A
Alethiaphile
Guest
Good, bad, or exaggerated?
Warning: this is a somewhat long and in-depth post: I hope some here will find the topic worth exploring.
Historically speaking, one of the biggest differences in the courses of the western and eastern churches is that the western was influenced by the Germanic peoples, especially the Franks, who came to dominate western Europe politically in the early middle ages. From the Eastern/Orthodox point of view, this has been characterized as a generally negative influence, with the Germanic influence being blamed for distinctive western developments such as the increase in papal power, the acceptance of the Filioque clause, and the triumph of the Augustinian views of original sin and grace.
A book I am presently reading, The End of the Modern World, by Romano Guardini, a pre-Vat. II RC theologian, agrees that the Germanic influence was significant, but argues, in general terms, that it was beneficial, indeed essential. Here is his argument: it is given in the context of his discussion of the transition of the western Church from the classical to the medieval periods; I’ve included some preliminary passages to establish this context. I have tried to mark off the major points by asterisks. Note he doesn’t specifically contrast with the Christian East, in fact, he talks as if the West constituted the whole of Christianity:
The Middle Ages transformed radically man’s sense and his vision of the world. Medieval man centered his faith in Revelation…
In this Faith [based on Revelation] the world was born afresh… The mythical bonds which had chained man to the universe were destroyed. A new freedom dawned in history for the human spirit…
Deeply significant for the new religious outlook of medieval man was the influx of the Germanic spirit. The religious bent of the Nordic myths, the restlessness of the migrating peoples and the armed marches of the Germanic tribes revealed a new spirit which burst everywhere into history like a spear thrust into the infinite. This mobile and nervous soul worked itself into the Christian affirmation… In its fullness it produced that immense medieval drive which aimed at cracking the boundaries of the world.
This medieval impatience with all limitations cannot be explained, however, simply in terms of the Christian view of man and his relationship to God. Nothing akin to the medieval drive can be found in the first centuries of the Faith, when the classical sense of limitation still retained its hold on Christian man. Although he experienced transcendence, he experienced it only as an inner freedom from the world and as a personal responsibility for his own life, a responsibility transcending the dmeands and service of society. Only after the Germanic ferment has quickened the European world throughout the course and aftermath of migrations was man’s relationship to God freed from the boundaries fixed by antiquity. Only then did man scale the barriers of the world and reach into the infinite that he might embrace the Godhead and return from Him to make all things new.
The Germanic longing to embrace the whole of being was one with the drive for transcendence. The Germanic spirit wished to surround the world in order to penetrate it completely. This passion both to embrace and to enter deeply the full sweep of existence explains the new vision of the world fashioned by medieval man.
Whew, ok, sorry about that, but I wanted to do Guardini justice. Although he is verbose and sometimes frustratingly vague, it seems to me Guardini’s basic point is fairly clear and interesting: he agrees with the Eastern viewpoint that the Germanic influence sigificantly changed western theology from its patristic roots, but, unlike most Eastern authors, he thinks this was necessary; he thinks that Patristic Christianity was somehow incomplete. I think this is an unstated viewpoint behind a lot western theologians and apologists. I’m interested in hearing what some people here think of this idea. Joe
Warning: this is a somewhat long and in-depth post: I hope some here will find the topic worth exploring.
Historically speaking, one of the biggest differences in the courses of the western and eastern churches is that the western was influenced by the Germanic peoples, especially the Franks, who came to dominate western Europe politically in the early middle ages. From the Eastern/Orthodox point of view, this has been characterized as a generally negative influence, with the Germanic influence being blamed for distinctive western developments such as the increase in papal power, the acceptance of the Filioque clause, and the triumph of the Augustinian views of original sin and grace.
A book I am presently reading, The End of the Modern World, by Romano Guardini, a pre-Vat. II RC theologian, agrees that the Germanic influence was significant, but argues, in general terms, that it was beneficial, indeed essential. Here is his argument: it is given in the context of his discussion of the transition of the western Church from the classical to the medieval periods; I’ve included some preliminary passages to establish this context. I have tried to mark off the major points by asterisks. Note he doesn’t specifically contrast with the Christian East, in fact, he talks as if the West constituted the whole of Christianity:
The Middle Ages transformed radically man’s sense and his vision of the world. Medieval man centered his faith in Revelation…
In this Faith [based on Revelation] the world was born afresh… The mythical bonds which had chained man to the universe were destroyed. A new freedom dawned in history for the human spirit…
Deeply significant for the new religious outlook of medieval man was the influx of the Germanic spirit. The religious bent of the Nordic myths, the restlessness of the migrating peoples and the armed marches of the Germanic tribes revealed a new spirit which burst everywhere into history like a spear thrust into the infinite. This mobile and nervous soul worked itself into the Christian affirmation… In its fullness it produced that immense medieval drive which aimed at cracking the boundaries of the world.
This medieval impatience with all limitations cannot be explained, however, simply in terms of the Christian view of man and his relationship to God. Nothing akin to the medieval drive can be found in the first centuries of the Faith, when the classical sense of limitation still retained its hold on Christian man. Although he experienced transcendence, he experienced it only as an inner freedom from the world and as a personal responsibility for his own life, a responsibility transcending the dmeands and service of society. Only after the Germanic ferment has quickened the European world throughout the course and aftermath of migrations was man’s relationship to God freed from the boundaries fixed by antiquity. Only then did man scale the barriers of the world and reach into the infinite that he might embrace the Godhead and return from Him to make all things new.
The Germanic longing to embrace the whole of being was one with the drive for transcendence. The Germanic spirit wished to surround the world in order to penetrate it completely. This passion both to embrace and to enter deeply the full sweep of existence explains the new vision of the world fashioned by medieval man.
Whew, ok, sorry about that, but I wanted to do Guardini justice. Although he is verbose and sometimes frustratingly vague, it seems to me Guardini’s basic point is fairly clear and interesting: he agrees with the Eastern viewpoint that the Germanic influence sigificantly changed western theology from its patristic roots, but, unlike most Eastern authors, he thinks this was necessary; he thinks that Patristic Christianity was somehow incomplete. I think this is an unstated viewpoint behind a lot western theologians and apologists. I’m interested in hearing what some people here think of this idea. Joe