Introduction
Writing in 1952 Yves Congar commented that “the things that divide us [Christians] in our notions of the nature of the Church find expression in points of language and usage which strike the eye and attract immediate attention.”Footnote 1 For Congar, engaging with these different expressions was essential to furthering ecumenical dialogue. What “strikes the eye” in Congar's own specific language about Christ and the Holy Spirit is how his expression changes over time. In earlier writings Congar refers to the Holy Spirit in the words of Tertullian as the vicarius Christi (Vicar of Christ), where the Spirit carries on the work of Christ alongside the Apostles.Footnote 2 It is not unfair to argue, as some scholars have, that in such works Congar appears to subordinate the Spirit to Christ.Footnote 3 However, in later works Congar instead favours Irenaeus’ image of Christ and the Spirit as the “two hands of God” acting in the world.Footnote 4 This image usually accompanies the pairing of the Son as the Word and the Spirit as the Breath. This essay will examine to what extent Congar's later language provides a healthier and more fruitful way of expressing the Son and the Spirit's economic relationship than his earlier articulations.
I will examine the words, in particular the images, Congar uses to describe the relationship between the Word of God and the Spirit of God. I argue that the shift from predominantly Christocentric language to a more balanced integration of Word and Spirit language, in part reflects his response to accusations made during the 1960s that Catholic theology suffered from a form of Christomonism.Footnote 5 This accusation claims that Catholic theology concentrates so much on Christ, that it effectively lacks a robust and fully developed pneumatology.Footnote 6 This, therefore, has detrimental consequences for its ecclesial life and teachings. Although Congar rejects the accusation, he does not dismiss it. He responds to it in various articles, published between the late 1960s and early 1980s.
Christomonism: A Harmless Jest?
Congar attributes the accusation of Christomonism to an Orthodox theologian, Nikos Nissiotis, but recognises that it was also echoed by other ecumenical observers of the Second Vatican Council.Footnote 7 Congar summarises Nissiotis’ claim as follows:
Everything [in Catholic theology] is seen one-sidedly as referring to Christ. The Spirit is merely added to the Church, its ministries and its sacraments, all of which are already constituted. The Spirit simply carries out a function of Christ.Footnote 8
In such a description, the role of the Spirit appears limited and is subordinated to Christ. The main reason why Congar rejects the accusation is fairly straightforward. He writes, “neither biblically nor dogmatically could one justify a conception of the Holy Spirit as autonomous with respect to the economy of the incarnate Word.”Footnote 9 The Spirit has a mission, distinct from Christ's, but there is not a “hypostatic incarnation of the Holy Spirit”; the Spirit is not “manifested in a personal way”.Footnote 10 Furthermore, he argues it is incorrect to imply that the western Church did not have a pneumatology, pointing instead to such examples as “the theology of the Spirit's operations and the Spirit's sanctifying indwelling in souls”.Footnote 11
Although Congar believed Christomonism to be “imprecise”Footnote 12 and “insufficiently substantiated”,Footnote 13 there was an element of it that seemed to ring true and warranted further reflection. As Pablo Arteaga has recently demonstrated, Congar deals with the topic in at least seven different publications and appears to give both direct and indirect responses to it.Footnote 14 In one of these articles Congar makes the following suggestion:
Even if the accusation of “Christomonism” seems to us so massive that we must reject it, we cannot but profit from a critical second look at our Latin tradition.Footnote 15
As Congar further reflects on the accusation, he progressively finds more examples in the Catholic tradition that could be seen as encouraging such a view. Congar points to the theology of the Eucharist, of grace, of the Mystical Body, and of ecclesiology, as examples that could justify aspects of Nissiotis’ criticism.Footnote 16 Congar acknowledges that these conceptions may have been shaped by the “Scholastic period”, which
showed its predilection for developing the Christological aspect of the Christian mystery. It was led in this direction by its pursuit of notional clarity—the mystery of the Spirit offers little that a conceptualized discourse can grab hold of—and also by its tendency to pass from a consideration of the Economy to a consideration of ontology.Footnote 17
