitment to what they believe to be right. Second, they stimulate cooperative
action and thus bind a community together through a common response to its
symbols. Third, they are able to communicate qualities of experience that cannot be
expressed by the literal use of language. Fourth, they both evoke and serve to foster
and clarify the human experience of an aspect of the world that can be called the
"order of splendor" or the Divine. In describing this last function of religious symbols,
Randall develops an aesthetic analogy:
The work of the painter, the musician, the poet, teaches us how to use our eyes, our
ears, our minds, and our feelings with greater power and skill. ... It shows us how to
discern unsuspected qualities in the world encountered, latent powers and possibilities
there resident. Still more, it makes us see the new qualities with which the world, in
cooperation with the spirit of man, can clothe itself. ... Is it otherwise with the prophet
and the saint? They too can do something to us, they too can effect changes in us and
in our world. . . . They teach us how to see what man's life in the world is, and what it
might be. They teach us how to discern what human nature can make out of its natural
conditions and materials. . . . They make us receptive to qualities of the world
encountered; and they open our hearts to the new qualities with which that world, in
cooperation with the spirit of man can clothe itself. They enable us to see and feel the
religious dimension of our world better, the "order of splendor," and of man's
experience in and with it. They teach us how to find the Divine; they show us visions
of God.19
It is to be noted that Randall's position represents a radical departure from the
traditional assumptions of Western religion, for in speaking of "finding the Divine"
and of being shown visions of God," Randall does not mean to imply that God or the
Divine exists as a reality independently of the human mind. He is speaking
"symbolically." God is "our ideals, our controlling values, our 'ultimate concern,'
"20 he is "an intellectual symbol for the religious dimension of the world, for the
Divine."21 This religious dimension is "a quality to be discriminated in human
experience of the world, the splendor of the vision that sees beyond the actual into the
perfected and eternal realm of the imagination."22 This last statement, however, is
enlivened by a philosophic rhetoric which may unintentionally obscure underlying
issues. The products of the human imagination are not eternal; they did not exist
before men and women themselves existed, and they can persist, even as imagined
entities, only as long as men and women exist. The Divine, as defined by Randall, is
the temporary mental construction or projection of a recently emerged animal
inhabiting one of the satellites of a minor star. God is not, according to this view, the
creator and the ultimate ruler of the universe; God is a fleeting ripple of imagination
in a tiny corner of space-time.
Randall's theory of religion and of the function of religious language expresses with
great clarity a way of thinking that in less clearly defined forms is widespread today
and is, indeed, characteristic of our culture. This way of thinking is epitomized in the
way in which the word "religion" (or "faith" used virtually as a synonym) has largely
come to replace the word "God." In contexts in which formerly questions were raised
and debated concerning God, God's existence, attributes, purpose and deeds. the
corresponding questions today typically concern religion, its nature, function, forms,
and pragmatic value. A shift has taken place from the term "God" as the head of a
certain group of words and locutions to the term "religion" as the new head of the
same linguistic family.
There is, accordingly, much talk of religion considered as an aspect of human culture.
As Randall says, "Religion, we now see, is a distinctive human enterprise with a
socially indispensable function of its own to perform."23 In many universities and
colleges there are departments devoted to studying the history and varieties of this
phenomenon and the contribution that it has brought to our culture in general. Among
the ideas treated in this connection, along with cult, priesthood, taboo, and many
others, is the concept of God. For academic study, God is thus conceived as a subtopic
within the larger subject of religion.
This displacement of God by "Religion," as the focus of a wide realm of discourse has
brought with it a change in the character of the questions that are most persistently
asked in this area. Concerning God, the traditional question has naturally been
whether God exists or is real. This is not a question that arises with regard to religion.
It is obvious that religion exists; the important queries concern the purposes that it
serves in human life, whether it ought to be cultivated, and if so, in what directions it
may most profitably be developed. Under the pressure of these concerns, the question
of the truth of religious beliefs has fallen into the background and the issue of their
practical usefulness has come forward instead to occupy the center of attention.
