Conversations with Tyler - David Bentley Hart on Reason, Faith, and Diversity in Religious Thought
Episode Date: July 12, 2023David Bentley Hart is an American writer, philosopher, religious scholar, critic, and theologian who has authored over 1,000 essays and 19 books, including a very well-known translation of the New Tes...tament and several volumes of fiction. In this conversation, Tyler and David discuss ways in which Orthodox Christianity is not so millenarian, how theological patience shapes the polities of Orthodox Christian nations, how Heidegger deepened his understanding of Christian Orthodoxy, who played left field for the Baltimore Orioles in 1970, the simplest way to explain how Orthodoxy diverges from Catholicism, the future of the American Orthodox Church, what he thinks of the Book of Mormon, whether theological arguments are ultimately based on reason or faith, what he makes of reincarnation and near-death experiences, gnosticism in movies and TV, why he dislikes Sarah Ruden's translation of the New Testament, the most difficult word to translate, a tally of the 15+ languages he knows, what he'll work on next, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded March 23rd, 2023. Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Join our Discord Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Learn more about Conversations with Tyler and other Mercatus Center podcasts here.
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Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.
Today I'm very pleased to be chatting with David Bentley Hart.
How to describe David Bentley Hart?
Well, the person I know whom I consider to be the best red is David Gordon, and David Gordon
thinks that David Bentley Hart is the best red person he knows.
David Bentley Hart is an American writer, philosopher, religious studies, scholar,
critic, and theologian.
He has authored over 1,000 essays, reviews, and papers, not to mention 19 books, including
a very well-known translation of the New Testament.
The topics he writes on include Christian metaphysics, Orthodox Christianity,
philosophy of mind, Indian and East Asian religions, Asian languages, classics, literature, music, and more.
David, welcome.
Thank you.
Now I have to live up to that introduction.
If you could explain to me as simply as possible, in which ways is Orthodox Christianity not so very millinarian?
Well, it depends on what you mean by millinarian.
I'd have to ask you to be a bit more.
Say the Protestant 17th century sense, that the world is on.
on the verge of a very radical transformation that will herald in some completely new age,
and we all should be prepared for it.
Yeah.
Well, in one sense, it's been the case of Christianity from the first century,
that it's always existed in a kind of time between times, right?
There's always this sense of being in history,
but always expecting an imminent interruption of history.
But orthodoxy has been around for a while.
you know, it's part of an inderated culture, grounded originally in the Eastern Greco-Roman world,
and has a huge apparatus of philosophy and theology, and I think just over the centuries has learned to be patient.
The notion, you know, the sort of Protestant millinarianism you speak of always seems to have been born out of historical.
crisis, in a sense, you know, the rise of the nation state, the fragmentation of the Western
Church, it's always as much an effect of history as a flight from history, whereas I think it's
fair to say that orthodoxy is sort of created for itself a kind of parallel world just outside
the flow of history. It puts much more of an emphasis on the spiritual life, mysticism,
that sort of thing. And as such, whereas it still uses the lying.
language, your recognizable language of the imminent return of Christ, it's not at the center
of the spiritual life.
And how does that theological patience shape the polities of Orthodox Christian nations
and regions?
How does that matter?
Well, it's been both good and bad, to be honest.
I mean, at its best, Orthodoxy has cultivated a spiritual life that nourished, you know, nourished,
millions and that puts an emphasis upon moral obligation to others and the life of charity
and the ascetical virtues of Christianity, the self-denial. At its worst, however,
it's often been an accommodation with historical forces that are antithetical to the gospel, too.
I mean, it's often been the case that orthodoxy has been so, let's say, disenchanted with the
and expectation that it's become a prop of the state. And you can see today in Russia in which
you have a church institution. Now, this isn't to speak of the faithful themselves, but the
institutional authority of the state, of the institution, rather, of the church, more or less
being nothing but a propaganda wing of an authoritarian and terrorist government. So it's, you know,
it's had both its good and its bad consequences over the sense.
centuries. At its best, as I say, it encourages a true spiritual life that can teach one to
be detached from ambitions and expectations and the sort of violent projects of the ego,
but at its worst, it can become a passive participant in precisely those sorts of projects,
and those sorts of evils.
How would you say your study of Heidegger has deepened your understanding of Christian orthodoxy?
Heidegger?
Well...
Heidegger, right?
Whom you understand quite well?
He's, well, he's one of them.
Yeah, I mean, the philosophers over.
Well, now there you're dealing...
I have to admit, this question comes a little out of left field, but with me, I never
know which aspect of my work someone might be interested in any given moment.
But with Heidegger, it's a very ambiguous figure, of course.
But he certainly was putting aside his own incredible moral defects.
For those who don't know, he was a member for a while of...
the Nazi party, as much out of cowardice as anything else, but I think out of early on, at least
some degree of sympathy. But when he wasn't being evil, he was a very reflective philosopher
on how we have arrived at what he considered an age of nihilism, of sort of an age of, that
values the will to power, the will to power over a physical environment above all other things,
any sense of the mystery of being, the piety of not trying to grasp and control and reduce all
of reality to instrumentality and utility. And he tells a very powerful story about the genealogy
of Western nihilism, how we arrived at what he calls the age of technology in which everything
is simply a project of the will and the whole of the world is nothing but a reserve of
resources to be exploited for the purpose of acquisition and for the purposes of the will.
