Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Sergius Bulgakov’s Sophiology Robert Thompson November 10, 2009 Provisional statement of the thesis topic To what extent can Fr. Sergius Bulgakov’s sophiology be understood as a hermeneutic principle for contemporary Christian thought and practice? What I propose to do in my paper is to sketch out, in general terms, the philosophical tradition in which Bulgakov’s sophiology makes sense. Within the context of this tradition, I will suggest some ways in which Bulgakovian sophiology might function as a lens through which to re-focus and re-envision our situation as persons and communities embedded in life—both in the church, and in the world. Methodology Thesis development will draw on the methods of intellectual history but it will also be programmatic in suggesting potential relevance to considerations of kenosis, divinization/theosis, and the restoration of all things (apocatastasis). Who is Fr. Sergius Bulgakov (d. 1944)? “The greatest Orthodox theologian since St. Gregory Palamas” --Constantin Andronikov (d. 1997) Biographical – Encounters with Sophia, “Philosopher’s Ship” Philosophical – Moscow School of Christian Neoplatonism (Khourjy) – Imiaslavie Controversy (1911-1913) Theological – Russian School versus Neo-Patristic Synthesis Sociological – Levite Bibliographical – Current state of translations Influence / Reception What is distinctive about the “Russian Idea?” Holy Rus – Significance of beauty (Dostoevsky) Kitezh and Third Rome (Daniil Andreev, d. 1959) Religious-Philosophical Renaissance – Slavophiles/Westerizers, Symbolist Movement Some key terms and perspectives from which to consider Bulgakov and his milieu sobornost, all-unity, divine-humanity, Chalcedon, sophiology, integral knowledge, God/world relations, conscious labor and theandric action, panzoism, revelation, essence/energies distinction, synergy, creation/emanation, German Idealism, Neo-Romanticism, Perennialist thought, the Great Tradition Bulgakov’s Sophiology 11/10/2009 6:29 AM Page 1 of 7 Some key figures in Bulgakov’s milieu Fyodor Dostoevsky (d. 1881), Vladimir Soloviev (d. 1900), Leo Tolstoy (d. 1910), Vladimir Ern (d. 1917), Fr. Pavel Florensky (d. 1937), Nikolai Berdyaev (1948), Aleksei Losev (d. 1988) The Christian Neoplatonic stream Dionysius the Areopagite (5th/6th centuries) – The One as overflowing, super-luminous darkness Maximus the Confessor (d. 662) – Cosmic liturgy Richard of St. Victor (d. 1173) Meister Eckhart (d. 1328) – “A new kind of action” Gregory Palamas (d. 1359) – Essence/energies distinction Nicholas of Cusa (d. 1464) – “Coincidentia oppositorum” and “learned ignorance” Vladimir Soloviev – Philosophy of “All-Unity” Pavel Florensky – Creation as “one living being praying to its creator and Father” Semyon Frank (d. 1950) – Intuitivist/personalist – “antinomian monodualism” What is sophiology? “Sophia is the divine world before creation.” --Sergius Bulgakov Eastern Orthodoxy in dialogue with modernity (Paul Valliere) Orthodox “liberalism” (Mikhail Sergeev) Extended metaphor for the Kingdom of God (Rowan Williams) “The gnoseological answer that is achieved on the way of synthesis of faith and knowledge” (Marina Vasina) Sophia as “the ontological side of divine humanity” (Tatjana Kochetkova, in The Search for Authentic Spirituality in Modern Russian Philosophy) Cosmogonic context of economy (theandric action) – “Nothing” can be left out What follows upon seeing things in the “Light of Tabor” Western sophiology – antecedents Jakob Boehme (d. 1624) John Pordage (d. 1681) Jane Leade (d. 1704) Emanuel Swedenborg (d. 1772) Johann Goethe (d. 1832) Some “layers” of sophiology Experiential (personal) Phenomenological (life world) Philosophical (philosophy of language, philosophy of nature, logic/antinomies) Theological (development of dogma) Literary/Artistic (creativity) Scriptural/Traditional (Margaret Barker - First temple tradition) Bulgakov’s Sophiology 11/10/2009 6:29 AM Page 2 of 7 Contemporary sophiology Fr. Michael Meerson – History of modern Russian theology - The “anthropological turn” in theology; retrieval of Medieval love mysticism, Russian Franciscanism Antoine Arjakovsky – Ecumenical studies Celia Deane-Drummond – Philosophy of science Anthony Paul Smith – Theological phenomenology Sergey Khourjy – Theological anthropology Basarab Nicolescu – Transdisciplinary studies, “included middle” Fr. Michael Plekon – Ecclesiology, Afanassiev Institute for Orthodox Christian Studies - The Figure of Wisdom in Patristic Literature Project (Marcus Plested) Henry Corbin (d. 1978) – Sophiology in Islamic philosophy G. I. Gurdjieff (d. 1949) – Conscious labor Bulgakov’s Sophiology 11/10/2009 6:29 AM Page 3 of 7 Holy Wisdom (Sophia) Novgorodian Type Bulgakov’s Sophiology 11/10/2009 6:29 AM Page 4 of 7 Holy Wisdom (Sophia) Novgorodian Type (in outline) Bulgakov’s Sophiology 11/10/2009 6:29 AM Page 5 of 7 Fr. Sergius Bulgakov Portrait by Sr. Joanna Reitlinger Bulgakov’s Sophiology 11/10/2009 6:29 AM Page 6 of 7 Fr. Sergius Bulgakov Deathbed sketch by Sr. Joanna Reitlinger Bulgakov’s Sophiology 11/10/2009 6:29 AM Page 7 of 7