In the perspective of history, is this pragmatic emphasis a surrogate for the older
conception of objective religious realities, a substitute natural to an age of waning
faith? Such a diagnosis is suggested by the observations of the agnostic, John Stuart
Mill, in his famous essay on The Utility of Religion:
If religion, or any particular form of it, is true, its usefulness follows without other
proof. If to know authentically in what order of things, under what government of the
universe it is our destiny to live, were not useful, it is difficult to imagine what could
be considered so. Whether a person is in a pleasant or in an unpleasant place, a palace
or a prison, it cannot be otherwise than useful to him to know where he is. So long,
therefore, as men accepted the teachings of their religion as positive facts, no more a
matter of doubt than their own existence or the existence of the objects around them,
to ask the use of believing it could not possibly occur to them. The utility of religion
did not need to be asserted until the arguments for its truth had in a great measure
ceased to convince. People must either have ceased to believe, or have ceased to rely
on the belief of others, before they could take that inferior ground of defence without
a consciousness of lowering what they were endeavouring to raise. An argument for
the utility of religion is an appeal to unbelievers, to induce them to practice a well
meant hypocrisy, or to semi-believe to make them avert their eyes from whar might
possibly shake their unstable belief, or finally to persons in general to abstain from
expressing any doubts they may feel, since a fabric of immense importance to
mankind is so insecure at its foundations that men must hold their breath in its
neighbourhood for fear of blowing it down.24
Mill's words refer to mid-nineteenth-century England, which happens to have had
much in common religiously with contemporary American society. One also recalls
the critical remark of Bertrand Russell (also a nineteenth-century rationalist, although
he happily lived on into the second half of the twentieth century): "I can respect the
men who argue that religion is true and therefore ought to be believed, but I can feel
only profound reprobation for those who say that religion ought to be believed
because it is useful, and that to ask whether it is true is a waste of time."25
Comparing this current emphasis upon utility rather than truth with the thought of the
great biblical exemplars of faith, we are at once struck by a startling reversal. There is
a profound difference between serving and worshiping God and being "interested in
religion." God, if God is real, is our Creator, infinitely superior to ourselves, in worth
as well as in power, One "in whose eyes all hearts are open, all desires known, and
from whom no secrets are hid." On the other hand, religion stands before us as one of
the various concerns that we may, at our own option, choose to pursue. In dealing
with religion and the religions, we occupy the appraiser's role, and God is subsumed
within that which we appraise. There need be no bareing of one's life before divine
judgment and mercy. We can deal instead with religion, within which God is an idea,
a concept whose history we can trace, and which we can analyze, define, and even
revise. God is not, as in biblical thought, the living Lord of heaven and earth before
whom men and women bow down in awe to worship and rise up with joy to serve.
The historical sources of the now prevalent and perhaps even dominant view of
religion as essentially an aspect of human culture are fairly evident. This view of
religion represents a logical development, within an increasingly technological
society, of what has been variously called scientism, positivism, and naturalism. This
development is based upon the assumption -- engendered by the tremendous,
dramatic, and still accelerating growth of scientific knowledge and achievement -- that
the truth concerning any aspect or alleged aspect of reality is to be found by the
application of the methods of scientific investigation to the relevant phenomena. God
is not a phenomenon available for scientific study, but religion is. There can be a
history, a phenomenology, a psychojogy, a sociology, and a comparative stndy of
religion. Hence, religion has become an object of intensive investigation and God is
perforce identified as an idea that occurs within this complex phenomenon of religion.
20 Ibid, p. 33.
21 Ibid, p. 112.
22 Ibid., p. 119.
23 Ibid., p. 6.
25 Bertrand Russell, Why I Am Not a Christian (London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd.,
1957), p. 172 (New York: Simon & Schuster, Inc., 1957), p. 197.
A second theory of the function of religion that asserts the noncognitive character of
religous language was offered by R. B. Braithwaite.26 He suggests that religious
assertions serve primarily an ethical function. The purpose of ethical statements is,
according to Braithwaite, to express the, speaker's adherence to a certain policy of
action; they express "the intention of the asserter to act in a particular sort of way
specified in the assertion . . . when a man asserts that he ought to do so-and-so, he is
using the assertion to declare that he resolves, to the best of his ability, to do so-and-
so."27 Thereby, of course, the speaker also recommends this way of behaving to
others. Religious statements, likewise, express and recommend a commitment to a
certain general policy or way of life. For example, a Christian's assertion that God is
love (agape) is the speaker's indication of "intention to follow an agapeistic way of
life."28
Braithwaite next raises the question: when two religions (say Christianity and
Buddhism) recommend essentially the same policy for living, in what sense are they
different religions? There are, of course, wide divergences of ritual, but these, in
Braithwaite's view, are relatively unimportant. The significant distinction lies in the
different sets of stories (or myths or parables) that are associated in the two religions
with adherence to their way of life.
