HTS Teologiese Studies/Theological Studies
ISSN: (Online) 2072-8050, (Print) 0259-9422
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Original Research
Christian love in inter-religious perspectives
Author:
Kobus Kruger1
Affiliation:
1
Department of New
Testament, University of the
Free State, South Africa
Corresponding author:
Kobus Kruger,
[email protected]
Dates:
Received: 18 Feb. 2016
Accepted: 08 Aug. 2016
Published: 17 Nov. 2016
How to cite this article:
Kruger, K., 2016, ‘Christian
love in inter-religious
perspective’, HTS Teologiese
Studies/Theological Studies
72(4), a3443. http://dx.doi.
org/10.4102/hts.v72i4.3443
Copyright:
© 2016. The Authors.
Licensee: AOSIS. This work
is licensed under the
Creative Commons
Attribution License.
The article approaches the phenomenon of love from a theoretical perspective in which the
interconnectedness of religions is constitutive of every religion, including Christianity, in its
relative singularity. It explores a historical context in which Christianity with its unique
message of love does not stand alone among the religions of the world, and a theoretical
context that could account for that historical context, without abandoning or diluting the
Christian vision, but enriching it, adding depth to the notion ‘Christianity’ in its most essential
sense. The argument is developed by first introducing seven religious perspectives on love.
This is followed by metaphysical-mystical reflections in which the concept ‘Infinitude’ features.
The argument proceeds concentrically outwards, starting from Christianity as centre, seen as
one magnificent dewdrop reflecting an infinite net of interdependence.
Introduction
In Christian mysticism the Holy One is Love and the process of human sanctification is growth in
love. This article will view the Christian vision of love, as exemplified in St Bernard of Clairvaux
(1090–1153), in a perspective in which the interconnectedness of religions is not a tentative addon, but a point of departure, constitutive of Christianity and its notion of love. It will explore a
historical context in which Christianity with its unique message of love does not stand alone
among the religions of the world, and a theoretical context that could account for that historical
context, without abandoning or diluting the Christian vision, but enriching it, adding depth to the
notion ‘Christianity’ in its most essential sense. This perspective is partly inspired by the fact that
the Second Bi-annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Christian Spirituality (20–24 May
2015) took place in Africa, cradle of humanity as one whole, and by a sense that the mystic urge
includes a longing for all-inclusive comprehensiveness.
First, six views of love in what are sometimes called philosophical religions, and comparable
views in ancient San religion, are presented. Then follow some theoretical reflections, centring in
the notion of ‘Infinitude’, by which is not meant largeness without end, but the lack of defining,
definitive characteristics. The argument will proceed concentrically outwards, starting from
Christianity as centre, seen as one magnificent dewdrop reflecting an infinite net of interdependence.
Comparing religions, philosophies and metaphysical–mystical systems from various cultural
contexts, historical origins and epochs and relating them structurally, requires caution. Seeking to
integrate them in one differentiated whole is daunting. Below, these religions will be interpreted
both ‘intentionally’ and ‘tendentionally’. By ‘intention’ is meant conscious, deliberate directedness
of mind, and by ‘tendention’ drift of mind in a certain direction, perhaps unconsciously, unintendedly.
‘Intention’ is understood to be explicit; ‘tendention’ could be hiddenly implicit. Needless to say, by
‘tendentional’ something vastly different from ‘tendentious’ is meant: a tendentious interpretation
forces itself on a religious tradition; a tendentional interpretation would want to interpret a religion
from within its own deepest assumptions, which is not to deny that a tendentional reading is more
than mere reconstruction and contains an element of transformative creativity.
Historical context
St Bernard of Clairvaux
In all of Christian history there is no loftier spokesperson for love (dilectio, caritas, amor) than St
Bernard of Clairvaux (1090–1153) (cf. Bernard of Clairvaux 1987, 1994; Dreyer 2007; Evans 2000;
Leclercq [1966]1976; McGinn 1994; Pranger 1994; Sommerfeldt 1991; Stiegman 2001) a truly
experiential theologian, a mystic, in the great sense of the word.
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Bernard’s celebration of union between God in Christ and the individual in the Church was
expressed particularly in his 86 Sermones super cantica canticorum. First comes carnal love, then
rational love, then spiritual love; second the love of the slave, then the love of the hireling, then the
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love of the son (Sommerfeldt 1991:110). Spiritual love is a
going out of oneself (ecstasis, excessus), a being raised (raptus)
above the ordinary capabilities of one’s faculties, one’s soul
being entered and taken possession of by God in a union of
love. He utilises the standard map of the soul’s progress
through ascetical purification, virtuous illumination and
loving union; alternatively called contrition, devotion
and piety; or confession (confessio), devotion (devotio) and
contemplation (contemplatio) – the third being the highest and
properly mystical stage. In the analogy of the Song of Songs
these three stages are described as the kiss of the feet
(penitence), the kiss of the hands (active virtue) and the kiss
of the mouth (the personal encounter with the Beloved).
Additionally, he distinguishes four steps in the growth of
love on the human side: love of self for the sake of self; love
of God for the sake of self; love of God for the sake of God;
and love of self for the sake of God (McGinn 1994:183), which
is quintessential Christian sentiment, yet in the mysticisms of
other religious orientations similar roadmaps, comparable
stages of mystical development, have been developed in
other doctrinal settings.