Although Congar admits that aspects of Catholic tradition are Christocentric, on the whole, the accusation of Christomonism must be rejected as an exaggeration. He argues that a Catholic pneumatology is not completely absent from the tradition. A promising sign of how much this has changed is found in the more significant role the Holy Spirit is given in the theology of Vatican II.Footnote 18 However, Congar does not completely dismiss the accusation. His critical re-examination of the tradition reveals that in Catholic ecclesiology, clericalism and legalism were often exacerbated by a concentrated use of Christic language about the church.Footnote 19
Congar's turn to pneumatology in the late 1970s, which led to his three-volume work, was not solely as a result of this accusation. There were numerous other factors that influenced Congar's renewed focus on the Spirit. His experience of Vatican II, the phenomenon of the Charismatic Renewal and the flourishing of ecumenical dialogue, were just three “events” of the Spirit in his own lifetime that undoubtedly shaped his work. However, there is a significant change in the language that Congar uses to describe the relationship between Christ and the SpiritFootnote 20 and it appears directly to address some of the concerns raised by the accusation. Perhaps, even more interesting than this change itself, is the way Congar chooses to structure it. I will now turn to examine what function this more balanced language plays in Congar's theology.
Congar's Balanced Language: The Son-Word and Spirit-Breath
In 1983, Congar wrote “if I myself were to draw one conclusion from my studies on the Holy Spirit, it would concern the Spirit's bond with the Word.”Footnote 21 In fact he explores this “bond” in more detail in 1984 in La Parole et le Souffle. In this work, he characterises the bond in a chiastic turn of phrase, “no Christology without pneumatology and no pneumatology without Christology.”Footnote 22 Congar's chiasm is intended to ensure the health of both Christology and pneumatology and consequently the health of other doctrines too. This chiasm is showcased by Congar's consistent reference to the Son and Spirit as the Word and Breath of God. The significance of this pairing is lost in the English translation of the La Parole et le Souffle, which is published under the title of The Word and the Spirit rather than The Word and the Breath. Congar employs the Trinitarian image of the “thought, the word and the breath” more frequently than others such as; sun, light and warmth; spring, river and sea; the root, the branch, and the fruit. All of which were commonly used by patristic sources as well.Footnote 23
Before examining why Congar seems to favour the Word/Breath pairing, it is worth noting that on numerous occasions, Congar recognises the limits of any language used to describe the Holy Spirit, “the mystery of the uncreated one who is ‘light beyond all light.’”Footnote 24 These images, he writes, “are obviously very imperfect” and their “adequacy must be denied even as they are being proposed.”Footnote 25 Therefore, as a way of understanding what Congar means by Word/Breath it will be helpful to consider three questions:
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(i) What is Congar not saying about the Holy Spirit in this analogy?
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(ii) What is Congar actually saying?
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(iii) What is he saying about the relationship between the Son and Spirit?
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(i) What the Spirit is not
According to Congar, when using the language of Breath:
…we need to avoid thinking of the Holy Spirit either in terms of the breath of an animal or the simple animation of nature, which we would risk doing by stringing together Old Testament passages in which the word “spirit-breath, ruach,” is found.Footnote 26
By this, Congar is arguing that ‘Breath’ should not lead us to consider the Spirit as a purely immanent life force that permeates the universe and causes its evolution, such as that found in the Pneuma of the Stoics.Footnote 27
Congar also argues that the Spirit is not the Word, and although they are often together in scripture and are hard to distinguish at times, this is rather because they are both involved in the same work. He also argues that the Word and the Spirit are not intermediaries, nor modalities through which a creative and provident God separately acts.Footnote 28 The Three-Personed God acts as one in the world. Therefore, in relation to the analogy, the Breath is never an isolated breath, nor simply the animating life force that is present only in the world. It always carries forth the Word.