Now, I don't agree with the whole story, but as I say, it makes one think about the genealogy
of the way we see the world and see the world as desacralized and disenchanted.
And that much of the appeal of, I suppose, Eastern Orthodoxy to me in my youth was precisely
that it was a Christian tradition that emphasized precisely the sense of cosmic mystery.
of Christ and the cosmic mystery of the revelation of God in all things.
And put this great emphasis on the notion that the heart of Christian thought is the idea
of deification, of union with God, of a whole creation renewed in some unimaginable way
so that a very popular image goes so that the whole universe is like a burning bush,
you know, shining with the glory of God but not consumed.
It's, you know, so I would say that,
if there is any connection there, and since no one's ever asked me this before, I'm not sure there is,
but if there is, then, you know, that you can see how someone who takes seriously the genealogy
of nihilism that someone like Heidegger unfolds might be drawn to a very robust,
among Christian traditions, a very robust depiction of a kind of glorified reality in which the entire cosmos
participates in the sacred mystery.
You mentioned questions out of left field.
Who played left field for the Baltimore Orioles in 1970?
Merv Retimond.
Well, let's see.
There would also be Don Buford sometimes played left.
I'm trying to remember.
Paul Blair was in Center still.
That was the last year that Frank Robinson was in right field.
So if my memory is correct, it was usually Merv Retimand or maybe the young Don
Baylor was up then.
I'm getting old now.
Do you know?
I think of it as Beaufort, you know, Blair in Center, Robinson and right, but I'm not entirely sure either.
Well, I think in left field, Earl Weaver was one of the first really to platoon players.
And sometimes Beaufort actually played the infield.
He was a much more versatile player.
But yeah, I think Retimann was still on the team too.
So let's say you're trying to explain to a Catholic in metaphysical terms where orthodoxy diverges from Catholicism, not the history.
not different views on the papacy, but fundamental underlying conceptual differences on metaphysics.
And as few dimensions as possible. Where do you see that difference?
In as few dimensions as possible?
Well, for one thing, there's no history of the notion of inherited guilt.
The whole idea of sin is very different.
It's, you know, sin that we're sort of born into a state of alienation from God and from the world and from our neighbor is a common.
and Christian idea, but in the West, mostly just as a result of certain translation issues,
but also because of the very powerful influence of the late Augustine on the development
of Western theology, there came there that somehow one is born in a state of guilt,
which, to be honest, was often, was considered repugnant in the East.
Also, there was no theology then of predestination. This is often also regarded as a,
and there was in Western Catholicism, albeit it's a doctrine without a strict definition.
It remains on the books, but it's unlike Calvinism, Roman Catholicism doesn't insist that it
knows what predestination means.
But the real big difference, I suppose then the greatest difference would be the theology
of grace.
I mean, that in the West it became more and more the case that grace was sort of treated as
antithetical to nature. Grace was a principle over against nature. It was therefore given according to a
kind of purely predilective predestining will of God, whereas in the east, that kind of opposition
between grace and nature simply never took root. Grace was just a word for the way God deals with
creatures, and it was seen as more continuous with nature, that were always already
naturally oriented to union with God, and that it's an unnatural impediment that separates us
from God rather than a failure to receive a super-elevating grace.
How can I put it this?
In Western tradition, grace became a very extraordinary gift, whereas in the East it remained
an ordinary reality from which we were extraordinarily separated by a tragic history
that had to be overcome.
Does the relative lack of counterpoint in Eastern Orthodox church music correspond to anything theological, or is that just historical accident?
Well, it depends on which church you're talking about.
Contrapontal polyphonic music actually has a very rich history in the Western, in the Russian and the Slavic tradition, especially from the time of Bortyanski and others onward.
I don't think so, no.
Those sorts of differences, those sorts of accidental differences, though, are the things that Orthodox polemish.
like to focus on every little difference becomes a difference of incredible magnitude for those who are looking for reasons to dislike the other camp.
But no, I don't think there's any significant theological difference there.
And the Slavic tradition, as I say, is highly contrapuntal.
You know, Rachmaninov's church music.
Sure.
How does the Orthodox Church in America avoid simply becoming an American religion, one of many others?
So far it seems to be failing to do that.
What's the reason for that failure? Why isn't it strong enough?
For any number of reasons. One, there's been a huge influx of former evangelicals into American orthodoxy,
but the problem is, is orthodoxy doesn't have, most of the communions, unlike the Catholic Church,
doesn't have a protocol for receiving converts that's very clear.
I mean, they just, so you come to the liturgy, you ask questions, and after a year or so, you
So you're chrismated or something.
And the result is that many who come into the church come with presuppositions formed in a very
radically different tradition.
I mean, fundamentalist evangelicalism is a much narrower understanding of, you know, how much
speculation is possible.
They're not really prepared to look at a 2,000-year history and see all the varieties.
