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Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion, Vol. III: The Consummate Religion

av Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel

Serier: Hegel's Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion (The Consummate Religion)

MedlemmarRecensionerPopularitetGenomsnittligt betygOmnämnanden
701376,339 (4.25)3
This is the first critical edition of Hegel's Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion (1821-31), which represent the final and in some ways the decisive element of his entire philosophical system. Volume III contains Hegel's philosophical interpretation of Christianity. - ;The Hegel Lectures Series. Series Editor: Peter C. Hodgson. Hegel's lectures have had as great a historical impact as the works he himself published. Important elements of his system are elaborated only in the lectures, especially those given in Berlin during the last decade of his life. The original editors conflated materials from different sources and dates, obscuring the development and logic of Hegel's thought. The Hegel Lectures series is based on a selection of extant and recently discovered transcripts and manuscripts. Lectures from specific. years are reconstructed so that the structure of Hegel's argument can be followed. Each volume presents an accurate new translation accompanied by an editorial introduction and annotations on the text, which make possible the identification of Hegel's many allusions and sources. Hegel's Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion represent the final and in some ways the decisive element of his entire philosophical system. His conception and execution of the lectures differed significantly on each of the occasions he delivered them, in 1821, 1824, 1827, and 1831. The older editions introduced insoluble problems by conflating these materials into an editorially constructed text. The present volumes establish a critical edition by separating the series of lectures. and presenting them as independent units on the basis of a complete re-editing of the sources by Walter Jaeschke. The English translation has been prepared by a team consisting of Robert F. Brown, Peter C. Hodgson, and J. Michael Stewart, with the assistance of H. S. Harris. Now widely recognized as the. definitive English edition, it is being reissued by Oxford in the Hegel Lectures Series. The three volumes include editorial introductions, critical annotations on the text, textual variants, and tables, bibliography, and glossary. 'The Consummate Religion' is Hegel's name for Christianity, which he also designates 'the Revelatory Religion'. Here he offers a speculative interpretation of major Christian doctrines: the Trinity, creation, humanity, estrangement and evil, Christ, the Spirit, the spiritual community, church and world. These interpretations have had a powerful and controversial impact on modern theology. -.… (mer)
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Hegel, Religion and Christianity Today: A Thought Experiment

Why read Hegel on Christianity and Religion when, according to the Zeitgeist, all three are thought to be almost equally passé? After all, most educated people today believe that modern enlightened thinking has obviously refuted them. But can we say that modern times has achieved such a level of tranquility and satisfaction that past philosophical views can be dismissed with such thoughtless certainty? A glimpse at any newspaper would show that there is perhaps some room for doubt...

If one believes, as some even now do, that the Hegelian Dialectic is both a genuine philosophical method and also that the progressive emancipatory dialectic that first becomes fully conscious in Hegel has somehow 'gotten lost' then one must go back and try to figure out why, and also where, this dialectic got derailed. A possible contender for the cause of derailment is the claim that Christianity failed to be *in fact* the Universal World Religion that Hegelian Theory both believed and expected it to be. Thus the 'education' that this specific Religion was to provide Mankind was never *in fact* provided. (I do not understand this 'failure', btw, to be fundamentally a failure of either Dialectical Theory or Christianity; rather, the numerous obstacles Christianity faced on the road to an actual global universality were merely practical and included differences in language, culture, family type [i.e., kinship, an anthropological category] and also, of course, politics and geography. It was simply not possible in practice for any premodern religious movement to overcome these and other contingencies and be truly universal.) Now, this is why I believe it would not be merely an error for someone steeped in Hegelian dialectical thought (and I mean either left or right Hegelian thought) to come to think that the best Humanity can hope for today (in these precise circumstances) is the rise of a new Universal Religion.

Thanks to modern technology (e.g., airlines, television, the internet) a Religion could now rise everywhere and thus *in fact* be Universal. - But hasn't the Universal Religion already risen? It is, according to Hegel, Christianity. And didn't he, after all, call it 'absolute'? But Hegel himself said that everything happens twice in History; and yes, yes, ...we are, of course, always here reminded that Marx observed that the second time was farce. Now, this last observation, in my opinion, is not, strictly speaking, dialectical. For Hegel, the fact of this 'twiceness' is itself a part of the process of the education of Man in History. It is the educative value of (ahem) 'dialectical repetition' that is of philosophical importance. Indeed, dialectically speaking, the same lesson could occur 100 times instead of merely twice, and so long as the lesson was eventually learned a dialectical sublation would have occurred. Some are coming to think that the rise of a new Universal Religion today would be an educational repetition in this precise dialectical sense. A close study of all three volumes of Hegel's 'Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion' would perhaps clarify (for Hegelianism) what is and what is not to be expected of this endeavor. This small review cannot even pretend to rise to that level of depth and detail. Instead, in this review I will concentrate on how Hegel chose to end his Lectures on Christianity in order to bring out some of what he meant by Spirit - and Community. Specifically, the situation of the Christian Community in his time. And also, a little on the Relation between Spirit and Christ. But first,

