"When I found myself confronted with perfect happiness, a quite unexpected thing happened. I suddenly discovered that if happiness is aimless, it's unbearable. I could not accept aimless happiness. Hardships and sufferings had to be overcome, there was always something beyond them. But because it had no further meaning and because I believed in nothing, happiness seemed to be stale. So I decided I would give myself a year to see whether life had any meaning."
Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh, School of Prayer (London: Daybreak, 1989), p. xiii
2013-2023 Gleanings and Musings from the Study of the then Rector of Monken Hadley
Showing posts with label Happiness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Happiness. Show all posts
Wednesday, 11 January 2017
Saturday, 12 December 2015
The first thing Scripture says about joy
"The first
thing Scripture says about joy can be summed up in the beginning of the hymn Jesu
meine Freude [Jesus, my joy][1].
This is the keynote of the biblical proclamation of the birth of Christ, of the
advent of the kingdom of God in the fellowship of Jesus with his disciples, of
his resurrection and ascension. (Lk 2:10; Mk 2:19; Lk
24:41,52; Joh 20:20). God wants to make us glad through Jesus Christ. He does not want to depress us or
shoulder us with problems, he does not want to present us with insoluble
problems, but he wants us to rejoice in Jesus Christ and his rule...This
belongs to the simple things which we like to forget as we are engrossed in the
difficult things, namely that we learn to be chuffed about Jesus like children.
Is it not the worst case of ingratitude and obduracy of heart, if the one who
came for our salvation, for deliverance, now becomes a burden to us? If our joy
in Christ dwindles away, so does our love for him. Without joy in the Son of
God who became man and rose from the dead we get into grumbling, dissent and
sadness. But how do we find such joy? Only through the firm belief: Jesus
lives! If it is really true that Jesus lives, that he testifies himself to us,
guides and helps us, how can we be other than glad like the disciples when they
saw him on Easter Day? (Joh 20:20)
Those who
have found Christ walk their way with joy, in their joy they go and sell all
that they have and buy the precious pearl (Mt 13:44 [cf. v.46]). Those who do
not walk the way of Jesus become sorrowful like the rich young man (Mt 19:22).
Those who commit themselves entirely to the way of Jesus will become glad in
it. Such joy proves itself also in the suffering which this way can bring for
us (Mt 5:12; 1. Pet 4:13ff; 2. Cor 6, 10; Phil 2:17; Col 1:24; Heb 10:24 et al.).
The basis of all such joy is the nearness of Jesus (Phil 4:4). Ach, mein
Herr Jesu, dein Nahesein... [My dear Lord Jesus, your
closeness...][2]. At
the same time there is the confidence that it is exactly in this way that the
work of Jesus Christ on earth is fulfilled and completed (2 Tim 2:10). Thus the
things that should bring us affliction and annihilation, by God’s wonderful
grace, only strengthen our joy. If we remain in the proper joy, then it is
really true: ‘No one will take your joy from you’ (Joh 16:22) because this joy will
last into eternity (1 Pet 1:8).
The
church is a fellowship of joy. All rejoice in the special grace received by one
(1 Cor 12:26). John does not know a higher joy that seeing his children walk in
the truth (2 Joh 1:4; 3 Joh 1:4; cf 1. Cor
13:6). Paul invites his church to participate in the joy of his suffering for
Jesus Christ (Phil 2:17). Jesus calls for joy with him over every sinner who
repents. The whole of Lk 15 is governed by this call (15:6,9,23,32; cf 2 Cor 7:9f).
Christians are a daily source of joy for one another (1 Thess 2:19; Phil 4:1).
Those who have their eyes open for their fellow Christians can never lack a
reason to be joyful. Isn’t it astonishing to know that not only Jesus is our
joy but also our Christian brother or sister? Do we not have reason enough
today to be filled with this joy?"