You know, well, this is the patristic period.
Here's the scholastic.
and the Russian religious philosophers of the 19th century were very different,
and, you know, be able to recognize that a huge variety of views is a lot.
Instead, they tend to think in terms of a faith statement of the sort of an evangelical church.
And to be honest, that's become such a dominant faction and so much American Orthodoxy
that much of American orthodoxy is intellectually and temperamentally and socially and culturally
and culturally just American evangelicalism plus saints and incense. And so I would say that I don't think,
you know, the only way in which the Orthodox communities have successfully resisted this is also
the degrees to which many of them have remained redouts of ethnic identity. And that's not much
better, that too. So I would say on the whole, the jury is still out. I think Orthodoxy in America may
very well, just be another American religion at the end of the day, another generation or two.
And it won't be any, the only distinctions will be in liturgical form.
If one draws a line down the middle of Europe with orthodoxy to the right of that line,
those nations seem to be much less democratic or democratic for shorter periods of time.
Is there something causal going on there or is that just historical accident?
Well, I mean, I don't know if orthodoxy as such is the issue, but I mean, the history of those
nations were radically different in any number of ways. Some of them, in the case say of most of the
Slavic nations have simply retained habits of governance and habits of social organization that go back
to a very pre-democratic past. I don't know if there's any causal relationship between the
kind of Christianity, because, of course, Western democratic institutions tended to go hand in hand
with some degree of laicization, some degree of secularization. I mean, for the, I mean, the whole
point of the French Revolution would be the overthrow of the Aalcian regime, which is both state and
church. You know, you're dealing with a kind of absolutist, Gallican church in a sense that's a
a wing of government. So my suspicion is this is mostly historical accident, the cultural
tendencies toward reaction in the East, or mostly I just have to do with the material conditions
and the political histories and the relative material isolation from the huge period of
Western European expansion of wealth, expansion of power, and ferment of social change.
and new ideas.
It was simply the case that
after the Middle Ages, early modernity,
Western Europe was the center
of economic
and political power
in the Western world.
Say Poland, Slovenia,
Czechia, which have a lot
of Catholicism in their backgrounds, they seem
to be converging on Western
norms, living standards, much more
than, say, the EU members,
the East, Bulgaria, Romania?
Well, they had certain advantages to begin with, too.
But, yeah, I mean, better relations.
Again, I don't think it has any particular, and to be honest, I mean, Polish Catholicism
is basically culturally very much like Slavic Orthodoxy.
I mean, there you're going to find that culturally, Catholicism and Orthodoxy are closer
to one another in many ways than Catholicism in the East is with Catholicism in the West.
trying to draw causal ties between what are very complex social histories, I just think is a mistake.
There's no way of saying one way or the other.
I mean, Greek democracy flourished in the modern age for a while.
I mean, after the, after the, after the revolution, after Greek independence in the early 19th century, and Greece remains orthodox too.
And it, and it's even more than Poland is committed to a kind of, uh,
as real democratic norms.
In Poland, there are stronger reactionary forces at present than there are in Greece.
What do you think of the Book of Mormon, and what is it about the Bible that so lent itself to this new spin-off or startup?
The book of Mormon.
I have no opinions about it whatsoever.
It's kind of silly.
That's the way it comes across to me, but I've only read it once.
The Bible, if you say the Bible lends itself to spin-off,
I mean, any religion that has tendencies towards the collapse of the difference and significance
between history and eternity is always likely to inspire new historical projects that consider
themselves.
I mean, after all, this is something of the Abrahamic religions, is that they're sort of supersessionist
in the way they proceed.
I mean, even within the history of Judaism before Christianity, it's a little.
one covenant superseding another, then Christians claim that they've superseded the covenant
in some sense. And then Islam is a supersession of the revelation with yet another revelation.
So this seems to be just part and parcel of the whole Western Abrahamic or the whole
Abrahamic religious tradition. So I suppose I would say that Mormonism is just another
example of that kind of new revelation, you know, the claim of a new revelation.
This is a general question I have about the roles of reason and faith in theological argument.
So when I hear members of the Orthodox Church criticize, say, the papacy and ex-cathedra doctrine,
what they say makes perfect sense to me.
They deploy reason.
They have arguments of reason against the doctrine.
But in other contexts, religions, including orthodoxy, they're quite willing to invoke faith.
And so we have faith in whatever.
So is it reason or is it faith that determines when an argument from reason,
or an argument from faith is appropriate.
Reason.
Reason. So reason's the bottom line.
It has to be because even if you choose faith,
you're choosing to believe something for reasons,
even if you're not able to name those reasons to yourself,
some sort of compelling rational intuition
has worked upon you to say,
well, I believe I can trust this source more than that source.
So you may say that, oh, I'm having faith in what it's telling me,
but you're having faith in that rather than something else
because at some level, maybe a tacit level that you'd have a hard time laying out,
you've somehow reached the judgment, and it would have to be a rational judgment
if your faith is of any meaning, that you trust this rather than that.
So I would say that, but, you know, what is faith?