Adhering to the traditional teachings in the Western Church
concerning the Trinity and Christology, Bernard describes
God1 as not only Eternity, but also Infinite Love. God is also
Power and Wisdom; all four integrated as the length, breadth,
height and depth of God. God, the holy origin of all things, is
Love. Love is not a quality of or an accident in God, but the
divine substance itself (Sommerfeldt 1991:101), which is
Bernard’s central theological motif. The presence of God is a
dynamic movement, not a flat, unchanging condition2: as the
soul advances God becomes more and more actually and
effectively present (sermon 74). God’s love and lovableness is
before us in the form of Christ, attracting our human love.
Bernard does not shy away from a heavy emphasis on
precisely the body of Christ and, tied to that, from
anthropomorphic language about God. His notion of infinity
denotes the ineffable immeasurability of God and his
qualities, including love, in a kataphatic sense, not in the
apophatic sense as associated with Neoplatonically inspired
mysticism, which was not in vogue at the time (Evans
2000:103). God is the Being of all things (esse omnium), present
yet incomprehensible.3
In Bernard’s view of the presence and the infinity of God, a
certain tension remains. God can never quite be found. Love
is a dynamic principle, ambivalent, hovering between
fulfilment and postponement4 in a non-final balance between
divine presence and divine infinity. To anticipate the second
part of the article, the notion of Infinitude put forward there
1.In his On consideration. Book V.XIII.27–31, transl. Leclercq ([1966]1976:152).
2.Although not changed or affected by what is outside himself, God can be moved
from within by his own love (McGinn 1994:194).
3.He is their cause, not the stuff of their being (factor causale, non materiale: Bernard
certainly had no pantheistic inclinations) (cf. Stiegman 2001:133).
4.The ‘sense of mystery remains and is intensified by the suggestion of the
simultaneous overwhelming presence, as well as absence, of the beloved’ (Pranger
1994:142).
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Original Research
‘embraces’ and ‘retains’ (to borrow the abbot’s terms) his
Medieval Christian model of God as infinite Love, but wishes
to suspend his understanding of infinite love in the wider
ambit of Infinitude emerging from empty, Absolute Horison.
His affirmation of the body of Christ tends towards an
affirmation of the body and Cosmos and is admired, although
it does not arise on an absolute horison, fascinatingly beyond
all. And in the end, in tune with his time, he probably saw no
intrinsic worth in the fleeting world and no value or beauty
in sexuality (Dreyer 2007:126; Stiegman 2001:135).
Nevertheless, did his writing unintentionally but shyly
tendentionally open the door to a true celebration of Cosmic
life?5 At both ends of the spectrum (empty Origin and
concrete Cosmos) this article would want to place different
emphases than the great Christian mystic had done: Origin
would be emptied more and Cosmos would be affirmed
more. Appreciate the object of love in its precious reality and
its absolute contingency. The poignant ambivalence of
Cosmic beings’ emerging from Absoluteness constitutes their
beauty, the loveliness of earthly love.
In some respects Bernard was ahead of his time, in others he
was a child of his time. He should not anachronistically be
blamed for what, from our present historical situation, might
appear to be problematic. Nevertheless, this mystic saint’s
instigation in 1146 of the Second Crusade appears
remarkable.6 He saw Muslims as sinners, having turned
down the opportunity of hearing the Gospel and being
converted, and therefore as enemies deserving of religiously
inspired military violence in a holy war. The mystic of love’s
active involvement in the power politics of Church and State
in his day reflects the unique historical conditions of the time.
To him the Crusade was an opportunity for demonstrating
one’s love for God. A metaphysical mysticism of love for
today would command a different course of social and interreligious interaction.
The mystical−intellectual programme of Bernard must be
appreciated highly. However, a nostalgic returning to what
he stood for is not possible. An emotional focus on an
attachment to one system of meaning such as – for example –
Christianity (as was the case with Bernard) is understandable
and laudable, but a theoretical position espousing Christian
(or any other form of) exclusivity is to be overcome. A loving
mother or father of one can also be a loving paediatrician of
many; seeking to save all. Bernard lived in a different epoch
and must be understood and appreciated over this vast
distance in time, circumstance and mentality. This article
proposes an open, inclusive metaphysical mysticism,
positively accommodating all of humankind’s religious
projects as so many searche for ultimate meaning, all oriented
towards the same north pole.
5.He avoided the extreme dualism of spirit v body, flesh and matter, as Gnostic
Catharism, flourishing at the time, taught. He assumed not an absolute break, but a
measure of continuity between flesh and spirit.
6.Even taking into account the vast chasm in time and cultural conditions between
now and then, his take on Islam was typical of the Christian sentiments of the time.
His role was largely determined by his very intimate ties with the powerful
institution of the Church, in the hierarchy of which he held no prominent position,
yet over which he wielded great influence.
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Hasdai Crescas
From the adjacent room of the great house of spirit (Judaism)
comparable, similar and related (not identical) sounds can be
heard. Medieval Jewish scholar Hasdai Crescas (1340–1410,
1411)7 was not a metaphysical mystic, a sophia-phile, in the
sense intended in this article.8 Although he could have been
influenced by Kabbalah, he did not write with a mystical intent,
as his main book, a philosophical treatise under the title Or
Adonai (‘The light of the Lord’, completed in 1410), demonstrates.