A Note on the Text:

This book is comprised of four lectures given by Hegel in 1821, 1824, 1827 and 1831. These separate lectures have been redacted by our team of editors and translators from Hegel's own Manuscript (Ms.) of the 1821 lecture, "auditor's' notebooks or transcripts of the 1824 lectures", the 1827 lecture is the Lasson edition compared and checked against other sources, while the 1831 lecture is derived from a transcript of D. F. Strauss. Hegel published very few books. (- Only the "Phenomenology of Spirit", 1807; "Science of Logic", 1812, 1813, 1816; "Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences", 1817, 1827, 1830; and the "Philosophy of Right", 1821.) Much of the material that we have today regarding Aesthetics, History, Philosophy and Religion comes from various editions of his manuscripts and also the notes and transcripts of students. We are told that Hegel titled these lectures on Christianity either "Die vollendete Religion" (The Consummate Religion) or "Die offenbare Religion" (The Revelatory Religion), or some variation/combination of these two. He never titles these lectures "Die absolute Religion". Why is any of this important? Our editor explains as follows:

"[...] while the object or content of religion is the absolute, religion itself does not entail absolute knowledge of the absolute: that is the role of philosophy. The representational forms of religious expression, even of the Christian religion, must be "sublated" (annulled and preserved) in philosophical concepts. Thus in Hegel's scheme of things there is an absolute knowledge (the science of speculative philosophy) but a consummate religion. Whether religion as such is to be superseded by philosophy is another question..." (Editorial Introduction, p. 4)

Religion is not Philosophy; therefore it cannot rise to Hegelian 'Absolute Knowledge'. Now, in the course of these lectures, Hegel does occasionally use the phrase 'absolute religion' regarding Christianity. Thus, while for Hegel only Philosophy can attain Absolute Knowledge, the term 'absolute' when applied to a Religion, or so I would maintain, is, and can only be, an honorific that philosophy occasionally elects to bestow. Another decision that I found particularly interesting is the decision of our editor's to never translate Vorstellung as either 'picture-thinking' or 'conceptual-picture'. We are told that:

"Some adjustments in the translation of specific terms have occurred in Volume 3 as compared with Volume 1, occasioned partly by the different context in which they occur and partly by the experience of the translation team." (Editorial Introduction, p. 8)

Now, our Volume III first appears in 1985 as a hardcover. (I have the 1998 paperback. And all page numbers in this review refer to this paperback edition.) Volume I, as a hardcover, appears in 1984. One finds oneself wishing for a fuller discussion of the 'experiences' that occurred which led to changes in the translation of certain words in the third Volume...

"In the case of Vorstellung we have found it necessary to be more flexible when it is used in non-technical contexts, as it often is in Volume 3. We have employed 'image' and 'imagination' (as when one has a hundred thalers in one's 'imagination'), 'view' (e.g., the Reformed 'view' of the sacrament of Communion) and even 'notion,' although rarely (such 'notions' are not worthy of further consideration). To maintain the distinction between Vorstellung, Begriff, and Idee, we never use 'notion' for Begriff, or 'idea' for Vorstellung, and we avoid such expressions as 'conceptual picture' or 'picture thinking' for Vorstellung. Begriff is consistently translated as 'concept,' Idee as 'Idea,' and in its technical sense Vorstellung remains 'representation'." (p. 8-9)

I do not understand the point of saying that the terms "conceptual picture" and "picture thinking" are merely avoided as translations of Vorstellung instead of admitting they were never used; I do not recall one instance of the term 'picture thinking' being used in this volume. I am not blaming the editors for anything here. Choices naturally have to be made between readability and painstaking accuracy. But every translation is an interpretation, whether it wants to be or not. For instance, the mere identification by the editors of 'non-technical contexts' requires an interpretation of the text. Now, everywhere Hegel used the term 'Vorstellung' in these lectures he would have been well aware that the resonances of its previous uses were available to the attentive student. However, when Vorstellung is translated as representation, image/imagination, view, and even notion(!), those resonances are necessarily lost to the reader of this translated text. Again, this is not a criticism of this translating team. All translation involves this risk. For instance, my copy of the Bilingual edition of the 1964 Musa translation of Machiavelli's Prince admits to using twelve different English words to translate the crucial Machiavellian term 'virtù'! But Musa very helpfully provides a list, in his Introduction, of each place in the text that the word virtù was used. I really would have liked to have seen that done here (at least) for the equally crucial term 'Vorstellung'...

