Lonergan Workshop, Vol. 9

Lonergan Workshop, Vol. 9

LONERGAN WORKSHOP Volume 9 LONERGAN WORKSHOP Volume 9 edited by Fred Lawrence Copyright © 1993 Boston College ISSN 0148-2009 Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper EDITORIAL NOTE After the 30th anniversary of Insight we tried focusing the theme of each summer's Lonergan Workshop on some work by Lonergan. The article "Mission and Spirit" supplied the theme for many of the articles in this volume. Not surprisingly, though, both the authors included in this volume and its editor have used it as an umbrella for a wide array of issues and concerns. The most obvious case of editorial initiative in this regard is the inclusion of a paper not originally delivered at a summer workshop, by long-time friend of Lonergan studies and cultivator of Lonergan's thought, James Pambrun. His paper on the relationship between science and theology compares Lonergan's approach with that of Paul Ricoeur. Its appearance here is due in part to our need to bring Lonergan's perspectives more into conversation with those of other thinkers prominent on today's scene. Eduardo Perez-Valera, 5J contributes a paper that grows out of years of labor on the concrete integration of the foundations of spiritual direction in the Ignatian tradition and the foundations of humane science. The realization that the pure and unrestricted desire to know is closely related to the biblical 'purity of heart' is reinforced in this paper's meditation on the theme of "prayer with the whole heart." The utterly existential motivation of Perez-Valera's article sounds forth again in Nancy Ring's grapple with spirituality in the context of the overall issue of the spirituality of women. Here Lonergan's style of intentionality analysis is used to put further relevant questions about the ecclesial dimension of Christian living, especially as regards feelings and the imagination. Further plumbing the relationship between symbols and feelings are the papers by Tad Dunne and Louis Roy, OP. Dunne engages in a playful speculation which uses Lonergan's funtional specialties heuristically to explore the realm of the imaginal vis-a-vis our concrete orientation as Christians in history: with quite suggestive results. Roy turns religiously converted critical realism in the direction of specifically liturgical symbols and practices to make some quite provocative reflections. Having been profoundly affected by the profound consonance between Lonergan's intellectualist stress on the preconceptual and prepredicative role of imagination and feelings, and psychologist Ira 111 Progoff's journaling workshops, William Mathews. sj has for many years been developing the nexus between autobiography and self­ appropriation in his afternoon sessions at the summer Workshops. Something of a kairos occurred when Bill was captivated by the need for the specific kind of spiritual biography of Lonergan which could be written only by one who had been appropriating biography and autobiography. We are fortunate indeed to be able to publish a part of Mathews's biographical research partly made possible by his year as a Lonergan Fellow at Boston College. Philip McShane takes the opportunity of the theme to remind the Lonergan community once again of the height and the distance implicit in Lonergan's challenge to theologians to operate 'at the level of their time' - namely, to enter the domain of austere interiority made uniquely possible by the rise of modern mathematics and science. Demonstrating what is at stake in the specifically scholarly differentiation of consciousness, Ann Johnston undertakes to communicate a glimpse of what spirit and mission meant to the "faithful remnant" of the ancient time and place objectified in Isaiah's scroll. Another Lonergan Fellow at Boston College, Filipino theologian Walter Ysaac, SJ was helped by Fr. Lonergan himself to understand that the functional specialty he is called to work in is communications. He spent his year as a Fellow exploring this functional specialty, with emphasis on interdisciplinary studies, in response to his concrete situation in the Philippines. His paper conveys the import of this concrete involvement. There are, as always, a number of persons without whose self­ giving collaboration this volume could not have been published. Special thanks are due to Charles Hefling, Darin McNabb, Anne O'Donnell, Jason Raia, and John Boyd Turner. IV ERRATA to Lonergan Workshop, volume 8 Hamish Swanston, "On First Reading Insight," page line correction 16 reflective understanding --+ "reflective understanding" 192 2 temperament and disposition --+ temperamental disposition 21 difficulty that I am --+ difficulty that, when Lonergan treats of matters tangential to my own interests and study, I am 100 2 secundum recipientis --+ secundum modum recipientis 199 4 Oratoria --+ Oratoria IX 24 drama is notorious, their being --+ drama is notorious. The dullness for most of us of Aristophanes' comedies derives immediately from their being IDa fn 13 Iranian ... myth. --+ "Iranian ... myth" (592). IDS a> known unknown --+ "known unknown" 'Z/ opposition --+ apposition 2I.Y1 fn 22 English Literature, 1983 --+ English Literature, Seattle, 1983. 