|
The anthropomorphism of biblical
language
8. The presentation of man as "the
image and likeness of God" at the very beginning of Sacred Scripture has another
significance too. It is the key for understanding biblical Revelation as
God's word about himself. Speaking about himself, whether through the prophets,
or through the Son" (cf. Heb 1:1, 2) who became man, God speaks
in human language, using human concepts and images. If this manner of
expressing himself is characterized by a certain anthropomorphism, the reason
is that man is "like" God: created in his image and likeness. But
then, God too is in some measure "like man", and precisely
because of this likeness, he can be humanly known. At the same time, the
language of the Bible is sufliciently precise to indicate the limits of the
"likeness", the limits of the "analogy". For biblical
Revelation says that, while man's "likeness" to God is true, the
"non-likeness"27 which separates the whole of creation
from the Creator is still more essentially true. Although man is created
in God's likeness, God does not cease to be for him the one "who dwells in
unapproachable light" (1 Tim 6:16): he is the
"Different One", by essence the "totally Other".
This observation on the limits of the
analogy - the limits of man's likeness to God in biblical language - must also
be kept in mind when, in different passages of Sacred Scripture (especially in
the Old Testament), we find comparisons that attribute to God
"masculine" or "feminine" qualities. We find in these
passages an indirect confirmation of the truth that both man and woman were
created in the image and likeness of God. If there is a likeness between
Creator and creatures, it is understandable that the Bible would refer to God
using expressions that attribute to him both "masculine" and
"feminine" qualities.
We may quote here some characteristic
passages from the prophet Isaiah: "But Zion said, 'The Lord has
forsaken me, my Lord has forgotten me'.'Can a woman forget her sucking
child, that she should have no compassion on the son of her womb? Even these
may forget, yet I will not forget you'". (49:14-15). And elsewhere:
"As one whom his mother comforts, so will I comfort you; you shall
be comforted in Jerusalem" (66: 13). In the Psalms too God is compared to
a caring mother: "Like a child quieted at its mother's breast; like a
child that is quieted is my soul. O Israel, hope in the Lord". (Ps 131:2-3).
In various passages the love of God who cares for his people is shown to be
like that of a mother: thus, like a mother God "has carried"
humanity, and in particular, his Chosen People, within his own womb; he has
given birth to it in travail, has nourished and comforted it (cf. Is
42:14; 46: 3-4). In many passages God's love is presented as the
"masculine" love of the bridegroom and father (cf. Hosea 11:1-4;
Jer 3:4-19), but also sometimes as the "feminine" love of a
mother.
This characteristic of biblical language -
its anthropomorphic way of speaking about God - points indirectly to
the mystery of the eternal "generating" which belongs to the
inner life of God. Nevertheless, in itself this "generating" has
neither "masculine" nor "feminine" qualities. It is by
nature totally divine. It is spiritual in the most perfect way, since "God
is spirit" (Jn 4:24) and possesses no property typical of the body,
neither "feminine" nor "masculine". Thus even "fatherhood"
in God is completely divine and free of the "masculine" bodily
characteristics proper to human fatherhood. In this sense the Old Testament
spoke of God as a Father and turned to him as a Father. Jesus Christ - who
called God "Abba Father" (Mk 14: 36), and who as the
only-begotten and consubstantial Son placed this truth at the very centre of
his Gospel, thus establishing the norm of Christian prayer - referred to
fatherhood in this ultra-corporeal, superhuman and completely divine sense. He
spoke as the Son, joined to the Father by the eternal mystery of divine
generation, and he did so while being at the same time the truly human Son of
his Virgin Mother.
Although it is not possible to attribute
human qualities to the eternal generation of the Word of God, and although the
divine fatherhood does not possess "masculine" characteristics in a
physical sense, we must nevertheless seek in God the absolute model of
all "generation" among human beings. This would seem to be the
sense of the Letter to the Ephesians: "I bow my knees before the Father,
from whom every family in heaven and on earth is named" (3:14-15). All
"generating" among creatures finds its primary model in that
generating which in God is completely divine, that is, spiritual. All
"generating" in the created world is to be likened to this absolute
and uncreated model. Thus every element of human generation which is proper to
man, and every element which is proper to woman, namely human "fatherhood"
and "motherhood", bears within itself a likeness to, or
analogy with the divine "generating" and with that
"fatherhood" which in God is "totally different", that is,
completely spiritual and divine in essence; whereas in the human order,
generation is proper to the "unity of the two": both are
"parents", the man and the woman alike.
|