It is not necessary, according to Braithwaite, that these stories be true or even that
they be believed to be true. The connection between religious stories and the religious
way of life is "a psychological and causal one. It is an empirical psychological fact
that many people find it easier to resolve upon and to carry through a course of action
which is contrary to their natural inclinations if this policy is associated in their minds
with certain stories. And in many people the psychological link is not appreciably
weakened by the fact that the story associated with the behavior policy is not believed.
Next to the Bible and the Prayer Book the most influential work in English Christian
religious life has been a book whose stories are frankly recognized as fictitious --
Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress."29
In summary, Braithwaite states, "A religious assertion, for me, is the assertion of an
intention to carry out a certain behavior policy, subsumable under a sufficiently
general principle to be a moral one, together with the implicit or explicit statement,
but not the assertion, of certain stories."30
2. The ethical theory upon which Braithwaite bases his account of religious language
holds that moral assertions are expressions of the asserter's intention to act in the way
specified in the assertion. For example, "Lying is wrong" means "I intend never to
lie." If this were so, it would follow that it would be logically impossible to intend to
act wrongly. "Lying is wrong, but I intend to tell a lie" would be a sheer contradiction,
equivalent to "I intend never to lie (= lying is wrong) but I intend to lie." This
consequence conflicts with the way in which we actually speak in ethical contexts;
sometimes people do knowingly intend to act wrongly.
3. The Christian stories to which Braithwaite refers in the course of his lecture are of
very diverse logical types. They include straightforward historical statements about
the life of Jesus, mythological expressions of belief in creation and a final judgment,
and belief in the existence of God. Of these, only the first category appears to fit
Braithwaite's own definition of a story as "a proposition or set of propositions which
are straightforwardly empirical propositions capable of empirical test."31 Statements
such as "God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself" or "God loves mankind"
do not constitute staries in Braithwaite's sense. Thus, his category of religious stories
takes account only of one relatively peripheral type of religious statement; it is unable
to accommodate those central, more directly and distinctively religious statements that
refer to God. To a great extent it is people's beliefs about God that impel them to an
agapeistic way of life. Yet, these most important beliefs remain unanalyzed, for they
cannot be placed in the only category that Braithwaite supplies, that of
unproblematically factual beliefs.
4. Braithwaite holds that beliefs about God are relevant to a person's practical
behavior because they provide it with psychological reinforcement. However, another
possible view of the matter is that the ethical significance of these beliefs consists of
the way in which they render a certain way of life both attractive and rational. This
view would seem to be consistent with the character of Jesus' ethical teaching. He did
not demand that people live in a way that runs counter to their deepest desires and that
would thus require some extraordinary counterbalancing inducement. Rather, he
professed to reveal to them the true nature of the world in which they live, and in the
light of this, to indicate the way in which their deepest desires might be fulfilled. In an
important sense, then, Jesus did not propose any new motive for action. He did not set
up a new end to be sought, or a new impulse toward an already familiar end. Instead,
he offered a new vision or mode of apperceiving the world, such that to live rationally
in the world as thus seen is to live in the kind of way he described. He sought to
replace the various attitudes and policies for living which express the sense of
insecurity that is natural enough if the world really is an arena of competing interests
in which each must safeguard oneself and one's own against the rival egoisms of one's
neighbors. If human life is essentially a form of animal life, and human civilization a
refined jungle in which self-concern operates more subtly, but not less surely, than
animal tooth and claw, then the quest for invulnerability in its many guises is entirely
rational. To seek security in the form of power over others, whether physical,
psychological, economic, or political, or in the form of recognition and acclaim,
would then be indicated by the terms of the human situation. Jesus, however, rejected
these attitudes and objectives as being based upon an estimate of the world that is
false because it is atheistic; it assumes that there is no God, or at least none such as
Jesus knew. Jesus was far from being an idealist if by this we mean one who sets up
ideals unrelated to the facts and who recommends that we be guided by them rather
than by the realities of our lives. On the contrary, Jesus was a realist; he pointed to the
life in which the neighbor is valued equally with the self as something indicated by
the actual nature of the universe. He urged people to live in terms of reality. His
morality differed from normal human practice because his view of reality differed
from our normal view of the world. Whereas the ethic of egoism is ultimately
atheistic. Jesus' ethic was radically and consistently theistic. It sets forth the way of
life that is appropriate when God, as depicted by Jesus, is wholeheartedly believed to
be real. The pragmatic and in a sense prudential basis of Jesus' moral teaching is very
clearly expressed in his parable of the two houses built on sand and on rock.32 This
parable claims that the universe is so constituted that to live in the way Jesus has
described is to build one's life upon enduring foundations, whereas to live in the
opposite way is to go "against the grain" of things and to court ultimate disaster. The
same thought occurs in the saying about the two ways, one of which leads to life and
the other to destruction.33 Jesus assumed that his hearers wanted to live in terms of
reality and he was concerned to tell them the true nature of reality. From this point of
view, the agapeistic way of life follows naturally, via the given structure of the human
mind, from belief in the reality of God as Agape. However, belief in the reality, love,
and power of God issues in the agapeistic way of life (like good fruit from a good
tree)34 only if that belief is taken literally and not merely symbolically. In order to
render a distinctive style of life both attractive and rational, it seems that religious
beliefs must be regarded as assertions of fact, not merely as imaginalive fictions.