I mean, when you create a sort of division between faith and reason, you're assuming
that faith is taking things simply on the authority of another blindly.
but that's never actually been the definition that any religion,
I mean, whether you're talking in the West or what are you talking about,
pistis in Greek,
or Schradda in Sanskrit or any number of other words for faith,
it usually means a kind of rational commitment to a certain path
for which you have reasons,
but those reasons in themselves don't necessarily arrive at a QED,
but that as you advance on this path,
more you're hoping, at least,
things become clearer and clearer, and you understand better whether you really believe it or not.
But you have to commit yourself to the path in order to find a way.
You know, the American philosopher William James spoke of the will to believe,
and he's often misunderstood, if all he was saying was, it's okay to choose arbitrarily to believe
something. That's not what he said.
What he said was when you, you know, it's as if you're in the fog, saying you encounter two paths,
and you have a sense that one is more likely to lead to safety and the other to the edge of a cliff.
You take that path, but you don't take it so credulously that you'll walk off the edge of a cliff if you come to the cliff,
that the act of faith is a way of engaging the mind, engaging reason, so it can explore.
If you don't start with some sort of trust, some sort of possibility of discovering the truth,
then you never will seek the truth to begin with. But that search requires a kind of combination of
a degree of rational judgment and a degree of trust, and you hope that the two prove to be in harmony.
If they're not, though, if you reach a point where your faith and your reason come into conflict,
then trust your reason. Always trust your reason, because otherwise faith is just epistemic nihilism.
Nehalism, sorry, pronouncing the word both ways today, is just, it's meaningless. It's just a
brute exertion of the will, at which point it's sub-rational and becomes contemptible. Always trust
reason, but make sure that reason is tempered. It's not petty rationalism, but it's a reason
that really can see things in broad perspective and understand in a variety of modalities.
don't treat reason as if it's a math equation.
So given that perspective, does it ever make sense to think about the deity
in probabilistic or Bayesian terms?
Because it's sounding almost Bayesian to me.
Well, the chance that God exists is 73%.
Well, you're actually God.
Faith is the question of existence of God.
I mean, that's not what I was talking about.
When I talk about faith, I meant a path towards the sacred.
there, first of all, to define what the word existence means, because God would not exist
in the way that an individual entity, a finite entity exists, right? So any rational arguments
you have about God are based on usually a kind of modal metaphysics of the absolute and the
contingent or so on and so forth. And there, I think reason should be fully indefinitely.
engaged, the question is, within a tradition, that's when things become a bit more stochastic.
It's like, you know, does, is this, I can start, if I don't start from the premise that
when I speak of God, that is that there's an absolute source and end to all things,
then I'm not really interested in the question of religion at all. But if I believe that
may be true, if I have a sense of it or if reason tells me it so, that it doesn't make sense
to believe in a pure physicalism or materialism, then where faith is engaged is in trying to make
rational judgments about who can point you towards a deeper understanding and relationship.
I don't think that's Bayesian so much as, you know, it's not a leap of faith in the vulgar sense,
but it is a venture of faith in the sense that you can't start with all the, you can't start
with perfect wisdom and knowledge. You are making rational,
judgments, and again, rationality is not a single, univocal sort of thing. It can also have to do
with intuitions, like moral intuitions. If you come up against a doctrine or a teaching or something
that is repugnant to your moral reasoning, then that is, you know, significant. And it would
be deplorable of you to choose to believe it despite the counsels of your moral reasoning,
unless you had really good reasons to think you'd been mistaken.
Does the concept of reincarnation make theological sense to you?
Sure, within the systems in which systems you're talking about.
Punabava in Buddhism isn't about the reincarnation of a psychological ego.
It has to do with an uncontrollable set of karmic consequences that lead to new phenomenal arising.
So there you're dealing with one notion.
The versions that you find in Vedanta and Bhakti and other,
things that we call Hinduism, or also in Sikhism or Jainism, in which the Jiva, something that is
a kind of soul passes over. Even that's not psychological self. But nonetheless, that's a more
substantial sense of the meaning of reincarnation. Within those systems, yeah, they make perfect sense.
But again, people tend to think they know what these terms mean. When you actually look at the
traditions, they have to be qualified and modified and explained at length, because you can't
step out of an entire world of presuppositions and beliefs and concepts and just take, you know,
one thing like that, Punabha, again becoming, I'm just choosing to use the Buddhist term,
and think you understand what's going on, is if you could just transpose it into say,
oh, I'm a Presbyterian, and I know what this means, because,
You can't do that.
What do you think of the testimonies of what are called near-death experiences?
Many of those testimonies coming from Christians, of course.
Well, I mean, I don't know.
Some of them, I think, are quite compelling.
I mean, especially the ones that involve, you know, being able to reconstruct facts
about the surrounding the moment of your death that you shouldn't have been able to know,
like who was out in the hallway, you know, things like, you can't, you can't completely deny it.
But at the same time, I think also that you're dealing with a moment of transition in which
it's very hard to separate the psychological from the objective.
So I wouldn't dismiss them.
Many of them, as I say, are quite compelling, but how much you can learn from them.
