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MISSIOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS OF A HOLISTIC
ANTHROPOLOGY
Recent advances in neuroscience provide a critique of the modern dualist
view of reality. Some neuroscientists are now telling us that Descartes got
it wrong (cf. A. Damasio, Descartes’ Error [Putnam, 1984]), that emotion
is as important to decision making as rationality (cf. J. LeDoux, The Emotional
Brain [Simon & Schuster, 1996]), and that thinking, feeling, and
acting involve at least the whole body, and, maybe even the whole community
(cf. D. Seigal, The Developing Mind [Guilford, 1999]). What is emerging
from neuroscience is an understanding of a layered cybernetic feedback system
between the neurons and the rest of the body, between the brain and the mind,
and even between the individual, the community, and the environment.
Let us sketch out some discoveries in neuroscience, then suggest a retro-theology
of mission, and ask what the implications are for mission policymakers today.
The implications for mission may give us a new paradigm that reflects an old
missio Dei.
What Neuroscience Is Telling Us
At the most basic level, neurons and synapses are all we can see in a biological
organism. However, these give rise to a biological system that not only senses,
organizes, and responds to the world out there, but also, simultaneously imagines
a self who is sensing, organizing, and responding. This view provides no
warrant for the usual dualities: body/soul, brain/mind, material/spiritual.
Perhaps holism, rather than monism, is a better way to conceive this alternative
to dualism. The brain thinks. But, in doing so the brain is complexly connected
to the rest of the body, so that senses, emotions, and values are an integral
part of the brain’s cognitive processing.
This complexity is only now being mapped. For example, the body has pathways
for perception, emotion, cognition, and response. LeDoux has shown that our
sense perceptions of danger come to the amygdala through two different loops:
one through the thalamus and the other through the visual cortex (see S. Johnson,
“The Brain and Emotions,” Discover [March 2003] 33-39). Synapses traveling
the second loop carry more information, and, therefore, take longer to make
the trip. The importance of the first loop is that people can respond in
a few thousandths of a second. Memories of danger are stored in both loops,
but emotion intensifies memory in the first loop. This is good for a quick
response, but bad if it leads the body to overreact, a condition called post-traumatic
stress syndrome. The problem is that “the brain seems to be wired to prevent
the deliberate overriding of fear responses” (38). This does not imply that
we are slaves to our emotions; however, it does imply that our emotions are
not completely under the control of our rationality despite what modernists
proclaim.
How are these loops formed? Does it work the same in every culture and generation?
S. Reyna has recently sketched a way of connecting synapses with culture,
linking neuroscience with hermeneutics (Connections: Brain, Mind, and Culture
in a Social Anthropology [Routledge, 2002]). Neurons and synapses appear
to be working with current sensory impressions, and these are connected with
short- and long-term memory. This system is shaped by experience, including
learning language and culture. Thus, the overall system involves layers of
interpretative frames that are connected to cultural schema, and all this
forms our worldview. Indeed, a “neurohermeneutic system works through an interpretative
hierarchy utilizing cultural memories of past realities to represent present
realities in ways that form desires about future realities” (114).
What neuroscience is discovering is an integrated organism whose functions
are multiple, interrelated, and interdependent. One result is that there is
no such thing as a “rational” decision. We have not only an organism relating
to something else in the environment, but also a brain that is aware that
the organism is relating. Parts of the brain monitor the state of the environment,
and other parts monitor the state of the body. The images that the brain provides
enter into the process of reacting. In other words, a self is a feeling of
a feeling (cf. Damasio, The Feeling of What Happens [Harcourt, 1999]),
a knowing about the organism that itself is reacting to the environment. It
is possible—persons with a certain kind of brain damage are like this—for
persons to be perfectly rational but unable to make a decision. They are unable
to make a decision because certain emotions are cut off from consciousness.
Rationality is not enough. Thus, selective reduction of emotion—what is often
recommended—is at least as prejudicial for rationality as is excessive emotion
(41).
Findings in neuroscience move us toward a complexly layered monistic/holistic
view of persons in community that has no room for modernist dualisms. Linguistic
categories with culturally-specific content form part of a hierarchy of hermeneutics
that links the organism to itself, to its community, and to its environment.
So, what does this understanding of person and self mean for a theology of
mission?
Theology of Mission
If we were to push back before creation, we would find God existing eternally
in a reaching-out, self-giving, and other-embracing love. This is the relationship
between Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. As J.D. Zizioulas reminds us, the Eastern
Fathers refused to define God in terms of substance, essence, or personal
attributes as did the Western Fathers. Instead, they placed priority upon
relationship; that is, they understood God as communion (cf. Being as Communion
[St. Vladamir’s, 1985]). And this communion, God the Father, the Son, and
the Holy Spirit, is involved in mutually supportive missions within the missio
Dei—that is, the mission of God as a whole.
