PART I: CONVERSATIONS AFTER GOD
1Theism, Atheism, Anatheism
James Wood and Richard Kearney
I
JW: Iâd like to ask you about the personal nature of your relationship to Godâyour own religious path.
RK: Sure. Iâll tell you a story about something I did on Irish radio. Itâs a program called Miriam Meets thatâs on every Sunday. Usually two members of a family are invited. So I did it with my brother, Tim, who works with the CommunautĂ© de lâArche, founded by Jean Vanier. Vanier is a very committed Christian who works with disabled peopleâkind of a hero and a saint. I played the âbad guyâ and my brother, Tim, was the âgood guy.â We get along extremely well, but we were teasing each other and so on. He was being pitched as the theist and me [sic] as the more wayward oneâin other words, the anatheist. A week later, I was walking in the fields near our house in West Cork, and I came to the top of this hill. I was trespassing on a farmerâs land, and he drove up with his tractor and hopped out, and I thought, âOh dear, heâs going to get me for trespassing and disturbing his cattle.â But he just wanted to talk about God. âAre you the atheist?â he asks right away. So I said, âWhat do you mean?â And he said, âI heard you on the radio. Your brotherâhe was very good, but you were very confused.â In Ireland, an âanatheistâ is an atheistâand atheists are very confused.
JW: Is there a tension between the openness, the emptiness of the name, âGodââGod as the name for the âmore,â the âsurplus,â the âsurprise,â that humans seekâbetween that emptying out and the need to keep on talking of âGodâ? In his book Saving God: Religion after Idolatry, the Princeton philosopher Mark Johnston says, in effect, âLetâs stop using the word âGod.â I will call him âthe Highest Oneâ from now onââwhich is good, proper anti-idolatry, but nevertheless heâs managed to write an entire book about this indescribable Highest One. So if there are all sorts of words that we have to retire because language is too absolute to adequately represent this unfinished, unfinalizable, God, then from a nonbelieverâs point of view, a question quickly emerges: âWell, why not just retire God himself? Youâve retired most of the language; why not retire the concept itself and just stop talking about God, the Highest One, and all the rest of it?â Which is another way of asking, âWhy does Kearney need God in order to achieve his ethics?â
RK: Iâm sympathetic at one levelâdoing away with the word âGodâ and eventually doing away with the terms âtheismâ and âatheism.â Anatheism is just a term for the critical revisiting of that language in order to try and upset it, challenging the old dogmatic antithesis between theism and atheism. Anatheism is no more than a strategic, terminological tool to carve open a middle space that is, as the prefix ana- suggests, both before and after the theism/atheism divide. In a way, its unfamiliarity as a neologism serves initially to confound readersâ expectationsâsome people think itâs theism, others atheism (âan-atheism,â as it sometimes mispronounced), and others again something altogether different. It depends how you read it. But at the outset, confronted with the term, no one is meant to be entirely sureâperhaps not even me. And the fact that it also means âbackâ and âforwardâ interests me. The âanaâ is not readily locatable in either time or space. It is a special moment, a strange space that I do not hesitate to call sacred. So Iâm using this odd prefix, ana-, to try to trouble the old dichotomy of God versus anti-God, and to do this in favor of a middle realm, a milieu, where some new kind of thinking about this ageless yet still urgent question might occur. Such a middle space is not some wishy-washy, lukewarm ambivalenceâwhich one would be correct to âspit outâ as Scripture suggests. It is not facile syncretismâa little bit of this and that without ever committing yourself to anything at all. The doubleness of âanaâ is not duplicity, but rather a deeply productive tension. The idea of âanaâ with its double a can be read in two ways: as in the colloquial a-dieu, it can mean both âhelloâ and âgood-bye.â One connotes a moving away from or a departure, the a of the deus absconditusâor, more radically, atheism (mystical or secular). While the other a is the âadieuâ of âhelloââad deum. Excuse the Latin, but one finds echoes of this in the colloquial usage of French and English also. And for me this double a says something important about our contemporary relationship with the sacred.
JW: Why keep the word âsacredâ?