It seems like a lot more testimony than, say, from the apostles or in the four gospels.
that if we wait testimony, one is led in many different directions, including, of course, the Book of Mormon.
Well, I mean, who's testimony? Come on.
I mean, the Book of Mormon is supposedly read off from these golden plates that Joseph Smith was shown,
able to read with magical spectacles, plates that no one else ever.
So, you know, that's very much a kind of story.
If you want to believe it, you can.
But that's not, you know, that's not, and maybe you can say the same about the everyone's testimony.
I mean, I just, there are judgments you have to make at times just no one's testimony should be taken as an absolute authority.
No one, because no one is free from psychological limitation.
So even if he or she is perfectly sincere, that in itself doesn't prove anything.
But you can make judgments on character.
You can make judgments about coherence.
These are, again, are relative judgments.
They're not absolute.
I think that when the story becomes, I don't know why you keep bringing up Mormonism.
I mean, I have absolutely no connections.
I've never written about it.
My only connection.
I've met a few nice Mormons.
I've read the book of Mormon once.
I didn't find it particularly well written, but neither for that matter is most of the New Testament.
And I think, you know, it's based on historical claims that are objectively false.
So, you know, that there are these ancient civilizations and the Americas that just didn't exist.
But I think the story of the genesis of the Book of Mormon is a bit more incredible than, say, somebody in the first century writing down what his theology is based on, you know, as in the case of Paul, obviously a person who whose life was turned upside down by some kind of experience.
Maybe he was a psychotic, I don't know.
But, you know, it doesn't seem that way when you read him.
There's some powerful spiritual apprehension that he has discovered about the love of God and the grace of God.
And that over many decades of self-sacrificing life leading ultimately to his death, he lays that out.
Well, that's compelling to me in a way that other sorts of claims that seem more incredible
art. In the United States, has progressive politics become the new version of a secular Christianity?
Well, I don't know. I mean, in some cases, yeah, in some cases not. I mean, it depends on what you're
talking about in particular. I think that we have learned both in America, I think in America,
but also in the West as such, just to a pathological degree at America, on both right and left,
we've learned to start all of our conversations from a position of moral absolutism.
I don't know if this has always been the case.
I mean, there have been apocalyptic moments in American history before.
I mean, we had a civil war, for instance.
But at the present, it seems like both extremes speak in such strident tones of moral indignation
that it is tempting to think that they're speaking out of a dogmatic impulse,
rather than a rational, that there is a kind of religious intonation in the worst sense in our
politics on all sides.
Is the future of Christianity as an institution brighter or darker than it was, say, 20 years ago?
20 years ago.
30 years ago.
How about 100 years ago?
A generation ago.
I don't know.
I mean, what would be brighter or darker?
I mean, for me, you know, what would be good, what would be bad?
There are people I know, in fact, people near here in Notre Dame who are all terrifically intent on trying to revive a dying Christendom because they think that would be the revival of Christianity in the West.
And they allie themselves to these reactionary figures like Victor Orban, whereas I, my idea, my ideal of what would be a brighter future for Christianity would be the final eclipse.
of that kind of conflation of Christianity with the interests of a particular civilization or culture or nation.
I believe that's a perfidious corruption.
So bright in what way?
I would say that in many ways, the brightest future for Christianity may consist in the death of many of its institutions and of much of its cultural power.
The TV show The Prisoner, How Should It Have Ended?
Ah, now that's an interesting question.
The last episode, I will admit, is a bit of a disappointment, but I think it ended properly.
I mean, I think Patrick McGowan made his point that, that number one is the self, that we imprison ourselves before anyone else can imprison us.
So I think the last episode would have been better had it been written as well as the one just before it.
But, you know, you can't have everything.
I'm contented with the way it went out.
This seems like a minor and a silly question, but it is true.
You know, they did a remake for AMC of the prisoner some years ago.
In the original, of course, number six, he escapes.
Now, his escape is an absolute because he goes back home and it turns out still to be, in some sense, the village.
He is still the prisoner of himself.
But he destroys the village, right?
Yes.
In the new version, he saves the village and turns it into a kind of psychotherapeutic
spa that, you know, some people require in place of the reality of this world.
I found that a sublimely nihilistic conclusion.
So the way it should have ended is the way it originally ended, not the way the remake ended it.
Maybe that's a kind of woke ending reflecting moral depravity, that moral judgments are not complex and the self is unitary.
and everything is easy, and you just have to pick the right side,
and you can set everything right again.
Well, what would be the right side?
I don't, I mean...
Well, I don't think we know, but I think in the AMC remake,
the implication is that it's easy to pick the right side.
I just got the impression that it chose the therapeutic over the Gnostic.
That is, that in the original program,
it was consciously, at times, a Gnostic allegory.
In fact, there was one episode called The Dance of the Dead
that just explicitly sort of invokes a Gnostic language of, you know, that somehow we're
imprisoned in a false reality and that we should long for the really real at whatever cost
and should seek to escape from delusion. Whereas the new version simply says that in a sense
that maybe there is no truth at all, there is no right side or wrong side, there's just the
need for therapy to help us deal with the sense of alienation or discontent. And that of those
two options, I prefer the former. Maybe at times, Gnosticism is too pessimistic for Hollywood TV
and too inegalitarian for modern progressivism. So you have to jettison it. And what do you
replace it with? A happy ending. Yeah, well, I mean, I'm not quite sure what your politics are.