In any case, what one ends up suspecting is that just as the Philosopher Hegel 'honors' Christianity by occasionally calling it 'absolute' so too our editors, here in the third volume, have elected to 'honor' Christianity (the 'Consummate Religion'!) by never translating 'vorstellung' as 'picture-thinking'.

Note that the following symbols are used throughout by the editors of these lectures:
[...] Editorial insertions
< ... > marginalia
| page number and/or page break
- indicates a grammatical break between sentence fragments in the MS.
-...- textual variants

A Note on Christianity, Community, and Spirit:

In this section of the review I will concentrate only on the 1821 manuscript since that can be assumed to most accurately reflect Hegel's view.
Now, what will perhaps first surprise the modern reader most is the extent to which, according to Hegel, philosophy stands alone in the world. It is radically distinguished from both the faithful common people and the 'Enlightened' throughout the concluding remarks (on Spirit and Community) of each of our four lectures. The next surprise is the crucial importance of the believing community for religion. It is no accident that these lectures always end with the Community (and Spirit). And perhaps the last surprise is how greatly Hegel feared Christianity, thanks to her Theologians, failing this very Community!

Now, this Community, according to Hegel, must be thought of as virtually (that is to say, possibly) endless! In the 1821 manuscript we read the following:
"In a formal sense [the following sequence applies to historical phenomena]: origin, preservation, and perishing, with the latter following upon the former. But ought we to speak here of this sequence [if] the kingdom of God [has been] established eternally? If so, then perishing or going under would [in fact] be a passing over to the | kingdom of heaven [and would apply] only for single subjects, not for the community; the Holy Spirit as such has eternal life in its community. <Christ [says]: 'The gates of hell shall not prevail against my teaching' [Matt. 16:18].> To speak of a passing away would mean to end on a discordant note. (p. 158, Hegel's Lecture Manuscript)"
The Holy Spirit has Eternal Life in the (or, if you prefer, His) Community! While the Risen Christ merely saves individual souls... Now, for Hegel, Spirit is always a living moving thing. By saying that the 'Spirit has eternal life in its community' Hegel has 'immortalized' the community and has thus transformed each of its sublimations (i.e., its changes) into a passing over into a 'new heaven'. So, while individuals merely die and go to Heaven, the Community Itself sublimates itself into a higher form - it is eternally becoming its own heaven. Well then, it's 'all good' right? - Wrong!

At this point in the margins of the manuscript Hegel unexpectedly compares modern times (that is, his time) to ancient Rome.
"<[The Roman age was one] when rationality necessarily took refuge solely in the form of private rights and private goods because the universal unity based on religion had disappeared, along with a universal political life. [Ordinary people,] helpless and inactive, with nothing to trust, left the universal alone and took care for themselves. [It was an age] when what subsists in and for itself was abandoned even in the realm of thought. Just as Pilate asked, 'What is truth?' [John 18:38], similarly in our time the quest for private welfare and enjoyment [is] the order of the day; moral insight, [the basis] of personal actions, opinions and convictions, [is] without objective truth, and truth is the opposite. I acknowledge only what I believe subjectively. [For some time,] the teaching of the philosophers has corresponded [to this view]: we know and cognize nothing of God, [having] at best a dead and merely historical sort of information.> (p. 159, Hegel's Lecture Manuscript)"
As it was yesterday in Hegel's time and in ancient Rome so it is today. With Universalism, both secular (either liberal or socialist) and religious (Christianity most especially), abandoned in our postmodern times there is only 'bread and circuses'; that is to say, the market and entertainment. By 'philosophers' Hegel here means most especially the Kantian view but also the whole of contemporary 'enlightened' philosophy. This comparison with Rome is no mere aside. It was in Rome, in the milieux aptly described here by Hegel, that Christianity itself rose to prominence and became a World Religion. Perhaps one could be forgiven for drawing the conclusion that whenever a genuine lived universalism evaporates from the scene of history into a sky bereft of all save private obsessions, then the world is ripe for the rise of a new universalism.

