“The Greatest Paradox of All”: The “Place of God” in the Mystical Theologies of Gregory of Nyssa and Evagrius of Pontus

Author:

Conway-Jones Ann1

Affiliation:

1. Honorary Research Fellow, Department of Theology and Religion, University of Birmingham , Birmingham , UK

Abstract

Abstract The “place of God” is an oxymoron, implying a spatial confinement of the transcendent deity. Gregory of Nyssa calls it “the greatest paradox of all.” It is a biblical image, applied above all to the tabernacle/temple, which inspired a long afterlife of fruitful reflection in both Jewish and Christian traditions. This paper focusses on the interpretations of the “place of God” in the writings of the fourth century theologians Gregory of Nyssa and Evagrius of Pontus. They take different biblical verses as their starting points, both from the Exodus narrative of Moses’ experiences on Mount Sinai – a narrative which was to prove crucial for the development of the Christian mystical tradition. Gregory takes his cue from LXX Exodus 33:21 – “Look, a place is near me. You shall stand on the rock” – and develops an argument for divine infinity. He correlates this with the relentless nature of the Exodus narrative and Moses’ insatiable desire. Evagrius is inspired by LXX Exodus 24:10 – “and they saw the place, there where the God of Israel stood” – and takes the sapphire blue colour of heaven to represent pure prayer. He talks of the human mind (nous) as a temple of the Holy Trinity. A close examination of their interpretations illustrates what Steven Katz calls “the fertile interconnection between theology, exegesis, and mystical experience.” They have not simply started with preconceived schemes into which they have slotted scriptural proof texts, but genuinely wrestled with biblical texts. In the new theological context of the fourth century, they have produced fresh exegeses. Evagrius chooses between different Greek translations; Gregory notices a discrepancy in the scriptural record. They do not explain away or smooth over the contradictions and difficulties of the biblical text, but work with them creatively, capitalising on the paradoxes, to generate imagery worthy of the unfathomable God. Unlike Gregory’s highlighting of the darkness in Exodus 20:21, which led, via Pseudo-Dionysius, to the medieval “cloud of unknowing,” these interpretations of the “place of God” have not passed into the bloodstream of the Western mystical tradition. But they amply illustrate the crucial role of biblical exegesis in the development of Christian mystical theology.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Reference47 articles.

1. Boersma, Hans. 2013. Embodiment and Virtue in Gregory of Nyssa: An Anagogical Approach. Oxford Early Christian Studies. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

2. Brakke, David. 2009. Evagrius of Pontus: Talking Back: A Monastic Handbook for Combating Demons. Cistercian Studies 229. Collegeville: Liturgical Press.

3. Bunge, Gabriel. 1986. “The ‘Spiritual Prayer’: On the Trinitarian Mysticism of Evagrius of Pontus.” Monastic Studies 17: 191–208.

4. Bunge, Gabriel. 1989. “Hénade ou monade? Au subjet de deux notions centrales de la terminologie évagrienne.” Le Muséon 102 (1–2): 69–91.

5. Bunge, Gabriel. 2000. “La montagne intelligible: De la contemplation indirecte à la connaissance immédiate de Dieu dans le traité De Oratione d’Évagre le Pontique.” Studia monastica 42 (1): 7–26.

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