So I have no concern one way or the other about how it's viewed in regard to progressive.
I mean, I'm a socialist, so, I mean, I'm perfectly fine. I'm not a liberal, but I'm definitely a socialist.
So, you know, my concern about it, and, yeah, Gnosticism in his classical statements to the degree there was such a thing.
I want to point out that in scholarly terms, who knows, there's so many different schools that we've simply stuck together and called Gnostic that when you actually look at them, the details, much of what we call Gnosticism,
is just actually Pauline or Johannine Christianity in the New Testament,
restated with an overlay of myth of fabulism.
I think, to be honest, there's been kind of a vogue of Gnosticism in popular culture,
not where you'd expect it, but, like, you know, there have been lots of films.
Movies versus TV, though. It's a big difference, Matrix, right?
The Matrix things, yeah, which were the, you know, not not, not, not, a,
my not very good films, but the Truman Show, which is just a pure Gnostic allegory, Gattaca, done by the same fellow.
And in television, too, I mean, as far as I know, I don't, if you said, I don't watch enough to know, but I did a few years ago, what was the Battle Star Galactic of the sci-fi version.
I actually got hooked on that and watched it through.
And there are plenty of Gnostic themes in that.
So, yeah.
But they ruined the ending in the final season.
right? It's like the remake of the prisoner.
No, I disagree there, actually. I kind of liked the angels turning out to be real angels.
But then again, it's been so long since I'm not sure maybe I'm misremembering how it ended.
For me, the best parts are seasons one and two, where it stays a bit dark and nasty and problematic.
Well, I'd have to go back and revisit it. I have to admit, my memory's not that sharp.
Which is the best Bob Dylan song?
Blind Willie McTell.
I might say Mr. Tambourine Man or Highway 61 revisited.
Well, it all depends on which era.
And, of course, there's the stuff we grew up with.
And so I would have said Mr. Tambourine Man up until.
And then Blind Willie McTell is sort of his revival period, you know, infidels onward.
And then I like a lot of the stuff and oh mercy.
There, the man in the black coat.
So I'm afraid he's been around too long.
You really have to say, what's the best vintage Dylan?
What's the best middle period, Dylan?
What's the best revival middle period, Dylan?
What's the best late period?
You know.
But if I had to choose one to be played while my corpse is being marched in its coffin down Bourbon Street or something,
I would go with Blind Willie McTal.
Why be so taken with the nation of Bhutan?
There was a recent UN survey of happiness.
Buton comes in 97.
There's another recent paper,
ranking nations for negative affect.
You know, how much stress and hardship is in your life?
Bhutan comes in 149, which is not well at all.
One time you wrote, quote,
Buton conforms better than any other state
to my criteria for national greatness.
Why not just protect Bhutan?
It's a failed state.
Well, first of all, that's a satirical piece
that was written so long ago
that I'm surprised that anyone remembers it.
The joke being, it was a period when people were talking about American greatness.
This is well before Trump and everything.
I mean, this was something.
Sure.
And it was always being couched in terms of economic development, from world power and all that.
So I chose the most isolated, most sort of militantly rural, the most unworldly.
Now, after doing that, of course, I had to say, well, then again, when I looked at it again, like the treatment
of Nepalese refugees and Bhutan was anything but admirable and all that. But at the time,
I was making a joke about what constitutes national greatness. And so the notion that you have
a country that, you know, didn't have any television in it up until like a decade ago
and only needed one stoplight and then they, in the whole country, and then they removed it
because it offended their aesthetic sense. It just seemed like a funny column at the time. But if you
meet him by really willing to go to the mat defending Bhutan against all its critics. No, no, that
was a that was a satire. What do you think of Sarah Rudin's translation of the New Testament?
I think it's awful. Why? It's just very bad. I just think it's barely literate. I think it's
very inaccurate. I say this not as someone, I think she's done other translations that are quite
wonderful. I think her translation of Augustine is the best in modern English, but I think her
insistence on translating philologically in the sense that, you know, taking the meaning of
words from their roots and doing other things of that sort all the way through was horribly ill-advised.
And I think she also just doesn't know the period very well.
She's a classicist in one sense, but late antiquity and certainly Second Temple Judaism
and late late-antee Christianity, or just not in her wheelhouse.
and there are just so many things that she gets wrong.
And I just think it reads exceedingly badly.
I don't know what she...
I agree with Luke Timothy Johnson,
who, with all the goodwill in the world,
just described it as a mess.
What do you think goes wrong
when that book is translated by committees?
The lowest common denominator wins out,
and that usually means the tacitly approved theology
of the most unimaginative and historically unformed faction in the committee.
