Aspects of The Cosmic Christ in The Spirituality of Dom Bede Griffithsf
Aspects of The Cosmic Christ in The Spirituality of Dom Bede Griffithsf
the degree of
Master of Theology
of
Rhodes University
By
February 2001
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ABSTRACT
Alan Griffiths was born at Walton-on Thames, England in 1906. He was educated at Christ’s
Hospital and later at Oxford (under the tutelage of C.S. Lewis). At Oxford he read English
literature and philosophy. After considerable inner turmoil he was converted to Chr istianity
in 1931 and entered the Roman Catholic Church in 1933. As a novice Benedictine he was
given the name Bede, and was finally ordained as a priest 1940. In 1955 Fr Bede went to
India to start a Benedictine community with Dom Benedict Alapatt. He later moved to
Kurisumala Ashram in Kerala, and finally, in 1968, to Shantivanam Ashram in Tamil Nadu.
He died at Shantivanam in 1993. Fr Bede was, and still is, regarded by many as a spiritual
pioneer. This high regard stems from an appreciation of his spirituality which was rooted in a
mystical experience of God. This thesis investigates aspects of Fr Bede’s cosmic christology
as they arise from his spirituality. The aim of this research is to show that Fr Bede’s cosmic
christology that stems from an expression of a real mystical experience of Christ, as the
source, sustainer and goal of the whole cosmos, offers both value and insight to Christian
spiritual practice and the formulation of doctrine. What makes Fr Bede’s spirituality so
valuable is the manner in which he integrated East and West in his spirituality and person,
coupled with his ability to draw upon that integration in reflecting and articulating his
experience – which ultimately shaped his cosmic christology. In order to share his
knowledge and experience of the cosmic Christ, Fr Bede draws upon linguistic and
philosophical concepts from the East (and Hinduism in particular) as well as the language and
theory arising from discoveries in the areas of quantum physics, microbiology and
transpersonal psychology in the West. It is the primacy of spiritual experience, coupled with
Fr Bede’s ability to integrate the religions, cultures and world-views of the East and West
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TRANSLITERATION OF SANSKRIT AND GREEK TERMS
For the notation of Sanskrit words used in this thesis the Harvard-Kyoto convention is
adopted.
For the notation of Greek words used in this text diacriticals are indicated.
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CONTENTS
ABSTRACT ii
CONTENTS iv
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS vi
CHAPTER 1: Introduction 1
CHAPTER 2: The marriage of East and West in the life of Bede Griffiths.
4
A) Revelation. 19
i) General or cosmic revelation. 20
ii) Particular or historical revelation. 24
B) Three levels of reality. 27
C) A new vision of reality. 30
i) Science. 32
ii) Biology. 37
iii) Psychology. 39
iv) The perennial philosophy. 44
D) Conclusion. 46
CHAPTER 4: Between two horizons: Aspects of the cosmic Christ in the spirituality of
Bede Griffiths. 47
A) Spiritual experience. 77
i) The importance of a contemplative lifestyle. 79
ii) The relationship between Creator and creation, and the effects of
this relationship for eco-human well-being. 82
B) Theological discourse. 88
i) Theological methodology. 88
ii) Theological language employed in formulating doctrine. 93
C) Conclusion. 95
CHAPTER 6: Conclusion. 96
End-notes 103
Appendix A: A glossary of Sanskrit terms 107
Select Bibliography. 110
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I first discovered the value and depth of Fr Bede Griffiths’ spirituality while an undergraduate
student at Rhodes University. Through studying his work and attempting to put into practice
what I have learnt from him, I have become aware of the important people who have so freely
given of their time, energy and expertise to enrich my life and this research. Over the last
few years I have developed a love for research in the area of contemporary spirituality, not
only for the sake of knowledge, but more importantly in a desire to better grasp and
understand the truths of spiritual living. It is with gratitude to God that I wish to
acknowledge the following persons who have contributed to my love for research and have
assisted me in the preparation and presentation of this thesis.
Firstly, my thanks to Professor Felicity Edwards who has been my supervisor and guide on
this project, and along much of my academic journey. It is her incredible insight and love for
spirituality that first encouraged me to study Fr Bede. Her academic ability and knowledge
of her subject have inspired me. She truly exemplifies all that a student could hope for in a
teacher. She has been patient, kind and encouraging, a true friend and mentor. I count it a
tremendous privilege to know her, and to have studied under her.
Thirdly, I give thanks to my colleagues and fellow Christians in the Methodist Church of
Southern Africa who have allowed me the freedom to explore my faith and develop a
ministry. I am particularly indebted to the Revd Philip Buckland and the leaders, and
members, of Coronation Ave Methodist Church, who gave me the time to complete this
thesis. I especially need to thank the Revd Brian Hazell and Mrs Hilbre Currin for assisting
me to sharpen my appalling grammar, and in so doing helped me put my thoughts into words
with greater accuracy.
Finally, and most importantly, I want to thank my wife, Megan. She has sacrificed a great
deal of time and energy over the last three years to allow me to complete this degree. I am
grateful for her loving support and patience. I love her deeply.
Dion Forster
Somerset West
February 2001
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CHAPTER 1: Introduction.
“The Christian of the future will be a mystic or he or she will not exist at all” (Rahner in
Schneiders 1990:677). This statement serves as a poignant reminder that doctrinal accuracy
alone will never secure the survival of the Christian faith. There can be no expression of the
mystery of God if there is no experience of the mysterious God. Likewise there can be no
experience of God if there is no mystical approach to the mystery of God. It is the primacy of
experience that makes the mystic better able to adapt his or her faith within a context of
Throughout Fr Bede Griffiths’ life, as a Benedictine monk (both in England and India),
spiritual experience always took priority over doctrinal formulation. Within the context of
this research it can safely be said that for him the experience of Christ was primary. This
experience was beyond one culture, one language, one philosophy – and even, one religion.
As will be shown, Fr Bede’s experience of Christ was primarily, although not exclusively,
cosmic in nature. His cosmic christology, as it is recorded in his many works, arose from a
desire to share the truth and excitement of his discovery with those with whom he came into
contact. Thus, Fr Bede’s aim is not so much to articulate the doctrine of the cosmic Christ as
it is to articulate and share his mystical experience of the reality of Christ, and to
communicate the significance of that reality for the whole cosmos or created order.
This thesis will investigate aspects of Fr Bede’s cosmic christology as they arise from his
spirituality. While many of the aspects of his cosmic christology are not new to the doctrine
of Christ, in the sense of being completely unique, they are extremely valuable in that they
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stem from his spiritual experience and are filtered through his context and character.
However, there are some cases in which Fr Bede has drawn upon, and applied, previously
unused concepts in expressing his cosmic christology. Thus, one can say that his christology
has a unique or personal ‘flavour’ to it. It will be shown that this ‘flavour’ is of great value
Fr Bede’s spirituality, and subsequent theological reflection upon that spiritual experience,
were fundamentally shaped and enriched by his life, and in particular the years he spent as a
monk living in India. This rich life’s experience (discussed in Chapter Two) allowed Fr Bede
to operate within the conceptualities of both eastern and western culture and philosophy.
Thus, unlike many other Christologies, Fr Bede’s christology is able to draw on the positive
aspects of both Eastern and Western culture, leading to a far more culturally balanced and
contextually honest christology. This thesis will point out the value of applying
philosophical and linguistic concepts that were previously unused in christology. Such an
integrative christology can be of global significance, since approaching the doctrine of Christ
in this manner supersedes boundaries created by drawing on only one culture and one set of
Fr Bede’s spirituality is integrative in nature. It will be shown that his spirituality encouraged
him to integrate and move beyond some of the limitations of traditional christological
language and philosophy. Stemming from this one is able to see a greater harmony between
a mystical approach to God, as found in the East, and the pragmatic and social approach as
found in western spiritualities. This approach reflects one of his primary spiritual aims, that
is, to establish a marriage between East and West (cf. Griffiths 1982:40; 1989:296).
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Bede Griffiths’ integrative approach makes his christology much more acceptable to the
eastern mind, through its application and integration of eastern linguistic concepts and
philosophy, while at the same time serving as an important corrective to some of the dualities
found in modern western society and religion. Most notable amongst these dualities is the
radical dualism placed between creation and creator that can be found in many forms of
western religion and secular culture. Gaining a clearer understanding of how an experiential,
or spiritual, christology can achieve such aims is of importance in understanding how future
Thus, the following investigation of Fr Bede’s cosmic christology will serve to show how a
doctrinal formulation that arises from spirituality can add valuable insight for both Christian
doctrine and practice. In order to achieve this aim, the thesis will follow a number of logical
steps. Firstly, since Fr Bede’s context radically affects his spirituality, the following chapter
will highlight some formative spiritual events in his life. Chapter Three is structured as a
more technical discussion of the philosophical and theological concepts that arise from his
experience, and so forms the background to his cosmic christology. The argument is further
developed in Chapter Four where significant aspects of Fr Bede’s cosmic christology are
discussed. These are aspects that are seen to offer creative insights while enriching the
continuing development of the doctrine of Christ. The next chapter draws on these insights
and shows in a specific way what contribution Fr Bede’s cosmic christology can make to
Christian spiritual experience and theological discourse. The thesis concludes with a
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CHAPTER 2: The marriage of East and West in the life of Bede Griffiths.
This thesis maintains that Bede Griffiths’ spirituality is primarily based upon his experience
of God. Thus, any discussion of his spirituality would need to discuss and highlight some of
the important and formative experiences that comprise the rich tapestry of his life. The
section that follows aims to do just that, with the intent of giving some insight into who Fr
Bede was, and how his spiritual experiences helped him formulate his cosmic christology.
Naturally it would be an impossible task to record and discuss the whole of Fr Bede’s life.
However, it is possible to suggest some formative and influential experiences, and events in
his life that relate to his cosmic chr istology1 .
Bede Griffiths went to India in 1955 where he lived until his death on 13 May 1993. He was
born Alan Griffiths on 17 December 1906 in Walton on Thames in England, where he was
Alan’s upbringing was thoroughly English, an aspect of his person that would affect rest of
his life. He was educated at Christ’s Hospital. Here he became interested in the literary
works of the great English and classical writers that would later be instrumental in his
conversion to the Christian faith (Spink 1988:44). It was at Christ’s Hospital that Alan had
his first truly religious experience, which interestingly enough, took place in nature (cf.
Griffiths 1979:9-12). Fr Bede relates in the video, “A human search: the life of Fr Bede
Griffiths” (1993), that while walking one evening he was suddenly overwhelmed by the
beauty of nature as if he realised the power of God for the first time. In reflecting on this
awesome experience of God in nature, Fr Bede describes it as his first awakening to “cosmic”
religion. Although, at the time, he sensed that these feelings had “something of a religious
character” to them, he had no interest whatsoever in any sort of formal religion (cf. du Boulay
1998:16). Such a desire would surface only later in his life.
Alan Griffiths entered Oxford in 1925 and soon came under the tutelage of C.S. Lewis 2 , who
had a marked effect on Fr Bede’s spiritual and academic development. At Oxford, according
to Fr Bede, his love for nature grew to become his only religion (Griffiths 1979:10). Fr Bede
reflects that it was only years later that he came to realise that the love and power that he had
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experie nced that day in nature at Christ’s Hospital emanated from the same God who was
preached about in Christianity (Griffiths 1979:130). While at Oxford, Alan Griffiths met two
significant people, Hugh Waterman and Martyn Skinner, whose friendship would be a
“constant thread through Alan’s life… corresponding regularly until the end of their lives”
(du Boulay 1998:20). They all shared the same view that ‘modern’ society had lost its sense
of the sacred (Spink 1988:54). Fr Bede was later to make this one of the central emphases in
his spirituality, seeking to correct the modern secular western world-view with the mystical
world- view of the East. However, in the pre-Indian stage of his life Alan, together with these
two men, attempted to overcome this loss of the sacred in society by entering into a social
experiment to withdraw from modern industrialised English society and engage in living a
common life in the countryside. While this experiment in the Cotswolds did little to appease
his dissatisfaction with western society, it was nonetheless valuable and formative for him.
This time in Alan’s life can be characterised as a period of philosophical and spiritual
literature. Included in this ‘reading diet’ was the Black Letter edition of the Authorised
version of the Bible – approached initially as purely a literary study. However, Alan soon
began to find that the “reconciliation of religion and philosophy which he had glimpsed in
Dante and St Augustine had its root in the Old Testament itself” (du Boulay 1998:51). Du
Boulay notes an important shift in Alan during this stage, recounting that soon “Hugh and
Alan passed from reading to praying, dropping to their knees” (du Boulay 1998:51).
Although correspondence around that time confirms that they did not consider themselves
Christians, there can be little doubt that Alan had begun to experience an awakening to the
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In the months following this experience in 1931, along with continued contact with C.S.
Lewis, Alan began to discover Christianity more acutely (cf. du Boulay 1998:60-61). It was
during this time of intense struggle and confusion Alan felt the need to spend a whole day in
prayer. While praying, he saw himself at the foot of the cross of Christ and surrendered
himself to the Lordship of Christ. Once he had fully associated himself with the Christian
faith it was less than a month before he entered monastic life at Prinknash Abbey. He
became a novice there on 20 December 1933. After making his Simple Profession (21
December 1934) and Solemn Profession (21 December 1937) he studied philosophy and
Fr Bede notes in the video “A human search: the life of Fr Bede Griffiths” (1993) that his
profound interest in religions of the East came as a result of the writings of Christopher
Dawson3 . From this time on he began to study Chinese and Indian religion in earnest, and
was introduced to the practice of yoga by the Jungian analyst, Tony Sussman. He became
convinced, as had others before him, that if the Christian religion was ever to penetrate the
East, it must be interpreted into eastern categories to make it intelligible to the eastern mind
(Rajan 1989:102). This realisation would have a profound effect upon the way in which Fr
Bede later lived and expressed his spirituality in India. It was, however, only in 1955 that Fr
Bede had an opportunity to go to India himself. This opportunity came at the request of Dom
Benedict Alapatt, an Indian Benedictine monk, who had asked him to assist in the
Initially Fr Bede had no intention of changing his lifestyle from the accepted Benedictine
standard. He wore a traditional habit and built a western style chapel with chairs and reading
desks. The cells of the monastery were simply furnished with wooden beds and straw
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mattresses. Gradually however he began to realise that what he regarded as poverty (as a
Benedictine monk) was in fact luxury compared to the ordinary way of life in the
neighbouring village (Griffiths 1982:13). In the nearby villages it was common practice to
sleep on the floor, eat meals with one’s hands and to go barefoot. The ‘simple’ lifestyle that
the monks were living was considered one of comfort compared to that of most Indians.
Hence, Fr Bede recalls that he slowly began to reject these western practices in order to
“come nearer to the condition of the poor man in India” (1982:18). Throughout his ministry
Fr Bede constantly sought to enter into the experience of those among whom he lived and
worked.
A further step of inculturation took place in March 1958 when Fr Bede, together with a
Belgian monk, Fr Mahieu, founded Kurisumala Ashram at Kerala. Ashram life was based on
utter simplicity. Fr Mahieu had come to India in order to reveal the contemplative nature of
the Catholic Church to India and felt that his task could best be performed in the formation of
1989:106). This was the first time that the concept of advaitic sannyasa had been
incorporated into Christian monastic life (Rajan 1989:102). In this regard Fr Bede writes:
It was our desire to enter into this tradition of Indian sannyasa and to establish
a Christian ashram, in which the life of prayer and asceticism could be
followed along Christian lines, yet keeping always in touch with the traditions
of India (Griffiths in Rajan 1989:107).
At Kurisumala the Benedictine rule was followed with a strict Cistercian observance to
complement the contemplative emphasis of the eastern traditions. Fr Bede stayed here for ten
years. In 1968 he moved to Shantivanam (meaning ‘Forest of Peace’) Ashram in Tamil Nadu
to take over from one of the founders of the ashram, Dom Henri le Saux4 (Abhishiktananda).
Fr le Saux had been deeply influenced by the contemplative life of India. He would retreat to
his hermitage in a cave on Mount Arunachula whenever possible and eventually left
Shantivanam altogether.
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Fr Bede comments on this further step of change and inculturation that took place as a result
of his move to Shantivanam, saying, “Here we were able to start our monastic life again in a
more radical way... now I embarked on something different” (Griffiths 1989:24). At
Shantivanam Fr Bede was able to enter more deliberately into the contemplative life of the
East.
Life at the Ashram was truly ecumenical (in the broader, inter-religious, sense of the word).
There were times of structured prayer and meditation, as well as reading from the scriptures
of the different religions. Fr Bede describes the religious life of the community as follows:
… we meet for prayer three times a day, not for the formal prayer of the
liturgy as at Kurisumala, but for more informal prayer… as well as readings
from the Bible… In the morning we read from the Vedas, at midday from the
Koran… (Griffiths 1982:24).
A further innovation to religious life at Shantivanam was the way in which the Eucharist was
celebrated. Following the concessions of Vatican II, the liturgy and elements used for the
Eucharist were adapted in order to make them more culturally accessible to the Indian mind.
