The principal objection to a wholly negative theology is that we cannot
make negative judgements about God without first having some positive
knowledge of him. The statement, ‘God is not evil’ presumes some positive
understanding that God is good. The sculptor
can only chip off unwanted
stone because he knows the shape that he wants to emerge underneath.
Negative theology has also had an impact on modern secular philosophy.
Theodor Adorno’s Negative Dialectics (1973) is an example. Adorno thought
that positive truth claims lead to totalitarianism and fascism, and advocated ‘a
negation of negation that will not become a positing … It lies in the definition
of negative dialectics that it will not come to rest in itself as if it were total.
This is its form of hope’ (Negative Dialectics, p. 406).
The legacy of negative theology can also be seen in some post-modern
artists. The sparse canvases of Barnett Newman’s Stations of the Cross have
no figures of Christ, just abstract lines leaving the viewer to deduce God (or
not) from their theological emptiness. Mark Rothko’s brooding panes of dark
colour are another example of a secular negative theology. Rothko evokes a
sense of the mystical without ever describing it, which is why his paintings
can work in a multi-religious ‘spiritual environment’ like The Rothko Chapel
(Houston, Texas). Similarly, Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot can be read
in the light of negative theology as an attempt to speak about the divine
through its absence.
THINKERS
St Thomas Aquinas argued that negative
theology was a necessary
preliminary to any positive theology.
Denis (or Dionysius) the Areopagite – also called Pseudo-Dionysius (c.
500) – argued in his Mystical Theology that, although we can contemplate
God in a symbolic way through metaphors and names, God himself is wholly
beyond our ability to comprehend.
Petru Dumitriu (1924–2002): a Romanian writer who argued, in To The
Unknown God (1979), that God is most real in silence and absence.
Johannes (‘Meister’) Eckhart (c. 1260–1327/8) argued that negative
theology must go so far as declaring God to be non-existent. This was not an
atheistic statement, rather a refusal to define God by human concepts of
‘existence’. Near the end of his life he was tried
as a heretic by Pope John
XXII.
St John of the Cross (1542–91) wrote mystical theology and poetry,
believing that the closer we get to God, the less we comprehend: ‘In my soul I
felt, revealing,/ A sense that, though its sense was naught,/ Transcended
knowledge with my thought’ (from ‘Verses written
after an ecstasy of high
exaltation’).
St Paul (3–65) tells in Acts 17 of seeing an altar dedicated to ‘the
unknown God’ – an example of negative theological description. Paul argued
that ‘the unknown God’ is in fact ‘known’ in the form of the Christian God,
‘in whom we live and move and have our being’.
Angelus Silesius/Johannes Scheffer (1624–77) argued for an extreme
negative theology in The Cherubic Wanderer, saying that ‘God is sheer
nothingness … To become nothing is to become God.’
Gregory of Nyssa (c. 335–c. 394) argued that God’s infinity necessarily
makes him unknowable.
Plato (427–347 bc) described ‘the Good’ (or the highest reality) as
‘beyond being’ – epekeina tes ousias (The Republic, 508b) – and therefore
beyond the reach of thought and language.
Plotinus (205–70) believed that we must
abandon ourselves to God in
contemplation rather than trying to understand him.
Proclus (412–85) argued in The Elements of Theology that ‘the gods are
superessential, and subsist prior to beings; they cannot be apprehended by
opinion, science or discursive reason, or by intelligence’ (Proposition 123).
The Cloud of Unknowing, an anonymous fourteenth-century spiritual
book, says that ‘of God Himself no man can think’. ‘Your intense need to
understand will … undermine your quest [to find God].
It will replace the
darkness which you have pierced … with clear images of something which,
however good, however beautiful, however Godlike, is not God.’
IDEAS
Apophatic theology: another term for negative theology, and the opposite
of kataphatic (or positive) theology.
Aufhebung: a concept in Hegel’s philosophy which means ‘negating in
order to move forward’.
The Dark Night of the Soul: a spiritual discipline, described by St John of
the Cross, that uses the absence of knowledge and the senses as a ‘secret
ladder’ to reach God.
‘Negative capability’: a term used by John Keats to describe the state
‘when man is capable of being in uncertainties, Mysteries, doubts, without