And there's a concern not to offend against people's piety, even when the text itself,
so you get translations that are not warranted by the Greek, and they're not warranted
by the history of the time in which the text appeared, but nonetheless are chosen because
they don't offend against people's theological expectations. And that's simply, I think, true of
Every committee. Now, you see, the King James is an exception only because it's based on the Tyndale
translation. It wasn't really a committee project. The committee simply dotted the eyes,
crossed the T's, fixed a few things, did some good. But that was first and foremost, the work of
an individual genius. Even then, the King James should not be used for theology. It's great
literature. It's great liturgy. It's better than many later translated.
far more accurate, say, than a piece of rubbish like the new international version.
But it's still, a lot of its translation is based on later Christian doctrine rather than on what the Greek actually says.
What's the most important thing you learned about the New Testament by translating it?
We're fools if we think we understand it.
But I think, even though I knew this, more than ever I came to appreciate the sheer diversity, even in the first generation of Christians.
I mean, this is not a unified text.
It doesn't reflect a unified theology.
What it reflects is many different reactions to an event of extraordinary mystery and power for those who are writing about it,
at least especially when you're dealing with the Poline literature, which is very early,
and the Gospels too are drawn from earlier strata of Christian literature.
I mean, some of the later stuff like 2nd Peter, there you're already well into a period of hardening factions.
But I think the thing that I came away with is that every attempt to ground absolute doctrine, fixity of dogma in the text is an absurd project because it's simply not there.
It does not.
It is not that kind of book.
It is not an index of propositional content.
What was the most difficult word of importance to translate?
That's a question.
all theos, God with the article, as opposed to Thales.
But that's not the only one.
You see, there's a cluster of words here, penhema, the spirit, in the sense that there you're
dealing with a word that in different contexts can just mean life or breath or the spirit,
or the spirit of God, or the spirit in you.
And sometimes is used to mean all those things at once, because the very concept of
spirit in late antiquity, especially when there was an influence of, say, stoic metaphysics,
was of a kind of element that on the one hand was intellectual on another was physical.
You know, it was like the wind, really, can be called Penevah without it necessarily meaning
something drastically different from spirit when we're speaking of intelligence or mind.
And also because when you actually get to the way it's used in the new time,
estimate mysteriously, say by Paul, it's not clear that he makes the distinction that later
tradition makes. In fact, he doesn't. He clearly doesn't. That is, the divine spirit and human
spirit are absolutely separate realities. They're not. In Paul, they often are one in the same,
or only slightly differentiated, or differentiated within a prior unity. And you see this picked up
in very early theology, like someone like Ironaeus, for whom the human,
Human spirit is just the divine spirit.
You know, I mean, there's no difference, really, to speak of between human and divine
spirit.
And then the way later translations dealt with this was again and again to make decisions.
The Here's spirit means the Holy Spirit, which we understand as, in later Nicene terms,
as one of the co-equal persons of the Trinity.
Here spirit means human spirit.
here, and so the translations capitalize it or add wholly, and when you go back to the Greek,
it's simply not there. It's not talking in that clear and precise way with all those
distinctions in place. It's a much more mysterious word, and it's very difficult to put it
in context from verse to verse to verse. And in some places, you know that the plural meanings
are intended. I had to use footnotes.
Who's your favorite post-war European composer broadly in the classical tradition?
The music that everyone else hates.
Oh, the 20th – well, you see, now, that's very unfair because the late 20th century,
the second half of the 20th century was a period of no particular style.
So they're composers who are neoclassical or neo-romantic as well as, you know, the cutting-edge of avant-garde.
I don't have a single favorite.
I love Stravinsky.
I love Ray von Williams.
I think it's a wonderful period for music.
I think it is, too.
It's a period of extraordinary riches.
I love Takamitsu-Turo, you know.
I think the wonderful thing about the 20th century was it was age of global music,
it was an age which composers were allowed to draw in the past.
And at the same time, working in new idioms, you know, Benjamin Britain would write neoclassically.
He would write, he would even wrote some serial pieces, you know, a 12.
12-tone row. He would write a-tonally.
It all sounds like Benjamin Britain. It's all wonderful.
Or then he would draw for the Prince of the Pagododas.
He would draw on Javanese-Gamalan.
I love that. I love the music.
The great composers of the 20th century.
There was some rubbish. I mean, you couldn't pay me to listen to Strockhausen.
But, I mean, and there are all these wonderful composers that get overlooked because of the decline
of the cultural centrality.
So, you know, figures like Nikoskal Kotas and others.
Greece or Weinberg in Russia, Hensa in Germany.
No, I don't have a single favorite composer.
Messian would be one I love going a lot, yeah.
And for more recent church music, what would you look to?
More recent church music?
Say the last 50 years.
Dave Brubach.
Good.
Which is your favorite recording of the Beethoven symphonies?
I see I don't have a single one.
For I think the second Deutsche Gramophone series with Carion for modern instruments for...
The 78 series, not the 63.
Right. Very good.
Okay.
For original instruments, if the recording were better, I like actually, believe it or not, the Roy Goodman performances.
There are just too many.
I mean, there you're dealing with a repertoire that's been recorded so many times that the virtues
of different recordings.
I mean, you have to choose something a bit more
recherche, like, you.
