Tuesday 23 October 2012

EXAMINING R. PANIKKAR’S INSIGHTS ON TRINITY IN THE CONTEXT OF WORLD RELIGIONS


A summary based on Cousins, Ewert. “Trinity and World Reigions”. Journal of Ecumenical Studies.476-498.


Part I: New Phase of Ecumenism and Trinitarian Theology: Method and Insights of Raymond  Panikkar

 “Perhaps future historians will designate the period from Nicaea to the twentieth century as an early stage in the development of the doctrine of the Trinity, for a new phase is ushered in when the Logos perspective of Christianity opens to encompass the apophatism of Buddhism and the unifying spirituality of Hinduism” writes Ewert Cousins as he concludes his work “Trinity and World Religions” after carefully analyzing the unique contribution of Raymond Panikkar[1] for Ecumenism through an all encompassing theology of the Trinity.

Every epoch has its influence in the development of our understanding of the mystery of reality (divine, human and cosmos). New shades of understanding emerge shedding new light. There is no point where we could we have grasped everything of the complex whole. The puzzle was unveiled by continental thought with hermeneutics and post-modernity. Every thought thereafter was situated within its historical setting (socio-political-cultural-religious setting in time and place). There grew a greater awareness about the development of thought with the changing times. Here we discuss the development of the Christian understanding of divine in the past and the need to relearn it in our encounter with the East. 

In its encounter with Judaism, Greek thought, early Christianity gradually moved beyond historical Jesus conceptualizing Jesus as eternal Logos who conceived the universe and further sustains it through the Spirit. This resulted in the composition of ‘cosmic hymns’ of the new testament see Johannine prologue (Jn 1.1-18) and Colossians (1.15-20). Thus they began to see Christ as more than mere redeemer of the believers (Christians).

The line of thought further developed with the rise of new scholars in similar context like Justin Martyr and Clement of Alexandria. There evolved thus Logos Christology attributing everything good, wise and beautiful in all cultures to Logos who is fully manifested in the incarnate Christ. This served well even in our encounter with Islam; they could not challenge us on this point. Later in the Middle Ages and the Modern Period with the rise of scientific development theologians like Bonaventure and Teilhard de Chardin extended this concept to explain the development of the science and secularism. Teilhard would note, “Christ is the Omega of evolution, drawing the entire universe to its ultimate development, from the least particle of matter to be expanded consciousness of the world community”.[2]

Logos Christology has served well Christianity in the West. It was able to relate with Judaism and Greek thought and differentiate itself from Islam founded on God’s word revealed to human beings.  Moreover, the endeavor has succeeded because Graeco-Roman and Semitic cultures were based on logos – as word and thought. But since its encounter with the East, Christianity is limping as to come to terms with its major religions and cultures – Buddhism and Advaidic Hinduism. Either we negate them to be false or we neglect them as non-existent.

We feel helpless because we are encountering religions and culture, which have no grounding in logos and technically negate it. Buddhism for example has no idea of revelation. It is silent about ultimate reality (God). If they ever explain it they call it as ‘sunya’ – ‘emptiness and void’. For the Buddhists, logos is irrelevant because words are harmful and deceptive. They do not serve the purpose. Hence they enter into meditation. Their ultimate goal of life is to realize the nothingness of existence - ‘Nirvana’ meaning ‘a blowing out’. Normally, Christians are confused listening to them. For us they are somewhere between atheists and moralists.

Advaidic Hinduism on the other hand denies the duality of our relationship with God; Hence the irrelevance of Logos to reveal the divine mystery. It contends Brahman as the ultimate self and the world as not as real as Brahman. Thus it poses a direct threat to the whole theology of incarnation. For us the theory seems pantheistic jeopardizing the transcendence of God and the identity of the self. The problem is intensified as these two doctrines form the core of their entire spirituality.