He writes a great deal about infinity, but does not use the
relevant Kabbalistic term Ein-Sof in this respect, and
immediately connects Love to God as positively revealed
and known.9 He accepts the notion of creatio ex nihilo, not in
the sense of emergence from Absoluteness, understood as
devoid of being, but in the sense of creation stemming from
God alone as its eternal Ground, which is his traditional
kataphatic Jewish faith. Crescas places a high premium on
the Will of God: the world is not a natural necessity, but it is a
divine necessity – the outcome of Divine Will. Divine Love is
the highest attribute of Divine Will.
Will and love are essentially parts of the eternal and unchanging
nature of God. Not Thought but Goodness is the central
feature and primary content of his God idea, organising the
various attributes of God into a whole. God is centrally a
volitional, emotional being, blissful and joyous.10 Compared
to that, the beliefs in immortality and retribution, the coming
of the Messiah and the eternity of the Torah, penitence and
the power of prayer, though true, are of secondary importance –
for Love seeks no reward and desires nothing in return.
Crescas was the leader of a religious minority persecuted in a
time fraught by unbelievable social tensions in Spain. His
7.Barcelona-born Crescas was an outstanding teacher of Jewish law (halakha) in
Christian Spain, but during his life and after his death he remained in the shadow
cast by the other Spanish-Jewish philosopher, Moses Maimonides (1135–1204),
whom he criticised trenchantly. The fact that Crescas did not win many adherents
and did not become the source of an enduring school in Jewish thought may be
attributed to the untimely nature of his thought: at a time when Aristotelianism was
the not only fashionable but also dominant paradigm, Crescas explored another
one, a novel and original one, intended to oust Aristotelianism. It was too early to
have much effect. He also strove to re-establish the traditional doctrines of Judaism,
preserving Jewish identity and loyalty at a time of severe crisis. His central concern
was the defence of Jewish orthodoxy against the double threat of intellectualist
Aristotelianism (particularly in the garb of theistic Aristotelianism as championed by
Maimonides) and Christian theology. Considering the common philosophical culture
prevailing in Europe and particularly Spain at the time, the fact that Crescas could
have been influenced by figures such as the thirteenth-century Muslim Al-Tabrizi
and the Christian theologians Thomas Aquinas and John Duns Scotus should cause
no surprise. As far as his own influence is concerned, Crescas could, according to
some, have foreshadowed the thinking of Giordano Bruno and Baruch Spinoza.
8.Striving to combine rational argument in the general European philosophical
tradition with halakhic studies and apologetics in his religious tradition, he was a
philosopher-cum-theologian in a strict disciplinarian sense. However, combination
is not the same as integration and transcendence, and could still imply a certain
disengagement of the two, and that was the case with Crescas.
Original Research
own son was killed in that context. That situation would not
have stimulated apophatic thinking – it was a time to take a
strong defensive–offensive stance. Yet, in passing, let us not
forget a Christian mystic from the same epoch, Nicholas of
Cusa (1401–1464), with his ideal concerning a true peace of
religions (De pace fidei).11 Ours is a time inviting the mystically
inclined as never before to be aware of a wider horizon,
transgressing the boundaries of all historical religions, yet
embracing all of them. The tendency towards Absolute
Horison accommodates traditional loyalties, but is not
reducible to the latter. The intuition of absolute ultimacy,
transcending every cultural and religious form, can be found
both inside and outside the various existing religious camps,
although not as majority view. In this article the emphasis
falls on some structural similarities cutting across religious
divisions – yet without sacrificing an appreciation of the
uniqueness and value of each of these religious organisms,
growing from various cultural soils over time.
Jalaluddin Rumi
How can one, starting from St Bernard, not be drawn into the
ambit of Muslim Sufi thought, producing its finest flower in
the mystical love poetry of the Persian poet Jalalludin Rumi
(1207–1273)?12 In Rumi’s vision the world leaps out every
moment from the ‘nothingness’ of ‘adam, and Love is not
merely an epiphenomenal foam on the world, but a structural
element in its very nature.13 His was indeed a religion of love:
Twere better that the spirit which wears not true love as a garment
Had not been: its being is but shame.
Be drunken in love, for love is all that exists.14 Nicholson ([1898]
2003:51)
Like Bernard he breathed in the atmosphere of a mystical
tradition, in his case based on the Qur’an and its reception.
Like Bernard, he knew the earthly love stories of his own
Medieval culture, and they fed into his mystical poetry,
describing the pain of separation and longing and the joy of
union. Yet, different from Bernard’s, Rumi’s mystical love
was religiously inclusive; he was a friend of Christians and
Jews and at his burial they took part in the funeral prayers in
their own religious idioms. He understood that the various
11.Written after the fall of Constantinople to the Muslims in 1453.
12.Cf. Nicholson ([1989]2003); Schimmel (1978) 1980, 1992, 2003; Bausani 2004; S Sri
Padmanabhan, The poetic mysticism of Jalal al-Din Rumi: an inquiry; in: Chaghatai
(ed.). Mawlana Rumi..., pp. 461–480; Reynold A Nicholson, Jalal Al-din-Rumi; in
Chaghatai (ed.), Mawlana Rumi, pp. 481–483.