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Das erste was die Schrift über die Freude sagt
Labels:
Dietrich Bonhoeffer,
Happiness,
joy
Saturday, 15 August 2015
Aquinas on Happiness
Chapter 4
of Ellen T. Charry’s God and the Art of
Happiness (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2010) on Saint Thomas Aquinas includes a review of Aristotle’s
teaching on happiness. “Happiness is not a matter of acquiring something outside
us, but of adopting a particular way of life….Happiness is being an excellent
person, and that is demanding; learning to “do” one’s life excellently takes
time…The path to happiness sis unflinchingly social, not private, because it
takes place in the context of interpersonal and public relationships and
behaviors. One must know what behaviors to cultivate, and this knowledge comes
from a good upbringing that inculcates moral discipline and good priorities, as
well as from a keen intellect that practices good judgment.”
“Thomas is
especially interested in knowing God, and, though he does not always call it
happiness, life’s goal is to know God perfectly…Perfect knowledge of God is
perfect happiness for Aquinas.”
“Aquinas is
unique among theologians in that mixed in with his eschatological vision is a
temporal construal of happiness that is experiential. He is the first Christian
theologian to embrace temporal flourishing in this life by enjoying material
goods – though it is a minor theme, one inspired by Aristotle.”
“Happiness…is
knowledge and not physical well-being. It is an intellectual activity that is
completed by delight in loving what we desire….Ultimate happiness is a spiritual
activity: it is seeking our ultimate good, which is, of course, God. Complete
happiness is knowing God utterly…Knowing God is not information about God but
an intimacy with divinity itself (the divine mind, essence, or nature) that satisfies
the soul’s deepest desire; it is simultaneously intellectual and emotional joy,
in which love infuses knowledge.”
“Since
happiness is knowing the divine mind, we are hamstrung using our mind alone
because our little minds cannot grasp the divine mind.” “By becoming spiritually
adept, one becomes emotionally secure and less needful of external sources of
gratification. This benefit is lost on those who miss the signs of God in this
world that would enable them to understand the true source of goodness.”
“Divine
illumination is the foundation of Aquinas’s doctrine of happiness: God is both
the means and the object of human happiness.”
All things
are purposeful and God uses secondary means to make creatures flourish in fulfillment
of their God-given purpose. “Acting on things for their good advances their
purpose, and as this happens we are also improving: enhancing the flourishing
of others enhances our own. This is enjoying ourselves and being happy in this
life.”
“Virtue is
necessary but not sufficient for temporal happiness. This is a deep break with
Christian Stoicism and Neo-Platonism. Even if it is an intellectual pleasure,
enjoyment is embodied and the body contributes to happiness (art. 5). Happiness
needs a healthy body because poor health can impede virtue and thus impede the
correct orientation or will toward selecting appropriate desires. At the same
time, ‘happiness of soul overflows into body which drinks of the fullness of
the soul’ (art.
5). Physical and spiritual pleasures work together because soul and body
are an indivisible unity.”
“Thomas
made two contributions to the developments of the Christian doctrine of
happiness. First, he integrated Augustine’s notion of happiness residing in the
enjoyment of God with divine illuminations, the beatific vision, and immortal life.
These were all Augustinian themes, but the bishop did not unify them. Aquinas incorporated
Aristotles’ valorizing of personal well-being into Augustinian theology to
create a genuine if limited Christian doctrine of terrestrial happiness while
sustaining central interest in eschatological happiness.
His second contribution is that he
recognized that terrestrial happiness prepares one for eternal bliss. Augustine
did not emphasize the continuity between material and spiritual happiness,
which Aquinas appreciated more. For his part, Boethius tried to wean us from
relying on good fortune and the ability to accumulate wealth, power, fame, and
reputation; Aquinas, by contrast, valued mundane happiness because he saw
continuity between temporal and eternal bliss: temporal happiness is a
foretaste of the heavenly banquet, and enables us to anticipate and yearn for
eschatological fulfillment even more. To the degree that achieving this goal
requires good attitudes, a well-disposed mind and body, and friends, divine
grace enables us to be happy in this life. Thomas viewed the great river of
time and space that we occupy as the arena in which the desire to celebrate our
life in the goodness of God’s creation, however imperfectly, enables us to develop
knowledge of God and hope for eternal bliss.”