From an ecumenical point of view what Fr Bede was aiming to achieve here was a fulfilment
of true sannyasa (cf. Chapter 2 B (i) for a discussion on sannyasa), where the sannyasi is in
essence beyond all religious divisions and seeking to move beyond the limits of one set of
cultural, philosophical or religious symbols, aiming only to attain pure advaita (non-duality)
(Spink 1988:154; cf. section 2 B (ii) for a further discussion of advaita). This emphasis on
going beyond the concepts and symbols of religion to an experience of the reality that they
B (ii), Fr Bede saw language, doctrine and philosophy as inadequate to fully capture the truth
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One further aspect of Fr Bede’s spiritual life that significantly influences his spirituality is his
relationship to the pilgrims and ashramites at Shantivanam. Rajan says that many of Fr
Bede’s disciples regarded him as a spiritual guide, and in some cases as their guru
(1989:102). However, from conversations with Professor Edwards, who knew Fr Bede
personally, it would seem that he never regarded himself as a guru in the technical sense of
the concept, but rather as a teacher (acharya). The Hindu guru has the awesome task of
taking responsibility for the salvation of his disciples. For this reason, Fr Bede spoke of
Christ as being the only true guru (sadguru), the only one who could truly save anyone from
their sins. It is nonetheless true that he fulfilled a very important spiritual role for many
through his teaching and spiritual discipline. Moreover his spirituality served not only to
teach and guide many spiritual pilgrims but also served as an example of commitment to
Fr Bede stayed at Shantivanam, living as a Christian sannyasi, until his death on 13 May
1993.
Christian sannyasi. Fr Bede’s life as a sannyasi affects not only the way in which he lived
out his faith, but also the manner in which he expressed his spiritual experiences.
Accordingly, this aspect of his life and spirituality has a profound effect on his cosmic
christology.
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Before discussing Fr Bede as a sannyasi I will give a brief outline of the concept of sannyasa
in India.
The most basic description of sannyasa is total abandonment. The word sannyasa is often
transliterated as samnyasa. However, in English literary texts, and many of Fr Bede’s own
works, it is anglicised as sannyasa. The wo rd sannyasa is composed of the prefix sam which
means totally or wholeheartedly, and the verb nyasa meaning to lay aside, resign or abandon
(Rajan 1989:10).
Therefore the sannyasi is a person who completely abandons every care, need and concern
for the world, self and others in order to attain realisation of the Supreme Self. The person
who chooses this rigorous ascetic life of poverty and exploration for Self-realisation is called
Brahman) (cf. Abhishiktananda 1984:3). Commonly sannyasa is the fourth ashrama or stage
of one’s journey to Self- realisation. In Indian life there are commonly four ashrama:
sannyasa, the stage of renunciation (Vattakuzhy 1981:14-17). After a person has completed
their duty (rsis) by passing through the first three ashrama he is able to make a break with the
past in pursuit of moksa (final liberation or salvation). However, old age or completion of the
first three ashrama is not a pre-requisite for sannyasa. At any stage in one’s life a person
could at will withdraw from all worldly pursuits, cutting short, or leaving out, the preceding
stages altogether to enter into sannyasa (Vattakuzhy 1981:18). All that is necessary is a
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desire for complete detachment from everything in order to foster an intense attachment to
the divine.
The person who completes the ritual initiation into sannyasa (sannyasa diksha) is “expected
to be free from all bonds in the world in order to be a visible witness to the transcendence of
The values of the life of sannyasa are: absolute poverty, complete solitude and silence, and
universal love and equanimity, as well as contemplation and prayer in order to realise the
divine. Sannyasis are regarded as dead to society because of their total renunciation. Rajan
notes that when a person is initiated into sannyasa, his kinsmen perform the ceremonies and
rites for death (atyesthi) (Rajan 1989:25). When the sannyasi dies his physical death is
The Christian monastic life and the life of the Indian sannyasi are in many ways similar, and
in many others dissimilar. Rajan suggests that both share a common aim, that is, to reach the
Conner suggests that it is the purpose of every person, and more so the monk or
contemplative, to return to “that original unity from which we have strayed, in order to
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restore the ‘image’ in which we were created” (1996:81). Here it can be seen that in
This contemplative and unitive desire was observed by some early Christians who came to
India, such as Roberto De Nobili who arrived in India in May 1605, and is believed to be the
first Christian to have adopted sannyasa. Initially sannyasa was outwardly incorporated into
Christianity as a means of making this faith more culturally acceptable to the Hindu (Rajan
1989:71). By adopting the life style of the Indian holy person in the matter of dress, diet and
manner of living, the Christian sannyasi was able to engage more effectively in mission work.
At this stage, the aim, in almost all cases, was to convert Indian people to the Christian faith
Later, however, with the arrival of Christians such as Jules Monchanin (Swami Parama
Arubi Anandam) and Henri Le Saux (Abhishiktananda), the aim changed considerably. The
deeply contemplative nature of sannyasa was realised as well as the benefits that sannyasa
would have for the Christian faith. This is a notable shift. It moves from a desire to impart
the Christian faith to India, to a desire to enrich the Christian faith by learning from the
religion and philosophy of India. During this stage there was a greater realisation that the
advaitic experience (i.e. the non-dual experience of God beyond name and form) and
devotion to Christ could co-exist and assist the Christian devotee in attaining the goal of
realising the Ultimate Reality. This stemmed from the recognition that India was already a
deeply spiritual country and that this spirituality could be of benefit to the Christian faith
(Rajan 1989:88). This view is much closer to Fr Bede’s motivation for entering sannyasa.
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The emphasis of the Christian sannyasi thus shifted from a one-sided desire to proclaim a
One of the major differences between the Christian sannyasin and the Hindu is that the
Christian sannyasin is often linked to an ashram or monastic community, whereas the Hindu
sannyasin is traditionally a wandering ascetic, since sannyasa in Hinduism implies
renunciation of all things. This difference has been justified by suggesting a reapplication of
the authentic approach to non-attachment (particularly in relation to possessions). As Fr
Bede puts it,
[t]his is the real renunciation which is demanded, the renunciation of ‘I’ and
‘mine’... detachment is the key word. It does not matter so much what
material possessions you have, so long as you are not attached to them
(Griffiths 1976:11).
The aim of the Christian sannyasi was thus to detach oneself from all things, as a spiritual
discipline that can take place within community, and to establish a form of contemplative life
based on the traditions of Christian monasticism and Hindu sannyasa.
It is in this sense that Fr Bede was a Christian sannyasi. For Fr Bede, sannyasa was not just a
way of life or some form of religious order; rather it was a matter of ‘being’, and as such, far
more than just the action of complete renunciation. It is only after utter renunciation of all,
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even sannyasa (or renunciation) itself, when the experience of the divine is realised in the
centre of one’s being, that one begins to grasp what living as a sannyasin means (cf. Rajan
1989:113).
From an early stage Fr Bede began to realise that western thought and practice, which
dominates most of the modern world, was inadequate. It made up only half of the truth.
Cartesian philosophy and Newtonian physics, along with the western emphasis on reason,
was leading humanity astray. In essence its complete dependence upon reason and science
makes it a prisoner to the limitations of language and human reason. This has contributed
towards a world-view that makes existence profane, robbing it of the mystery of the sacred.
Fr Bede relates:
I had begun to find that there was something lacking not only in the Western
world but in the Western Church. We were living from one half of our soul,
from the conscious, rational level and we needed to discover the other half, the
unconscious intuitive dimension. I wanted to experience in my life the
marriage of these two dimensions of human existence, the rational and the
intuitive, the conscious and the unconscious, the masculine and the feminine.
I wanted to find the way to the marriage of East and West (Griffiths 1982:8).
It was through his exposure to the Hindu notion of advaita, in particular, and through his life
as a Christian in India, that Fr Bede began to discover this marriage and strive for non-dual
existence. In the West the masculine aspect is dominant and is characterised by aggressive
power, rational thought, deductive science. In the East, on the other hand, the feminine is
dominant, and can be associated with features such as sympathetic power, an intuitive mind
and the perennial philosophy. For Fr Bede it was only a marriage between these two that
would save the world from ultimate destruction (cf. Griffiths 1982:40; 1989:296).
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Through his lifestyle as a sannyasi, that is, a lifestyle characterised by contemplation,
simplicity and complete renunciation, the marriage of East and West became a reality for Fr
Bede. As sannyasi Fr Bede aimed to transcend East and West, masculine and feminine,
reason and intuition, to reach the one Reality, the source of everything. This Ultimate Reality
escapes all explanation. It can be experienced only in the depth of one’s being. According
to the Chandogya Upanishad VI:2. 1-4 it is “beneath and beyond all multiplicity”. The
Absolute is the source of both East and West, masculine and feminine. Here all things are
One (cf. Ephesians 1:10 and Rajan 1989:115). This realisation is consciousness of the
Absolute. This is what sannyasa makes possible – the transcendence of all religion, all
creeds, all spiritual exercises and rituals (Griffiths 1982:42). It is here that one discovers the
True Self, where the I-Thou separation breaks down between the person and God. Such
constructs have been difficult to formulate from a purely western mind-set. The eastern
mind-set, which is far more intuitive than rational, allows for a greater understanding of
This is the great discovery of Indian thought, the discovery of the Self, the
Atman, the Ground of personal being, which is one with Brahman, the Ground
of universal being (Griffiths 1984:16).
It is my conclusion that sannyasa, not as a manner of living but as a way of being, brought Fr
point that as a sannyasin one does not reject the things renounced (such as one’s religion and
values); rather these are integrated as part of who and what one is. Every stage in one’s life is
a significant part of Self-realisation. In a sense one has to pass beyond the ‘symbols’ used in
religion to the reality that is represented. The symbols contain and convey something of the
reality that they signify. The symbols are therefore to be integrated into one’s spirituality as
one moves towards a greater realisation of the truth, since they are not a ‘false’ reality,
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merely an attempt at representing the true reality. The symbols of a religion are not to be
regarded as the religion itself, but to be transcended in order to discover why the religion
exists.
C) Conclusion.
The experiences of life significantly influence and impact on one’s spirituality and
subsequent expression thereof. Taking this into account, this section aimed to give some
insight into Fr Bede’s spiritual development and the significant aspects of his life and
spiritual experience and how these shaped and gave rise to his spirituality, and so too, his
cosmic christology. The essential elements of the above discussion have shown how Fr
Bede’s spirituality began and ended beyond the commonly accepted boundaries of the
Christian faith. It is notable that his spirituality began at Christ’s Hospital with a ‘cosmic’
awakening to God in nature (cf. Griffiths 1979:9-12), and ended with a highly developed
sannyasi, Fr Bede constantly sought to integrate and transcend the symbols of religion in
order to discover the One True Source of all reality that lies beyond all religious expressions
and structures. Out of this he was able to develop a cosmic christology that is based not just
on the doctrinal and philosophical formulations of one religion, but to move beyond those
names and forms to an experience of Christ as both the source and goal of the whole cosmos.
One of Fr Bede’s favourite passages from the Svetasvatara Upanishad outlines his
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I know that Great Person of the brightness of the sun beyond the darkness.
Only by knowing him one goes beyond death, there is no other way to go.
(Svetasvatara Upanishad III:8).
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CHAPTER 3: The philosophical and theological background to Bede Griffiths’ concept
The previous chapter pointed out some significant experiences in Fr Bede’s life that informed
and developed his spirituality. A further aspect that makes his spirituality so significant
arises from his desire to share those experiences and discoveries of truth with others.
Naturally this process requires the use of language and concepts to communicate what he has
discovered. This chapter of the thesis will give insight into Fr Bede’s understanding and use
of particular theological and philosophical concepts that underpin his cosmic christology.
A primary focus that arises from Fr Bede’s mystical spirituality is the relationship between
God and the created order. This conclusion is surmised from his desire to overcome any
artificial dualities (dvaita) that have arisen between Creator and creation. Fr Bede employs
his understanding and expression of the doctrine of the cosmic Christ as a ‘vehicle’ to explain
this non-dual (advaitic) relationship. It is in his theology of the cosmic Christ that the
discussion of the relationship between the absolute and the contingent takes shape and is
articulated with the greatest accuracy of which language is capable. Thus, since this thesis is
discussing a theology that arises from a reflection upon spiritual experience, it is important to
scrutinise the philosophical and theological background that Fr Bede employs in expressing
his doctrine of the cosmic Christ. An understanding of how he utilises theological and
philosophical concepts and terms will lend a fuller understanding of both his experience of
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This discussion will focus on three areas in particular: firstly, Fr Bede’s understanding of
revelation as both general and particular; secondly, there will be a brief discussion of what Fr
Bede accepted as the three primary aspects of reality; namely, the physical, spiritual and
psychological; finally, this chapter will conclude with a section that outlines Fr Bede’s ‘new
vision of reality’. This discussion will take the form of a breakdown of some developments
in contemporary society and in science, that shaped Fr Bede’s spiritual paradigm – in a sense
E) Revelation.
To comprehend Fr Bede’s concept of the cosmic Christ it is necessary, firstly, to consider his
understanding of revelation. For Fr Bede revelation takes place in two stages (Griffiths
1992:95). Firstly, revelation began before Christianity, and thus also before the incarnation
of Christ. This revelation takes place in a cosmic religion. That is, ancient cultures and
people became aware that there is a sense of the sacred which is present in animals, plants,
the earth, the sun, humans, in fact, in all creation (Griffiths 1992:95). This is the first stage of
The second stage of revelation, which is also an aspect of the cosmic revelation, is far more
particular and is very much like the revelation of God contained in the sacred texts of the
world’s religions. This came gradually as people developed their use of language and
symbols and began to use their powers of discrimination in relation to the Truth contained in
all reality, particularly as it is related to places, events and people (Griffiths 1982:89). Fr
Bede refers to this second stage of revelation as being a distinct movement within the cosmic
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revelation because of its close ties to history and culture (1982:175-176). Fr Bede’s
This section is concerned with general or ‘cosmic revelation’, the first stage mentioned
above. Fr Bede speaks of it as, “... the revelation of ultimate Truth, given to all mankind
through the Cosmos, that is, through the creation” (Griffiths 1982:88). In this sense, then, Fr
Bede speaks of the whole of creation as a theophany or manifestation and revelation of God.
However, as a Christian, he also points out that this revelation essentially takes place through
Christ.
The Father manifests himself in his Son or Word, who by taking our human
flesh assumes the whole creation to himself and fills it with his presence (Eph
4:10). We cannot properly speaking think of anything apart from Christ; it is
he who gives existence its meaning (Griffiths 1984:219).
Fr Bede thus goes further and refers to the whole of creation not only as a theophany, but in
concerned, on the one hand, to relate all of his discoveries to the Christia n faith. However,
on the other hand, he is also moved to point out that the authenticity of these experiences
So, having made the point, he goes on to say that he “began to see how all religion had grown
from a perception of an all-pervading spirit which was held to be present in all phenomena”
(Griffiths 1995:vii). While this spirit or power was very often conceived as one, it was held
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that it would manifest in many forms. These manifestations of the divine were regarded as
gods and goddesses, angels and spirits (cf. Griffiths 1995:viii). The understanding of these
manifestations came to be expressed in the myths and legends of cosmic religions that
predate Christianity. Fr Bede explains the importance of these myths in cosmic religion and
revelation as follows:
This kind of general or cosmic revelation predates the particular revelation of God that is
often found in contemporary formalised religion. Rather, it is the foundation from which
particular revelation stems. Wong notes that, “cosmic revelation is based on the belief that
Pertaining to this form of universal or cosmic revelation, the cosmic Person would be that
person who underlies, or is manifest in, all creation as the one who creates and gives meaning
to all creation. For Fr Bede, this person is Jesus Christ. As seen above, Fr Bede considers all
creation as not only a ‘theophany’, but in fact a ‘christophany’. The whole creation finds its
meaning and purpose in Christ because in the incarnation God enters the created order, and in
the ascension Christ assumes the whole material universe into the Godhead. Thus, not only is
God seen in the whole of creation, but the whole of creation is seen in God. In making this
point Fr Bede quotes (1989:171) Meister Eckhart, “God only spoke one Word [i.e. Jesus, the
Word of God], and in that Word the whole creation came into being”. Fr Bede relates this
understanding directly to the Christian faith by referring to St Paul’s letter to the Ephesians:
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“He who descended is the very one who ascended higher than all the heavens, in order to fill
the whole universe” (Ephesians 4:10). Accordingly, Fr Bede accepts that the whole creation
holds together in the Christ, the cosmic Person. As is maintained in the letter to the
Colossians chapter 1:17 “He is before all things, and in him all things hold together”. At this
point, as in others, Fr Bede’s cosmic christology was influenced significantly by the work of
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin7 . For Teilhard, Christ is the centre of all creation. He writes in
one of his early essays, ‘Le Milieu mystique’, as if he were Christ speaking:
It is I [Christ] who am the true bond of the World. Without me, even if they
appear to make contact with one another, beings are separated by an abyss. In
me they meet, despite the Chaos of the age and of Space (Teilhard de Chardin
in Lyons 1982:150).
For Fr Bede, as will be discussed in more detail later, Christ has a universal and cosmic
significance that is much broader than the Christian faith, its symbols and Church (cf.