9.The focus of his interest in infinity was Aristotelian physics, in the context of his
refutation of naturalism as a threat to orthodoxy. Accepting infinity as real and
defined as unfinalisable magnitude, Crescas refuted Aristotle and argued for the
infinity of empty space as the receptacle of all things, and the infinity of time and
number, as well as of causality. In the Medieval context, entertaining the possibility
of an infinite universe was a novelty and a great achievement. In his application of
the notion of infinity to causality Crescas did away with Aristotle’s argument for the
existence of a terminus (called ‘Prime Mover’ by the Greek) in the chain of
causation, intended to end what would otherwise amount to a futile infinite
regress, which is a significant theological offshoot of his anti-Aristotelianism.
13.Rumi knew the thinking of Ibn Arabi (1165–1240) well. Taking their common Sufi
sentiments into account, they were different mystical types: Ibn Arabi’s was essentially
a mysticism of Thought; Rumi’s, a mysticism of Love. A great metaphysical mystic in the
sense of this article Rumi was, but his mysticism was less integrated with theosophical
reflection than was the case in Ibn Arabi (and, to mention another great Muslim
theosophist, Suhrawardi). Ibn Arabi was overwhelmingly a theosofist; Rumi,
overwhelmingly a theophile, which is not to say that love (Arabic hubb) was not a
prominent theme in Ibn Arabi’s thinking. On the contrary, he wrote a great deal and
most profoundly about it. To him God’s love has a most significant corollary: God’s
being known. All things come from God and wish to return to Him. God’s love to be
known is the creative force that brings all things into existence and occasions their
desire to know and love Him. The world is God’s self-disclosure, so that to love the
world is to love God. To Ibn Arabi love has divine roots: it sprouts from the deepest
roots of Ultimate Reality, in Ibn Arabi’s terminology, from wujud (non-manifest Being).
On the divine roots of love according to Ibn Arabi (cf. Chittick 2005:35–51).
10.Crescas’ emotional-voluntaristic emphasis distinguishes him from Maimonides,
who awarded priority to reason. He severely criticised Maimonides’ formulation of
the basic tenets of Judaism. Among the non-negotiables (pinnot) of Judaism,
Crescas includes the Love of God. Maimonides did not have it among his list of
non-negotiable dogmas.
14.To Rumi (1996:182), discursive reason is, compared to love which flies to heaven, a
donkey carrying books, and a stick in the darkness for the blind compared to a
candle for those who can see beauty: Love resides not in learning/not in knowledge/
not in pages and pamphlets/Wherever the debates of men may lead/that is not the
lover’s path (Rumi, Swallowing the sun, 115).
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religions long for the same inexpressible essence that the
religion of love knows no difference between sects. The
transcendence of God, the Infinite, is the basis for his tolerance
of all religions. In his own way Rumi interpreted all religions
tendentionally – all aim at the Infinite. Love is rooted in the
eternal Kindness of God, originates in God, is co-eternal with
Him and is His foremost quality (Schimmel [1978]1980:341).
About God he spoke in exuberant kataphatic poetry, veiling
the blinding brightness of God, like stained glass pieces
protecting from yet also revealing the sun (Schimmel
[1978]1980:336). He did not withdraw into apophatic silence
and could not contain the flood of kataphatic loveintoxicated words gushing over his lips. Rumi
approximates Absolute Horison more strongly than was
the case in Bernard. To the Persian poet God is utterly
transcendent, virtually to the point of non-existence from a
human point of view, beyond personalism.15 Yet his
metaphysical mysticism, brushing the limits of what is
possible in Islamic orthodoxy, does not transgress the
boundaries between God and human being set in the basic
tenets of the Qur’an. This article would emphasise the
emptiness of Absoluteness more strongly than the Persian
poet allows, eventually petering out at Absolute Horison
beyond which no greener grass can be observed or
postulated.
The essence of Rumi’s poetry was his burning love for God
as Creator (khaliq) and Ocean of Love, ever continuing His
work of creation ex nihilo (‘adam): the mine from which He
produces everything. God is the Living, the Everlasting,
and Kindness and Mercy, the spark not only of His Power
and Wisdom but also of His Love, can be discovered in
everything. Love, like Being and Beauty and Goodness
belongs essentially to God and is manifested in a thousand
mirrors in the phenomenal word. Divine Love is a positive
Cosmic force in the world, without which the world would
be frozen. The sun, the earth and mountains are lovers,
and everything in the world loves something. Love shuns
extreme asceticism; like Bernard, Rumi sees human love
between woman and man as a symbol of the love between
God and the believer, but more than Bernard he appreciates
it in its own right as good and divinely inspired. The
world, though merely a mirror, is affirmed as positively
beautiful.
Rāmānuja
Original Research
In Rāmānuja’s Visistadvaita (‘qualified non-dualism’)16 the
Supreme, Brahman, is the only, all-encompassing reality.17 He
taught a realism as far as the existence of the world is
concerned, yet at the same time saw the world as nondifferent from Brahman.18 At the religious level Rāmānuja
worshipped Vishnu as the Supreme God, flanked by his
consort, the goddess Lakshmi. At that level Vishnu (a name
for Brahman, the Supreme Reality) is worshipped as a
Personal God. Theologically his system was a devotional
theism, in which God as responding to human devotion and
entering into deep personal relationships with humans is the
ultimate basis for a morality of love in everyday life.
