interest in the ‘theology of the body’ (see also ‘Soul’) and theologies of
sexuality. The incarnation means that Christ must have been a sexual being,
dealing with all the normal aspects of human physicality. In Christ, the human
body – in all its aspects – became something sacred.
THINKERS
Thomas Altizer (1927– ) has argued that the incarnation should be
understood as a cosmic affirmation of the world of the flesh and human
history.
By becoming human, God collapses the distinction between the
sacred and the profane: ‘Christian theology must affirm the union of the
sacred into the profane and affirm the profane as profane.’
Nikos Kazantzakis (1883–1957): a Greek Christian philosopher whose
book The Last Temptation of Christ explored the more radical sexual
implications of the incarnation. If God truly became flesh, then he must also
have been a sexual being. Kazantzakis saw the incarnation as fundamental to
his view of life. Elsewhere he wrote: ‘within me even the most metaphysical
problem takes on a warm physical body which smells of sea, soil, and human
sweat. The Word, in order to touch me, must become warm flesh. Only then
do I understand – when I can smell, see, and touch.’
Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1908–61): a French
philosopher who explored
the relationship between the twin human experiences of being ‘conscious’ and
being a body of ‘flesh’. Merleau-Ponty describes the experience of touching
oneself as a form of self-consciousness: a realisation that we are all incarnate
beings, and that the incarnation of God in Christ is just a special case of the
general human condition.
Michel Henry (1922–2002): a French phenomenological theologian who
explored the theme of incarnation in his book Incarnation, a philosophy of the
flesh. For Henry, our experience is a complex combination of our inner
awareness of having a body and the external encounter with our own bodies.
This self-conscious awareness of our own flesh and the flesh of others is quite
different from the experience of mere matter, and is the fundamental
revelation of the reality of Life. In the incarnation God becomes ‘flesh’, as we
are, and not merely a physical body. So the Logos, the Word of God, reveals
itself as Life. The incarnation is ‘the auto-affection of Life’: God celebrating
and loving the Life which is his.
IDEAS
Avatara: the Hindu concept that the gods
occasionally take human or
animal form.