Griffiths 1983:128). His desire was that Christians would see that the salvific activity is not
only for Christians but that it has significance for the whole cosmos. While the Church is a
sacrament of Christ it does not contain him; rather it is a symbol or sacrament to the world of
the true Christ. Fr Bede quotes the last verse of St Thomas Aquinas’ hymn Adore te devote
Jesu quem velatum nunc aspicio, Oro fiat illud quod tam sitio, Ut te revelata cernens
facie, Visu sims beatus tuae gloriae. The translation, which really does not do justice to
the beauty of the Latin, is: “Jesus whom I now see under a veil, grant that that may be
which I so desire, that I may see Thee, face unveiled, and be blessed with the sight of
Thy Glory”. We pray that the veil may be taken away, the veil of the sacrament, so that
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the reality may appear…. Jesus, the humanity of Jesus, is a sacrament of God. It is a
sign of God’s grace, God’s love, God’s salvation, but we have to go beyond the sign to
Lyons comments on Teilhard’s cosmic christology, with reference to this point, saying that:
In Teilhard's view, Christ's Body is not merely mystical; that is, ecclesial. It is
also cosmic, extending throughout the universe and comprising all things that
attain their fulfilment in Christ. Fundamentally, the Body of Christ is the one
single thing that is being made in creation (Lyons 1982:154-155).
Thus, Teilhard’s cosmic christology served to further corroborate Fr Bede’s belief that Christ
has a significance that is far greater than Christianity alone, that is a cosmic significance.
Arising from his own christology and influenced by Teilhard, Fr Bede concludes that the
cosmic Christ is present in all forms of religion, including those general or cosmic forms of
religion that predate Christianity (cf. Griffiths 1983:75; 1989:118-127 and Panikkar
It needs to be said that Christ is present in all religion. Jesus died for all
humanity, without exception. So, from the beginning to the end of the world
the grace of Christ through the cross is offered to every human being in some
way, normally through their conscience, their traditions and customs or holy
books (Griffiths 1992:96).
A more detailed discussion of the Fr Bede’s theology of the cosmic Christ, and its ensuing
implications for the Christian faith, will follow in Chapters Four and Five. Fr Bede found a
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great deal of resonance between his cosmic christology and the highly developed notion of
cosmic revelation in the Hindu scriptures in general, and the Upanishads in particular.
The above discussion shows that Fr Bede was aware of, and clearly accepted, a general or
cosmic revelation that predated Christianity and has a broader significance than the Christian
faith. However, he relates this general revelation to the cosmic Christ, seeing it as a
‘christophony’ and in this doctrine shows that Christ has a universal relevance for all religion,
but also a particular relevance for Christianity and the Christian church.
The second stage of revelation, as mentioned in the introduction to this chapter, is called
time and a subsequent understanding of how God chooses to reveal God’s self within that
The essential difference between historical and cosmic revelation relates to the historical
view of time and the cosmic view of time. Wong points to the difference.
The understanding of time in the Hindu and other Oriental cultures is cyclic.
It rests on the rhythms of nature or the cosmic order with the end less
recurrence of day and night and the four seasons of the year. In the Judeo-
Christian tradition, however, time is linear. It has a beginning and is moving
towards an end, an eschaton, with various kairoi, or moments of divine grace,
in between (1996:2).
It is important to note the relationship between linear time and history within the Christian
faith. In linear time, history takes the form of events that follow one another chronologically.
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Thus, linear historical revelation conceives of God as revealing God’s self not only in
creation and the human soul, but also through the successive moments of human history, in
relation to people and the events that take place in their lives. For Christians, the incarnation
of Jesus Christ would be the climax of God’s gradual self- revelation in human history. In
fact, Christianity derives from the historical event of Jesus Christ who was born at a
As a Christian Fr Bede emphasised the historical necessity of the incarnation of Jesus, a man
of Nazareth, born in Bethlehem under a Roman Emperor, crucified by Pontius Pilate. This
series of historical events illustrates a valuable part of the relationship between God and the
created order (cf. Griffiths 1989:166-175). Wong notes that for Fr Bede this historical event
reveals the unique character of the mystery of Incarnation. The real meaning
of the Incarnation is that, by adopting our human nature, God fully enters into
the world and history, sharing our human condition (1996:2).
The ineffable Godhead, the one absolute reality, was revealed in the historic
person of Jesus of Nazareth at a particular time in a particular place. It has to
be emphasised that, in biblical faith, it is a matter of the infinite being manifest
in the finite, the eternal in the temporal, in a specific time and place. This is a
key point by which Christian revelation is distinguished from the Hindu and
Buddhist view (1989:165).
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The theological significance of such a particular historic view of Christ will be discussed in
Chapter 4 D (iii). However, the essential aspect that needs to be noted at this stage is that
while Fr Bede contrasts the cyclic and linear notions of time, he also suggests areas of
The following serves as an example of this complementarity. A cyclic notion of time, such as
that found in the philosophy that underpins Hinduism, tends to depreciate the meaning of this
present world and its history. Fr Bede maintained that this view was, to a large extent,
responsible for the situation of poverty in India. Christianity on the other hand, with its
historical view, is very committed to the here and now, that is, to material and historical
realities. At times Christians need reminding that the Kingdom of God cannot be solely
identified with this present world. For this reason, Fr Bede says:
The danger of Hinduism is that it tends to see time and history as a passing
phenomenon without any ultimate significance. The danger of Christianity is
that it tends to attach too much importance to temporal events and to lose the
sense of timeless reality…. The Hindu surely needs to discover the real value
of time and history…. But the Christian must learn that the Kingdom of God
is not to be found in this world…. The Kingdom of God lies beyond history in
the timeless reality in which all things find their fulfilment (Griffiths
1982:180-181).
However, it must also be noted that there are many Christians who maintain with vehemence
that the Kingdom of God is not of this world and so do very little to change the world in
which they live. A clear example of this is to be found in the Pentecostal and Charismatic
Churches in South Africa and their lack of social awareness and involvement during the years
of the apartheid struggle. The same criticism can be levelled against such Christians, as is
levelled against the purely mystical sections of the Hindu faith. I believe that Fr Bede’s aim
was not so much to show that one needs a balance of two views of history, but rather that one
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needs a balance that takes seriously both the present physical reality and the transcendent
spiritual reality.
To return to Fr Bede’s understanding of revelation, it is important to note at this point that his
spirituality did not demand an acceptance of one form of revelation or truth over another.
Rather, Fr Bede’s desire was for truth, regardless of where it came from. Consequently he
was able to integrate both cosmic and particular revelation into the expression of his cosmic
Thus, Fr Bede’s understanding of revelation, as taking place in both cosmic and historical
forms, is an essential aspect that underlies his theology of cosmic Christ. The Hindu, cyclic
view of time serves as a corrective for some Christians who place an overemphasis on the
historical Christ, while the Christian view of time and history is able to emphasise the fact
A further essential aspect to understanding Fr Bede’s theology of the cosmic Christ is his
view of reality. In accordance with the standard Hindu view of the cosmos, he maintained
that the universe is made up of three interdependent and interconnected aspects of reality,
namely the physical, the psychological and the spiritual (1982:184). Fr Bede noted that this
view of reality was the view of the ancient world that had been lost in contemporary western
society and culture. However, it is regaining acceptance amongst those who accept the new
science (cf. Griffiths 1982:183; 1983:20 and the following section (Chapter 2 section C) for
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a more detailed discussion on the elements of the new science that Fr Bede used in his
theology.).
Fr Bede maintained that the commonly accepted western understanding of the world, based
on Cartesian philosophy and Newtonian physics, is limited in that it attempts to explain all of
reality in mechanistic and reductionist terms. Fr Bede maintained that if one subscribed only
to this materialist view of the cosmos one’s view of reality would not only be limited but
wrong (1989:15). This limited view of reality imposes a radical subject/object distinction by
maintaining that matter is merely an “extended substance” that is extended outside of the
human mind (Descartes in Griffiths 1983:20). Fr Bede summarises his understanding of this
viewpoint as follows,
…we have a mind, and that mind is quite different and distinct from this
matter, this world. Science is the process of the mind observing this external
world. Then, for those who believe in religion, beyond this matter and beyond
this mind there is a God, above everything. That is the three-tiered universe
which we have inherited (1983:20).
Fr Bede’s own view of reality differs significantly from the above- mentioned understanding.
In formulating his view of reality Fr Bede integrated elements of the new science. In
particular he aligned himself with the new understanding of reality that no longer conceived
organic whole 8 . Such a view of reality is not entirely foreign to the eastern mind. However,
for western culture and religion with its strong emphasis on rugged individualism it is
somewhat strange. Drawing on scientific views such as this one, which was made popular
and accessible through scientists such David Bohm and Fritjof Capra, Fr Bede was given a
suitable vocabulary for sharing with westerners his experiences of a cosmos united in Christ.
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Fr Bede also maintained that the physical world could not be separated from the human
Beyond the physical and psychic ‘worlds’, Fr Bede held, there is the spiritual world which
“though separate from matter and soul is yet interwoven in the whole structure” (1983:20).
This view of reality is not alien to Christianity; in fact it can be found in the theology of St
Paul and in the theology of the Church Fathers, Irenaeus and Origen. For Fr Bede the
His physical body did not disintegrate, but was reunited with his soul, his
psyche. Soul and body did not ‘disappear’ but were transfigured by the
indwelling Spirit (Griffiths 1984:184).
Fr Bede’s cosmic christology draws a great deal of inspiration from this view of reality, as
well as the new physics that interprets the universe in this interdependent and organic
manner. In relation to the cosmic Christ, the resurrection of Jesus Christ can thus be seen not
only a sign of the new creation, but also as its inauguration. Such an assertion is based on the
understanding that since the body of Christ is part of the one cosmos, which is a continuum
or interrelated system, his resurrection has consequences for the whole of reality. Wong
follows:
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Through the instrumentality of the glorified Christ, the Spirit took possession
of matter and the entire creation, initiating the process of transmutation of the
cosmos into a new creation (1996:5).
Thus, Fr Bede’s cosmic christology is intrinsically linked to his view of the universe as
technical discussion of the science, philosophy and psychology (through which Fr Bede
expressed his views) will take place in the section that follows.
As stated above, Fr Bede views the universe as consisting of three interdependent and
interrelated dimensions, namely the physical, the psychological and the spiritual (Griffiths
1989:278). These categories are generally accepted within the framework of Hinduism.
However, wha t makes Fr Bede’s spirituality stimulating is that he not only draws on
Hinduism to substantiate and explain his view of reality (thereby making his views
acceptable to the eastern mind), but he also makes use of the predominant expression of the
West, science, to get his point across. Many have found this to be a very attractive element in
his spirituality. Through marrying elements of eastern mysticism with aspects of the new
science in the west he is able to appeal to a much larger audience. It is true that Fr Bede only
drew selectively on elements of eastern mysticism and western science in articulating his
marriage of East and West. Regardless of this selectivity, Fr Bede’s resultant spirituality is
more balanced than either a purely eastern or western spiritual perspective. His spirituality
aims to show how insights and developments in the new science relate to the three categories
of reality referred to in eastern mysticism.
This section will discuss this complementarity between science and mysticism. In doing this,
an outline of Fr Bede’s views of science, biology, psychology and the perennial philosophy
will be given. Accordingly, the knowledge gained from this discussion will serve as valuable
insight into how Fr Bede relates his understanding of the cosmic Christ.
Fr Bede believed that the world was on the verge of a new age (Griffiths 1989:9). This new
world order, or new age, would come as a result of two things. Firstly, it would come as a
result of a collapse of the current, inadequa te, world- view (Griffiths 1989:295). Secondly, it
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would come as a result of a ‘new vision of reality’. That is, a new view of humanity,
creation, and spirituality in the areas of science, biology, psychology and religion that would
As was briefly mentioned above, Fr Bede felt that the largely accepted Newtonian/Cartesian
view of reality was inadequate to address the complexity of reality as physical, spiritual and
thought over the last hundred years, and particularly the later half of the twentieth century.
He believed that the inadequate materialist view of reality was being undermined and
The sections below will briefly sketch some of these understandings of reality from science,
psychology and religion and will then go on to discuss the positive elements that Fr Bede saw
taking place in these fields, and how they can affect one’s vision of reality. Naturally Fr
ii) Science.
The materialist philosophy that has pervaded our society has its roots, as outlined above, in a
view of the world as purely matter, functioning simply as a complex mechanism. A primary
source of this world-view can be traced to the philosophy of Rene Descartes. His philosophy
in turn is based upon Aristotelian philosophy with its belief that all human knowledge is
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based on evidence received from the senses (touch, taste, hearing, smell and sight). Descartes
took this materialist view of reality further in being the first person to make a complete
separation between mind and matter. Aristotle had maintained that the human person is a
body-soul, the soul is the form of the human body and so the person remains an integrated
whole (cf. Griffiths 1989:12). Descartes on the other hand said that all matter, including the
human body, is extended outside of the mind, that is, separate from the person, completely
separate from the mind. There is a radical subject/object distinction between the mind and
the world. The mind looks out on the universe extended outside of the person.
Following along these lines it would be possible for a person to study objectively all things
outside of him or her self. Descartes, as a mathematician, believed that through mathematical
calculation one could come to a perfect understanding of the universe. For him the universe
was merely a complex mechanism, governed by mathematical laws and principles which,
This view maintains that each person is a separated, self- contained, thinking reality (res
cogitans) over against the material reality (res extensa) (cf. Griffiths 1989:13). Francis
Bacon, the English philosopher, took this notion a step further. He said that the goal of
science was not only to understand the universe, but to control it by applying the principles
discovered in scientific and empirical investigation. Galileo made the next important
contribution to this world- view by adding that mass and motion were the main characteristics
of matter. Thus, since mass and motion are measurable, all matter could be measured
measured and studied objectively. Aspects of reality such as faith, beauty and emotions
began to be regarded as subjective and of no scientific value. Since this view held that they
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had no scientific value they began to have less value, generally, in western society, which
The next major contribution to this world-view was that of Isaac Newton, whose model of
science is still accepted by many today. Newton said that reality could be explained in terms
of a number of laws (especially concerning mass and motion), such as gravity, that governed
all creation. For Newton all reality consisted of concrete objects moving in space and time.
Fr Bede says,
The result of this world- view was the exclusion of anything that was not objectively
materialistic approach to reality comes. In its most extreme form there is no longer a need for
belief in God since all of creation is seen to be regulated by laws and principles that are
purely mathematical. Moreover, it has often been maintained that if a person could discover
these laws, and then learn how to manipulate them, that person could ensure the smooth
running of nature, and the contentment of human persons. In a general sense this is often
regarded as a common view amongst groups such as the Marxists. However, in less stringent
forms this world-view can be seen to permeate almost all of western society in subtle ways.
Such a view of reality is clearly inadequate. In the West it is becoming increasingly obvious
that mechanism is far too simplistic to describe the whole of reality. Fritjof Capra’s book
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The Tao of Physics (1975) has been significant in spreading awareness of this. Recent
discoveries in quantum physics have shown that the material universe is not so much a
mechanism as “a field of energies in which the parts can only be understood in relation to the
whole” (Griffiths 1989:17). Thus, the universe is more accurately likened to an organic,
living entity (like a cell), rather than a mechanistic system (like a clock).
For Fr Bede, David Bohm’s theory of implicate and explicate orders gives a much more
complete reflection of physical reality than the Cartesian/Newtonian model (Griffiths
1989:18). Bohm’s view is that all material reality is an explication of a vast number of
implicate orders. He maintains that underlying the explicate order there is a “deeper order of
existence, a vast and more primary level of reality that gives birth to all objects and
appearances of our physical world” (Talbot 1991:46). Hence this world-view would hold that
what we perceive as physical reality is not a number of separate self-contained objects (as in
the Cartesian/Newtonian world-view) but rather, reality is a dynamic whole, an explication of
the undivided whole that is in a perpetual state of flux 9 (Bohm 1980:185).
What Fr Bede found so significant in this view of reality is its emphasis on the unity and
... behind the explicate order the implicate is always present, so in that sense
the whole universe is implicated behind every explicit form (Griffiths
1989:18).
This notion of the implicate and explicate orders is also referred to as the ‘holomovement’ by
Bohm (Keepin 1993:34). He says that the structure of reality can be likened to a holograph.
splitting a laser beam and reflecting some of the beam of the object, before reuniting it with
the rest of the beam on the photographic plate. When a laser beam is directed onto the
image still appears, although less distinctly (Keepin 1993:34). In an analogous manner
(implicate) reality. The explicate order is also constantly in a state of change since it since it
continually comes out of, and moves back into, the implicate order. Furthermore, this theory
Theologically this is significant, as it could imply that we are living in a universe that is not
separate from ourselves. We ourselves are the universe, the universe is us. We are an
between all persons and all of creation. We are one, one with the Creator, all creation and
ourselves. Fr Bede related this idea to Ken Wilber’s early work on the ‘spectrum of
consciousness’, where at the deepest level a person is one with all reality (cf. Wilber 1975).