Brahman has unfathomable, unlimited qualities: He is not
only perfectly blissful, but also all-knowing, all-powerful, allembracing, endowed with limitless, maximum mercy,
affection, generosity, friendliness, sweetness, compassion,
boundless love for his devotees, and grace (prasāda). In his
infinity He is not only ‘a subject enjoying bliss’ in
‘immeasurable magnitude’, but also the ‘cause of bliss’ in the
world (Veliath 1993:67), and He can be experienced and
enjoyed in loving meditative devotion (bhakti) and bliss,
which is the central focus of Rāmānuja’s teaching, which
amounts to a variant of kataphatic mysticism.
Vishnu is the origin of the world (the Creator), sustains the
world (the Preserver) and eventually reabsorbs the world
(the Destroyer). This process is driven by the Will of Brahman.
During the stage of extinction of the world (pralaya)
distinctions do not exist and the supreme principle (Brahman)
has not yet re-evolved. Therefore, Brahman can at that stage
be called ‘Non-being’ (Asat) and ‘Undeveloped’ (Avyākrita),
but only in the sense that He is not connected to names and
forms. However, subtle existence is never denied (Veliath
1993:53). Brahman evolves and assumes various forms out of
love, for the benefit of the world and purely as sport or
recreation (Veliath 1993:55).
The sincerity of Rāmānuja’s passionate love for God cannot be
doubted. Yet, following a more radical emptying in the Indian
Buddhist tradition, this article would see Infinitude as
absorbing anthropomorphic mental pictures of gods in a
spaciousness relativising them to the point of disappearance,
and it would see Infinitude as appearing from and disappearing
16.The easiest first move to locate Rāmānuja is to contrast him with his fellow
Vedantins, Sankara (788–820) on the one hand and Madhva (thirteenth/fourteenth
century) on the other hand. Sankara’s monistic system, known as Advaita (‘notdual’, ‘not-different’) Vedanta taught that the individual, the world and the
Absolute (Brahman) are ‘not-two’, but one. At the other end of the Vedantic
spectrum Madhva’s monotheistic system (perhaps influenced by Christianity or
Islam) taught that the individual and the Supreme are different; it is hence known
as Dvaita (‘dual’, ‘different’) Vedanta.
Outside the circle of Near-Eastern-born theism lies Indian
thought, represented in the person of Rāmānuja (1017–1137),
older contemporary of Bernard, and the greatest exponent of
Hindu bhakti and Hindu theism (cf. Kesarcodi-Watson 1992;
Lott 1976; Overzee 1992, Van Buitenen 1953; Veliath 1993).
17.Nevertheless, Brahman has qualities, attributes, modes, forms, distinctions,
various manifestations, which was his main difference from Sankara’s monism,
which inevitably ended up in ascribing illusionary (māyā) status to the world, the
result of ignorance, false imposition (avidyā).
15.But God remains an eternal noumenon, the Ground of Being, of all Creation, an
inconceivable superabundance, closer to Neoplatonism and Vedanta than to Taoism
and Buddhism. Probably his God is indeed ‘inexpressible reality’, the ‘non-dual
reality’, ‘the Absolute One without attributes’, ‘strikingly close to the monism of the
Upanishads, of Sankara’s Advaita and of Plotinus’ Sublime’. See Padmanabhan (469,
478). According to the renowned Rumi scholar R A Nicholson, Rumi was ‘a pantheist
in the sense that he identifies all real being with God and regards the world of
phenomena as a mere image of the divine ideas reflected from the darkness of notbeing: the universe in itself is nothing, and God alone really exists’ (Nicholson 481).
18.The following quotations from Rāmānuja’s commentary on the Gītā contains the
essence and gives the flavour of his thinking: ‘God, the Supreme Person, is modified
by all existing beings and things which modify him by constituting the body of
which He is the ātman ... God is said to be the quintessence of all entities. All these
entities with their peculiar individuality and characteristics have originated from
God, are shesas (‘dependents’) of God and depend on God inasmuch as they
constitute his body, and God himself is modified by all these entities of which he is
the ātman ... God himself, however, does not depend on them ...’ (II.I.3.8–11).
Translation of J van Buitenen (1953:101).
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on the edge of inaccessible Horison. Rāmānuja does not have
an intention towards Absoluteness, dropping away below
Person and Being. From the point of view of this article, theistic
personalism occurs in the space of contourless Infinitude, yet
anthropomorphised in various ways (‘Person’ and so on) by
human beings with their mystical yearning for transcendence.
Taking all necessary methodological provisos into account,
Rāmānuja’s mysticism of Love may be said to be kindred
in spirit and structure to what is found in Judaism–
Christianity–Islam.
Avatamsaka Sutra
Most exemplary of the drift of this article is the Buddhist
Mahāyāna sutra, Avatamsaka Sutra (‘Flower ornament
scripture’),19 presupposing the original teaching of the Buddha
concerning the radical impermanence (anicca) and nonsubstantiality (anattā) of all things, and their inter-relatedness
and conditionality (paccaya). The anonymous authors of that
text present Cosmos as seen through the enlightened eyes of
a Buddha or advanced bodhisattva.
The last book (Gandavyūha Sutra (XXXIX.1135–1518) in this
huge volume describes the pilgrimage of a young man,
Sudhana, towards enlightenment, sent on his way by the
bodhisattva Manjushri, metaphoric personification of Wisdom.
En route Sudhana encounters the bodhisattva Maitreya
(XXXIX.1452–1502) and is invited to enter Maitreya’s Tower.
