Reflections on Paul
Number 6
A short quote from Simone Weil that is relevant to the Philippians hymn - Phil 2:4-11:
"An imaginary divinity has been given to man so that he may strip himself of it like Christ did of his real divinity" (Gravity and Grace, 30)
When it comes to learning about our faith, I feel as if I am
standing on a beach trying to drink down the entire ocean one coffee cup full
at a time. There is so much to swallow and so little time to swallow it. At
moment I am trying to drink in so much so quickly that most of water of
knowledge is spilling off my chin onto my previously clean white dress shirt.
Anyway, I have spent some time sharing space with the
concept of a grant of imaginary divinity. The connection to the hymn, I
suspect, comes from the use of the word form. Jesus was in the form of God but
he emptied himself to take the form of a slave that was human in likeness and
appearance. We tend to describe things has having both form and substance.
Jesus was in the form of God and then also became in the form of man but
he was also in the substance of God and man through the mystery of homeostatic
union. His divinity and humanity were not imaginary in and sense.
So what of imaginary divinity? Humans are created in
the image of God. In order to be visible or understandable the image must have
a form that we can grasp. The form, however, does not have the substance of
God. We are promised we that through the promised glorification of the second
coming, we will be of the same substance as the risen Christ but for now our
divinity has form but no real substance. It is imaginary.
What is the invisible divinity we strip away? Our
freedom to choose, to make our decisions, to act on our initiative, to attempt
to create what something new. We have to use our God granted free will to empty
ourselves of our drive to rule our lives as we wish to chose to be obedient.
Like God we have the ability to choose. Unlike God we are not free to determine
his will. We have to strip away this notion of freedom in order to find the
true freedom of eternal life by becoming obedient.
Peace.