RK: I use the word âsacredâ because it is generousâor, at least, more capacious than the often-exclusivist understanding of terms like âtheism,â âreligion,â and âGod.â Many people who might have a real problem with the traditional notions of God have little trouble saying âThis is sacred to meâ when referring to a certain person, place, or time. So the initial a of ana signals a first movement of abstention and absolution whereby one absolves oneself of the preconceptions of the old God of power and might, in a sort of apophatic (negative theology) or anti-idolatrous (iconoclasm) gesture. And this preliminary move, akin if not identical with a certain salutary atheist scruple, may then open the possibilityânever the necessityâof a return to something more, other, transcendent: a surplus that was always there though we didnât see it. This is what I call ana-theos, or the God after God. Something âcalledâ Godâfor God is a name that means different things to different people. The best response, at least for me, to the question âdo you believe in God?â is, âIt depends what you mean by God.â In other words, âTell me what you understand about God, and Iâll tell you whether I believe it.â
JW: So, tell me something about what God means to you. Tell me something about your own childhood in religious terms. Your father was a sort of observant Catholic, wasnât he?
RK: Yes, he was. Silently observant. He never came to mass with us.
JW: Oh, he didnât?
RK: No. He went often to his own mass. He was a silent observer and rarely took the Eucharist. He felt unworthy and would go on a penitential pilgrimage to Lough Derg in Northern Ireland once a year; only then would he take communion. Whereas my mother was very devotional and very partial to the sacraments. So to put it in terms he would never have used himself, my father was more âapophaticââhe rarely spoke about religion and never about theology. He was educated and intelligentâa professor of surgeryâbut never articulated his religious or spiritual beliefs. In fact, at his funeral, a medical nun from one of the Cork hospitals came up to me and said, âYou know, every day we saw your father at the back of the chapel. He never went into surgery without saying a prayer.â But it was like a revelation to us. We would never have imagined it.
JW: He went on his own?
RK: Yes.
JW: Interesting.
RK: By contrast, my mother was full of spiritual pathos and very involved with helping suffering and homeless people in the city. Both parents were incredibly tolerantâmoral but never moralistic or moralising. My mother would say, âJust be good to people.â To take a somewhat dramatic example, when contraception was outlawed in Ireland, she would encourage all six of her sons to bring condoms when we dated girls. She knew that boys would be boys and wanted us to be responsible and never cause our girlfriends any harm. My sister became pregnant when she was still in her teens and suffered the consequences of a punishing Catholic community. But my father and mother stood by her and her baby, right through the terrible ordeal when she had to give up her studies and lost her first job as a trainee teacher in a girlsâ school for âfear of scandal.â My parents were amazingly strong and protective. I respected that and learned early on that religious people could be the best as well as the worst.
JW: So your mother was a churchgoer and took you along?
RK: She took all seven of her children. My brothers and I were altar boys. We went through the whole thing, and it was very beautiful. Sacramental, richly liturgical, something magical, not at all censorious or punishing. It may have been somewhat atypical of most Irish Catholic culture of the time; I donât know. But when I later heard and read about what so many of my contemporaries lived through as young Catholicsâa punitive, fear-filled, guilt-ridden religionâI felt fortunate to have had the parents I did.
JW: The punitive element, that wasnât there at all for you?
RK: For the most part, no. I was, of course, beaten by the Christian âbrothersâ in primary schoolânobody escaped thatâbut fortunately, my parents sent me to secondary school in a Benedictine Abbey called Glenstal. The monks there had a deep culture of tolerance, an openness to interreligious dialogue inspired by pioneering Benedictine missionaries like Abhishiktananda and Bede Griffiths in India; and a real sense of critical questioning informed by Vatican II theologians like Yves Congar and Henri De Lubac. Glenstal Abbey was also a place of ecumenical reconciliation in a sectarian Ireland, where the Northern troubles smouldered and raged in the late sixties and seventies.
JW: As a teenager, did you struggle with inherited belief or was the inherited belief not a large enough pressure that you had to struggle with it?