6 known unknown --+ "known unknown" 16 being?" (632) --+ being" (632) ~fn24 add: and with these it is profitable to take his reference to Mario Praz' The Romantic Agony on p. 237. v CONTENTS Editorial Note iii Errata v Imaginal Theologies of History Tad Dunne 1 Spirit and Mission of the "Faithful Remnant": A Study of Community in the Isaiah Scroll Ann Johnston, R.S.C.J. Lonergan's Apprenticeship 1904 - 46: The Education of Desire William Mathews, S.J. 43 Mission and Spirit: Questions of Probability and Providence Philip McShane Lonergan and Ricoeur: Emerging Complementary Philosophical Approaches for Theological Views of Science James R. Pambrun The Structure of Christian Prayer and its Integration with the Sciences Eduardo Perez Valera, S.J. 145 Intentionality Analysis, the Church, and Women's Spirituality Nancy Ring 195 Grace, Mediation, and Liturgical Orientations Louis Roy, o.P. Doing Theology in the Philippine Context Walter L. Ysaac, S.J. 225 IMAGINAL THEOLOGIES OF HISTORY Tad Dunne, S.J. Do you have the peace you expect from life? When do we work to avoid trouble and when to accept the cross? By which measure do we say the family is doing fine? What concretely is the work of the Kingdom? What do you thank God for as you lie down at night? How are we to understand the different ecclesiologies and soteriologies contained in the various New Testament books? Is a bishop a good bishop because he runs a smooth operation? Puts all his trust in God? Has progressive pro­ gramming? In answering each of these questions, spontaneously we use some image of the ways we put order into our lives. These images represent for us, long before we analyze it, the work of finding and putting meaning into the history we are part of. Prior to naming that work as "kingdom" or "salvation" or "healing" or "peace," we repre­ sent it through images drawn from everyday experience. Even before we designate some liturgical or artistic symbol to represent what transcendence means for us today, we use a more primary inner image to guide our symbol-making. I must point out here that the images I am talking about are not goal-images - not images of the ideal community or the antici­ pated results of some five-year plan. Rather they are process-images; that is, images of the work involved in steering history. It is the difference between a description of an island one is sailing towards and a description of the art of sailing. The difference between these two kinds of images struck me forcefully when I realized that the goal-images of Ignatius of Loyola changed during his lifetime, but that his process-image of the work of salvation remained constant. For him, salvation is a struggle between the inner pull to pride and the inner pull to humility. The same may be said, I believe, of Jesus himself. Although he left no account of how he made his decisions, he clearly shifted his goals 1 2 Dunne during his public life. He began by preaching repentance, but many did not repent. He healed, but many many people never thanked God for what happened to them. He gathered a community of faithful followers, but they did not understand what he was about. One after another, each of his goals failed him. And yet, through each failure, he is constantly portrayed as struggling against an enemy within people. In other words, he did not have a fixed goal-image of what salvation should look like, but he did have a fixed process-image of what the process to salvation should be. These process-images are not mental photographs, mere graphical forms we can draw. Rather they are dramas - sequences of experiences we remember from inherited stories or from our own lives. For example, suppose a mother regards her work in raising children essentially as "protection." The guiding image in her mind is neither a concept nor a picture of protection; it is rather her ex­ perience of protecting and being protected, of childhood houseplay, of fairy tales, and of family lore on grandparents. In Bernard Lonergan's model of the subject, the status of these process-images is that of a symbol. Their function is to provide the affect-laden vehicles through which the mind, the heart, and the body communicate. They are not easily recognizable. Interpretation is necessary to explain the symbol, not only for psychotherapeutic purposes but also for the purposes of phenomenology, literary criti­ cism, religious healing of guilt, and existential philosophy (Lonergan, 1972: 64-69). But while interpretation of symbols is necessary for a healthy psychological life, it is also necessary to be able to criticize symbols and to choose the symbol that best represents the task of life for us.

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