Maitreya (meaning ‘the Compassionate/Loving One’) is a
metaphoric personification of Compassion. At the request of
Sudhana (XXXIX.1489 ff), Maitreya snaps his fingers, the
doors open and Sudhana may enter the Tower, metaphor for
Infinitude as intended in this article. It is as vast as all of
space, as measureless as the sky, adorned with incalculable
beauty and glory such as chambers of jewels, jewel lotuses,
jewelled promenades, jewel stairways, radiant gems. Inside
the tower are hundreds of thousands of other towers,
similarly arrayed, each infinitely vast, each distinct, all
reflected in each single object of beauty and glory in every
one of the multitude of tower, each gem reflecting the entirety
of all the towers with all their objects of beauty. It is a truly
19.The Avatamsaka Sutra, dating from around the first–second centuries CE,
originated somewhere in the Indian cultural sphere (India, Central Asia) and was
composed in Sanskrit by an unknown number of anonymous minds from an
unknown number of heterogeneous original sources. In the Indian culture of the
time some Buddhist texts were published under the names of their authors: these
were works of scholarship and were known as sastras (‘treatises’); other texts
(sutras) emerged without identifying their authors, but were attributed to the
Buddha, which did not entail a claim that it had been literally proclaimed by
Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, or a theory of verbal inspiration by a celestial
Buddha, but signified that the teaching corresponded to the central teaching of the
Buddha. In that doctrinal setting the anonymity of authorship would not have been
an embarrassment, signifying loss of intellectual property and prestige, but the
expression of the very teaching of non-self. Introducing and translating this text
into English was the achievement of Thomas Cleary (1993). The references in this
article refer to the relevant book in the Sutra and the page number of Cleary’s
translation. Infinite Love as understood in this article finds no direct equivalent in
the jhāna system of early Buddhism as such. There are levels of meditative
absorption in Infinity of Space and Infinity of Consciousness, but not of Infinite
Love. However, there is a close approximation in the Sublime Abodes (the Brahmavihāra), as set out in the Tevijja Sutta (the thirteenth sutta of the Dīgha Nikāya).
The four sublime virtues (benevolence, compassion, sympathetic joy and
equanimity) are extended universally, pervading all four quarters of the globe,
above, below, all round, in all directions, everywhere, the whole universe, not
omitting anything, not passing anything by. The Buddha declares such meditation
to be the path to companionship with the god Brahmā. The practice of the four
Abodes of universal cosmic love is but one step removed from experiencing
‘Brahmā’ (shorthand for what humanity has called ‘gods’ or ‘God’).
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inconceivable realm, flooding Sudhana with joy and bliss,
clearing his mind of all limiting conceptual thought. The
book continues to pile up staggering, concept-transcending
visions of beauty. Realising that the phenomenal world is
completely suffused with this dimension, beings on the path
towards enlightenment and Buddhahood are filled with
love.20
The voidness or emptiness which is the essence of things, the
lack of inherent nature in all things, the principle of
interdependence and inter-relation of all things are the
groundless ground of compassion, allowing Book XXV to
speak of ‘vows’ directed at the saving of all sentient beings:
I should be a hostel for all sentient beings, to let them escape from all
painful things. I should be a protector for all sentient beings, to let them
all be liberated from all afflictions. I should be a refuge for all sentient
beings, to free them from all fears. (XXV.533)
The difficulty faced by a text such as this Sutra is that it
inevitably oscillates between the impossibility of saying
anything (given the nature of its central orientation) and the
necessity to say something (given its commitment to exist
compassionately in the world, including its need to speak
and its commitment to communicate with people).21
Mencius
Moving further outwards, we hear the voice of Mencius
(c 370–c 290 BCE)22 in China, and outside the reach of historical
scholarship as far as possible links of influencing with cultures
and religions to the west are concerned. Mencius continued
the humanism of Confucius (c 550–c 480 BCE), but added an
element of mysticism to it. While not rejecting the traditional
Chinese feudal system, he nevertheless built a large measure
of human heartedness (jen) into that social model. What had
been non-excluded possibility in Confucius became positive
teaching with a strong mystical component in Mencius. He
taught that ‘no man is devoid of a heart sensitive to the
sufferings of others’ (Lau 1970).
His moral philosophy of altruism (shu) and commiseration
(ts’e yin) had a transcendent, metaphysical root: Heaven.
Human heartedness has been given by Heaven. And this
metaphysical root has a mystical dimension. Originally, the
human individual is one with the spirit of the universe and
may recover ‘the lost mind’, the ‘child-like mind’, the original
nature. Mencius not only believed ‘that a man can attain
oneness with the universe’, but also had ‘absolute faith in the
20.They ‘are tireless in guiding and perfecting all beings, because they are aware all is
selfless; they never cease taking care of all beings, because they embody universal
love and compassion’ (XXXIX.1500–1501).
21.In the sixth century this problem would lead to a split within one of the two main
branches of Mahāyāna: the Mādhamika school (founded by Nāgārjuna roughly in
the same period that gave rise to the Avatamsaka Sutra). Whereas the Prasangika
sub-school uncompromisingly rejected every conceptual position, the Svātantrika
sub-school allowed for adopting a position in the ongoing debate about truth, with
the proviso that its relativity be written large in its programme. It would appear
that the Avatamsaka was closer to the second strategy. Moreover, the Svātantrika
epistemology took up a middle position between Mādhyamika and the second
main branch of Mahāyāna: the Yogācāra school, which boldly developed a grand
speculative metaphysical mysticism of an idealist variety.