Wilber’s model will be discussed in greater detail in section iii) below. What is noteworthy
in this view of reality, as it relates to Fr Bede’s cosmic christology, is that not only does it
affirm cosmic unity at a deep level (implicate), but it also affirms differentiation. As Teilhard
de Chardin would say, “Unity differentiates”10 (cf. Lyons 1982:165). In the explicate order
there are different manifestations or explications of the one implicate reality. As a person I
am an explication (an individual) of the implicate (collective) reality. While Fr Bede never
used Beatrice Bruteau’s understanding of identity, there is a great deal of resonance between
Fr Bede’s use of the implicate and explicate orders in showing how unity differentiates, and
Bruteau’s view. She says that identity no longer depends on negation of the rest of creation.
insofar as I am not you” (Bruteau 1990:128). Rather, differentiation comes from the
implicate order. Our individuality comes from the One, the Source, the Ultimate Reality in
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and behind all creation. In this new view of reality a person could say, “I am I in so far as I
Both Fr Bede and Bruteau’s views are radically different from the Cartesian/Newtonian view
of reality in that there is interdependence and interconnectivity and all of material reality is
pervaded by, and finds its explanation in, the transcendent reality (Griffiths 1989:11). Fr
Bede affirms this as a positive development, in that the mechanistic model of reality is being
replaced with a living or organic model (1989:278)11 . However, he does grant that
materialism is “correct” in so far as it recognises the material basis of reality, and that science
within that model has made great advances through exploring a material view of reality
(1989:278-279). Thus, while Fr Bede does use the word “correct” in reference to
materialism, his intention is not to suggest that it is entirely correct, since he refers on
numerous occasions to materialism as flawed (cf. 1982:9). Rather, his suggestion is that
materialism is correct only in so far as it recognises “the material basis of reality, and science
has explored this basis further than has ever been done before” (1989:278-279). Here one
can again see the integrative and transcendent aspect of Fr Bede’s spirituality. He affirms
that which is of value in materialist science, but also points out that one needs to move
beyond it in order to move closer to the truth of reality. Consequently he goes on to say that
this age, dominated by individualism, science and capitalism, is flawed in that it has lost
sight of the sacred within and behind the material world (1989:279). Once again what Fr
Bede advocates, as was seen in the sectio n on cosmic and historical revelation (see Chapter 3
ii) Biology.
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One of the consequences of the reductionist and mechanistic views of reality has been an
attempt to explain life in terms of physics and chemistry alone (Griffiths 1989:20). However,
Fr Bede agrees with Rupert Sheldrake that even though molecular biology has made some
pertinent discoveries, it is not comprehensive enough to explain the main features of life.
that is, the development of new forms of life, and their regulation and regeneration, in
relation to morphogenetic fields (1989:20). Therefore, Fr Bede notes that Sheldrake has
made a significant contribution to the new vision of reality with the introduction of the notion
The theory that has dominated biology up to now has been a form of neo-Darwinianism. It
asserts that the evolutionary development of organisms can be accounted for in terms of
random mutations, Mendelian genetics and processes of natural selection. Fr Bede, following
returning to a view that recognises the presence of God in creation. He does this by
questioning how random mutation can account for the complex process of electrons and
protons being organised to form atoms, which in turn form molecules and ultimately how the
organisation of molecules can form cells which become plants and even more highly
developed self conscious human persons. Sheldrake, as a biologist, puts forward the
hypothesis that although the universe is made up of fields of energy, these fields of energy
cannot alone explain the Universe. Thus, in conjunction with these fields of energy, there
must be some formative cause or power. It is these fields or powers that Sheldrake calls
morphogenetic fields.
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The Greek word morphe means form, hence ‘morphogenetic’ is that which
produces forms. (Griffiths 1989:20).
Morphogenetic fields, also referred to as morphic fields, can be likened to the Aristotelian
notion of soul or ‘entelechies’ that give form to substance (Sheldrake 1996:350). From this
assumption Sheldrake moves on to suggest that the universe is made not only of matter, but
also of form. Matter is potential energy; it has no existence of itself. Matter only has the
potential to exist. Sheldrake’s assertion is that matter is structured in the universe by form,
what Aristotle would have called eidos (meaning shape or form). Sheldrake suggests
particular morphogenetic field, while at the same time it is also in resonance with other
similar organisms. So the universe, in this view, can be seen as developing through two
forces working together. Firstly, there is energy or matter that has no structure. Secondly,
there is form or the morphogenetic fields that give structure to the universe.
Within the context of this study, this is theologically significant as it could suggest that all of
creation is dependent on the order or form of the cosmos for its meaning and structure.
Sheldrake says that, “[b]odies of all kinds derive their physical activity and material existence
from the flowing energy within them... they are pervaded by spirit...” (1996:353).
Fr Bede agrees with Sheldrake’s thesis on form and matter in saying that,
The whole creation, from the smallest atom to the furthest star, is a
manifestation in space and time, in multiplicity and change, of that
unchanging One.... From the first beginning of matter, through all the stages
of evolution, of organic growth and consciousness, the Spirit is structuring
these forms, moulding them by her inherent power (1982:193).
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A view such as this goes a long way towards restoring an awareness of the sacred within the
cosmos. For Fr Bede the cosmic Person is the source and form, as well as the sustainer, of all
vii) Psychology.
A third aspect of importance within this new paradigm is its implications for the
understanding of the human psyche. For Fr Bede, a connection between science and
psychology comes from the work of Teilhard de Chardin (cf. Griffiths 1989:25). Teilhard’s
view shows a connection between the evolution of consciousness and the evolution of the
reality. He speaks of two forces that operate on creation. They are the radial and tangential.
For him there is a centre out of which the world moves. At every moment of time there is, as
it were, a sphere and the particles on that sphere are governed by a tangential force that
corresponds to forces spoken of in phys ics, such as gravity and electromagnetism. The
tangential forces are forces that organise order in matter. Along with this there is also a radial
force that encourages an evolutionary outward movement to higher levels of reality. The
consciousness (Griffiths 1989:26). The point towards which all of the cosmos is evolving in
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fullness of being, in which God and his completed world exist united together
(Lyons 1982:156).
Thus, as the universe matures, the strength of this radial force increases in intensity. Hence
the universe is emerging into consciousness constantly as it evolves. Fr Bede recognised this
and psychology within the ambit of his view of reality (Griffiths 1989:26). In our present
state our consciousness is relatively rudimentary, but there is an increasing discovery that
human consciousness can develop beyond its current level to a level that Teilhard calls
‘hypermental’, and Sri Aurobindo 12 calls the ‘supramental’ consciousness, that is, a level of
consciousness and experience that is beyond the personal and mental. Fr Bede describes such
consciousness as transpersonal and transmental (Griffiths 1989:27). He says that with this
level of consciousness we discover within ourselves “the ground of the whole structure of the
it is a discovery of the ground of all creation, the Ultimate Reality sustaining the whole
universe. Consciousness of this reality is nothing new. While such a consciousness of the
ultimate reality sustaining the whole universe cannot be directly equated to the supramental,
it must be mentioned that this form of consciousness is nothing new. As is stated in Chapter
3 A (i), such forms of consciousness predate Christianity and can be found in those early
religions that are identified with cosmic revelation. Fr Bede records examples of how early
Indian philosophers in the Vedas referred to rita (rta) as the cosmic order that underlies the
whole of the universe. This led them to see in Brahman the ground of all existence and in the
Atman, the inner self, the ground of all consciousness (Griffiths 1995:x). Fr Bede notes with
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interest that there was a similar experience, referred to as nirvana, that took place in
Gautama Siddhartha, the Buddha, piercing through the outer worlds of the
senses, which is always subject to change and decay, was able to experience
the transcendent mystery of nirvana… the passing away of all phenomena and
the awareness of the void (sunyata), that which remains when all images and
concepts have been surpassed and the mind dwells in the silent depths of its
original being (Griffiths 1995:xi).
Experiences such as these, of which there are many more than mentioned here, give strong
credence to the notion of cosmic revelation. The same cosmic Lord that is revealed in all of
nature is the cosmic Lord that is revealed within the human soul. This assertion substantiates
expressed in science, and in this psychological view of consciousness. The common ground
articulated in both of these disciplines is that the whole universe is in each of us, implicated
in a multitude of layers. This united state of the whole cosmos is thus not only a physical
As stated earlier (Chapter 3 C (i)), within the mechanistic and reductionist world-view there
is a psychological distinction between the self and creation. Hence, we think of the rest of
the universe as outside of and apart from ourselves. The new science however suggests a
different reality. Karl Pribram, a friend of David Bohm, was the first to use an understanding
of holography as a metaphor for reality (see Chapter 3 C (i) for a discussion on David
psychology. His suggestion is that we receive vibrations of light, sound and matter into our
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brains and then, as in the case of the hologram, we project a three-dimensional image of the
world around ourselves (Griffiths 1989:31). This does not mean that the world does not
exist. The energy is real and it is this energy that projects on our brains. What is suggested
in this hypothesis is that the way in which we perceive the world depends on our level of
consciousness. A greater consciousness will lead to far truer perception of reality. Jung was
the first psychologist to propose something similar to this when he referred to the collective
We have inherited from the past archetypes which are structured forms or
patterns of organic energy, in which the unconscious reflects its experiences
(Griffiths 1989:32).
Within the discipline of psychology, Fr Bede was particularly fascinated by the work of Ken
Wilber and his explanation of consciousness. Wilber’s notion is that human consciousness is
beings we are manifestations of the one Ultimate Reality at different levels, depending on
which level we identify with on the ‘spectrum of consciousness’. The spectrum ranges from
identity with God, others, self and the world through several gradations or bands to the
At the deepest level the person’s consciousness is identical with the Absolute and Ultimate
On this level, man is identified with the universe, the All - or rather, he is the
All.... In short, man’s innermost consciousness... is identical to the ultimate
reality of the universe. (Wilber 1975:107-108).
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Such an understanding of consciousness was used by Fr Bede to show that cosmic unity is
more than just physical or biological and that essentially all of creation is interconnected at
every level. Relating the above view to the scientific stance of David Bohm, it can be said
that we are the explication of the one implicate reality, interconnected with all creation and
with God. However, the way in which people perceive this unity depends on their state or
level of consciousness. All creation is always one. However, some aspects may seem
separated from the self because one’s conscious development may be at a lower level on the
level. Here the person makes a distinction between self and environment. One sees all
creation as outside of, and separate from, who one believes one is. This is that person’s state
of consciousness; it is the way in which he or she will perceive him or herself in relation to
creation.
While Ken Wilber’s own theories have evolved since Fr Bede’s death, the discussion above
serves to give some indication as to what role Fr Bede saw the human psyche taking within
his view of the cosmos. The discussion above is of significance in understanding Fr Bede’s
theology of the cosmos, in that it clearly displays his view that all creation is united to (not
separate from) its Creator. All persons can know that they are one with God, one with the
world and one with others and Self. Through meditation and other spiritual disciplines the
individual can reach the level of Supreme Identity. Protestant tradition affirms the fact that
we are simul justus et peccator, that is, at once justified, one with God, creation and self, yet
through our sin we cut ourselves off from that supreme consciousness and we experience
reality at a lower level. From the above it is clear that non-dual consciousness of the cosmos,
some level of duality is present, and even necessary, at lower levels of consciousness in order
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for the cosmos and society to function (e.g. to be able to differentiate different persons and
places as unique and different is a necessary duality for the functioning of society).
The next important element that shapes Fr Bede’s cosmic christology is what is referred to as
the perennial philosophy. Until the sixteenth century there was a universal philosophy
throughout the civilised world that was known as the “perennial philosophy” (Griffiths
1989:10). According to Fr Bede (1989:11) this universal wisdom prevailed from about 500
This philosophy was based on the belief that all of the cosmos was pervaded by, and could
find its explanation in, a transcendent reality. Gradually however, as shown in Chapter 3 A
(i) above, a mechanistic and materialistic view of reality began to take over, which led to the
eradication of the perennial philosophy (Griffiths 1989:11). This eradication took place
mainly in the West. To a large extent the perennial philosophy was maintained in the
The psychologist, Stanislav Grof, suggests that the reason for this is that the eastern mind-set
is far more open to a cosmic consciousness and creative intelligence as primary attributes of
existence (Grof 1984:4). The advantages of this view of reality are numerous. For instance,
whereas the materialistic view of reality sees humans as highly developed animals or thinking
biological machines, the perennialists see humans as one with the whole universe and its
transcendent creator; humans are regarded as essentially divine (Grof 1984:4). Materialistic
spiritual, seeking to liberate the spirit of the person. Fr Bede did affirm that western science
and materialism had done much to alleviate physical suffering, but they had neglected
genuine spiritual and emotional fulfilment (1989:279). He remarked that cultures such as
those of the East, that have maintained the perennial philosophy, have had a much stronger
emphasis on spiritual liberation (Griffiths 1989:279). However, their struggle was that they
often failed to offer practical solutions for the problems of everyday existence. Fr Bede’s
suggestion was that there needs to be a combination of the positive aspects of the perennial
philosophy with the positive aspects of western science in order to have a holistic existence,
Once again, one is able to observe some characteristic elements of Fr Bede’s spirituality
emerging from this discussion. Firstly, there is his emphasis on recapturing the sense of the
sacred in creation. Secondly, one is able to identify his desire to see a marriage between the
positive aspects in eastern and in western culture that would move human consciousness to a
higher level of truth, a truth that transcends any one cultural or religious approach to the
complexity of reality.
H) Conclusion.
This section of the thesis has given an overview of the philosophical and theological
background from which Fr Bede develops his cosmic christology. It has shown that Fr Bede
drew upon a number of disciplines in order to understand and express his experience of
reality as sacred and interconnected. It is important to remember that Fr Bede draws upon the
insights of these concepts and philosophies, not because he believes they are able to express
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fully the truth of the cosmic Christ that he has experienced, but rather because they are able to
give further insight and truer linguistic and conceptual expression to his spiritual experience.
All of the areas discussed above have gone through significant changes since Fr Bede’s
death. I am certain that he would have found these subsequent theories and discoveries
Bede’s use of, and reliance upon, a multiple of disciplines in conveying his spirituality.
The next section will discuss aspects of Fr Bede’s theology of the cosmic Christ.
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CHAPTER 4: Between to horizons: Aspects of the cosmic Christ in the spirituality of
Bede Griffiths.
For the salvation of those who are good, for the destruction of evil in man, for
the fulfilment of the kingdom of righteousness, I come to this world in ages
that pass (Bhagavad Gita quoted in Griffiths 1987:66).
The above quotation is taken from the Bhagavad Gita with reference to Hindu concept of
incarnation where an avatara (meaning a descent of God into the world) enters creation (cf.
Griffiths 1987:66). Christianity and Hinduism both place emphasis upon God becoming
‘incarnate’, entering into the created world. Naturally, for the Hindu and Christian,
In this section of the thesis aspects of Fr Bede’s cosmic christology will be examined in some
detail. Areas will be pointed out in which Fr Bede draws on Hindu theology in order to
enrich his understanding and expression of his christology. Since one cannot directly transfer
Hindu and Christian theologies into each other without encountering considerable
philosophical and conceptual difficulty, there will also be a focus on areas of divergence
between Fr Bede’s cosmic christology and understandings of the cosmic Person and
incarnation that are found in Hinduism. Another important area to be covered will be Fr
Bede’s understanding of the relationship between the cosmic Christ and created order.
Thus, this section of the thesis will examine how and why Fr Bede chooses to use the
language and concepts of Hinduism to express and articulate his experience of the person and
work of Christ. In addition to this there will be some discussion on how Fr Bede views the
differences between the person of Christ and incarnations in other religious traditions
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(particularly Hinduism). Firstly though, it is necessary to gain some insight into Fr Bede’s
approach to, and understanding of, the doctrine of the cosmic Christ as it has developed
within Christianity.
Cosmic christology has a long and rich history in the Christian tradition. Before pointing out
some of the significant ways in which the doctrine developed, it is useful to examine briefly
Within Christian doctrine this term is used to refer to a particular understanding of the person
and work of Jesus Christ. The adjective ‘cosmic’ is derived from the Greek word ?ósµ??,
which refers to the whole of the universe or created order. As will be seen below, the notion
of the cosmic Christ is used to explain the manner in which Christ is related to the whole of
the created order. A further emphasis in cosmic christology is that Christ’s relationship with
the created order stretches beyond human and earthly affairs. This means that the cosmic
Christ has a broader significance than the historical view of the person of Jesus Christ that
confines his significance to one period of time, one geographical area. The doctrine of the
cosmic Christ has significance that stretches beyond one particular culture or religion or
planet. In essence the doctrine of the cosmic Christ affirms that Christ has significance for
the whole of the cosmos or created order and not just for the Christian faith and those who
adhere to it.
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Of course this doctrine has developed over a long period of time and continues to do so. The
doctrine of the cosmic Christ, in its earliest Christian form, can be traced back to the New
Testament. The Epistles, and particularly the writings of St Paul, contribute and bear
testimony to the development of this aspect of the doctrine of Christ (cf. Colossians 1:15-18;
Ephesians 1:10)14 .