But certainly the common people of Hegel's time and also the theologians were fighting against this decadence? Well, yes and no:
"Although among the people, i.e., the lower classes, [there is still] faith <in objective truth, the teaching of this truth is no longer justified in terms of faith, once the time has come when what is demanded is justification by the concept; nor is justification achieved by harshness, objective commands, and external supports, nor by the power of the state.> [If] the clergy, whose office [is] always to stimulate religion, [renounces] this service,[it falls into] mere argumentation, a particular [i.e., not universal] history, i.e., something past. When [religious truth is] treated as historical, that spells an end [to it]; then it no longer [lives] in immediate consciousness, i.e., in actuality, [as] the unity of the inner and the outer. {When] moralistic views and motivations , moralistic or subjective feelings and virtuosities, [prevail], then [something else] is put in its place - certainly not the speculative truth! (p. 159 - 160, Hegel's Lecture Manuscript)"
Hegel is arguing here that faith cannot be justified philosophically ('by the concept') or even by the force of church rules and laws of the state. Justification comes by faith alone, that is to say, a living active faith. Thus the theologians (insofar as they are trying to imitate philosophy) are actually aiding the destruction of their religion. Their arguments no longer stimulate religious belief and, as argumentative particularities, only add to the further fragmentation of Christianity. Everything they say is 'past'; it no longer lives in the heart or soul of anyone. Now, ...does any of this sound familiar?

And so, what follows?
<[when every] foundation, security, the substantive bonds of the world, [have been] tacitly removed; when [we are left] inwardly empty of objective truth, of its form and content-[then] one thing alone [remains] certain: finitude [turned] in upon itself, arrogant barrenness and lack of content, the extremity of self-satisfied dis-enlightenment.> (p. 160, Hegel's Lecture Manuscript)"
Of course, the German word for enlightenment is Aufklärung. The word translated as dis-enlightenment is Ausklärung. Noting this wordplay our editor explains that there might be another meaning. He delicately explains that a "more vulgar overtone may also be intended since Aus-klärung means literally 'clearing out,' suggesting perhaps a kind of intellectual diarrhea. (see p. 160-161, note 255)" The 'Enlightenment' as mere criticism has drowned the world in sh*t! Hegel, at times, really is too funny!

Note that this particular lecture ends in a most memorable fashion:
"Instead [of allowing] reason and religion to contradict themselves, [we must] resolve the discord in the manner [appropriate] to us - [namely,] reconciliation in [the form of] philosophy. How the present day is to solve its problems must be left up to it. In philosophy itself [the resolution is only] partial. These lectures have attempted to offer guidance to this end.
Religion [must] take refuge in philosophy. (For [the theologians of the present day], the world [is] a passing away into [subjective reflection because it has as its] form merely the externality of contingent occurrence.) | But philosophy, [as we have said, is also] partial: [it forms] an isolated order of priests--a sanctuary--[who are] untroubled about how it goes with the world, [who need] not mix with it, [and whose work is to preserve] this possession of truth. How things turn out [in the world] is not our affair. (p. 162, Hegel's Lecture Manuscript)"
Karl Barth once asked “why did Hegel not become for the Protestant world something similar to what Thomas Aquinas was for Roman Catholicism?” Well, one reason is that try as I might, I can't imagine Aquinas writing a sentence indicating that the outcome of theological strife was 'not our affair'. But sentences that are unavailable to philosophy in medieval circumstances became unavoidable in high modernity...

For some of us, perhaps the most stunning admission at the end of this lecture is the 'partiality' of philosophy. The implication (to me) is that Thought (i.e., Philosophy) and Being (or Actuality) are not and perhaps can never be exactly the same! By comparison, even the apathy of that final sentence should not shock us. After all, in his Preface to the "Philosophy of Right" Hegel says:
"A further word on the subject of issuing instructions on how the world ought to be: philosophy, at any rate, always comes too late to perform this function. As the thought of the world, it only appears at a time when actuality has gone through its formative process and attained its completed state. This lesson of the concept is necessarily also apparent from history, namely that it is only when actuality has reached maturity that the ideal appears opposite the real and reconstructs this real world, which it has grasped in its substance, in the shape of an intellectual realm. When philosophy paints its grey in grey, a shape of life has grown old, and it cannot be rejuvenated, but only recognized, by the grey in grey of philosophy; the Owl of Minerva begins its flight only with the onset of dusk." (H.B. Nisbet translation)
This philosophical Owl devours (that is to say, knows) only the dead. Now, if Christianity (like every other existing Religion) is past rejuvenation and only recognized in philosophy then - ...what?