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(ii) What the Spirit is
For Congar, the term Breath has natural connotations with activity and movement. The Breath is part of the one action of speech, which has three dynamic and simultaneous elements, “The Thought, The Word, and The Breath”. Congar writes, it is the breath that makes speech happen, “that makes speech come forth and that carries it afar.”Footnote 29
Although the Breath is representative of movement, Congar distinguishes between the “Spirit's action, a simple presence of cause, and the gift, the indwelling of the Spirit as a communication of grace that enables us to enter into a relationship of communion and familial intimacy with God.”Footnote 30 A word of love, breathed forth, dwells, grows and moves in us. However, the Spirit does not remain in the world but is the “Breath, the gush of air that wafts back to the Father.”Footnote 31 And, it does not return empty:
This indwelling of the Holy Spirit must not end in a sterile intimacy. The Spirit is Breath. The guest who dwells within us wants us to be dedicated and fruitful.Footnote 32
Congar argues that this dynamic movement and action of the Spirit is not for its own end. The Spirit does not do its own work. The Spirit is not autonomous,Footnote 33 it is always connected with the Word:
The Breath is the one who breathes forth the utterance of the Word far and wide; the Spirit ensures that Christ will continue to come in Christians throughout the course of history. As time unfolds he constantly carries forward the truth which the Word contains.’Footnote 34
The Spirit brings Christ to life in the world, not only in the Incarnation, in which Congar gives great emphasis to the role of the Spirit, but also in the work of Jesus as the anointed Messiah.Footnote 35 Especially, after the Ascension, the Spirit continues to bring life to the ecclesial Body of Christ, “unceasingly” making “Christ's work real in the present.”Footnote 36 This is illustrated in Congar's claim that the life and the activity of the church can be seen totally as an epiclesis.Footnote 37 The invocation of the Spirit makes Christ present through the established structures of the church.
So, for Congar, Breath encapsulates an understanding of the Holy Spirit as activity, gift, and life-giving. From this brief survey, one can see how Congar is using the analogy to help him adhere to his own basic chiasm. Congar distinguishes but does not separate the Spirit from Christ. This is further illustrated by examining the relationship between the Word and the Breath.
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(iii) Word/Breath and the relationship between the Son and the Spirit
Congar neatly summarises the relationship between the Son and the Spirit in the following extract, where he comments on the analogy of speech, which is worth examining more closely:
There is no Word without Breath; it would remain in the throat and would address no one. There is no Breath without a Word: it would have no content and would transmit nothing to anyone.Footnote 38
What does this reveal to us of the relationship? Firstly, the Son-Word and Spirit-Breath are always at work together. We see in this example the chiasm in analogical form: “There is no Word without Breath: No Breath without Word.” Secondly, although the Son and Spirit work together, Congar recognises their own distinctive and essential roles. Christomonism is impossible in this analogy as the Breath is needed to carry the Word out of the throat so that it can address the world. Likewise, Congar rules out the other extreme of pneumatomonism, an unhealthy concentration on the Spirit, as the Word provides the content, the message, the tangible form. The Spirit never speaks of itself. The Breath and Word mutually inform and depend upon each other.
Finally, one can also see here how Congar is echoing the Thomistic conception of the two missions of the Son and the Spirit, which reflect the immanent trinitarian processions. The two missions bring about the one work of God. However, Congar does not stretch the analogy into immanent relations. The image of the Word/Breath, as part of the Trinitarian analogy of the act of speech is, for Congar, an economic image. One reason, perhaps, why Congar is reticent about applying it to the immanent Trinity, is because he had his own reservations about Karl Rahner's und umgekehrt (and vice versa). Congar argued that the Grundaxiom (‘the “economic” Trinity is the “immanent” Trinity and vice versa’) could only be held as true by keeping some distance between God's self-communication and God in Godself.Footnote 39 As with Rahner's axiom, Congar's own chiasm raises some critical questions and requires some qualifications.