“Illumination
is the gift of loving and wanting to know God utterly; it gives unifying purpose
to life.”
Boethius on Happiness
The consolation genre of ancient literature was
not designed to comfort but to exhort readers to get on with life rather than
wallow in self-pity. The Consolation of
Philosophy by Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius (c. 482-c. 525) is more confrontational
than other works of that genre and “unusual in that the author exhorts himself”
as Boethius is in prison facing execution for a political offense he did not
commit. Most commentators agree that “it is a Neo-Platonic exhortation…to
embrace God as the means to overcome sentimental self-pity.” Its Christian
character is rather less obvious.
Boethius suggests that “perhaps only ill
fortune will capture our attention so that we can focus on the source of true
happiness. Shifting reliance from fortune to God is the wake-up call of the
work.”
“Ill fortune is a blessing in disguise. In
addition to helping us see ourselves more clearly, it enables us better to
distinguish true from false sources of happiness by stripping us of pride in
our cleverness and virtue.”
“True happiness is the realization that only
one “substance” is self-sufficient, powerful, honorable, famous, and even pleasurable.
The good that people seek piecemeal in so many different temporal goods is, it
turns out, one simple “substance”: goodness itself. Those who seek happiness in
wealth, office, reputation, and bodily pleasure are grasping at pieces of
goodness, for wanting them is to desire the good. Seeking the good in objects
rather than activities is misplaced. Happiness can never be attained in this
way because it is not to be had when enjoying any of these goods. The seeker
who looks there confuses the pleasure these objects bring with genuine
happiness that is enjoying goodness itself even when that brings no external
reward and even misfortune.”
“The issue is that we do not know what true happiness
is because we do not know what is truly worth wanting.” Material pleasure is
insufficient, we must acquire divinity. “That is, when we realize that we partake
of the ordered beauty and goodness that is God, enjoying that goodness becomes
the basis on which we enjoy the world and find the power, riches, and wealth
that we were looking for in their material expressions.”
In suffering we must not think of ourselves as “victims
of fate” but “beneficiaries of divine providence.” “The suffering of the just
enables us to discover our strengths and to exercise virtue. They give others
examples to follow, and unjust death brings posthumous renown.”
“Happiness is commonly thought of experientially;
Boethius rejects that notion because experience is unreliable…Happiness is an
outlook arising from a staunch commitment to divine omnipotence and goodness in
the face of contradictory experience…Believing that one’s misfortunes are part
of a larger invisible divine plan for the well-ordered functioning of the
cosmos should enable the sufferer to be content that his suffering is not
pointless or that it damages the divine reputation…Ultimately, happiness is
participating in divine intelligence wherein all makes sense.”
Notes from Ellen
T. Charry, God and the Art of Happiness
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2010) who comments further “This is a hard teaching.
Happiness is enjoying being part of the divine plan. While there is nothing in
Boethius’s presentation that departs from Christian theism…the redemptive
dimension of Christian theology that gives hope is missing. His notion of
happiness is tinged with despair about the need to be ever striving for
intellectual perfection and vigilant against feels of dejection, anger, and
defeat. Boethius offers only the power of unremitting strength, unqualified by
relaxed joy…Because Augustine compassionately gave credence to suffering, he
could not take the hard line that Boethius did. Augustine’s future eschatology
offers hope of reward while counseling endurance now. Boethius offers a
realized eschatology, at the expense of succor for the suffering in this life.
That being said, Boethius does believe he is succoring sufferers, only not in
the way they might hope. Succor is the strength not to be brought low by experience
but to rise above it and to exercise one’s dignity by doing so.”
Labels:
Boethius,
Ellen T. Charry,
Happiness
Wednesday, 12 August 2015
Augustine on Happiness
From Ellen T. Charry, God and the Art of Happiness (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2010)
“Happiness is knowing, loving, and enjoying God
securely. For that, one must seek and find God, and this seeking proceeds by
cultivating wisdom. It is the highest end of human life. Wisdom requires virtue
but is not itself virtue, for wisdom resides in God revealed in Christ.”