Let's review. Religion cannot be Absolute. But if historical circumstances continue to change then Religion (as vorstellung, representation), any religion, must change to be equal to the changed circumstance. Hegel, I believe, always hoped that the inherent tension between moving world and immovable dogma could be relaxed (and perhaps, at the very best, even tamed) by his taking up some elements of Trinitarian theology into his dialectically philosophical concept of Spirit. You see, Spirit moves, and, or so Hegel seemed to hope, that this 'movement' might have allowed Christianity (i.e., the Christian Community) to itself change as the world changed around it. Of course, this never happened. All Christianity has done is continue to fragment. But Hegel was not merely fantasizing; the resources available to Trinitarian thought (see especially, in this regard, Joachim of Floris, e.g.) are still there. But we are now certain (as one can be) regarding the future; no Christian 'Third Age' will rise because the inertia of the various Christian Institutions blocks it.

And since these Institutions refuse to move they will die. But is this the end of Hegelian 'transcendental universalism'? Well, with all roads to secular universalism seemingly blocked, I certainly hope not. - Any universalism is better than no universalism! Now, before concluding, some remarks on

Spirit, Community ... and Christ?

What is the relation between the risen Christ and Hegel's always moving 'Holy' Spirit? Isn't the Crucifixion (cum Resurrection) Itself an unsurpassable miracle, a Moment that cannot be sublated?
"...the nature of God is spirit, and that being so, negation is an essential moment. (p. 220, The Lectures of 1824)"
Negation is essential; this means that so long as there is Spirit there will be negation. But can everything, even the highest miracles, be negated and surpassed?
Hegel notes that Christ Himself "says, 'You wish to see signs and wonders.' It is not a matter of signs and wonders; Christ renounced them. In any event, this is by its very nature an external, spiritless mode of attestation.We are rightly aware that God and his power are present in nature in and according to eternal laws; | ~the true miracle is spirit itself. Even the animal is already a miracle vis-à-vis plant life, and still more spirit vis-à-vis life, vis-à-vis merely sentient nature.~ However, the genuine mode of verification is quite different - it is through power over minds. We must insist that this is the genuine [proof]. (p. 221, The Lectures of 1824)"
It seems that every 'miracle', thanks to the never-ending movement of Spirit, is destined to be sublated by an even greater miracle. This is why Spirit is the 'True' (or perpetual) Miracle. Also note that it is faith, the living faith of a community (i.e., multiple minds), and not miracles, that is the genuine proof. (I am here tempted to type 'proof'.) But even the living faith of the community, insofar as it is not and can never be philosophy, must always be, to some extent, mere vorstellung (representation). But again we ask, what is Sprit to Hegel?
It "is the transition from externality, from appearance, to inwardness. (p. 223, The Lectures of 1824)"
"This is the turning to the inward path, and in this third realm we find ourselves on the soil of spirit as such - this is the community, the cultus, faith. (p. 223, The Lectures of 1824)"
Note that the "inward path" Hegel here has in mind absolutely does not lead to 'me'; it leads to 'us'. But this community lives in faith. So who, according to Hegel, are 'we'?
"A story -an intuition, a portrayal, an appearance of this kind- can also be raised by spirit to the level of the universal, and thus the history of the seed or the sun becomes a symbol of the idea, but only a symbol; these are configurations that, in terms of their peculiar content or specific quality, are not adequate to the idea. What is known in them lies outside of them; their meaning does not exist in them as meaning.
The object that does exist in itself as the concept is spiritual subjectivity, human being. As thinking being it is in itself meaningful; meaning does not lie outside of it. It is all-interpreting, all-knowing, it is not a symbol. Human consciousness, what is specific to humanity, is essentially history itself, and the history of the spiritual does not take place in an existence that is not adequate to the idea. Thus what is necessary in regard to humanity is that the thought, the idea, should become objective in the community. (p. 225-226, The Lectures of 1824)"