But among the, I mean,
everything after they got over the
ponderous, overly romantic style
of Toscanini and Forfangler
and all they got back to,
Karian made it more
genuinely classical,
and then the original
instruments approach where they actually use
who's, I'm trying to think
how the British
conductor who did those wonderful recordings.
Roger Norenton.
Thank you. Thank you.
Using the actual metronome markings of Beethoven.
Yes.
Absolute revelation.
You know, hearing the music, realizing that, yeah, it has all of the grandeur and
fire and power of Beethoven, but also has the lightness of Mozart, you know, the
quickness, the agility, you know.
So there are a lot of great recordings of Beethoven, but I am really glad we got over
the, you know, the almost Vognarian approach to Beethoven that was in place well up through the 1950s.
Final segment of our conversation, the David Bentley Hart production function.
How did you learn all those languages you know?
I just, I don't know.
I just studied them.
I don't know.
See, the thing is, I know better linguists than myself in the sense that I know people who can learn to speak a language in like a few months
and speak it as if they were native.
I'm, because of the way my brain is constructed,
I have to learn the grammar first, do it, you know,
learn the syntax, I much, and then learn it on paper
and then learn to speak it up,
I mean, except for like the things I got early in school.
I mean, you go to French class and Spanish class,
and you speak it before you really immerse yourself in the grammar.
But my approach to most like,
which is like the approach I had to Latin and Greek,
as a kid, I learned the grammar.
So I think that whatever the case, I have a talent for languages, but I don't have, I still envy
those who can just somehow absorb it without having to master the grammar first and then
speak it like a native.
I know a fellow like that at Cambridge who now, still alive, has like 32 languages under
his belt.
And which languages do you know?
Well, quite a few.
We have time, you can tell us.
You know, with varying degrees of competency, Western and Eastern.
I say English, but of course, French, German, Spanish, Italian, not bad at Portuguese.
Let's see.
I mean, I'm lousy but competent in Russian.
I had to study Hebrew-Syriac in theology.
I had Greek and Latin from early on.
I studied, and I don't consider.
myself a master of, but I can read now among Asian languages, Sanskrit, Pali, classical Chinese,
although I find it so nomic at times. It's hard to be sure that you get the meaning right.
It's amazing how many really variant readings you can get at the same, say, Chinese poem by
Li Bai, you know, the same line. It comes out completely differently for different.
And I'm still working at my Japanese.
I know some Britonic Celtic languages, kind of.
I don't know if I'm forgetting anything or not.
When I was an undergraduate, I thought I might be doing Native American studies.
I worked on spoken Cheyenne, Tzitsa, to be precise, but that's pretty rusty.
How do you construct your media diet?
What do you consume?
You wake up, you want inflow, what do you do?
do? Oh, books.
Books. I mean, I'm still, I still pretty much live in a different century in that regard.
I, uh, I do want, I mean, I will pretend to don't watch television ever. I do. I, uh, I was
really hooked on better call soul, uh, for instance, and, and breaking bad before that.
But, you know, it's mostly books. I, I don't, uh, I don't have a lot of subscriptions to magazines.
I don't, I don't like the, uh, I don't like social media at all. I don't like the internet, even though I
have a substack newsletter. But I see that as just a subscription magazine, digital form rather than print.
How can they subscribe to you? What's the name of your substack? Oh, it's called Leaves in the Wind.
And how would you summarize it in a sentence? Well, all the things I write about, I write about there.
It's not about one thing in particular. Over the years, I've built up a readership that's literary
criticism, philosophy, theology, fiction. You didn't mention that at the beginning. I've also
published five or six volumes of fiction.
So there's sometimes short stories show up on it.
This year I've been recording conversations with other writers.
And, you know, it's for people who just like to read without necessarily knowing what the topic's going to be in the next post.
What's the outstanding theological problem that you think about the most?
Relations with other faiths.
I think that we need radically to rethink the very capital.
category of religion that we've inherited in the modern age, the sort of anthropological notion
that these are systems of propositions opposed to one another, rather than, as the ancient
view would be, religion was a virtue that all human beings practiced in greater or lesser
degree with greater or lesser understanding. But, you know, for instance, I don't write much
theology anymore, but when I do, I draw, you know, even if it's Christian theology, I'm quite
happy to draw on Vedantic sources from India if they illuminate a question for me. And I think we do
have to rethink what exactly it is we're talking about when we talk about religion. The other
thing, I guess, because I published that book a couple years ago, that all shall be saved,
is Christians radically need to rethink and go back to the original text and go back to the
first century and rethink this grotesque notion of an eternal hell. Yes, you have a whole book on that,
which I like very much. Final question. What will you do next? Well, what I'll do now? I have several
projects going on at any given time. I've got a volume of short stories coming out at some point.
I've got to finish a second sequel to a children's book. I wrote with my son. We're writing the
sequel as all of the son. I have a book on philosophy of mind that's almost finished.
coming out from Yale.
So I'm never, I'm never just doing one thing at a time because I'm too jittery.
If I concentrate on just one task at a time, I get depressed.
David Bentley Hart, thank you very much.
Well, thank you for having me.
Been a pleasure.
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