Introduction
A fundamental requirement in an inclusivist understanding of the relationship between Christianity and other religions is the evidence of God's salvific activity outside of any knowledge of Christ. Evidence for such redemptive activity is commonly identified (rightly) in the people of Old Testament Israel. On this basis an analogy (hereafter referred to as the “Israel analogy”) is drawn between these Old Testament believers and contemporary followers of other religions. The closely related subject of fulfilment theology argues that because Christ fulfils the Old Testament he can also be seen as the fulfilment of other scriptures and other faiths. Within fulfilment theology there is a continuum along which various sub-categories of this fulfilment concept exist. Towards one end of the continuum is a view that understands Christ to be the only answer to the longed-for but unrealised spiritual quest of all people. Within this definition a radical discontinuity between the prior worldview and Christianity is maintained. The various religions themselves play no part in the salvific process. All non-Christian religions are natural rather than supernatural. Here a very qualified use of the Israel analogy is employed in an attempt to preserve the sui generis relationship between Israel and the Church. At the other pole of the continuum is an understanding of fulfilment that emphasises continuity between the prior religion and Christianity. Within this scheme non-Christian religions represent distinct interventions of God in salvation history. All religions play a positive, albeit preparatory role. In its most pronounced form this model tends to treat other religions/their sacred texts as alternative “Old Testaments.” Between the two poles are a variety of approaches, some giving more emphasis to one pole, and others giving more emphasis to the other. Fulfilment theology warrants a full analysis because of its continued prevalence in considerations of the relationship between Christianity and other religions, and particularly because of its key role in inclusivism. Indeed, in his Introducing Theologies of Religions (2002), Paul Knitter makes the bold claim that it is now the predominant view within the field of theology of religions “If the Replacement model…held sway over most of Christian history, the Fulfillment Model embodies the majority opinion of present-day Christianity.”Footnote 1 This article will focus on the use of the fulfilment concept in Jean Daniélou's Karl Rahner's and Jacques Dupuis' Theology of Religions. These theologians have been selected because each represents a different variety of the fulfilment approach.
Jean Daniélou (1905–1974)
My exposition of the relevant aspects of Jean Daniélou's theology of religions will be the most extensive of all the theologians here studied, as his position is complex and nuanced,Footnote 2 and it is here that we will first encounter many of the concepts and arguments that we will meet again in the subsequent expositions. Daniélou holds a three-stage history of salvation, through which God has been revealing his purposes progressively. Salvation history begins with creation: “In the Christian tradition, the history of salvation begins, not with the choosing of Abraham, but with the creation of the world. St. Augustine constantly makes this point.”Footnote 3
The first stageFootnote 4 of salvation history is that of “cosmic religion”Footnote 5 representing the period of history anterior to Abraham. The next stage is that of the JewishFootnote 6 religion, through which the holiness and faithfulness of God are manifested. In this second stage, God appeared as a living God who intervened directly in the life of people: “He did not merely make signs from a distance, as he does to the pagans.”Footnote 7 The final phase is that of Christianity, in which the mystery of the Trinity is revealed.Footnote 8
However, Jacques Dupuis contends that in Daniélou's three-stage scheme:
Salvation history proper is. … limited to the Judeo-Christian tradition: its starts with God's personal revelation to Israel through Abraham and Moses, runs through the history of the chosen people, and culminates in Jesus Christ… . . Whatever came before God's personal manifestation in history, even though already inscribed in God's unique plan for humankind, can at best be called “prehistory” of salvation. The same term would apply to whatever religious experience may be found today, outside the Judeo-Christian tradition, within the religions of the world.Footnote 9
Daniélou refers to the religion of the first phase as “pagan religion”. He uses the term “pagan” to refer to all religious peoples that are “strangers to the covenants of Abraham and Jesus”Footnote 10– that is, all those religions which are beyond the context of historical revelation.Footnote 11 He does not include the non-religious world in the term “pagan”.Footnote 12 The cosmic covenant, between God and Noah extends, according to Daniélou, to all humanity.Footnote 13 He suggests Hans Urs von Balthasar's concept of “cosmic liturgy” is the most appropriate term to “designate the period of sacred history anterior to the covenant with Abraham and to include at the same time whatever there is of truth in the non-biblical religions.”Footnote 14 This principle continues to apply today, to those people who are beyond the reach of the Gospel.Footnote 15 Daniélou suggests these religions have a certain knowledge of God from the cosmic covenant while “ignoring the fact of his intervention in the historical process – as to which there is no witness before Abraham.”Footnote 16 Daniélou argues that the pagan saints were unacquainted with the positive revelation which begins with Abraham.Footnote 17 Nevertheless, he affirms the holiness of many “pagans”.
