Thursday, September 11, 2008

It is not good for a man to be alone

Christ is in heaven, with a glorified body. Glorification does not destroy what is essentially human. A glorified body, thus, has a mouth, eyes, ears, and all that. There is more to it than that. But what normal human beings have, Christ has in heaven. But there would be something unnatural, something lacking in the glorification, if Christ had a mouth and ears, but there was no fellow human being there for him to talk to. Our bodies exist in large part for interaction with others (that our bodies are signs of our being-for-others is a central insight of John Paul II's theology of the body). A single embodied human being just does not make all that much sense.

But if there is a fellow human being in heaven for Christ to be in human communion with, then who is this fellow human being? It is right and proper to confer honor upon our parents. Thus, his mother is a very plausible candidate. There would be something unfitting about his conferring that honor on someone other than his mother, and not on his mother, given the commandment of filial devotion, unless his mother were not a disciple of his—which, the Christian tradition insists, she was. (Indeed, I think it is right to read the New Testament as presenting her as the paradigmatic disciple.)

Objection 1: This argument proves too much. For a glorified body also includes reproductive organs, and so a parallel argument would show that to live a full, glorified human life requires reproduction.

Response: Probably, reproduction is only a natural function of a human being for a limited portion of the human being's life. Moreover, there is a way in which we can transcend the physically reproductive life through spiritual reproduction—through devoting our lives in celibacy to spreading the Gospel. But some form of bodily interaction with other human beings—whether through talking or hugging or just looking in another's eyes—seems essential to a naturally fulfilling human life at just about all its mature (and maybe even immature) stages.

Objection 2: The need for bodily communion is satisfied through Christ's giving of himself to us bodily in the Eucharist.

Response: Christ's giving of himself to us in the Eucharist does not seem to make use of any of the natural faculties of his glorified body. There is a kind of natural bodily communion with others that is called for.

Objection 3: Mary survived at least some time past Christ's ascension into heaven. So if Mary is the only one assumed into heaven, for a while Christ was bodily alone in heaven, only surrounded spiritually by the souls of those he brought out of Sheol.

Response: Maybe then we have to say that more people were assumed bodily into heaven. Moses and Elijah are good candidates on Scriptural grounds. But the argument that it would unfitting for Mary not to be assumed as well if anybody is, given the special honor to be paid to parents, still remains. Or, maybe, we should say that there is nothing deeply unnatural in a human being's being alone for a while, even for a couple of years. But to be alone for a significantly greater amount of time would be unnatural.

Objection 4: Maybe time runs at a different rate in heaven, and it'll only be five minutes of heavenly time between Christ's ascension into heaven and the Last Judgment.

Response: Could be. I think such a difference in the rate of time, though, weakens the way in which Christ is in human communion with us. But I acknowledge that the different-rate hypothesis is a viable one, and hence weakens the argument.

Fittingness arguments, like the one I offer, are not meant to be conclusive. But they do increase the probability of the claim. Or, at least, the argument could help explain why it is that the doctrine of Mary's assumption is not something weird, unexpected and ad hoc, if the doctrine actually can be seen as helping to solve a genuine problem, the problem of Christ's bodily aloneness.

5 comments:

Martin Cooke said...

Glorification does not destroy what is essentially human. A glorified body, thus, has a mouth, eyes, ears, and all that.
Are ears essential to being human? One is surely not less than human if one lacks them. If you are right about the reproductive organs (as you surely are about the hair on our heads) then similarly we might outgrow ears, eyes and a mouth when we die. We see darkly through these sorts of eyes, for example, and might not need a mouth and ears if we became telepathic in the afterlife. Even the expressive job of eyes and mouth, which can be so deceptive, might be replaced, e.g. by something more like auras...

But some form of bodily interaction with other human beings—whether through talking or hugging or just looking in another's eyes—seems essential to a naturally fulfilling human life at just about all its mature (and maybe even immature) stages.
Some form of interaction for sure, but why not (for such as the aforementioned reasons) physical-bodily before death and spiritual-bodily afterwards. Hugging would only require that the spiritual body have some sort of boundary, within the spiritual realm, and something like an aura might have a cloudy boundary that allows interactions more intimate than the brushing together of hairy skin. And that could be complimented by holy communion, a physical-bodily interaction (similarly analogous to but superiour to hugging).

...also I wonder, why does your argument defend Mary's assumption, rather than that something like that was to be expected, e.g. maybe after dying normally she was (or will be) resurrected or recreated? It is more obvious (and it happens earlier) that men leave home (and their mothers) as they grow up, than that they leave sex behind. So it is only natural for Jesus to be waiting a relatively long time for Mary's arrival. Does the analogy not suggest that Mary might be expected to be helping with the children of the Church (alongside the angels perhaps), rather than keeping Jesus company?

Alexander R Pruss said...

Here, I was using "essential" in a non-modal, medieval sense. I should probably have used the word "normal". Glorification does not destroy what is normally human. Ears, etc. are normal for human beings.

And it is essential to human beings (in the modern, modal sense of "essential") that it be normal for them to have ears.

Martin Cooke said...

So Jesus retains in Heaven all those things about his human body that were normal (and perhaps some other things too)?

Alexander R Pruss said...

I think so. But likely transformed in some way.

Anonymous said...

Hi Dr Pruss. I have a Fifth Objection. The premise including the application of the biblical statement, "It is not good for man to be alone," suffers from radical eisegtical misapplication, namely, the fact that Gen. 2 was considering the benefits of the martial companionship of a man with a woman, and the "one flesh" sexual union that necessarily follows in consummating that union.

So unless you think Jesus had celestial intercourse with his Mother, then you probably can't use that text in your argument.