“This very early work [De Beata Vita] has
accomplished the following: all people want to be happy, and God has made this
possible; humans are defined as both body and soul, implying (against the
Stoics and Plotinus) that the well-being of the body is important. Further,
human life is purposeful: to become wise and filled by enjoying God as much as
possible in this life is to achieve our purpose, knowing that here we will
never be completely safe from suffering and distress. Only those who know or
have God to the fullest experience this spiritual joy. Yet, as well as we may
know, love, and enjoy God in this life, happiness will never be complete until fulfilled
in the eschaton. While being filled
with the wisdom of God surfaces here early on as central to Augustine’s
teaching on happiness, it will eventually be eclipsed by love.”
“Happiness characterizes God-lovers, and loving
well is the key to happiness…We flourish when we enjoy our chief good, the end
for which we are made – enjoyment of God.”
“Happiness is high-quality loving by means of
which one extracts the best that life has to offer…To be good is to love in a
manner consistent with one’s God-given nature. Living wisely is living
virtuously – that is, in obedience to the self God created us to be.”
From a summary of Sermon 368 (“Whoever loves
his soul will lose it”): “What does this mean? Some loves are harmful while
others are helpful; when we pursue helpful ones and let them push out harmful
ones, better self-love will prevail. Therefore, one way to grasp the healing of
the soul is to see it as learning to love oneself well. This is not in any way individualistic,
antisocial, or prideful, because, for Augustine, self-love exists always in the
context of comprehensive Christian identity – in relationship with God and
others.”
“[The] instability of love is the greatest
impediment to the training of love unto salvation. Vanity and greed are distorted
forms of love that create psychological and spiritual dysfunction. Augustine
realizes that the specific form this dysfunction takes depends on individual
differences, but the conflicted self is a universal human experience essential
to Augustine’s theological psychology. Finally, he argues, divine grace is the
only way that the divided soul can truly be healed. However, our ultimate
reliance on God for this healing does not absolve us of the responsibility to
be guided and to guide others in loving as best we can here and now.”
“People say they want to be happy; they say
that they want the truth and do not want to be deceived by falsehood. But they
are unwilling to be convicted by the truth when it criticizes their distorted
love…people love truth only when it confirms and supports them.” Augustine “understands
the power of defense mechanisms that entrench us in patterns of thought and behavior
and that resist insight and change.”
“The journey into God is a healing journey into
one’s soul, for each step deeper into God heals and strengthens love. In this
journey, love of material goods loses its power as the soul is perfected in the
love of God which is perfect self-love.” (Cf. O’Donovan on self-love in
Augustine)
“Augustine concludes that only those who have
everything they want – and want nothing wrongly – can be happy…The best thing
to want in this life is a will to love well and desire good things in proportion
to their goodness, the getting of which will make the seeker happy as possible
for as long as possible. A good will that aspires to God can bring a person
near to complete happiness, but Augustine holds tenaciously to the view that
life is so challenging that true happiness eludes us. Temporal happiness, then,
is wanting and having what is good – righteous love of self, neighbor, material
things, and al these in God – in proportion to their goodness. This requires spiritual
training.”
“The implicit teaching on happiness in The Trinity is soteriological. Salvation
is the healing of the soul through the slow and painful recovery of the
shattered and lost image of God that we are intrinsically by the grace of
creation.” “Augustine’s therapeutic soteriology is the primary
handhold for the current effort to reclaim a Christian doctrine of happiness.”
Augustine’s “doctrine of happiness remains
hopeful that we can have and enjoy what we seek and be healed by that
enjoyment. It is cautious in that it discourages high expectations of
persistent flourishing as life proceeds. Perhaps the most distinctive feature
of Augustine’s doctrine of happiness is that it heals the soul. It is a
christologically grounded eschatological theory of happiness that is salvific.
To be healed is to be happy. If we cannot be happy in this life, it is because
we cannot be fully healed here – not that
we cannot be healed here at all. The soul’s rest in God is its healing…happiness
is not just that we enjoy seeking God but that his goodness, wisdom, and beauty
actually do heal us to the extent that we know, love, and enjoy him.”