Amidst mixed opinions of theologians and scholars who attempted to dialogue with these traditions, Panikkar meets the challenge squarely with a new approach. Of the two possibilities either to change them or find a platform to dialogue Panikkar chooses the latter. He explains our inability to enter into a dialogue with these traditions by pointing finger at our platform ‘Christ as the eternal Logos’. We stand on a platform that is irrelevant to these traditions. Hence he signals the need to go beyond the universalizing logos Christology. He discovers a common ground between us and these traditions in the doctrine of the Trinity.

Panikkar describes the three persons of the Trinity as three aspects of the divinity, hence include three forms of spirituality. The Father represents the silent dimension of the Buddhism. Since he expresses only through the son and of himself is utterly silent. The Son represents the personalistic dimension of Christianity, Judaism and Islam. He relates to the world, acts as a mediator. We are created, sustained and redeemed in him. The Spirit stands for the imminent dimension of Advaidic Hindusim. It helps us identify the unity in difference between the Father and the Son. In the Son we realize our non-duality with the Father and the whole cosmos. The three persons of the trinity thus represent three different forms of spirituality, three different approaches to the divine.

The novelty of his approach is his dialogue founded on pluralism that retains the individuality of the doctrines at the same time affirming a profound unity. Unlike the past, he founded his dialogue on the spirituality of religions, their rich experience of the divine, than on their doctrinal speculations. Besides a ground breaking insight into a healthy dialogue between the major religious of the world, he has given us a new insight into the Trinity one that is founded on our experience of the divine. Yet, we may need to listen to others to understand the fullness of the mystery as it involves dimensions that are not prominent in our tradition. From the perspective of other traditions, it is an awakening to the latent Trinitarian insight in their respective traditions not so much referring to the Father, Son and Holy Spirit instead the attributes that give us perspective into the divine/infinite and its non-dual presence in the world.





[1] Ewert Cousins works on the article of Raymond Panikkar, “Towards an Ecumenical Theandric Spirituality”, Journal of Ecumenical Studies, (1968) 507-534.
[2] Cousins, 477-478. 



Part II - Examining Panikkar’s Proposal

Our aim is to examine whether, (i) Panikkar’s attempt to extend the Trinitarian doctrine to relate with world religions, (ii) and his new insights in our understanding of the Trinity, are in conformity to the tradition and teaching of the Church.

In the history of understanding the Trinity there has always been two tendencies one is to restrict it to the revelation in Christ and Church; the other is to universalize it to the entire universe – its creation, existence, and history. Panikkar would fall into the latter category. There were three universalizing currents in the history of Trinitarian theology: vestige doctrine of Augustinian tradition (West), doctrine of creation of Greek fathers (East), and appropriation doctrine of the western fathers and scholastics (medieval times).

Vestige tradition is founded on the Platonic Augustinianism. It conceived if Trinity was the first cause of all things as taught in scriptures then everything should have a Trinitarian stamp. Hence the school began to discover the trace (vestige) of Trinity in everything that exists from speck of dust, universe, to human being and his inter-personal relationship. More than a mere academic reflection it was meditation founded on philosophical and theological principles.  It got further affirmed in the Franciscan cosmic sense. Take for instance, Robert Grosseteste (ca. 1168–1253),[1] could trace Trinity in the speck of a dust: its existence represents the power which brought it into being (father); its beauty/complexity, the shape and form represent the wisdom (son) through which the dust was made by the power; and its usefulness represent the good end  (spirit) for which it is made in this case it is useful to understand Trinity. So did Bonaventure (1221 -1274)[2], Richard of St. Victor (d. 1173)[3] found the traces of Trinity in ‘nature and human psyche’ and ‘inter-personal relationships’. A closer observation of vestige tradition makes plain how it has traced the presence of Trinity from speck of dust to human inter-personal growth in a logical progression. Hence what Pannikar does is further expanding it to larger human community with its history, religion, philosophy and culture. This again is an older trend but frozen to Greek thought and Semitic religions (Mediterranean world).