RK: It was a mixture of inheritance and struggle. Glenstal Abbey, where I went when I was twelve, provided a forum for this that was not, as I mentioned, very typical of Ireland in the late sixties. And then there was my equally atypical family situationâwith a very apophatic father and a very cataphatic mother. And, of course, my motherâs devotion to the poor and needyâweâd pray for them and for my fatherâs critically ill patients every night before bed. It was basically my mother who shared my fatherâs work with us. He never said a word about it himself. And then three of my brothers started working with the disabled community as teenagersâthey were much better than me in that regard. I was reading Nietzsche and Heidegger while they were pushing wheelchairs in Lourdes and Knock. They were very inspired by Jean Vanierâs movement Lâarche, which was set up to care for the mentally disabled by taking them out of awful psychiatric hospitals, known as âlooney binsâ in Cork, and living with them in ordinary houses. Vanier, originally a philosophy professor in Canada and a good friend of the family, was extremely liberal, open, ecumenical, wise, and caring. So I saw all the good side of Catholic caritas and caring for the broken and woundedâalong with the more oppressive side infamously epitomised by some perverted clergy in Ireland, as elsewhere, and in much of the Catholic-imposed social intolerance (regarding divorce, homosexuality, premarital sex, unmarried mothers, contraception, abortion, and so on). So, although I remained informed by a spiritually rich religious life on a personal level with my own family and educational experience, at a public level, I was extremely angry with the official Church. But my antiecclesiastical indignation did not prevent me from struggling to retrieve what I considered to be certain valuableâperhaps invaluableâtreasures of my spiritual heritage. I felt I could be furious with the bishops while continuing to worship something called âGod.â
JW: You werenât struggling through theodicy questions?
RK: Of course, but not for long. Theodicy never made sense to me. I was incensed by the very idea from early on. I could never believe in a divinity that willed or allowed evil if it had the power to do otherwise. That seemed like sheer cruelty or casuistry. I never gave credence to a deity of omnipotence. My God was one of nonsovereignty, vulnerability, fragility, and unknowability. A God of service, who preferred washing feet, healing the sick, giving bread, dying for his friends and enemies alike. In fact, the washing of the disciplesâ feet was always my favorite Easter liturgy. Jean Vanier used to do that. Heâd go around and wash the feet of thoseâboth abled and disabledâat his Easter table. That to me epitomised the divine as a servantânot servile, but in the service of others, strangers, outcasts. So, when you mention Mark Johnson defining the monotheistic God as the Highest One, I would rather say the âlowest one.â My God is an anti-God in that sense, God as outsider, guest, vagrant, the one who hungers and thirsts for justiceââthe least of these,â as he says in the gospels, the elachistos. Not the God above us but, as Paul Claudel put it, the God beneath us.1
JW: Now, what if an ethically, politically engaged atheist had turned up alongside you while you were doing those good, Vanier-inspired works? And this ethical chap was as ethical and motivated as you but turned out to have a Dawkins-like lack of belief. Where, then, do the distinctions fall? What would separate you, if anything, from him? What would be the difference?
RK: Well, the first thing for me would be what doesnât separate usâthe fact that weâre both in service to something radically other than ourselves. If you look at Matthew 25 . . .
JW: It is a foundational text for you, isnât it?
RK: Yes. Matt 25:31â44 is radical. But its radicality is so often neglected in practical and theological terms. Itâs crucial. Christ identifies here with the hospes, the stranger in the street, the last person in the world you think could be God. And that is where and how the kingdom comesâincarnate in the one who gives or receives a cup of water. I mean, that is the exclusion of exclusion par excellence. So if the worst of religion is its exclusivenessââwe have the revealed truth and the rest of you are damnedââthe great thing about this passage (and I believe one finds certain equivalents in Judaism, Buddhism, and other religions) is that no one need be excluded, except those who exclude themselves by choosing not to give or receive bread. Atheists are not at all excluded hereâbut I will come back to this. In fact, the askingâacknowledging oneâs need for bread and waterâis as important as giving the bread and water (or wine, as the case may be). So anatheist practice, as I understand it, would be the exclusion of exclusion, not the contrary. Or, to put it in more technical terms, when it comes to serving strangers, orthopraxis trumps orthodoxy.
JW: I see.
II
RK: But letâs get back to your example of the nonbelieving student who is doing the same thing as the believing student. What is the difference? When Iâm washing peopleâs feet with this guy as weâre working together with the homeless in downtown Dublin or out in Somalia, the first and most important thing is that weâre doing the work (facere veritatem as Augustine says, âdo the truthâ); the second thing might be that, as we are working, we have a conversation. And the conversation begins with the questions, âWhat do you say that youâre doing? And why are you doing it? What is your narrative about this shared action?â In short, what is the story behind your being here? Or the history behind the story? The why, who, wherefrom, whereto? I recount my story and listen to the otherâs story as well.
JW: You trade narratives.
RK: Yes. We trade narratives, and then we ask questions about those narratives: The atheist might say, âWhy do you call that God?â And the anatheist would say, âWell, actually, I call it the suffering servant.â And the reply might be, âBut thatâs not my view of God.â And...