So you see, 'we' (subjectivity lived as Spirit, as Community) are not symbols; but everything that is merely past certainly is... 'We' are 'all-intepreting', 'all-knowing'; and, according to Hegel, the unfolding of the human community (cum Spirit) shall not prove inadequate to this task! But we must never forget that the faith of this community, "began from the individual [founder]; that single | human being is transformed by the community, he is known as God -characterized as the Son of God, but entangled in everything finite that pertains to subjectivity as such. ~Subjectivity itself, the form that is finite, then disappears in the face of substantiality. This is the transformation of the sensible appearance into something spiritual and the knowledge of what is spiritual.~ It is the community as it begins from faith; but on the other hand, it is the faith that is brought forth as spirit, so faith is at the same time the result." (p. 226, The Lectures of 1824)"
Everything that is finite, including symbols 'transformed by the community' and 'subjectivity itself' (as finite), passes away... But it is the Human Community as Spirit that lives! And the 'work' of this community (i.e., its result) is faith. ...Does this work really entail the transformation of Everything?
"Since faith begins from the sensible mode, it has a temporal history before it. (p. 226, The Lectures of 1824)" But any sensible content can be doubted. "A sensible content is in fact one that cannot be certain in itself because it is not certain by virtue of spirit as such, because it stands on a different soil and is not posited by the concept. (p. 227, The Lectures of 1824)" Verification cannot be based on the sensible, but it "is the concept, and sensible existence is reduced to the level of a dream image, above which there is a higher region with its own enduring content. (p. 229, The Lectures of 1824)"
Spirit is above all; but what is Its origin? "...God is spirit. This is the spiritual element of religion, and this content is what the community brings forth. It is evident that the community brings forth this doctrine, this relationship within itself, that it cannot be brought forth, so to speak, from the words, from the mouth of Christ, but is produced through the community, through the church. (p. 232, The Lectures of 1824)" A variant reading of this passage ends as follows:
"Nor is it sensible presence but the Spirit that teaches the community that Christ is the Son of God and sits eternally at the right hand of the Father in heaven. That is the interpretation, the testimony and decree of the Spirit. When grateful peoples placed their benefactors only among the stars, that was how spirit recognized subjectivity as an absolute moment of the divine nature. The person of Christ is made the Son of God by the decree of the Church. (p. 232, note 187, The Lectures of 1824)"
So then, are the common people and their extraordinary community enough? No. We must not forget Philosophy. "What is the content in and for itself? Only by philosophy can ~this simple present content~ be justified, not by history [Geschichte]. What spirit does is no history [Historie]. Spirit is concerned only with what is in and for itself, not something past, but simply what is present. This is the origin of the community. (p. 232-233, The Lectures of 1824)"
Spirit is concerned with nothing that is past!
And then add to this that the "community is a process of eternal becoming" (p. 233, The Lectures of 1824) and one wonders helplessly what will be left of 'us' (and our ideals) tomorrow, when the Spirit moves again...
And just one more time we ask, what is Spirit to Hegel? Well, in contradistinction from/to Kantian philosophy, where 'resolution is put off to infinity' and where, regarding the sensible and the rational, the 'two realms remain independent':
"Here the power belongs to spirit; but spirit is the absolute and is what is here known - the awareness that what has happened as such, what has been found to be the case, the natural being of humanity, can be undone. Here there is the awareness that, just as the natural will can be given up, so there is no sin that cannot be forgiven, except for the sin against the Holy Spirit, the denial of spirit itself; for spirit alone is the power that can itself sublate everything. (p. 234-235, The Lectures of 1824)"