The second universalizing outlook stemmed from Greek fathers (Athanasius, Basil, Gregory of Nyssa) who understood everything – creation, sustenance, redemption and sanctification - in terms of Trinitarian dynamic act. Hence they were able to be aware of the action of the three persons in the universe and history. Justin and Clement of Alexandria could attribute the wisdom of great Greek philosophers to the inspiration of the Logos, which later fully manifested in Jesus. Pannikar’s proposal within this trend would extend the dynamic activity of Trinity from creation, Christian redemption and sanctification to universal religious history. This would lead to an understanding of Trinitarian activity in universal terms.

Doctrine of appropriation on the other hand was an attempt to understand Trinity from its functions/attributes that distinguish one from the other. For example, consider power, wisdom and goodness theory of Grosseteste. It helped first to find the trace of Trinity in the universe, second to relate Trinity to a non-Christian’s doctrine of divinity. Bonaventure for example speaking of the Greek philosophers writes that they know the Trinity of appropriation and not the Trinity of persons which forms part of Christian faith. So do we surprisingly find Sankara and Ramanuja calling Brahman as sat/cit/ananda (being, consciousness and bliss), in a similar way, familiar with the Trinity of appropriation than the persons. In method though Panikkar is faithful to the medieval theologians, he is radically new by carrying appropriation to a new level of universalization not lingering on Trinitarian patterns in one or the other religion but discerns a Trinitarian pattern in world religions as a whole.
Recollect he always speaks of three conceptions of Absolute, three spiritual attitudes and three spiritualities evolving from them: Father, the silent/apophatic dimension fully manifest in Buddhism; Son, the personalistic dimension as one reveals the father appears in Judaism, Islam and Christianity; and Spirit, the immanent dimension is present in advaidic Hinduism. Thus he could sum all the religions in the Trinitarian insight of the Christian tradition with openness and profound respect for their intuition.

Panikkar has yet another job to be done. His new insights especially one that equates father to a profound silence/nothingness and undifferentiated union to the spirit has to prove itself against the traditional doctrine of Trinity: power to father and goodness to spirit. While attributing unity to spirit is a minor problem however non-negligible as it renders the advaitin insight to Spirit, the problem with the understanding of Father as silence appears quite opposed to traditional doctrine of Trinity.

If we dig the history of the development of the doctrine of Trinity within the church we find similar understanding in the writings of Ignatius of Antioch who compares father to son as silence to word. The son therefore is the word that emerges from the silence. Seen from another perspective, if we strip son, the Word through whom the father manifests, what remains is profound silence. This thinking did not however become part of the creeds or any other formulation of classical Trinitarian theology. But by way of theological reasoning in can be applied to other traditions of Trinitarian theology. In the vestige tradition, take the case of dust, if we mentally strip the matter and form from the dust what remains is silence. We at times have glimpse if through meditation we tend to go beneath the form. Similarly can we analyse human psyche where memory (the historicity and learning) is analogous to the father. Later it is also attributed to the soul.

But can we associate apophatic dimension to the father who is always viewed as a dynamic priniciple, the fountain/source/spring/root of existence? Yes, because although these theologians emphasize the dynamic fecundity/productivity of the father they hint at his silent depths from which springs the power. This is more evident in the contradictory attribution of paternity and unbeggotteness to the father. The apophatic/silent dimension is rooted in the unbegotteness of the father. Such expressions are also found in the mystical traditions of East like Pseudo-Dionysius.

Panikkar hence with his new approach has brought to light an aspect of Trinity which has been elusive nonetheless every present since the beginning. Moreover we note that he is rooted in Christian tradition but open to other spiritual traditions. As a result we find originality in his response to meet this new situation (encounter with world religions especially east). He has helped us realize that ‘all spiritual traditions are dimensions of each other and that at this point of history individuals throughout the world are becoming heir to the spiritual heritage of mankind’.[4] For us Christians this implies that we would not know the depths of our mystery unless we take seriously our encounter with world religions, in this case, Buddhism and Advaidic Hinduism.


[1] More on Robert Grosseteste see http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/grosseteste/
[3] More on Richard of St. Victor see http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13045c.htm
[4] Cousins, “Trinity and World Religions”, 497. 



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