Tuesday, 11 August 2015
Happiness: The Western Philosophical Heritage
From Ellen T.
Charry, God and the Art of Happiness
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2010)
“Although the differences among them are
significant, all the various ancient philosophical pathways with which
Christianity competed affirmed that life ought to be lived purposefully. One
should strive for the highest good that life offers: eudaemonia (variously translated as “well-being,” “flourishing,” or
”happiness”). The schools disagreed about the content of what a flourishing
life looks like and about how to achieve it, but they agreed that a principled
life is best. A casual or haphazard life is not likely to be a successful or
enjoyable as a well-crafted one. Ancient philosophies of happiness are
teleological: life reaches towards an achievable goal…In contract to happiness
as sustained external pleasure, the ancients agreed that happiness is enjoying
oneself in living morally and productively, and it is an external judgment on
how one is faring at life. It is a judgment on how one orders one’s life as a
whole, and it is the enjoyment of that life’s positive results. Both the
enjoyment and the judgment are inspired by a pattern that identifies a life
that is going well enough to be called a fine life – we might even say, a
beautiful life. Overall, well-being comes from using oneself consistently,
intentionally, and effectively, and hence it is a moral undertaking.
Flourishing reflects the moral quality of one’s ultimate purpose or organizing
principle.”
“Here is a taste of what Augustine plundered
from these sources. He agreed with the Epicureans that a flourishing life must
be a judgment about the whole of a life, both psychological and physical.
Obversely, he thought that complete well-being is never assured: against the
Epicurean denial of divine providence and judgment he asserted a strongly
eschatological teaching that happiness is not completely realizable given the
vicissitudes of life. He agreed with the Stoics that a happy life is a
consistently virtuous one, but he disapproved of their disdain for the emotions
and, like the Epicureans, disagreed that material well-being is not valuable as
a good in its own right, even if it is not the highest good. From Plotinus he
took the idea that happiness is a form of self-realization: realizing that our
true identity lies in God and our likeness to God. Of course, Augustine meant
the God of Israel, not of Plato. Again, he disagreed with Plotinus that care of
the body is irrelevant to that realization, though he did not spell out how
physical and spiritual well-being hold together.”
A fuller summary of Augustine's debt to the classical heritage is on pages 22-24.
God and the Art of Happiness
Ellen T.
Charry writes that her God and the Art of Happiness “is a sequel to By the Renewing of YourMinds: The Pastoral Function of Christian Doctrine, where I argued that
classical doctrinal theology is pastorally motivated and that its end is human flourishing.
At the outset of that book I note that “all the thinkers to be examined here
held that knowing and loving God is the mechanism of choice for forming excellent
character and promoting genuine happiness.” Having argued there for the pastoral
function of Christian doctrine, here I review the history of the theological
conversation about happiness and offer a constructive proposal for reopening it
now.”
“Western
Christian theology is skittish about temporal happiness, not because the
tradition has not engaged the subject but because happiness has been primarily
construed in terms of eschatology...This study addresses the general concern
for theology’s emphasis on future eschatology at the expense of temporal
happiness by proposing that happiness is a realizing eschatology with salvation
centered in sanctification. Salvation is growing into the wisdom of divine love
and enjoying oneself in the process.”
“Untethered
from God, there is little call to locate happiness in a spiritual-moral
framework. Christian doctrine has not adequately linked piety to pleasure, thus
leaving a theological gap between goodness and happiness. Happiness unlinked
from goodness and linked to excitement instead has moved in to fill the space.
My hope in reopening the theological discussion is to reconnect pleasure to goodness
so that happiness may regain its soteriological calling, not only for
Christians who may have ceded the term to the marketplace but also for those
who seek spiritual flourishing. This treatment of happiness agrees with most
classical ones that, while all want to be happy, many are looking in the wrong
place. While all seek happiness, this offering carries a special burden for
those traumatized by life’s adversities – that they may be comforted and
encouraged.”
Here is Scott McKnight's book notice.
Labels:
Ellen T. Charry,
Happiness
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