The Church Fathers further developed the New Testament understanding of the cosmic
Christ, and ingrained it in subsequent Christian doctrine. One of the earliest explicit
articulations of cosmic christology amongst the Church Fathers comes from Origen (c.185-
… God the Logos is the Alpha, the beginning and the cause of all things, the
one who is first not in time but in honour…. Let it be said that, since he
provides an end for the thing created from him, he is the Omega at the
consummation of the ages. He is first and then he is last, not in relation to
time, but because he provides beginning and end (Origen quoted in Lyons
1982:130-131).
Thus, in Origen there is already a clear understanding of all of creation having Christ as its
source and goal. Christ is the one who recapitulates all of creation in himself. Gregory of
Nazianzus (d. 389 AD) also expressed an understanding of Christ as being present in the
whole of the cosmos. He writes succinctly that, “Christ exists in all things that are” (in Fox
1988:75). By the time of Thomas Aquinas the theology of the cosmic Christ had developed
further. Building upon the central idea of theosis or divinisation, as found in the Eastern
Fathers, the stress in cosmic christology was not only upon the notion of Christ as present in
the whole of the cosmos, but also that through Christ’s incarnation the whole of the cosmos is
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Each creature is a witness to God’s power and omnipotence; and its beauty is
a witness to the divine wisdom…. Every creature participates in some way in
the likeness of the Divine Essence…. The Incarnation accomplished the
following: That God became human and that humans became God and sharers
in the divine nature (Aquinas quoted in Fox 1988:75).
Christian history, and still continues today. In recent times a significant contribution to the
doctrine of the cosmic Christ has come from Pierre Teilhard de Chardin. Teilhard’s view,
like Origen’s, brings together an understanding of Christ and the evolutionary nature of the
cosmos, in a manner that shows the cosmic Christ not only as the source and sustainer of all
that is, but also the ultimate goal of all creation. What is a notable further contribution from
Teilhard is his suggestion that the cosmic aspect of Christ is far more significant than had
previously been acknowledged in the Christian faith, in that Christ actually has a third nature,
that is, a cosmic nature. Teilhard writes: “This third nature of Christ (neither human nor
divine, but cosmic) – has not noticeably attracted the explicit attention of the faithful or of
As the one who holds all things together, Christ exercises a supremacy over
the universe which is physical, not simply juridical. He is the unifying centre
of the universe and its goal. The function of holding all things together
indicates that Christ is not only man and God; he also possesses a third aspect
- indeed, a third nature - which is cosmic (Lyons 1982:153).
From the preceding discussion on the development of this doctrine one is able to extract three
seminal emphases that have arisen (although not chronological, or linear, emphases). Firstly,
from biblical and natural revelation comes the understanding of Christ as the source and
sustainer of the whole cosmos. Secondly there is the bridging of the radical distinction
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between creator and creation, leading to the notion that Christ is present in all creation – and
by his presence he sanctifies and divinises the whole cosmos. The third aspect is the
understanding that the whole of the cosmos has Christ as its ultimate goal.
What is of importance for this thesis is the way in which Fr Bede uses and understands the
term cosmic Christ as well as the way in which he emphasises it. Even though the section
above shows that the doctrine of the cosmic Christ developed throughout Christian history, it
has been greatly neglected in recent centuries. This is largely as a result of the impact of
Newtonian science and its impact upon the western world-view. Thus Fr Bede’s emphasis on
this aspect of christology serves as an essential corrective within the Christia n faith.
Moreover, what makes his cosmic christology so insightful and valuable is his emphasis on
the primacy of experience. However, this also presents some challenges to his readers since
the communication of experience is never able to convey fully the depth and complexity of
the experience itself. It is because of this challenge that this thesis has suggested that Fr Bede
is constantly moving between two ‘horizons’. The one horizon is that of his experience of
the cosmic Christ – an element that arises from the mystical influence of Hinduism on his
faith. This experience is beyond completely accurate doctrinal and philosophical expression
since it is primarily mystical in nature. The other horizon is that of Fr Bede’s expression and
articulation of his experience using words and concepts that can convey only partly the
mystery of reality.
One of the primary struggles in Fr Bede’s cosmic christology is his desire to communicate
both the unity and distinction that exist between creation and creator. Language is unable to
express fully the experience of true unity in distinction without weakening the emphasis on
unity when stressing distinction. For the Christian, creation, including human persons, and so
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also to some extent the incarnate Christ, is not merely a manifestation of God (as in the case
of an avatara in Hinduism). Rather, creation differs in its very nature from God who created
it. Creation differs in its nature from God in that its nature is that of the creation of a creator
God. Yet, at the same time while there is distinction between creator and creation the two are
This problem leads Fr Bede to use the term cosmic in two senses. The first way in which Fr
Bede uses the term cosmic, in reference to his cosmic christology, has strong ties and links to
the Christian faith and its doctrines, while this second usage of the term has a range that
Firstly, he uses the term cosmic in the sense of the created order or cosmos. Of this creation
he writes:
But for the Christian there is a creation, which is not simply a “manifestation”
of God, but a real creation in the sense which has been explained, which
differs in its very nature from God, that is, which has a created being which is
essentially different from the being of God (Griffiths 1973:53).
Thus, on one level when Fr Bede speaks of the cosmos in relation to Christ he is referring to
all that has been created by the creator and is distinct in nature from that creator. The
dilemma that arises from this distinction is that if taken to the extreme it could suggest a
radical separation between creator and creation. However, Fr Bede uses his cosmic
christology to overcome this difficulty. He does this by emphasising the fact that while God
is distinct from creation, God, in Christ, is also within creation. Reflecting on his own
experience of this reality Fr Bede writes that “God is to be seen in the earth and in the whole
creation” (1992:96). Thus, when he refers to the cosmic Christ in this sense, he is referring
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to the continuing creative and sustaining activity of Christ as present in creation. “In him and
through him and for him all things are created and in him all things hold together”
(Colossians 1:16). In short, this usage of the term has primarily to do with the relationship
Fr Bede employs the term cosmic Christ in a second manner. Here he speaks of the cosmic
Christ who is “beyond space and time, is totally one with the Father, the creator God, and so
is also present in creation” (1992:96). This is the transcendent element of his cosmic
christology, and here Fr Bede moves from using the notion of the cosmic Christ in relation
only to material or physical reality to further include the psychological and spiritual aspects
of reality. In relating and expressing this aspect of his experience of the cosmic Christ, Fr
Bede draws on a wide range of disciplines, cultures and religions. It is because of this second
understanding of the cosmic Christ that Fr Bede has been able to encounter, and be
encountered by, people of others faiths and cultures. He maintained with passion that the
cosmic Christ, in this broader usage of the term, is “present in all religion”, and that “Jesus
Taking his usage of the cosmic Christ further, in this second sense, Fr Bede sees Christ not
only as having significance for all physical reality, but also having significance for all reality,
physical, psychological and spiritual (cf. Griffiths 1992:96-97). The key to the cosmic
Christ’s significance for all reality is to be found in Fr Bede’s emphasis on the transformation
of the cosmos. In line with other cosmic Christologies Fr Bede emphasises that Christ,
through his incarnation, life and ascension, is constantly bringing the divine life of God into
creation, and drawing the cosmos into the divine life of God. The cosmic Christ is that
Person that holds all creation together and creates it moment by moment. This
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transformation, in Christian terms, as it is found in Fr Bede’s spirituality, is influenced by
In concluding this section on the way in which Fr Bede approaches and utilises the notion of
the cosmic Christ, it must be noted that neither of these two uses, the Christian nor the
mystical, or spiritual, usage, expressed above, are novel. As mentioned in the introduction to
this section, the understanding of Christ as creator, sustainer and goal of the whole cosmos
(spiritual, physical and psychological) has become a common understanding within cosmic
christology. However, there are two things that make Fr Bede’s cosmic christology
particularly valuable and significant. The first is the primacy of experience, in this case
experiencing the cosmic Christ. Well- formulated doctrine must always be understood as an
expression of a far greater reality, a reality that can only be experienced beyond the confines
of language and human reason. This leads to the second valuable contribution that Fr Bede
contemporary Christian doctrine, as will be shown below, by moving beyond the confines of
the traditional language and philosophy associated with christology and drawing on a wide
range of disciplines, religions and cultures to communicate and express his experience of the
cosmic Christ.
The next section of this chapter will examine in detail the way in which Fr Bede has enriched
his cosmic christology by relating it to, and expressing it through, Indian (and particularly
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G) Christ in India.
As the passage in the introduction illustrates, the concept of incarnate deity is nothing new to
India. In fact modern Hindus tend to say that every age has an incarnation. According to Fr
Bede the most renowned incarnation at present is Satya Sai Baba (1987:67). At a later stage
in this chapter there will be a discussion on some significant differences between the Hindu
and Christian concepts of incarnation. Here however, one needs only note that incarnation, in
It is interesting to note a theological shift that took place within Fr Bede. Initially, it was Fr
take Christ to India. However, upon his arrival in India he discovered that Christ was already
there in a very real sense, not only through the Church, but also present in the lives of very
many devout people. So, instead of going to India merely to impart and share his faith, Fr
Bede came to a new discovery of God, the Church and Christ by allowing the rich presence
of Christ in India, its people and religion, to influence him (1982:7). Valiaveetil suggests that
Fr Bede builds his Indian christology on the basis of “the deepest experience of the Absolute
in the Hindu and Christian traditions” (1997:9). Accordingly, Fr Bede is able to draw on the
strengths and insights of both Hindu and Christian spirituality and doctrine in expressing his
experience of the Absolute. Valiaveetil notes the complementarity that is of value in such an
The Hindu experience springs from the contemplation of the cosmos, from the
human experience of the physical and the psychic world…. The Christian
experience of the Absolute has its basis in the Person of Jesus Christ (1997:9)
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Commenting on the worth of his experience in the East, and how it has enriched his
… the Christian faith is seen from the Oriental perspective, another aspect of
Truth contained in the original revelation is disclosed (1982:26).
Arising from his developing discovery Fr Bede interpreted and expressed the doctrine of
Christ in the light of eastern linguistic and theological concepts; in this process he came to
realise more fully the extent to which Christ was truly present in India (cf. Griffiths
1984:218-223 for an early account of Fr Bede’s awakening to the presence of the “Unknown
Christ of Hinduism”).
The East has a different understanding of God, and would therefore be expected to have a
different understanding of the second person of the Trinity, Jesus Christ. In India Fr Bede
understanding maintains that all of the cosmos is sacred, an emphasis that became an
essential element in the formulation of his cosmic christology (1982:15-16). In a broad sense
knowledge of God in the East is far more intuitive, and much less rational, that is the norm in
western theology. This is in part because knowledge of God, in the East, is much more a
mystical approach as he came to discover and incorporate his discoveries and experiences
The next section will focus on the most significant influence from Hinduism on Fr Bede’s
To some extent Fr Bede’s relationship with other religions was influenced, as a Catholic, by
the stance of the Second Vatican Council which held that the “Church rejects nothing that is
true and holy in other religions” (in Griffiths 1992:96). Thus in accordance with the widely-
accepted position of the Second Vatican Council Fr Bede had a positive view of other non-
This notion of the Church as a sacrament that has universal significance for all people and
faiths is not that far removed from Fr Bede’s understanding of the person and work of Christ
as “mythical symbol” with efficacy for all people and all of creation (Griffiths 1983:129-130
see also Chapter 3 A (i)). However, as will be shown, Fr Bede went far beyond the official
stance of the Second Vatican Council on other religions. It is certainly clear from Fr Bede’s
later works that he viewed Christ as significant for all religions. In his early works he
maintains that all religion contains truth leading up to Christ, in much the same way that
Thus there is a solid tradition according to which Christianity, that is to say the
mystery of Christ and the Church, can be said to have existed from the
beginning of the world. It is present in creation, because the whole creation
finds its meaning and its purpose in Christ, who assumes the whole material
universe in the life of God. It is present in all history, because Christ comes as
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the ‘fulfilment’ of history and reveals the nature of human destiny. Above all,
it is found in the different religious traditions of the world, because in them
this ‘mystery’ is gradually unfolded… [in these religions] we have so many
‘prophecies’ as it were of the mystery of Christ. (Griffiths 1984:220).
Here again one is able to detect the significant influence that Teilhard de Chardin’s cosmic
christology had on Fr Bede’s theological and spiritual development. Teilhard maintained that
Christ is the ‘omega’, or goal, of creation, and as such, the goal of all religion (cf. Teilhard de
Chardin 1965:54-56). Lyons gives a synopsis of Teilhard’s view, in saying that according to
Teilhard, “the world has only one goal of creation, Omega, the supernatural goal, which is
evolutionary. Lyons suggests that for Teilhard the transformation of the Cosmos
consciousness finds resonance with both Teilhard’s notion of the ‘omega point’ and with
what Sri Aurobindo 16 calls the ‘gnostic being’ or ‘superman’ (1997:9). In his writings Fr
Bede adopted aspects of both Aurobindo’s and Teilhard’s evolutionary models for the
Chapter 3 C (iii)).
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Thus, for Fr Bede, as for Teilhard de Chardin, the cosmic Christ is both the source and goal
of all creation. However, with regard to the significance of the cosmic Christ for religion, Fr
Bede often made use of an illustration (quoted below) to explain his view.
The Christian mission is to help other people grow but also to learn from them
so that our Christian faith grows too…. Our aim is the deepening of our own
faith which then becomes more open to others. This is not easy, and
everybody has to answer the question themselves. I like the illustration of
fingers and the palm of the hand. The fingers represent Buddhism, Hinduism,
Islam, Judaism and Christianity. Buddhism is miles from Christianity, and
each has its own position. If you try and mix them, taking a bit of Hinduism
or Buddhism and adding Christianity, that is syncretism. But if you go deeply
into any one tradition you converge on the centre, and there you see how we
all come forth from a common root (Griffiths 1992:96-9717 ).
From the above it is clear to see that Fr Bede’s understanding of religious development fits
into the broad ‘perennialist’ understanding of all religion as originating from a common
source. For Fr Bede Christ is this source, as he notes, “Christ is ultimately the source of all
incorporate an understanding of Christ as the true source of all religion that predates the
Fr Bede upholds the understanding that the mystery of Christ has existed since the foundation
of the world (see quotation above from Griffiths 1984:220). The theological starting point of
this notion is to be found in the teaching of the Apostle Paul. According to Paul the whole
creation takes place “in Christ”, “For by him all things were created: things in heaven and on
earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things were
created by him and for him. He is before all things, and in him all things hold together”
(Colossians1:16-17). This means that we cannot properly think of anything apart from
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Christ, as Fr Bede insists (1992:97). It is Christ who gives existence and meaning to all that
exists. Here Fr Bede is speaking of the pre-incarnate Christ, the logos spoken of in John 1:1-
Thus far the discussion of Fr Bede’s understanding of the cosmic Person has focussed only
on the insights that can be gained from Christian theology18 . An essential element to
understanding Fr Bede’s cosmic christology is a discussion of the way in which he relates the
above- mentioned aspects of Christian doctrine to the Hindu doctrine of the purusha. The
word purusha can be translated as ‘man’, ‘cosmic man’, ‘cosmic person’ or ‘archetypal
The idea of an archetypal or cosmic Person is developed in Hinduism, although it can also be
found in Buddhism and Islam. The Rig Veda states, “this purusha is all that has been and all
that will be, the Lord of immortality” (in Griffiths 1989:128). Furthermore, the Rig Veda
says that the purusha is both immanent in, and transcends all, creation. “One fourth of Him
is here on earth, three- fourths are above in heaven” (quoted in Griffiths 1983:74). Fr Bede
suggests that the one fourth of the purusha that is immanent on earth manifests everything
that is, including human persons. The three fourths are the dimension of “his being above in
heaven” (1983:75). As such the purusha is both the person from whom all creation comes
Fr Bede suggests it is very probable that Jesus identified himself with the primordial or
cosmic Person in saying “... before Abraham was I am” (John 8:58).
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The primordial man was before Abraham and before all men, and I think it is
very probable that Jesus is identifying himself there with this primordial or
heavenly man, who is prior to all creation. (Griffiths 1989:120).
Fr Bede takes this notion further, as do many New Testament scholars, in saying that Jesus
identifies himself with the Son of Man figure from the Book of Enoch. This book was
written a short time before Jesus and was almost certainly in circulation during Christ’s
earthly life. Accordingly, Fr Bede notes that it is highly likely that its contents would have
been familiar to Christ. In the Book of Enoch the Son of Man appears and is identified with
the “Ancient of Days” who is the primordial or cosmic Person who existed before creation
(cf. Griffiths 1989:120). The Book of Enoch also says that the Son of Man was hidden from
the world and would be manifest at the end of time. This links him with the Son of Man
In Daniel, the Son of Man is said to have existed from the beginning but would come at the
eschaton or fullness of time. The Son of Man in Enoch is also viewed as the promised
Messiah who was to come. Fr Bede feels that this further corroborates the idea that Jesus
would have viewed himself in these terms as the primordial person, the Son of Man and the
transcendent Messiah who was to come (Griffiths 1989:121). This is in line with the fact that
in the Gospels Jesus never speaks of himself as God. His most common designation of
Another remarkable insight that comes from the notion of purusha is that of the sacrifice of
the cosmic Person. At the beginning of time the purusha is sacrificed and his limbs are
scattered over the world. In ritual sacrifice purusha is gathered together and becomes one
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again. According to Fr Bede this has a profound correlation in the concept of Adam and the
Son of Man. St Augustine said that “Adam, at the fall, was scattered over all the earth”
… was once one, one with nature, one with himself, one with God. And then
when he fell he was scattered and divided. The atonement means that God
comes into this divided universe and ga thers those scattered pieces together
and in his sacrifice reunites mankind. He brings all persons together in his
Person (1983:75).