22.Also called Meng K’o, Meng Tzu, and Mengzi (cf. Fung; Wing-Tsit Chan (1963:49);
Lau (1970).
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moral purpose of the universe’ (Lau 1970:45–46). He imagined
a metaphysical mysticism centred in Love.
San religion
Step into the world of the aboriginal South Africans, the San,
direct descendants of the earliest manifestations of human
life on the earth, and occurring far outside the geographical
and temporal span of what has been looked at so far. Theories
understanding preliterate religions from the normative
perspective of any particular belief system are here
suspended.
San religion, the clear traces of which are to be found in rock
art and evidence of deliberate burials dating back to at least
10 000 years ago, no doubt continuous with older art of about
25 000 years ago, and, stretching back to the beginnings of the
emergence of homo sapiens sapiens in Africa, reminds of the
earliest layers of religion.23 If ‘religion’ is understood (as is
the case in this article) as the attempt found in all cultures
since the beginning of humankind to orientate themselves
comprehensively in the world, in the widest horison possible,
the similarities between the sophisticated designs looked at
on previous pages and this ancient religion outweighs the
differences. The San represent a mode of thought much older
than the substantialised dualities of Western Asian
monotheisms (to which Christianity belong) as well as the
philosophical monisms of India and the West: a mode of
thought without an ‘original’, divinely inspired text, and
without any claim to absolute truth – but equally impressive.
It too is transparent to and reflects an original light glowing
through this fragmented world. In their own unique way the
San in myth and ritual gave expression to the pan-human
need to come to terms with the conditionalistic coherence of
all things (the root of love), all adding up to a meaningful
world, in the ultimate embracing context of an unreachable,
uncrossable Horison on the outer edge of all.
An ideal-typical reconstruction of their religion as it
manifested in historical times brings to light a mythological
belief (not evolved under Christian influence) in a creator
deity (variously named, including N!adima, N!eri and Gu/e).
He is the source of power, although rather remote. The San
people also believed in a second, lesser, cunning and erratic
trickster deity (/Kaggen, //Gauwa). Humans are not
hierarchically favoured above other forms of life. San people
and all people are related, and all forms of life are dynamically
interrelated in a multicausal matrix of interdependence, in
ever-widening concentric circles, which, I submit, may count
as a definition of love. This definition finds expression in the
‘sympathetic bond’ (Biesele 1975:160) between hunter and
the hunted in its throes of death.
Anticipating the second part of this article, I wish not to deny
the epochal differences between then and now, but to
transcend any division between their supposedly ‘primitive
mentality’ and the supposed superiority of the literate
23.Relevant literature includes Biesele (1975), Silberbauer (1981), Barnard (1992) and
Krüger (1995).
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religions over the last two and a half millennia. San religion
from old Africa is a challenging dialogue partner, making a
unique contribution to the kind of outlook underlying this
article.
Theoretical context
Positing an identity of the various notions of Love presented
above would be a serious mistake, yet it must be
acknowledged that together they form a family photograph
with uncanny resemblances connecting them. Of course,
historically speaking, they are ultimately all connected, all
manifestations – some older than others, some more closely
grouped in time than others – of one pan-human historical
context since the beginning of humankind, of which the San
are the reminders.
What sort of metaphysical–mystical imagining, what sort of
theory, could provide a background, not only to understand
present reality as it is, but to promote a morality of love
towards all beings? A morality that would not succumb to
the law of claw (however smoothly covered in silk gloves)
and tooth (however pretty the words flowing across it may
be), let alone reinforce it by elevating selfishness to the basic
law of nature? By ‘imagining’ here is not meant the invention
of arbitrary tales, but listening to the dream arising from the
depths of the human spirit, the envisioning of a kindnessunderstanding, kindness-promoting frame of mind. Such
imagining is at odds with the imaginings of social
determinism and biological reductionism of much of presentday science across disciplines. Can a notion such as the one
put forward here be proven? No. It can neither be verified
nor falsified ‘scientifically’ by an appeal to the ‘facts’. But it
can be known by its fruits.
So let us imagine Absolute Horison as the absolute end of the
road, not a mere boundary on the other side of which a
different reality or more of the same reality can be postulated
per analogiam, based on previously obtained knowledge of
that other reality. ‘Analogy’ is here understood to mean that
both compared entities (‘my love’ and ‘a red, red rose’) have
to be known to make any sense; ‘Absolute Horison’ is
understood to mean the outer limit altogether of mental
perception and experience, beyond which nothing can be
assumed or postulated. As the Horison where all ontology
and epistemology simply peter out, it may also be evoked by
the term Emptiness. Here categories such as ‘on the other
side of’, which may be ‘wholly different’ or ‘somehow
continuous’, lose all relevance and do not apply. This Horison
lies further than apophatic certainty of a Being or Person,
assumed or known by other means, such as religious
tradition; further than an already content-filled fides seeking
intellectum.