28 Ibid., p. 18.
29 Ibid., p. 27.
30 Ibid., p. 32.
31 Ibid., p 23.
32 Matthew 7:24f.
33 Matthew 7:13-14.
34 Matthew 7:16f.
A third influential noncognitiye view of religious language derives from the later
philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951) and has been developed by D. Z.
Phillips35 and others. According to this view, different kinds of language, such as the
languages of religion and of science, constitute different "language-games" which are
the linguistic aspects of different "forms of life" To participate wholeheartedly in, say,
the Christian "form of life" is, among other things, to use distinctively Christian
language, which has its own internal criteria determining what is true and false within
this universe of discourse. The internal transactions constituting a given language-
game are thus invulnerable to criticism from outside that particular complex of life
and language -- from which it follows that religious utterances are immune to
scientific and other nonreligious comment.
To say of someone "He'd sell his soul for money" is a perfectly natural remark. It in
no way entails any philosophical theory about a duality in human nature. The remark
is a moral observation about a person, one which expresses the degraded state that
person is in. A man's soul, in this context, refers to his integrity, to the complex set of
practices and beliefs which acting with integrity would cover for that person. Might
not talk about immortality of the soul play a similar role?36
Indeed, according to Phillips:
Eternal life is the reality of goodness, that in terms of which human life is to be
assessed. . . . Eternity is not an extension of this present life, but a mode of judging it.
Eternity is not more life, but this life seen under certain moral and religious modes of
thought. . . . Questions about the immortality of the soul are seen not to be questions
concerning the extent of a man's life, and in particular concerning whether that life
can extend beyond the grave, but questions concerning the kind of life a man is
living.37
The positive moral value of this interpretation lies in the release that it prompts from
concern with the self and its future:
This renunciation [of the idea of a life to come] is what the believer means by dying ]
to the self. He ceases to see himself as the centre of his world. Death's lesson for the
believer is to force him to recognise what all his natural instincts want to resist,
namely, that he has no claims on the way things go. Most of all, he is forced to realise
that his own life is not a necessity.38
On the other hand, it clearly does not follow from the fact that we can be (and indeed
often are) selfishly concerned about a possible future beyond this life, that there is no
such future. In Christian belief, the doctrine of the life to come is grounded, not in
human desires, but in the nature of God, who has created us in the divine image and
whose love will hold us in being beyond the limits of this present life. Having created
men and women with immense potentialities, which only begin to be realized on
earth, God will not drop them, half formed, out of existence. As Martin Luther said,
"Anyone with whom God speaks, whether in wrath or in mercy, the same is certainly
immortal. The Person of God who speaks, and the Word, show that we are creatures
with whom God wills to speaks, right into eternity, and in an immortal manner."39
Indeed, the basic criticism that has been made of the Neo-Wittgensteinian theory of
religious language is that it is not (as it professes to be) an account of normal or
ordinary religious language use but rather is a proposal for a radical new interpretation
of religious utterances. In this new interpretation, religious expressions are
systematically deprived of the cosmic implications that they have always been
assumed to have. Not only is human immortality reinterpreted as a quality of this
present mortal life but, more fundamentally, God is no longer thought of as a reality
existing independently of human belief and disbelief. Rather, as Phillips says, "What
[the believer] learns is religious language; a language which he participates in along
with other believers. What I am suggesting is that to know how to use this language is
to know God."40 Again, "To have the idea of God is to know God."41 The skeptical
possibility for which such a position does not allow is that people have the idea of
God, and participate in theistic language, and yet there is no God.
35 D. Z. Phillips, The Concept of Prayer (London. Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1976
and New York: Seabury Press, Inc , 1981), Faith and Philosophical
Enquiry (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1970); Death and Immortality (London
The Macmillan Company, and New York: St. Martin's Press, 1971); Religion Without
Explanation (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1977).
41 Ibid.. p. 18.