Just as the purusha, or cosmic Person of the Vedas, once sacrificed is made whole again, so
too one can see this taking place in the Christian concept of atonement. God enters the
universe and gathers divided and scattered persons and makes them one in his Person.
Augustine writes, “In the end there will unus Christus amans seipsum - One Christ loving
himself in all his members” (quoted in Griffiths 1983:75). Jesus is the lamb that was slain
before the creation of the world, as with the Hindu concept of the purusha. Fr Bede says
that it is in this regard that Jesus sees himself as the Son of Man. As suggested in the book of
Daniel, the Son of Man is the one that comes at the end of time to fulfil God’s plan for the
unity of creation (1989:118). The cosmic Person who comes in the fullness of time to be a
sacrifice, is the one that makes all reality, the entire cosmos, whole again.
Fr Bede’s cosmic christology further draws on the widely accepted view that Jesus identified
himself with the ‘suffering servant’ of Isaiah 53 (1989:119). Jesus is not only the Son of
Man that comes on the clouds of heaven (Matthew 26:63-64), but also the suffering servant
that gives life to the world. Jesus speaks of himself as a representative of all people
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(Matthew 25:40), just as the suffering servant of Isaiah is representative of Israel. Jesus is the
purusha, the cosmic Person, the one who is before all creation, yet who comes at the end as
the Son of Man to redeem all creation. He is the suffering servant who gathers all things up
under One head (Ephesians 1:10), taking all that is scattered and divided and making it One.
This section has shown how Fr Bede’s understanding of the doctrine and work of Christ is
enriched by the Hindu doctrine of the purusha. His theological formulation goes a long way
towards expressing the doctrine of Christ in a manner that would be far more acceptable to
approach and sensitivity to the culture and religions of the East can serve as an example to
theologians and Christians in many parts of the world who are attempting to form a faith that
is inculturated. The significance of these steps will be discussed in some detail in the next
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I) Christ and creation.
person and work. The second article of the Nicea-Constantinople Creed (381 AD)
expresses this clearly in presenting a synopsis of the Christian doctrine of the person
and work of Christ. It says (in paraphrase) that Jesus is the only Son of God, begotten
from the Father. More than that; Jesus is true God from true God, creator of all
things. It also affirms that for the salvation of creation Jesus became a human person,
This section will discuss how Fr Bede interprets the incarnation in his cosmic
christology, and highlight new insights of this aspect of Christian doctrine, as well as
the significance of it for our faith. This will be done under a number of separate
headings.
The archetypal man is said to have been created (or in this case begotten) in the image
of God. Fr Bede deals with this notion of Christ as the image of the Father (or God)
Within the context of saccidananda Fr Bede says that the Father is sat, meaning True
Being, the source of all that exists. Everything that exists does so in the Being of the
Father who is the source of all exists. The Son is chit, meaning knowledge. As such
the Son is the knowledge of the Father and exists within the Being (or mind) of God.
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The Holy Spirit is ananda, the bliss of love between Father and Son and Son and
Father, uniting each to the other and to creation. Returning to the notion of the Son as
chit, Fr Bede expresses this understanding in saying that the Son as knowledge of the
Father is, “... Being reflecting on itself, knowing itself, expressing itself in the eternal
Word” (Griffiths 1982:190). All creation comes into being through the manifestation
of the Father in the Son. Within Fr Bede’s Indian Christian theology the Son would
be
Within traditional christology the Son is said to be the image of the invisible God, or
the eikon tou theou, to use the words of the New Testament (cf. 2 Corinthians 4:4).
Jesus is not the Father. He always remains the Son, even though he is of one
substance with the Father. Christian doctrine would suggest that Jesus is the morphe
tou theou, the manifestation, the form or the nature of God as spoken of by Paul in
Philippians 2:6. Fr Bede points out that the word morphe, form, is from the same root
as the Sanskrit word murti (Griffiths 1989:122). This means Jesus is the image or
form of God, the Self-Knowledge of the Father through whom all creation comes into
being. When the Source of all reflects on Self, it expresses Self in the form of an
eternal Self-Knowing and Self- Revealing word, the logos of John’s Gospel (cf. John
1:1-3). Thus Jesus the logos of God can be likened to the purusha of the Bhagavad
Gita, as the Self-knowledge of the source with attributes (saguna brahman), that is to
say the son, with attributes, is a reflection upon the source who transcends all
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reasonable human description and characterisation (nirguna brahman) (cf. Griffiths
1982:190). Fr Bede suggests that Colossians 1:15-17 points this out quite clearly.
He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation.
For by him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth,
visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities,
all things were created by him and for him. He is before all things and
in him all things hold together. (New International Version).
He suggests that this conception of Jesus as the cosmic Person or cosmic Lord, “who
is God’s self- manifestation to the world, gives us the key to the New Testament
understanding of the relation of Jesus to God” (1989:124) and as such enriches our
Valiaveetil observes of this aspect of Fr Bede’s cosmic christology that, “In Christ’s
consciousness of unity with the Father we have the basis of Christian Advaita. It is a
difference” (1997:8). Here again one can see where Teilhard de Chardin’s theology
has influenced Fr Bede’s. Fr Bede sums up his view of Christ’s unity in distinction
…here [in John 17:21] Jesus reveals this inner mystery of his oneness
with the Father. This to me is the climax of it all, that this Son of Man,
this man knows Himself in this unity with the Father. He can say, “I
and the Father are one.” And that is the mystery of unity in distinction.
This is the point that is generally missed. Jesus does not say, “I am the
Father.” That would be pure advaita, pure identity, but he says rather,
“I and the Father are one,” which is unity in distinction… And he also
says, “I am in the Father, and the Father is in me.” That is the proper
way of expressing the advaita in Christian terms (Griffiths quoted in
Valiaveetil 1997:8).
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Thus, it can safely be said that for Fr Bede the Trinity seen within the framework of
Christian advaita reveals the mystery of unity in distinction, as Fr Bede understood it.
Jesus’ very identity is advaitic, and this non-dual relationship is cosmic in that it
Therefore, to sum up, in his identity as self-knowledge of the Father, the cosmic
Christ reveals the true nature of unity in distinction. In this relationship we see truly
the reconciliation of the One and many, the cosmic significance of the Son’s filial
The Council of Nicaea, in 325 AD, affirmed the doctrine that Jesus is fully God and
fully human in one person, one ousia (person) in two hypostaseis (natures). While Fr
Bede (1989:113) agrees with the outcome of the council, he emphasises the
proposition of many biblical scholars, who maintain that Jesus is not presented as
Fr Bede holds that the New Testament does not start from the premise of Jesus as
God, but from the premise of Jesus as human. He also shows that Jesus never speaks
of himself as God, rather he refers to himself as the Son of Man, which in Hebrew and
Aramaic is practically equivalent to man (or human) as has been suggested above
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(1989:113). He goes further in saying that it is only after his death that his disciples
begin to ask the question who this Man was and interpret his life and message in the
light of the Jewish tradition. Thus, Fr Bede notes that it is only at the end of the New
Testament period that the disciples begin to refer to Jesus as God; and that the
assertion that Jesus is Lord is based on reflection upon Christ’s person and message
Bede cautions that an unqualified use of the word ‘God’ in relation to Jesus can be
dangerous. He feels that it could cause a great deal of confusion, particularly if seen
from the perspective of other religious traditions (1989:114). For the Muslim to say
that a man, Jesus, is God, would be the ‘ultimate blasphemy’. Such an assertion
would associate a creature with the creator and thus deny the absolute transcendence
of the one God. This is the one extreme. For the Hindu there is also danger, in that
the Hindu may take the notion of Jesus as God to the other extreme. Fr Bede sums up
the difficulty with this concept in relation to Hinduism in saying that for a Hindu
being is potentially divine and anyone who has realised his divinity is entitled to be
Thus, the Hindu may have no problem with seeing Jesus as an avatara, an incarnation
of God. However, here a major problem arises for the Christian when the incarnation
of Christ is related to the Hindu notion of incarnation. Unlike an avatara, Jesus is not
merely one of many forms in which God has appeared on earth. As will be discussed
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However, to return to the discussion of Jesus as fully God and fully human, Fr Bede
held that in the New Testament Jesus is not precisely God in an unqualified sense. He
is, as mentioned in the section above, the Word of God, the Image of God, the Self-
revelation and manifestation of God, “who is reflected in the whole creation and
brings the whole creation back to God” (1989:126-127). The nearest that the New
Testament comes to saying that Jesus is God, is to be found in the prologue of John’s
Gospel. Here it says that the Word (logos) who became flesh both was God (theos)
and was in relation to God (pros ton theon) (Griffiths 1989:127). It is important not to
misunderstand what Fr Bede is saying about Jesus being God. What he says is that it
is
… therefore perfectly correct to say that Jesus is God, but always with
the qualification that he is ‘God from God’, that is, he receives the
Godhead from the Father, which is what characterises him as the Son;
and furthermore he is not simply God, but God in man and man in
God. (Griffiths 1989:127).
Fr Bede’s understanding of the cosmic Christ as the Self-revelation of the Father thus
emphasises both the nature of Christ as God of God, and his full humanity as a
maintains traditional thoughts on the person of Christ. Hence, the cosmic Christ that
Fr Bede experienced and the Christ of whom Fr Bede speaks is not foreign to
Christianity and its doctrine, although in some other places, his expression of the
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vii) Jesus in history and his full humanity.
The next essential element in Fr Bede’s cosmic christology is the relationship between
Christ and history and how this shows that Christ is fully human. As argued above,
Jesus is God of God who enters into creation, once, in the concrete historical context
of human history. This derives from the fact that the Christian tradition comes out of
the Hebrew faith with its concept of time. The Hebrew tradition has an understanding
of time as linear. There are certain historical events that are of fundamental
importance of the Exodus from Egypt, going through the desert and into the promised
land. According to this linear view of time, all time moves according to a divine plan,
towards an end (eschaton). It is held that God reveals God’s self not only in nature,
but also in history, in relationships with particular historical groups and people and in
the events that take place in their lives (cf. Wong 1996:2).
In this sense Christianity derives from the historical event of Jesus Christ who was
The true significance of this is that God is fully incarnate in a historical person, Jesus
Christ. God enters fully into our human experience. The bible points out that Jesus
knew pain and suffering, as well as joy. He knew the limitations and restrictions, as
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well as the weaknesses, of human nature. These human attributes and experiences are
(cf. Chapter 4 D (iv)). Christ enters into creation fully as a human person. He was
“one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are--yet was witho ut sin”
(Hebrews 4:15). Jesus overcame the sin and weakness of humanity both as the
historical and the cosmic Person. He brings all things together in himself (Ephesians
1:10), and in the resurrection takes all of creation into the Godhead once and for all.
Fr Bede maintained, as most Christians do, that this was a once-off event that cannot
This is a key distinction between Christianity and Hinduism. Fr Bede employs the
Rama and Krishna are thus mythical symbols that have a universal meaning for all
creation, and they belong to cyclic time. By contrast, Jesus is a symbol who reveals
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God as rooted in history and creation. He is a human person, a part of the created
order. Fr Bede says that the life, death and resurrection of Jesus are events of
supreme symbolism in that they serve as a sign of God’s salvation for all of creation
and the whole of humanity (1983:125). However, the life, death and resurrection of
Jesus are not only important as a sign of salvation. These aspects are important as an
historical event in that not only do the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ have
a message of salvation for the whole cosmos, they also have a concrete effect on
history.
The divine life penetrates history, time, suffering, and death, and then
raises history and time and suffering and death into a new creation, a
new order of being in which these things are not lost, not destroyed,
but transfigured (Griffiths 1983:127).
God becoming fully human, in the person of Jesus, is a symbol of the new creation.
human presence. As the fully human Jesus is ascends into the Godhead he completes
this act by reuniting creation to its source and taking matter into God. This is only
possibly through God taking becoming fully human and entering history.
The earlier section entitled, ‘Christ in India’, pointed out that incarnation is not a
foreign concept to India. Modern Hindus would say that every age has an incarnation
cites Satya Sai Baba as a contemporary example of just such a person, who claims to
be the supreme avatara beyond Jesus, Buddha and Krishna (Griffiths 1987:67). In
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classical tradition however, there are only ten avatars, the final (tenth) one being Kalki
who comes at the end of the world to bring all things to a conclusion (Griffiths
modern Hindus. Perhaps we could then speak of him as the final avatara among
The Hindu doctrine of the avatara and the Christian concept of incarnation are in fact
very different in many ways. Fr Bede says, firstly, an avatara is based on a myth
rather than history (1987:67). The fish, the boar and tortoise are all mythological
figures. Even Rama and Krishna are only semi- historical. Fr Bede says there may
have been historical persons, Rama and Krishna, but as avatars they are more like
Hector or Achilles, the heroes of Greek epics. They may have existed as people, but
the stories that have grown up around them are legendary rather than historical
(1987:67).
A further difference between Christ and Krishna has to do with the strong moral
for the quality of ecstatic love and for “somewhat questionable behaviour toward the
Gopis which seems to show him in an immoral light” (1997:9). However, in the
historical person of Christ there is no such moral ambiguity. Jesus Christ represents
the epitome of moral perfection and holiness, which is widely viewed by Christians as
The love of God was revealed in Christ not in poetry, but in history. It
was shown not in ecstasy, but in self- giving for others, in the surrender
of his life on the cross (1976:83).
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The third, and most significant difference between incarnation and avatara is that the
Christian terms). A theophany fits comfortably into a cyclic notion of time. In India
time is conceived as moving in cycles. The world comes from brahman, goes through
all the cycles of life and in the end it returns to brahman. Then the cycle starts again.
In this view of time there is no real beginning and end, no finality. Each time
righteousness declines the avatara appears temporarily and then disappears when his
task is complete. Thus the avatara appears again and again on earth in some form or
For the Christian, the whole point of the incarnation is that Jesus came at the end of
the age to bring all things to completion (Ephesians 1:10). There is finality in this
event. It is an event that takes place in history. Christ is God incarnate, not merely a
theophany. In contrast to the cyc lic view of time, the Judeo-Christian view is linear.
All things progress towards an end, the eschaton where history is fulfilled. The
The avatara is conceived as a lila (play) of God. The Christian could never speak of
the terrible suffering of the crucifixion of Christ as lila xix (Griffiths 1987:69).
However, it must be noted that lila, as understood in the context of the Gita, does refer
to the purposeful activity of God. Such a view would be more consistent with the
Christian understanding of the redemptive work of Christ (cf. Griffiths 1987:69, 87).
Nonetheless, the Hindu and Christian emphasis on history and the Hindu
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difference. For Christians, history has a definite meaning and purpose, not only in the
events themselves, but also in the sequence or chronology of events. The purpose,
meaning and plan of history are fully revealed in the human Person of Jesus Christ
and the events of his life, death and resurrection. Jesus is indeed God become fully
human, unlike Krishna, Buddha and other avatars who are theophanies. The
difference here is that Jesus is fully human – with all that that means soteriologically,
and the Hindu avatars are not. Jesus is God who brings fulfilment to God’s plan for
J) Conclusion.
around which he discusses the relationship between creator and creation. It also
forms the foundation of his desire for interfaith encounter leading to the goal of
Creating such common ground between the faiths is clearly in line with his
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There is a great deal that one can learn from this innovative approach to the doctrine
of Christ. I believe that this understanding of the doctrine of the cosmic Christ
emphasises, in a profound way, inter alia, the manner in whic h Christ not only
creates, but also permeates all creation with his divine presence. He is truly the one
who creates, and holds all things in being (cf. Colossians 1:16-17). Fr Bede also
shows the importance of God’s plan in history, while not denying the universal
In concluding this section, I believe that the application of various doctrinal and
philosophical insights that come from Hindu philosophy and religion have once again
proved extremely valuable in giving new insight into the formulation of the doctrine
of Christ. Viewing Christ as the cosmic Person, in the Hindu sense, as purusha, gives
broader insight into the nature and work of Christ. Drawing a distinction between
avatara and Christian incarnation helps to focus more acutely on the importance of a
normative act of salvation in Jesus Christ. Struggling with the notion of Jesus’ filial
qualification as God helps to cement the notion that the Father truly is sat, the source,
from which all things come, and the Son is chit, the Self-knowledge of the Father. Fr
Bede’s own words best encapsulate the cosmic significance of the doctrine of the
It is true that Rama and Kris hna also have a universal meaning, just as
Buddha’s Enlightenment has a meaning for all humanity. But the life
and death and resurrection of Christ have not only a meaning for all,
but also an effect on history.... Here history has assumed a universal
meaning... an ultimate purpose, in that death, resurrection, ascension,
and final glorification (Griffiths 1983:128).