Some Critical Questions and a Creative Suggestion
First, one criticism of Congar's approach might be that his language still perpetuates some form of Christomonism. The Word provides the content, arguably what matters most, and therefore the Breath's role is secondary.
However, such a criticism is problematic because the Spirit does not have its own separate “content” to communicate, as the Son and the Spirit are both God. Furthermore, Congar's chiastic approach tries to protect against any monistic tendencies by stressing the joint relationship of the Son and Spirit. The Spirit is not dispensable. The Spirit is not an optional extra. Its presence and involvement in the life of Christ and in the life of a Christian is essential. Christ cannot be fully understood without the Paraclete, the one who will “guide us into all truth” (Jn. 16:13) – no Word without Breath. Likewise, the Spirit does not lead to a truth distinct or different from that of Christ, who is the “the way, the truth, and the life” (Jn. 14:6) – no Breath without Word.
Second, one might argue that Congar too closely identifies the Son and the Spirit. Could not the Spirit's activity in the life of Christ be confused as an alternative explanation for the divinity of Jesus? Are adoptionism or modalism lurking around the corner? Again, Congar uses the analogy of the Word and Breath to stress the distinctive role of each. There are two missions, the Son and Spirit each contribute their own “hypostatic or personal stamp to a common action.” The Son is sent into the world to bring redemption, the Spirit is sent into our hearts to interiorise and personalise the treasury of grace acquired by Christ.Footnote 40
Third, in the opposite sense, is the analogy in danger of separating out the one work of God? Once again, Congar's approach appears to deal with this. There is only one Word of God that is spoken. The Spirit never reveals itself as a separate and autonomous agent, it always breathes forth the Word. The Word and the Breath are part of the one trinitarian analogy of the act of speaking.
Perhaps, if we were to expand Congar's analogy further than he does, it may help to offer a clearer articulation of what difference the Spirit makes. We could expand Breath so that it does not simply imply the active delivery of the Word but also its expression. If we reflect on what speech involves, there is a creativity, a playfulness, an endless variation in how a word can be expressed. Conveying meaning rests as much on the speaker's tone and intonation as on their choice of words. Therefore, the Breath is not additional, nor inconsequential but integral to the how the Word sounds.
To fully understand the Word made flesh, we must hear how it sounds. Perhaps this is a clearer way of understanding what Congar is trying to achieve by proposing a pneumatological Christology – a Spirit Christology, which takes seriously the action of the Spirit in shaping the life and work of Christ. One sees this in Congar's constant request to move the language of Christology away from pure ontology, and to ground it in history.Footnote 41 Jesus of Nazareth is the anointed Christ-Messiah, because he is the Word incarnate spoken in the power of the Holy Spirit. This also links with Congar's description of the Holy Spirit as the Eschatological Gift, the one who connects the “already and the not yet” of salvation history, the one who makes and will continue to make the Word present. As Congar writes, “The Spirit is the Breath which pushes the Gospel out into the newness of history.”Footnote 42
Conclusion
The words and images we use about the Word and the Spirit matter. Congar's consistent choice of language about the Word and the Spirit matter too. They reveal not only his concern for avoiding monistic tendencies but also that he was striving to articulate a more comprehensive expression of the dynamic relationship between the Son and the Spirit.
The accusation of Christomonism was the result of Congar taking seriously the concern of an ecumenical dialogue partner. Although, there has not been space to treat it here, Congar recognised how an imbalance in Christology or pneumatology could have detrimental consequences for ecclesiology. It seems most fitting then to close with the words of Ignatius Hazim, an Orthodox Metropolitan of Latakia, who Congar cites at various points and who made the following comment during an opening address at the World Council of Churches in 1968:
Without the Spirit, God is far away, Christ is in the past, the Gospel is a dead letter, the Church is simply an organization, authority is domination, our mission is propaganda, worship is simply reminiscence.Footnote 43