It follows that we, too, are defined by relationship. The human person is
a body-in-relationship. We invite persons to know God in personal relationship,
and this is the heart of salvation: healing and reconciliation for the whole
body and ultimately for the whole community (cf. J.B. Green, Salvation
[Chalice, 2004]). This is the driving force of mission: to invite bodies—and
all that is connected to neurons and synapses—to enter into a life-giving
relationship with the Triune God and with other persons in community.
It follows that if there is only body-mind-community, and within it neural
networks that link to personal and cultural hermeneutic systems, then it is
impossible to be in mission to the soul without being in mission to the body.
Consequently, if our pathways are affected by development, diet, and damage,
and clearly they are, then how can we expect people to change their minds—repent
and believe—unless we also work toward repairing damage and building healthy
bodies, brains, and community? This is what it means to be reconciled to
God and to live an abundant life.
In light of the whole story of God’s personhood and God’s mission (creation,
redemption, kingdom), we need to continually rethink our theology of mission.
Western social science and theology have assumed the ontological priority
of persons over and against the priority of relationship. Western missionaries
share these assumptions about personhood and sociality, and they tend to concern
themselves with conversion and growth of the individual while disregarding
local constructions of personhood and community. What we have learned recently
from the neurosciences and biblical studies, though, shows us that the Euro-American
construction of persons, community, and salvation that has developed over
the last two hundred years has been quite cultural; therefore, it has been
local, and not universal. The Enlightenment did not always bring light. Thus,
“the fundamental doctrine of the person changed from dependence on God to
independence from any higher authority. It also changed from being relational
to being avowedly individual. Because the dependent relationship with God
had been severed, there was now no ontological basis for community” (E. Storkey,
“Modernity and Anthropology,” in P. Sampson, et al., eds., Faith and Modernity
[Regnum, 1994] 139).
Other cultures have other persons and other communities. Notice that we
have had to use other languages (missio Dei, imago Dei, hypostasis)
and other cultures and times (Greek Orthodox, early church fathers) to discover
a biblical construction of persons that differs from the Western view. When
there is a different conception of person and relationships, what does conversion
mean? Is there an autonomous individual out there who can make a purely rational
decision, raise her hand, and walk down the aisle alone? Is that what God
wants, or does salvation also include body, relationship, and community?
Might conversion mean a new construction of self in relation to both God
and community? Paul’s metaphor that we “put on Christ” is instructive here.
Does conversion involve only the acquisition of new knowledge for the self?
P.G. Hiebert suggests that “orientation toward God” is a more helpful metaphor
for understanding conversion (cf. “The Category Christian in the Mission Task,”
in Anthropological Reflections on Missiological Issues [Baker, 1994]).
For over a hundred years, the Western cultural juggernaut has overcome other
cultures with a theology founded, among other presuppositions, on a dualistic
construction of persons and a compartmentalized view of life. Now neuroscience
brings into question this foundational presupposition. What else might be
questioned as more a presupposition of modernity than a tenant of the Bible?
R. Clapp suggests that “evangelicals move from decontextualized propositions
to traditional, storied truths; from absolute certainty to humble confidence;
from mathematical purity to the rich, if less predictable, world of relational
trust; from detached objectivist epistemology to engaged participative epistemology;
from control of the data to respect of the other in all its created variety;
from individualist knowing to communal knowing; and from once-for-all rational
justification to the ongoing pilgrimage of testimony” (Border Crossings
[Brazos, 2000] 32).
To make this move in mission theology and practice involves listening to
different cultural streams within the Western tradition, but also to other
theologies of other cultures in other places. M. Adeney suggests that “one
underlying theme (of non-Western theologies) is holism: between the natural
and the supernatural; between mind and body, theology and economy; between
the individual and the group; between proposition and symbol; and between
system and uncertainty” (“Mission Theology from Alternative Centers,” in C.
van Engen, et al., eds., The Good News of the Kingdom [Orbis, 1993]
183).
There is a cry from below for the recovery of a lost wholeness, stolen by
the Western advance, whose propagandists included missionaries. This call
to Christ is not a call to individualism, but a call to see what Christ does
for the whole of society; indeed, the whole of creation. This call is from
a relational Triune God to be redeemed and reconciled in relationship through
the person and work of Jesus Christ, empowered by the previous, present, and
continual work of the Holy Spirit. This call relates Christ to the person,
however constituted. This call offers hope, not for some ethereal soul, but
for the material, the social, the economic, the political, the spiritual,
the intellectual, the dispossessed, the oppressed, and the lost: the whole
person, community, land, and creation. God has responded to human needs, not
spiritual needs. The ultimate purpose of God is the redemption and reconciliation
of all things in Christ; the purpose of humans is to use everything good that
has come from God to play our part in redemption and reconciliation of all
things in Christ.
By Michael A. Rynkiewich, Ph.D., Professor of Anthropology at Asbury
Theological Seminary.
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