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CHAPTER 5: The contribution of Bede Griffiths’ cosmic christology to
This section of the thesis suggests some ways in which Fr Bede’s spirituality
contributes both to the way in which Christians live out their spirituality and to the
way in which they articulate, theologically, this lived reality. Spiritual experience,
and the articulation of that experience are two essential elements of his spirituality.
The introduction to this thesis makes the point that it is the man, Bede Griffiths that
makes his spirituality unique and valuable. Thus studying the man and his experience
can offer some insights into the discipline of Christian spirituality. Because of his
philosophies, and his strong desire to enliven the faith- life of others through sharing
his spiritual experiences, Fr Bede’s spirituality has a lot to offer those who are
seeking.
The importance of his spirituality will thus be discussed under two categories namely,
the contribution of his spirituality to (A) practical spiritual experience and (B)
D) Spiritual experience.
The preceding sections of this thesis have aimed to discuss aspects of the development
and content of Bede Griffiths’ cosmic christology. These sections have sketched the
way in which Fr Bede was able to bring together seeming opposites such as science
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and religion, and the “personalism of Christianity” and the “nondualism of Hinduism”
(Bruteau 1996:xiii) through his life- long spiritual search and theological development.
What makes Fr Bede noteworthy as a theologian, although he did not consider himself
as such, is that his theology was formulated through reflection on spiritual experience.
spirituality has to deal with more than his writings and talks. It should also attempt, in
Chapter Two said that Fr Bede, as a westerner, adopted many eastern ideas and
concepts in his faith in order to achieve a balance between East and West. On the
video “A human search: the life of Fr Bede Griffiths” (1993) one hears numerous
corroborations from ashramites and colleagues suggesting that Fr Bede’s own life, as
a Christian sannyasi in India, was a model of the ‘marriage of East and West’ that he
so often talked about. Fr Bede is said to have had a unique way of imparting his
spirituality to the whole of the human person, both rationally, through his many
writings and lectures, and intuitively through his monastic lifestyle at ‘Shantivanam’
(Forest of Peace) Ashram. Fr Bede’s lived spirituality, which included his writings
and talks, was able to capture both heart and mind. In this regard His Holiness the
I therefore have much admiration for the life- long work of Father
Griffiths for inter-religious understanding, and for helping people open
their hearts and minds to gain a sense of peace and utility to further the
cause of goodwill among all peoples (in Bruteau 1996:xi).
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This section of the thesis aims to show in what way Fr Bede’s cosmic christology is
From the discussion presented in the preceding chapters it has been shown that Fr
Bede’s spir ituality and faith are predominantly experiential as apposed to being
largely speculative. By this it is meant that his theological discourse stems from, and
flows back into, his spiritual experience. For him, the symbols and concepts of
religion and philosophy are useful tools for expressing the reality of a life lived in
consciousness of the Centre, the cosmic Christ. In other words, for Fr Bede, a
contemplative lifestyle in which one seeks to deepen one’s consciousness of God was
much more important than having an articulate and theologically accurate explanation
expressing the end. As was pointed out in Chapter 2 A, Fr Bede’s approach to his
spirituality was contemplative in nature from before his arrival in India right up to his
death. Furthermore, Fr Bede said that it was this contemplative experience, this
consciousness which is beyond “all religion” and “every scripture and creed”
(Griffiths 1982:42), that gave him insight into reality as it is, and as such allowed him
to speak of it to others.
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Thus, for Fr Bede the lived consciousness of the non-duality between creation and
Creator, and the experience of the cosmic Christ, were important aspects of his
spirituality, and his theology was an articulation of this spirituality. One may go as
far as to suggest that Fr Bede was himself a sign or image of the Real. Or, stated
more aptly in the words of James Conner, Fr Bede as a sannyasi, truly became a sign
person of Christ that informs and shapes his spiritual life. Chapter 3 A (i) and (ii)
suggested that Fr Bede’s experience can be characterised in two ways, or along two
that it was an experience of the saving and revealing Christ of Christianity. However,
Fr Bede also articulates a second kind of experience of Christ that is more general.
This second kind of experience suggests that Christ is of broader significance than the
the person of Christ that drew him beyond the supposed dualities between God and
self.
Jesus was taking us to the point where we go beyond all dualities, and
the marvellous expression of it is in the Gospel of St. John: “that they
may all be one as Thou, Father, in me and I in Thee, that they may be
one in us.” Jesus is totally one with the Father and yet he is not the
Father. It’s a non-dual relationship. It’s not one and it’s not two. It’s
the mystery of love. Love is not one, and it’s not two… When two
people unite in love, they become one, and yet they have their
distinction. Jesus and the Father have this total communion in love.
And he asks us to become one as he is one with the Father, total
oneness in the non-dual being of the Father. That’s the Christian
calling (Griffiths quoted in Valiaveetil 1997:8).
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From what Fr Bede wrote it is clear that his christology is rooted in a very deep
experience of God that is testified to in both the Christian and Hindu traditions. Both
of these religious traditions emphasise being taken into God, that is, the breaking
down of dualities. However, where the Christian tradition differs is that it emphasises
jivanmukta, that is one who is intimately in communion with the Father, so much so
that he can say “I and the Father are one” (John 10:30) (for a more detailed discussion
of Fr Bede’s understanding of Jesus (the Son) in relation to the Father, see Chapter 4
D (ii)). In this, Jesus is not only communicating his experience of his unique
relationship to his Father, that is that Jesus and the Father are one, but Jesus is also
communicating his filial distinction from the Father. Consequently, Jesus maintains
his identity, as the Son of the Father, while affirming that it is this filial identity that
makes him one with the Father. Fr Bede articulates his conscious experience of the
trinity further in asserting that Jesus was only capable of knowing of his identity and
relationship with the Father through the work of the Holy Spirit within him. Fr Bede
explains:
… in Jesus that capacity to receive the Spirit of God was without limit;
he received that fullness of the gift of the Spirit. In this experience of
the Spirit he was able to kno w himself as the Son of God, as sharing in
the divine nature, as expressing the very Word of God…. In this
knowledge of himself as Son, he was able to know the Father, not in
part but in fullness. He knew himself as the “only Son”, the One who
alone knows and expresses in fullness the mind of the Father (Griffiths
quoted in Valiaveetil 1997:8).
Thus, in Jesus we see what God desires for all humanity. Jesus was a particular
human person who lived in a particular place. However, his intimate communion
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with the Father, through the Spirit, reveals his unique identity. Jesus had completely
given himself over to the indwelling Spirit and in so doing he had achieved perfection
in God. Thus, according to Fr Bede’s cosmic christology, Jesus achieved what every
human is meant to discover and be, that is, true identity with, and lack of separation
This emphasis from Fr Bede’s cosmic christology thus not only shows Jesus as the
aim of the spiritua l life, but also shows him as the perfect example thereof.
maturity.
iv) The relationship between Creator and creation, and the effects of this
Fr Bede’s amazing ability to live out, and talk about, the non-duality between creation
and Creator is an further notable aspect of his cosmic christology. Chapter Three of
this thesis discussed the largely prevalent mindset in the West that views creation as
purely materialistic, without any sense of the sacred (cf. Griffiths 1982:9), while
Chapter Four gave some insight into the mindset of the East that so emphasises the
mystical that it often neglects the physical (cf. Griffiths 1982:180). In this light of
these shortfalls, Fr Bede suggests that East and West need each other in order to
survive and flourish. What is required is a balance between the philosophies and
spiritualities of both East and West, that is, an ability to identify and deal with
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concrete human, social and ecological concerns, without disregarding the essential
Within this context Fr Bede’s organic approach to nature is extremely valuable in that
Consciousness of the cosmic Christ not only awakens one to the fact that Christ is the
creator and sustainer of all that exists, that is, the transcendent Christ, it also awakens
one to the reality that Christ is part of the created order through his incarnation into
matter, has sanctified creation through his resurrection, and has taken matter into the
… divine life penetrates history, time …and then raises history and
time …into a new creation, a new order of being in which these things
are not lost, not destroyed, but transfigured (Griffiths 1983:127).
This spiritual insight is not unique, yet the way in which Fr Bede arrives at it gives
rise to some fresh insights. Fr Bede’s insight into the manner in which the cosmic
Christ creates and sustains creation stems both from widely accepted Christian
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doctrines in this regard and also from his acceptance of the cosmic mystery of the
Upanishads.
Fr Bede suggests that the saying tat tvam asi “Thou art That” is a key to
understanding the way in which mystical union with God changes one’s view of all of
reality and as such also of creation. He suggests that this saying, like the saying aham
understanding of these sayings, and so too of the reality that they describe, one could
quite easily come to this incorrect conclusion by regarding the sayings (and the truth
they speak of) as blasphemous. Fr Bede is at pains to point out that even Jesus only
calls himself God in a qualified sense (see Chapter 4 D (ii)). While Christians believe
that they are created in the image of God (Genesis 1:26), and strive to become more
like God (in Christ (Romans 8:29)), they still maintain a distinction between
Great Saying, from the Upanishads is sarvam khalvidam brahman asti (All this world
is Brahman), or “All this world is God”. Taking these three sayings literally, without
the mystical insight from which they stem, would indeed seem to suggest an
understanding of God that is quite different to that contained in the Christian tradition,
and even Hinduism. However, Fr Bede notes that what is really being emphasised in
these sayings is the truth that “I, in the deepest centre, the ground of my being, am one
Bede’s views of the new science, and developments in transpersonal studies, the
mystical realisation is that the source of a person’s being, the centre of the person, is
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When you say “I am Brahman,” Aham Brahmasmi, what you are
saying is that in the inner depths of my being, beyond my ego, beyond
my conscious self, I am one with this inner Spirit which is also the
Spirit of the universe. In Christian terms you have discovered yourself
in God (Griffiths 1983:60).
important to point out again at this stage that this does not mean that a discovery of
one’s true identity as being ‘one with God’ is a loss of individual identity. Fr Bede
distinction to make the point that true individual identity can only be found in God,
the true Source (cf. Valiaveetil 1997:9). The Indian christology that Fr Bede
ultimately advaitic in nature (cf. Valiaveetil 1997:9). However, Fr Bede was able to
develop the notion of advaita, and the way in which unity differentiates, further than
Trinity, as in the world, there is not a simple unity, or monism, where everything is
‘melted’ into one, and so loses its identity. Rather, in the Trinity there is a unity in
distinction. The Son is the principal, and clearest example, of unity in distinction,
being fully God, yet distinct as Son. In Jesus we see complete union with the Father,
yet it is precisely that union with the Father that gives him his identity as the Son of
the Father. In relation to this statement it is important to note that one’s true identity
is not simply swallowed up by that of the rest of creation. However, there is also no
duality between self and the rest of creation. As shown earlier in Chapter 3 C (ii), Fr
Bede believed that all of creation is interdependent and interrelated. This idea, along
with the notion presented above, serves to further emphasise both unity and
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distinction in the cosmos. As an aside, it is interesting to note that Fr Bede’s first
awakening to the mystery of God comes through an experience of God in nature (cf.
Griffiths 1979:9-12, see also Chapter 2 A). His awareness of the divine in nature
Contemplatives are often criticised for being over-concerned with the interior life at
the expense of the world around them. This section argues that such criticism cannot
explanation of the term, ‘eco- human well-being’. This phrase was coined by Paul
Knitter with reference to social and ecological responsibility and how that leads to
well-being (cf. Knitter 1995). It displays an awareness that ‘well-being’ is not only a
human concern, but that all of creation has a need for wholeness. Because the term
encompasses both people and nature, which are interconnected, it will be used in this
Firstly, his spirituality gives rise to a new experience of the mystery of God and
creation. That is, his spirituality in general, and his cosmic christology in particular,
emphasise the facts that: firstly, God is not separate from humanity, or any part of
creation, and secondly, that the true Self of the human person (atman) is not separate
from the Self of the rest of the universe (brahman). Thus, if I am not separate from
creation and Christ the creator and sustainer (i.e. if there is no objective duality or
dvaita between my self and the Source from which all created reality stems) and I
choose to exploit creation, am I not exploiting myself, and ultimately Christ? The
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same can be said for human relationships and the structure of society. Any society or
system that sets out to exploit others is ultimately exploiting Christ himself.
Accordingly, it is proposed that Fr Bede’s spirituality gives a very clear motive for
Thus, Fr Bede’s spirituality gives insight into the value of a spiritual life lived in such
a manner as to overcome the dualities that often lead to separation: the kind of
separation found in many societies between people and God, people and people, and
In the preceding sections it has been noted on a number of occasions that Fr Bede
longed for a balance between East and West, between the contemplative depths of
eastern spirituality and the active concern for material reality found in the spirituality
of the West. The following quote shows Fr Bede’s understanding of how the person
Jesus therefore was a man, in whom body and soul were pure
instruments of the indwelling Spirit. In him the destiny of man has
been fulfilled. But this inevitably has an effect on the whole cosmos.
The universe is a psychosomatic unity, a space-time continuum in
which each part depends on every other part as an integrated whole.
Whereas in this universe, as we know it, there is conflict at every level
and body and soul are in conflict with one another, in Jesus, this
conflict has been overcome, body and soul have been restored to unity
with the Spirit, and a power of unification has been released in the
world. In this sense we can say that the death of Jesus, the free
surrender of his life on the cross to his Father, was a cosmic event
(1983:187-188).
Thus, as pointed out in Chapter 4 D (ii) and (iii), the soteriological significance of
Christ reaches to all levels of the cosmos. Moreover, one can further say that in a
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universe in which each part depends upon every other part – a universe that is still
evolving towards true Christ consciousness – any activity that exploits creation in any
way stunts to evolutionary process. As one’s unity with Christ grows more and more
one is able to overcome the conflicts that wreak havoc in creation and in so doing
move closer to the destiny of all humanity, that is, blissful unity with God and
creation.
Having seen two significant ways in which Fr Bede’s cosmic christology can
contribute towards a lived spirituality this chapter will now move on to highlight some
E) Theological discourse.
Many theologians xx are becoming increasingly aware that speculative reason and
philosophical discourse are limited sources for discovering and expressing the
revelation and will of God (cf. Schneiders 1990:17). There are an increasing number
of theologians who are of the mind that spirituality serves as a valuable source for the
development and furtherance of such systematic theologies. The sections that follow
show how Fr Bede’s spirituality is able to make a valuable contribution to the way in
i) Theological methodology.
This thesis has already made the point a number of times, that Fr Bede’s spirituality is
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mind that he was first and foremost a monk, and only a theologian by virtue of the
fact that he desired to share his experiences with others, and so had to articulate them
There is no doubt that the spiritual awakening, and subsequent discovery that is taking
place in many disciplines, is making an impact upon the sciences, social sciences and
related fields. Whereas in the past any form of subjectivity within the sciences was
frowned upon, there is today an increasing awareness that the subject is intimately
involved in, and radically affects, the process of discovery. While this recognition is
not solely as a result of the greater spiritual awakening that is taking place in the
West, there is no doubt that this awakening has affected academic methodology. In
A number of theologians, notable amongst them being Raimundo Panikkar and Ewert
In a similar way Fr Bede has offered a great deal of insight into the importance of
experience and reflection thereon, which forms the basis for articulation of the
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how to move from spirituality to theology. Within the context of Fr Bede’s cosmic
christology and his emphasis on the universal significance of the person and work of
praxis is the only way in which claims of the universal significance of Christ will be
dialogue has often failed because of the starting point of theological dialogue. When
persons from different religions meet to dialogue theology they are discussing
through understanding and can often be hindered by a lack of adequate language and
discussion. As such Panikkar asserts that the only place that true encounter can take
place between religions is at the place where they truly meet. He suggests that place
is an experience of the unknown or universal Christ that is present in all true religion
(1988:126). Within the context of Christianity and Hinduism he writes the following:
The point of the above quotation is simply to illustrate the necessity of spiritual
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grapple with Panikkar’s views on the relationship between Christianity and Hinduism.
Rather, all that needs to be noted is that Panikkar’s assertion on the validity of
spiritual experience is very similar to Fr Bede’s own views. This is not surprising
since they were colleagues and spent a good deal of time together in India. Panikkar
affirms that religions cannot truly hope to meet through discourse or reason, neither in
concepts of God, but only in God. Everything in existence exists within God.
However, as Fr Bede asserts many times, the link between God and all things is Christ
from whom all things come and in whom all things subsist (cf. Griffiths 1983:75;
from different backgrounds and traditions, that one can begin to formulate and
Abhishiktananda, a precursor of Fr Bede (see Chapter 2 A), who also emphasised the
attempt to move beyond what is located in the intellect. In other words, there is a
realisation that the human mind could never fully capture the mystery of God in
Christ, and that sound theological methodology needs to be open to the fact that
speculative and reasoned outcome will always fall short of the reality it is attempting
to describe.
