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Book Review
Timothy Gorringe, God's Just Vengeance: Crime, Violence
and the Rhetoric of Salvation, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1996. Pp. 280 + xiv. $59.95 cloth (ISBN 0-521-55301-6), $18.95 paper (ISBN
0-521-55762-3).
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This is an ambitious book, a thought-provoking book, a monitory
book, but ultimately it is a book at odds with itself. The question
that it asks is both poignant and topical (How could nominally good
Christians in the twelfth or the eighteenth or the twentieth century
sanction the use of retributive punishment while at the same time
worshiping a God-man who died a victim of judicial murder?), but
the answer that it attempts is methodologically ambiguous and historiographically
inconsistent. It is nevertheless an answer that engages a deeply
rooted problem in the Judeo-Christian legal and theological tradition,
and if it is unsatisfying, it is as much because the answers given
within the tradition are not susceptible to easy formulation as
it is because Gorringe has not successfully assimilated them within
his argument. It is therefore a book that deserves closer consideration,
if only to understand why its question is so analytically intractable. |
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Gorringe's purpose is two-fold:
on the one hand, to demonstrate the interdependence between theologies
of the atonement and penal strategies within the historical tradition,
particularly in England, and on the other, to argue for an alternative
interpretation of the founding texts upon which these theologies
have been constructed. His argument is divided into three parts:
an exegetical discussion of the principal biblical sources for a
theology of atonement, a historical survey of the development of
these theologies from the eleventh to the nineteenth century, and
a concluding argument for the contemporary reinterpretation of the
biblical sources. He situates this attempt to reconcile historical
development with theological truth within the context of sociological
and anthropological analyses of punishment (David Garland, Punishment
and Modern Society [Oxford, 1990]) and violence (René Girard,
Things Hidden Since the Foundation of the World, trans. S.
Bann and M. Metteer [London, 1987]), but his primary methodological
concern is exegetical: What do the founding texts of the tradition
really say, and how have they been misinterpreted over time?
This in itself is an acceptable (not to say traditional) methodology,
and there is no doubt that many of the answers that have been given
in the past may in fact represent a "deformation of biblical faith"
(82). My concern is not with Gorringe's revision of the texts but
rather with his historiography. His intention is to demonstrate
that within the tradition itself, there are conflicting interpretations
of the meaning of Christ's death, and that some of these interpretations
point not to retribution against sinners and criminals (the two
at times conflated, at others distinguished by the theologians and
lawyers) but rather to forgiveness and reincorporation into the
community. He argues that it is possible to read Jesus' death not
as divine sanction for inflicting suffering or death on those who
have transgressed the laws of the community (who either as scapegoats
or as penitents must atone for their wrongdoing to satisfy God's
justice) but rather as a challenge to recognize the "needs and rights
of victims" (256), here defined not as those who have suffered crime,
but those who have perpetrated it. The answer is the "imagined community"
(Benedict Anderson) of the church realized through a "praxis of
costly forgiveness" (268). So far so good, at least insofar as the
argument operates from a theological perspective. Where Gorringe
encounters difficulties, however, is not in his arguments for contemporary
reinterpretation of the gospels but rather in his historical survey
of their effects, two of which provoke particular concern for this
reviewer: the use of Anselm's theory of satisfaction as the prototype
of retributive theology and the description of the effects of passion
mysticism on late medieval and early modern understandings of corporal
punishment. |
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Anselm of Canterbury is perhaps best
known for his ontological proof of the existence of God, but theologically
his most provocative work was his Cur Deus Homo?, an apology
for the Incarnation addressed to certain "unbelievers" who contended
that the death of Christ was not only absurd and improper, but moreover
unnecessary, since God might have redeemed humanity by a simple
act of divine forgiveness. According to Gorringe, Anselm's answer
(that only the sacrifice of an innocent God-man could satisfy God's
justice) was metaphorically dependent upon the structures and procedures
of feudal law, according to which sin might be perceived as an "infringement
of honour" (93), and satisfaction (satisfactio) would be
considered necessary to restore the hierarchical order of society.
Gorringe is not the first to observe Anselm's dependence on feudal
imagery in his theological arguments (see Richard Southern, St.
Anselm and His Biographer [Cambridge, 1963], 107-14), but he
convincingly demonstrates that this imagery is at base legal as
much as it is social. Where he oversteps his evidence is in his
allusions to the transmission and reception of Anselm's theology.
"Still, today, it commands the allegiance of many (99).... [Calvin]
addresses Anselm's question (without, however, mentioning Anselm)
(137).... [In Grotius' Defensio Fidei Catholicae de Satisfactione
Christi] the Anselmian theme of order is reintroduced in an
almost unrecognizable form (148).... Enter Anselm ... The death
of Christ dominated the 'structures of affect' of Europe for five
hundred years, and in so doing they pumped retributivism into the
legal bloodstream (224)." This may be good theology, but it is bad
history. Had Calvin and Grotius read Anselm? Why does Anselm "still"
command allegiance? How appropriate are metaphors of the circulation
of the blood for the description of processes of intellectual reception?