Everything can be undone; and the endless sublations of the 'Holy' Spirit are the cause of this. Spirit has now become that last God standing; and It is only Movement. A most peculiar Trinitarianism!
Our Revelatory Religions (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) all begin with sensible content; therefore, as particularities, they are all doomed... Hegel certainly hoped things would be different for Trinitarian Christianity, thanks to its living Spirit. But this, or so it seems to me, is no longer possible. Moving Spirit isn't a symbol, nor is it a shrine. Even the man Jesus is overcome by Time. Each and every particularity must be destroyed; but the whole (Spirit, community) to which each particularity once belonged ceaselessly transforms itself. Hegel names this all-devouring process: 'Spirit'. And he is very grateful for each and every opportunity to call it 'Holy'. It is in this devout and lyrical manner that Hegel hopes to both obfuscate and indicate the fact that Spirit is the graveyard of every particularity, even Jesus and His Sacrifice...
Of course, Hegel doesn't anywhere repudiate the Risen Christ, but it is pretty clear that while He has become a mere symbol it is only the Spirit Who truly lives. Everything past is, and can only be, a symbol; but it is the Spirit (cum community) that alone forever lives! And the question that Hegelian philosophy must today resolve is whether or not this moving Spirit can survive without Christianity itself. Now, they know better than any of us that there is no Absolute Religion; therefore every representational form of religion can be, from the perspective of philosophy, replaced.
Christ saves individual souls, Spirit saves the community (through sublation). Philosophy is interested in the general, the necessary and the universal. And so Hegel is (and can only be) the philosopher of Spirit. But I must insist that the decision to either sustain Christianity or destroy it is, for Hegel, a sub-philosophical question; the philosopher qua philosopher only wishes to know Actuality. But for Hegel to admit, in effect (at the end of the 1821 manuscript), that philosophy cannot (=will not?) save Christianity is already to put the possibility of a new religion on the table. "What happens in the world is not our affair" Hegel says! One may wish that Hegel never said this regarding Der Untergang des Christentums; - but that doesn't change the fact that he did say it...
To recapitulate: the history of actual religions is the history of increasingly adequate instantiations of the Spirit as Community. None of these representations are ever fully adequate; so there can be no final representation (no Absolut Vorstellung). Therefore Philosophy itself is not tied to any representation and can even favor a new representation if it is more adequate than existing ones.

In closing I want to say that no brief review could ever do justice to the richness of these lectures by Hegel. One can say without exaggeration that there are pages here that could easily be turned into books! All these lectures were superb. In the discussion of Community and Spirit I concentrated on Hegel's manuscript in order to avoid the notes of his students and any perspective they might introduce. However, I found Hegel most succinct on the relation between Christ and Spirit in the 1824 lecture. In my reading I found that I was mostly drawn to the final sections of of each these lectures where Hegel discusses Spirit and Community. But I do want to mention how much I enjoyed, in the 1827 Lecture, the rich and suggestive "Survey of Previous Developments", where Hegel discussed the relation of Christianity to previous religions. It too should not be missed. Five stars only because I could not give six!

Addendum:

A Note on 'Dialectical Repetition'

Now, why did Hegel 'forget' to say 'farce' regarding his example of dialectical repetition?

Since it now seems to me that regarding the question of 'dialectical repetition' some may well doubt that the point, for Hegel, was merely education and not also exasperation at having to wait for the inevitable learning of the dialectical lesson I have decided to add this note. And, yes of course, I do agree that Marx was quite exasperated. He says that,

"Hegel remarks somewhere that all facts and personages of great importance in world history occur, as it were, twice. He forgot to add: the first time as tragedy, the second as farce. Caussidière for Danton, Louis Blanc for Robespierre, the Montagne of 1848 to 1851 for the Montagne of 1793 to 1795, the Nephew for the Uncle. And the same caricature occurs in the circumstances of the second edition of the Eighteenth Brumaire!" (Marx, "The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte", Section I, p. 15. International Publishers, 1975. No Editor or Translator listed.)

Yes, here there is exasperation; and also wonderful humor: "Louis Blanc for Robespierre, the Montagne of 1848 to 1851 for the Montagne of 1793 to 1795, the Nephew for the Uncle". It is impossible not to burst out laughing when you read that! Marx is writing propaganda, and he was certainly superb at it. But Hegel is only trying to understand the past, while Marx is attempting to make the future. The exasperation of Marx is therefore quite understandable...

Let us now turn to Hegel. He is here speaking of the transition, the necessary transition, from Republic to Empire in Ancient Rome.

"... Spite of this we see the noblest men of Rome supposing Caesar’s rule to be a merely adventitious thing, and the entire position of affairs to be dependent on his individuality. So thought Cicero, so Brutus and Cassius. They believed that if this one individual were out of the way, the Republic would be ipso facto restored. Possessed by this remarkable hallucination, Brutus, a man of highly noble character, and Cassius, endowed with greater practical energy than Cicero, assassinated the man whose virtues they appreciated. But it became immediately manifest that only a single will could guide the Roman State, and now the Romans were compelled to adopt that opinion; since in all periods of the world a political revolution is sanctioned in men’s opinions, when it repeats itself. Thus Napoleon was twice defeated, and the Bourbons twice expelled. By repetition that which at first appeared merely a matter of chance and contingency becomes a real and ratified existence." (Hegel, "The Philosophy of History", Part III. The Roman World, Section II: 'Rome from the Second Punic War to the Emperors', p. 313. The J. Sibree Translation, Dover, 1956.)