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Faith has to do with what cannot be seen. But even though faith is
located in the intellect, it far surpasses it; and the intellect, even when
enlightened by grace, is unable to comprehend the whole mystery…. It
is precisely in transcending even the highest reach of the human mind,
in passing beyond all symbols and expressions of itself, that faith
reveals itself in its essential purity. This is the essential “void” in
which alone the human person is open to and able to hear the eternal
Word (Abhishiktananda 1984 a:199).
he still adhered to the same principles of passing beyond words and symbols in order
to move closer to the truth. However, Fr Bede’s approach had an integrative aspect to
it in which he emphasised that one does not reject what one transcends but integrates
The key benefits of such a theological approach are twofold. Firstly, such an
approach recognises the fact that ultimately all theology is mediated through the
methodology does not undermine the importance of human experience within the
premise that language and concepts can never fully contain or explain the mystery of
not only for theology in general, but particularly for interfaith encounter, and in
relating the Christian faith in cultural contexts that are foreign to its underlying
theology and philosophy. This leads to the next significant contribution that Fr
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ii) Theological language employed in formulating
doctrine.
through the use of language and concepts. Traditionally the Christian faith has
attempted to explain its truths through the language of the Christian scriptures, the
tradition and symbols of the church, and the philosophy of the Greek Fathers as
Chapters 2 A and 4 C, there is a growing realisation that for the Christian faith to be
philosophies, concepts, and religions of the rest of the world. Fr Bede suggests that,
While the image of death and resurrection is a somewhat extreme one, Fr Bede’s
cosmic christology is very valuable in that it illustrates how he draws not only from
the richness of the language used in the Christian tradition, but also from the vast
treasures of the language and philosophy found in the religions and culture of the East
(cf. Griffiths 1983:76). There is a sense in which one could say that his traditio nal
Christian roots, as found in the Catholic Church, had to undergo a death when he left
England, and we reborn over the years he spent in India (see Chapter 2 A).
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Clearly, Fr Bede’s approach, that seeks to inculturate the Christian faith through
encounter and dialogue with the religions of the East, would prove valuable in many
other contexts, such as the African one. Encounter and dialogue with other religions
in this context refers not only to superficial encounter and dialogue but to a mystical
encounter that goes beyond the doctrines and philosophies of the particular faiths
concerned, to the reality they seek to express and represent. From this common
mystical experience of true unity, authentic dialogue and mutual enrichment can flow
(see the discussion in the previous section). Thus, Fr Bede’s ‘marriage of East and
West’ is valuable in terms of cultural reciprocity and the subsequent linguistic and
conceptual categories that can be added to the Christian faith in order to help it to be
born into new and different theological contexts. However, current trends show that
truth through encounter with people of other faiths. In this regard Fr Bede writes:
Thus, Fr Bede affirms that true encounter and dialogue can be valuable as means
through which one can come to a fuller understanding of the truth about God and
reality, both of which transcend the categories and forms that we tend to attach to
them in our various religions. In the face of a myriad of truths, one’s absolutes tend to
become relative, and one discovers greater truths and more effective language and
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a prime example of how inter-religious encounter can enrich one’s theological
such as the doctrine of purusha that Fr Bede adapted to Christianity through his
F) Conclusion.
puts this point across so well in using the metaphor of exploration. He writes:
Just as explorers in outer space have much to offer from their discoveries in outer
space, so too does Fr Bede from his explorations in ‘inner space’. This section has
shown how Fr Bede’s spirituality of experience affirms and enriches the views of
many theologians, that true theology can only stem from mystical experience.
Secondly, this section argued that such experience is beyond one particular religion or
culture, yet it can be transferred into, and expressed through, the language and
of the truth.
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CHAPTER 6: Conclusion.
This thesis has investigated aspects of Fr Bede Griffiths’ cosmic christology as they
arise from his spirituality. The basic argument of this research has been that his
cosmic christology is insightful and valuable because it stemmed from his spiritual
The argument was presented and developed in the following manner. Firstly, there
showing how these influenced and developed his spirituality. The finding of this
section of the thesis was that Fr Bede, as a Christian sannyasi, sought to move beyond
language, sacred texts, rituals and concepts of faith, and Christianity in particular, in
order to gain a mystical experience of God – who is beyond names and forms.
Having experienced the cosmic Christ as the source, sustainer and goal of all creation,
he desired to share his discovery with both Christians and Hindus. In order to express
the mystery of the cosmic Christ that he had experienced, Fr Bede had to rely on
concepts and language that came from the theologies of Christianity and Hinduism.
philosophy and theology. Firstly, his christology was informed by his understanding
of revelation. These insights came from both eastern and western understandings of
as being physical, psychological and spiritual. This area of his thought was strongly
he gained from the ‘new scientific’ paradigm, as well as selected aspects of quantum
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portion of his thought was particularly influenced by scientific advances and
discoveries being made in the West. One of the notable findings in this section was Fr
Bede’s desire to have East and West complement each other by overcoming
deficiencies in their respective word-views. The next step in the argument presented
aspects of Fr Bede’s cosmic christology that were innovative and useful, because they
illustrated the way in which Fr Bede drew upon traditional Christian theology, as well
as on innovative expressions of the cosmic Christ that arise from his contact with
Hinduism, in order to express his experience of the cosmic Christ. The primary
finding of this section was that Fr Bede’s cosmic christology found expression on two
‘horizons’ or levels. Firstly, he spoke of Christ in Christian terms, drawing upon the
traditional doctrine of the cosmic Christ, constantly showing the relationship that
Christ had to the Christian faith. However, he also sought to express the idea that the
cosmic Christ has a much broader significance than one religion. In articulating this
aspect of his christology he drew upon the theology of the cosmic Person as found in
Hinduism. Having discussed the manner in which Fr Bede expressed his experience
of the cosmic Christ, the argument concluded with a discussion of the significance of
Fr Bede’s cosmic christology. The research in this area found that his christology was
In addition to the above, it needs to be noted that what makes Fr Bede’s spirituality so
significant is the way in which he lived and embodied the spiritual ideals that he
taught.
In 1993 Fr Bede was given the John Harriott award for outstanding work in religious
communication. Sadly, du Boulay records in her biography that Fr Bede did not feel
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that he had fully succeeded in conveying his message (1998:288). Many of those who
knew him would disagree with Fr Bede’s judgement on himself. Even some who did
not have the privilege of knowing him personally would disagree with this judgement
of himself. His teaching and example were able to reach beyond his death to a small
university town in South Africa where they affected and impacted on one theology
His life and spirituality were groundbreaking in many regards, and on many occasions
ahead of their time. The ‘National Catholic Reporter’ wrote: “Even at age 86 and on
the edge of death Benedictine Fr Bede Griffiths was still running so far ahead of the
pack that his life’s momentum will quicken him for many springs to come” (quoted in
du Boulay 1998:288). Many conservatives, both Christians and Hindus, have been
critical of Fr Bede’s lifestyle and teaching. On the other hand, many less conservative
Christians and Hindus regard him as “one of the great religious prophets of modern
times” (du Boulay 1998:288). I believe that the Camaldolese official statement after
Fr Bede’s death best sums up why Fr Bede’s life and spirituality are able to offer so
His lived example of an integrated spirituality of East and West is even more
significant when one considers it in the light of Karl Rahner’s assertion which was
quoted in the introduction to this thesis: “the Christian of the future will be a mystic or
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It is in this regard that Fr Bede’s cosmic christology has so much to offer. It has been
shown in the preceding chapters that his cosmic christology stems from his spirituality
as a Christian monk in India. The insights gained from eastern, and in particular
Hindu, culture and philosophy, which so radically affect his cosmic christology, come
from his own ability to integrate East and West within himself.
In a world of increasing pluralism where information and ideas are so easily shared,
where contact between differing cultures and religions is becoming far more frequent,
Here Fr Bede’s cosmic christology serves as a good example of how one can enrich
and develop one’s own spirituality and theology by integrating different religious and
cultural paradigms (cf. Chapters 3 and 4). Raimundo Panikkar, in his tribute to Fr
Bede, suggests that it was Fr Bede’s person, and particularly his tolerance and vision
that helped him to formulate such a well balanced spirituality. Panikkar encourages
his readers to use Fr Bede’s spirituality as a sound basis upon which we can “go
forward and take our own further steps into the future” (1996:33)
What are some possible further steps? Firstly, as is shown above, there is a need to
spirituality and such integrity is costly. As has already been mentioned in this section,
many were critical of the way in which he transcended the normative boundaries of
showed, through his spirituality, the wonderful depth of insight that can be gained
when one is prepared to challenge accepted norms in the quest for a greater truth. The
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truth that he sought, as illustrated in his cosmic christology, is beyond the confines of
Venturing into such relatively uncharted Christian spiritual territory takes courage, yet
step’. This is particularly valuable in areas where faith has tended to run alongside, or
America). If the Gospel is truly to have global significance there is an urgency for its
proponents to engage honestly with the culture into which it is entering. Fr Bede soon
realised that the Gospel would only have significance and efficacy in the life of the
Hindu person if it was made more acceptable to the Hindu way of life.
The Church remains cut off by all its habits of thought from those deep
sources of spiritual life and thought which have moulded the character
of the Indian people for four thousand years. Unless some means is
found of making contact with these sources, there seems to be
absolutely no hope (except by a miracle of grace which we have no
right to expect) of Christianity making any deep impression on the
mind of India (Griffiths 1984:89).
The courage to engage honestly with other cultures should be applied to Christianity
in places such as Africa, South America, and many other areas of the world where
western culture and religion may seem foreign. What is required is a reciprocity of
cultures and a critical evaluation of both positive and negative aspects of the generally
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engaging. Fr Bede writes of his own experience of this process of inculturation in
India saying,
Such sincerity is exemplary to the contemporary Christian who seeks to live out an
Finally, I would like to highlight the manner in which Fr Bede drew on a wide range
of disciplines in order to enrich his spirituality and increase his ability to express
spirituality has been used as a springboard for the bridging the gulf between science
and religion. Of late there has been a great deal of research in the area of the interface
between science and spirituality. Fr Bede was one of the pioneers in this area, even
before it was popular to study it. However, there is a great deal more to be discovered
These abovementioned ‘further steps’ are merely three among many that I believe can
arise from the example of Fr Bede’s spirituality as seen in his cosmic christology. The
three are: the courage to seek the truth, the desire to be enriched through encounter
with different cultures and religions, and an engagement with a wide array of
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Shirley du Boulay pays a fitting tribute to the contribution that Fr Bede’s spirituality
has already made in the lives of many. I feel that the following quote goes some way
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Appendix A: A glossary of Sanskrit terms.
advaita non-duality
avidya ignorance
bhakti devotion
darshanas philosophies
dvaita duality
grhastha householder
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jivanmukta one who has attained liberation during his
world
creative word
puja sacrifice
purnam fullness
Person
rishis seers
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rita the order of nature
sannyasi a monk
sat being
shanti peace
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Select Bibliography.
Berky, RF
Edwards, SA (edd.) 1993. Christology in dialogue. Ohio: The Pilgrim Press.
Bruteau, B (ed.) 1996. The other half of my soul: Bede Griffiths and the
Hindu–Christian dialogue. Wheaton IL: Quest Books.
Capra, F
Steindl-Rast, D (edd.) 1991. Belonging to the universe: Explorations on the
frontiers of science and spirituality. San Francisco: Harper
Collins.
Conner, J 1996. The monk as a bridge between East and West. The
other half of my soul: Bede Griffiths and the Hindu–Christian
dialogue. (Ed. Bruteau). Wheaton IL: Quest Books.
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Gaybba, BP 1981. Vatican II’s approach to non-Christian religions.
Christianity among the religions. (Ed. Vorster, WS). Pretoria:
UNISA.
Griffiths, B
Sethna, KD 1996. A follower of Christ and a disciple of Sri Aurobindo:
Correspondence between Bede Griffiths and K D Sethna (Amil
Kiran). Waterford: The Integral Life Foundation.
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Hanson, BC (ed.) 1990. Modern Christian spirituality. Atlanta. Scholars Press.
Link, HG (ed.) 1988. One God, one Lord, one Spirit: An explication of the
apostolic faith today. Geneva: World Council of Churches
Publications.
Martin, J 1997. Who do you say that I am? The golden string: Bulletin
of the Bede Griffiths Trust Vol. 4 No. 2.
Sheldrake, R 1996. Mysticism and the new science. The other half of my
soul: Bede Griffiths and the Hindu–Christian dialogue (Ed.
Bruteau, B). Wheaton: Quest Books.
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Teasdale, W 1996. Towards a cosmic theology. The golden string:
Bulletin of the Bede Griffiths Trust Vol. 3 No. 2.
Teilhard de
Chardin, P 1965. Science and Christ. London: Collins.
Teilhard de
Chardin, P 1974. The future of man. London: Collins.
Bede Griffiths: interview with Sam Keen. 1990. Spiritual Renaissance Project.
The space in the heart of the lotus: Bede Griffiths a Benedictine in India. 1993. MTI
Films.
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1
For an excellent biographical synopsis of Fr Bede’s life see the article by Sr.
Pascaline Coff O.S.B at http://www.bedegriffiths.com/bio.htm .
2
C.S. Lewis and Fr Bede struck up a lasting friendship during Fr Bede’s time at
Oxford. Over the years they corresponded with each other on many occasions. Both
Spink (1988) and du Boulay (1998) refer to this friendship and the effect it had on Fr
Bede’s life and spiritual development.
3
Christopher Dawson (1889-1970) was an Oxford-educated historian and a Catholic
in faith. He was author of such works as: The Age of the Gods (1927); Progress and
Religion (1929); Enquiries into Religion and Culture (1933); Religion and the
Modern State (1935) and Beyond Politics (1939) (cf.
http://members.nbci.com/dawson.htm).
4
Abhishiktananda, previously known as Dom Henri le Saux, was a co-founder of
Shantivanam Ashram (together with Fr Jules Monchanin). Abhishiktananda was far
more deeply attracted to the advaitic ideals of Hindu mysticism than Fr Bede. While
Abhishiktananda and Fr Bede did not always agree on the manner of the relationship
between Christianity and Hinduism, and particularly the mystical life, Fr Bede was
significantly influenced by Abhishiktananda both through his person and his prolific
writings. Abhishiktananda left Shantivanam before Fr Bede’s arrival in order to
deepen his mystical spirituality.
5
It will be shown in the section that follows (2 B, (i) and (ii)) that this aspect of Fr
Bede’s spirituality stems from his life as a sannyasi.
6
The details of this particular aspect will be presented in Chapters Three and Four.
7
This thesis only points out specific areas in which Fr Bede’s christology was
influenced by the work of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin. For a succinct examination of
the overall impact that Teilhard’s theology had on Fr Bede’s theology see: Hale, R
2000. “Teilhard de Chardin and Bede Griffiths”. The golden string: Bulletin of the
Bede Griffiths Trust Vol. 7 No. 2.
8
As will be seen in Chapter 2 section C, Fr Bede found a great affinity between his
view of reality and that of David Bohm, the quantum physicist. Bohm wrote, “The
entire universe is basically a single, indivisible… but flexible and ever changing, unit”
(Bohm in Russell 1985:135, see also Bohm 1980 and 1993, Keepin 1993).
9
Along with Bohm 1980, see also Keepin 1993 and Talbot 1991:43-48 for a more
detailed discussion of Bohm’s theory of the implicate and explicate orders. The
intricate technical details of this view are not a necessary component in furthering the
argument that Fr Bede finds this view of reality more acceptable than the
Newtonian/Cartesian world- view. All that is necessary to note at this point is that
Bohm’s view overcomes the imposed dualities on matter that arise from reductionist
science and metaphysics.
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10
A discussion of the concept of “Unity that differentiates” in relation to Fr Bede’s
Christology will take place in Chapter 5 A (ii).
11
While Fr Bede would not have been aware of developments in ‘Quantum
computing’, there have been some significant advances in this area of late. Of
particular interest to this research is the notion of interdependence and
interconnectivity that is gaining greater acceptance. Paul Davies writes concerning a
comment by David Deutsch:
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Adapted from Wilber 1975.
14
Matthew Fox gives a detailed discussion of the biblical roots of the doctrine of the
cosmic Christ, both in the New and Old Testaments, showing how it developed from
the Old Testament understanding of the relationship between creation and Creator, to
the more technical understanding of creation in, through, and for Christ, as found in
the Epistles. See Fox, M 1998 The coming of the cosmic Christ : The healing of
Mother Earth and the birth of a global renaissance. San Francisco: Harper Collins.
(pp..83-107).
15
For a good synopsis on the stance of the Second Vatican Council in relation to
religious pluralism see Gaybba 1981:77-104.
16
Sri Aurobindo also had a view of consciousness as evolutionary (also see footnote
13 above). Judith comments on Sri Aurobindo’s view in the following manner:
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17
See also The space in the heart of the lotus: Bede Griffiths a Benedictine in India.
1993. MTI Films, where Fr Bede uses this illustration.
18
This thesis has pointed out only those aspects of Christian theology that have
directly informed Fr Bede’s cosmic Christology. For a far more detailed and broader
discussion on cosmic Christology and its significance for Christian theology see
Lyons, JA 1982 The cosmic Christ in Origen and Teilhard de Chardin. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
xix
It needs to be mentioned, in order that the reader is not misled, that Fr Bede was
well aware that the Hindu concept of lila had a greater meaning and significance than
‘fun and games’. He writes:
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