These questions might or might not provoke concern if encountered
in a history of doctrine (but see Quentin Skinner, "Meaning and
Understanding in the History of Ideas," History and Theory
8 [1969]: 3-53), but in an argument attempting the integration of
theology with legal and social praxis, they are Socratic gadflies,
insignificant in themselves, but pointedly irksome en masse. |
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The need to pay closer attention
to the mechanisms of transmission and reception is most acute in
Gorringe's account of later medieval and early modern uses of the
Passion. One of the great strengths of Gorringe's argument on the
whole is his contention that theologies of the atonement were caught
up in the ideology of criminal law, and that these theologies in
turn impacted upon the development of criminal law and the treatment
of criminals, most particularly in the execution of the Waltham
Black Act between 1722 and 1823. Nevertheless, in assuming rather
than demonstrating Anselm's dominance into and beyond the early
modern period, Gorringe on the one hand fails to explain why Anselm's
later contemporaries, themselves caught up in the structures of
feudal law, did not on the whole immediately embrace his satisfaction
theory and on the other ignores perhaps the single most important
transformation in judicial practice for the representation and perception
of the significance of Christ's execution in the later Middle Ages:
the reinstitution in the twelfth century of judicial torture (Thomas
Bestul, Texts of the Passion: Latin Devotional Literature and
Medieval Society [Philadelphia, 1996], 145-64). Instead, Gorringe
appeals to Johann Huizinga's classic description of a medieval "mind
saturated with the concepts of Christ and the cross" (The Waning
of the Middle Ages, trans. F. Hopman [Harmondsworth, 1965],
184), and, in Norbert Elias's terms, to the "emergence of new structures
of affect" (105), in order to explain the transformation in sensibilities
that manifested itself in the late medieval devotion to Christ's
wounds. This devotion itself emerged at a time when the use if not
the spectacle of torture was becoming standard, especially in the
treatment of suspected heretics. It is not enough to suggest that
this passion mysticism was simply "the obverse of the brutality
which characterised the period" (125). In theological terms, the
argument was often cast according to the Latin rhetorical trope
quanto magis (how much the more). If Christ, who was God,
suffered such extremities of physical pain and humiliation, how
much the more ought the same pain and indignity be inflicted upon
"the Jew, the heretic, the criminal, the outcast?" (Bestul, 159).
The legality of torture in this period had as much to do with the
perceived purity of the socio-ecclesiastical body of the church
as it did with the punishment of wrongdoers. |
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As noted above, this is an ambitious
and thought-provoking book. A longer review might comment more upon
Gorringe's efforts to integrate biblical exegesis with anthropological
and sociological interpretations of Old Testament sacrifice and
upon his rather more successful discussion of the paradoxical demands
placed upon prison chaplains in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
who were expected "to preach repentance and obtain conversion" (160)
from the more often than not poor criminals awaiting execution under
the Black Act. Nevertheless, enough has been said to sketch the
complexity of Gorringe's argument and to highlight its difficulties,
one of which must be noted as uppermost: how should a (post) modern
theologian address theological issues historically without implicitly
or (as Gorringe occasionally does) explicitly blaming the proponents
of now unacceptable positions for holding those same positions even
as he demonstrates the extent to which these positions were implicated
in the social, cultural, and legal institutions of the day? In asking
"how a Christian theology of the atonement ought to bear
on penal thinking" (7), is it possible to do so without suggesting
that all previous construals of the crucifixion were wrong, indeed
"deformations of biblical faith," rather than themselves attempts
to reconcile the ambiguity of scripture with the powerful human
impulses to seek expiation for wrongdoing and vengeance against
wrongdoers? In his argument, Gorringe himself slips at times not
only between the analytical categories of sin and crime, morality
and law, but also between the interior demands of individual guilt
for atonement and the exterior demands of society for retribution.
Perhaps the story of the crucifixion functions so powerfully as
myth, despite its grounding in the historical reality of Roman justice,
precisely because the narratives on which all subsequent interpretations
of that historical event inevitably rest, namely the gospels, were
themselves historically contingent attempts to make sense of the
apparent nonsense of Christ's death, while at the same time irrevocably
bearers of cultural meaning insofar as they engaged their readers
in contemplation of the "primeval reality" of human violence and
suffering (11, citing Bronislaw Malinowski, "Myth in Primitive Psychology,"
in Myth, Science and Religion and Other Essays [Westport,
Conn., 1971], 101). Theological truth may or may not be historically
contingent, but human interpretations of that truth inescapably
are, as are human attempts to come to terms with the simultaneous
and perhaps inevitably complementary facts of human violence and
suffering. Gorringe's question admits no easy answers precisely
because violence and suffering continue to be inescapable, and yet
Gorringe's critique of criminal law and theologies of the atonement
suggests that they might be within his utopian "imagined community"
of the church. |
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Rachel Fulton
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University of Chicago
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