Somehow, on this side of that terminal Horison where all
disappears, Infinitude (including Infinite Love) is
intuited to arise, not restricted to human existence, but
permeating Cosmos. By ‘Infinitude’ is not meant endless
extension, but non-substantial, non-fixed potential
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mediating between Cosmos and ultimate Horison, and
thus Origin of all. Love connotes the sympathetic
interrelationships of all things in the large context of
Cosmos as an organic, living whole, the parts of which
are dependent on the whole and on all the other parts,
affected by all, sensitive to all. Love is the urge to co-be
well and the volitions and sentiments motivating and
enabling the interactive ability to achieve that.
To return to where this article started, Dante Alighieri
(1265–1321) in his Divina Commedia not only elevates St
Bernard to his final guide at the threshold of Paradise (Paradiso
XXXI – XXXIII), but also builds his entire Commedia around
Love. In the central canto of his entire edifice of 100 cantos
(Purgatorio XVII) (Esolen 2003:453), he lets Virgil explain that
neither Creator nor a single creature has ever existed without
love, either natural, instinctual love or intellectual, volitional
love, however perverted such love may in fact be. Love is the
axis of his poem, of his world. From the perspective of this
article, this is greatly admired. The world cannot be understood
adequately unless it is understood as in principle, ab Origine on
the ultimate Horison (further than Dante could see in his time),
permeated by Love.
And so matter and life are to be loved. Of course love is
not the overall factual truth of life; life as known in the
human world is mostly selfish and greedy and dominated
by conflict and hatred, with a few strands of cooperation
and harmony sparsely woven into that fabric. Yet in human
beings there is an, as it were, ingrained categorical
imperative to love. The fact that it is mostly overridden by
urges to exist at the cost of others does not nullify the
priority of love. Love comes first and last, hatred and
greed in between. Loving reciprocity follows from the very
nature of things. Bursting open as Infinitude becomes
Cosmos, spreading its seeds, Infinite Love incurs the
inevitability of dissonance, friction, conflict - in short,
what humans term ‘evil’.
Such a dimension of Infinitude, Infinite Love, between
concrete, manifest Cosmos and wholly withdrawn Horison,
is imagined to be the source of humanity’s mysticisms,
religions and arts with their rich mythologies. But the
appreciative acknowledgement of this dimension does not
imply an uncritical endorsement of the hardening of
magnificent ‘fiction’ with their gods and other personages,
into quasi-‘fact’.
Infinitude, becoming Cosmos, is the dimension experienced
in, for example, the mythologised mysticisms of the
Abrahamic theisms of Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
These religions introduced the dimension of God as Love
into the human religious discourse. The dimension of God
as Love was their greatest gift to the world. But look behind
the profound myths; sense the empty depth behind those
faces in the clouds, prior to lover and beloved, subject and
object. This article acknowledges the dimension of Infinite
Love as a primordial structural dimension of the world and
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as arising from a Horison inaccessible to human thought
and experience. The entire gamut of emotions and volitions
felt by humans derives from Infinite Love and tends towards
the experience and expression of love in thoughts, words
and actions. The notion of Infinite Love provides a
transcendental root for a morality centring in love for all
living beings. Fun and laughter, weeping and lamenting,
wrath and forgiveness, happiness and anguish, anxiety and
confidence, sympathy and callousness, cruelty and mercy they all arise from and long to return to this Love. Even
anger and hatred parasitise on it as perversions and can
only be appeased by love. Every cosmic being is essentially
attuned to existing in harmony with the other cosmic beings
in the largest totality.
Psychology and other sciences speak about the empirically
accessible origins and manifestations of the inner life in all its
many shades. Metaphysical mysticism suggests a more
remote origin of emotions and volitions, which is also the
direction in which emotions and volitions are inclined by
nature. And it suggests an ethos. Emotions and volitions in
humans and other beings are not the chance outcomes of
blind contingency in an indifferent process of evolution since
a blind big bang. Yes, they did arise in a process of cosmic
unfolding, but that process itself has Love as a central aspect,
which has been part of the Cosmic process since its beginning,
with roots in Infinitude, arising on this side of Horison. Look
awestruck at the stars and you see into the secret of Love.
Touch a stone with respect and you feel the secret of Love
under your fingers. Caress a living being with love and you
give sensible form to Infinite Love.
Some, seeking to transcend the greed and hatred in human
existence, have sought and found relief and salvation at the
edge, where Cosmos emerges from and merges with
Infinitude. Theirs has been the mysticism of love. It is bhaktiyoga; it is following the command to love the Lord your God
with all your heart and soul. Kataphatic Divine personalism
is transcended in apophatic Divine substantialism, and
apophatic substantialism is ultimately transcended in
Absoluteness.
This article does not espouse conventional theism and
does not endorse atheism, neither in the form of rabid
antitheism nor in the form of disinterested atheism. It is a
meta-theism, sympathetic towards the mental pictures of
gods read into the tumbling clouds in the sky of Infinitude
by human beings since an early stage in their emergence as
a species. Humans attach names and characteristics to
nameless, featureless Infinitude between Cosmos and
Horison: not necessary, but probably unavoidable and
understandable, and as such not wrong. Not at all, but
every one of such configurations should be seen as relative
to all the others, and relative to Absolute Horison. A
merging of the horisons touched on above, largely still
considered irreconcilably different, is feasible and
necessary – and tendentionally in line with the life and
message of the Man from Nazareth.
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Acknowledgements
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Competing interests
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Lavoie, Cistercian Publications, Kalamazoo, MI.
The author declares that he has no financial or personal
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