(Now, there is some question as to exactly which text in the Hegelian corpus Marx was alluding to. I think the most likely contender is the one above. I do not for a moment doubt there are other defendable possibilities. But, the fact that Napoleon and the Bourbons were mentioned in the penultimate sentence makes this passage, in my opinion, the most likely contender for the Hegelian text that Marx had in mind.)

What stands out here, to my mind, is the necessity of repetition, not any great contempt for that repetition. Yes, yes, I of course see that there is some exasperation: "Possessed by this remarkable hallucination". But note that while the bon mot of Marx "Louis Blanc for Robespierre, the Montagne of 1848 to 1851 for the Montagne of 1793 to 1795, the Nephew for the Uncle" is quite comical, the above passage by Hegel is not.

Marx intends us to compare the first revolutionaries with their avatars and then to burst out laughing. And we do. But does Hegel intend this? After all, are Cato (the hero of the first civil war) and Pompey really all that superior to Cicero, Brutus and Cassius? ...Well, no, not really. Without a hint of irony Hegel calls these three the 'noblest men of Rome'. There is no great drop in intelligence or admirable talent from the first instance to its later 'repetition' in the example here offered by Hegel. Therefore, Hegel cannot be said to intimate (or intend us to believe) that here there is 'farce'.

It is by repetition that what could be thought to be mere chance is shown to be solid reason. Repetition is how 'the new' often (perhaps even most usually) enters the world. And yes, all this is still quite dialectical. That really is Hegel's only point.

And that is why it did not occur to Hegel to use the word 'farce'. It all comes down to the problem of making, that is to say, the philosophical problem of World Creation. There are two possibilities for philosophy, and they are nicely represented by Hegel and Marx:

Hegel: How things turn out [in the world] is not our affair. (p. 162, Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion, Vol. III: The Consummate Religion)
Marx: The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways; the point is to change it. (From the so-called 'Theses on Feuerbach', included in my edition of "The German Ideology", 1978, p. 123.)

Hegel rejects philosophical world-making long before Marx (and indeed, albeit in a very different manner, Nietzsche) embrace it. If you only wish to phenomenologically see the actuality of the world then an event that otherwise might be considered 'farcical' is but another moment within the dialectical unfolding of actuality. But if you are in the midst of 'making' then those events that prevent, or even merely hinder, this creation will naturally be considered contemptible. Now, if you add to that a belief in necessary, inevitable progress then this contemptible delaying event must also be 'the farcical' because the farcical event in question only delays the inevitable... ( )
2 rösta pomonomo2003 | Feb 9, 2011 |
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This is the first critical edition of Hegel's Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion (1821-31), which represent the final and in some ways the decisive element of his entire philosophical system. Volume III contains Hegel's philosophical interpretation of Christianity. - ;The Hegel Lectures Series. Series Editor: Peter C. Hodgson. Hegel's lectures have had as great a historical impact as the works he himself published. Important elements of his system are elaborated only in the lectures, especially those given in Berlin during the last decade of his life. The original editors conflated materials from different sources and dates, obscuring the development and logic of Hegel's thought. The Hegel Lectures series is based on a selection of extant and recently discovered transcripts and manuscripts. Lectures from specific. years are reconstructed so that the structure of Hegel's argument can be followed. Each volume presents an accurate new translation accompanied by an editorial introduction and annotations on the text, which make possible the identification of Hegel's many allusions and sources. Hegel's Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion represent the final and in some ways the decisive element of his entire philosophical system. His conception and execution of the lectures differed significantly on each of the occasions he delivered them, in 1821, 1824, 1827, and 1831. The older editions introduced insoluble problems by conflating these materials into an editorially constructed text. The present volumes establish a critical edition by separating the series of lectures. and presenting them as independent units on the basis of a complete re-editing of the sources by Walter Jaeschke. The English translation has been prepared by a team consisting of Robert F. Brown, Peter C. Hodgson, and J. Michael Stewart, with the assistance of H. S. Harris. Now widely recognized as the. definitive English edition, it is being reissued by Oxford in the Hegel Lectures Series. The three volumes include editorial introductions, critical annotations on the text, textual variants, and tables, bibliography, and glossary. 'The Consummate Religion' is Hegel's name for Christianity, which he also designates 'the Revelatory Religion'. Here he offers a speculative interpretation of major Christian doctrines: the Trinity, creation, humanity, estrangement and evil, Christ, the Spirit, the spiritual community, church and world. These interpretations have had a powerful and controversial impact on modern theology. -.

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