Daniélou maintains that the Noahic Covenant marks a turn in salvation history from the period of preservation to that of redemption –“from a heart-burning for primeval innocence to the first steps towards final restoration of it.”Footnote 18 This covenant is the first manifestation of redemptive love, whilst the former divine economy showed only creative love:Footnote 19
The covenant [Noahic] thus marks a turning point in the history of salvation, the passage from a vision directed to a past that is to be maintained despite the destructive action of time, to a vision turned upon a future that is to be prepared for by the constructive action of time. With the covenant nature becomes history.Footnote 20
Daniélou distinguishes between natural religion and supernatural religion. Dupuis asserts that in Daniélou's approach “Non-Christian religions belong to the order of natural reason, the Judeo-Christian revelation to the order of supernatural faith. Both constitute different orders.”Footnote 21 The current writer agrees with Dupuis that this distinction is made by Daniélou. However, it should be noted there are isolated references in Daniélou's work that seem to be at odds with this distinction. For example, in Holy Pagans, Daniélou writes “the cosmic covenant is itself a supernatural covenant. It is not of a different order from that of the Mosaic or the Christian covenant.”Footnote 22 In the same publication he states:
The cosmic religion is not natural religion, in the sense that the latter means something outside the effective and concrete supernatural order. That is the reason we avoid the expression. It is not natural except in the sense that it is through His action in the cosmos and His call to the conscience that the one God is known. The cosmic covenant is also a covenant of Grace, but it is still imperfect, in the sense that God reveals himself therein only through the cosmos, and it is very difficult to grasp by reason of the fact that it is addressed to an already weakened humanity.Footnote 23
There is therefore an apparent ambiguity regarding this matter. However, Daniélou's overall framework certainly seems to rely on a natural – supernatural dichotomy, and this assessment is confirmed by other evaluations of Daniélou. Veliath writes “[For Daniélou] religions belong to the realm of nature, whereas Christian revelation belongs to the supernatural realm. There is a radical distinction between the order of nature and the order of grace.”Footnote 24 Chrys Saldanha's assessment of Daniélou reaches the same conclusion. Saldanha argues that Daniélou “attempted to draw a distinction between Christianity and the religions on the lines of supernatural versus natural, or grace versus nature.”Footnote 25
The cosmic covenant is a covenant of grace, however it has been superseded by a “new and better covenant”.Footnote 26 The Judaeo-Christian faith is quite different to religious faith in general. It is testimony to an event–an event that constitutes sacred history:Footnote 27“The object of revelation is a unique event, designated as hapax in the Epistle to the Hebrews. If this event is unique, revelation must necessarily be unique.”Footnote 28 Thus, Daniélou distinguishes sharply between religion and revelation:
The religions are a gesture of man towards God; revelation is the witness of a gesture of God towards man… The religions are creations of human genius; they witness to the values of exalted religious personalities, such as Buddha, Zoroaster, Orpheus. But they also have the defects of what is human. Revelation is the work of God alone… . Religion expresses man's desire for God. Revelation witnesses that God has responded to that desire. Religion does not save. Jesus Christ grants salvation.Footnote 29
For Daniélou, Biblical revelation is “radically different” from the content of the other religions.Footnote 30 However, this distinction is not absolute, for Daniélou does not deny fallen humanity all possibility of knowledge of God.Footnote 31 Daniélou affirms the “genuine spiritual worth” of other religions, but the “unique transcendence” of Christianity.Footnote 32 The “nature-religions” represent an authentic manifestation of true religion – the representation of God through the regular procession of cosmic events.Footnote 33 There is thus a “portion of truth” in every religion. “Paganism does not enjoy the immense benefits of Revelation in its search for truth” but it does contain a certain natural knowledge of God.Footnote 34 Nevertheless, the religion of nature is invariably found, in the forms known to us, in a more or less corrupt condition.Footnote 35 Daniélou also makes a sharp distinction between knowledge of God and saving faith. Other religions are human expressions of a real knowledge of God available through the proper use of natural reason. This natural knowledge of God, however should not be confused with supernatural faith which comes only from God's active intervention in the unfolding history of salvation (beginning with Abraham and culminating in Christ).Footnote 36 Between the cosmic and historical covenants there is some continuity as the first serves as the necessary substratum for God's personal revelation in history. But God's personal intervention initiates a new order which commands a greater discontinuity.Footnote 37
Veliath states that influential in Daniélou's scheme are Patristic sources, particularly Irenaeus.Footnote 38 Drawing on the thought of Irenaeus, Daniélou proposes that the Old and New Testaments belong to the same scheme of things, but mark two successive stages in the development of history. For Daniélou these are the second and third stages of his scheme. This succession is a system of pedagogy: “Everything that belongs to the temporal order must be imperfect at first… . .Before granting the plenitude of revelation to his people, he began by familiarizing them gradually with his ways, that is, by educating them.”Footnote 39 Veliath summarises Daniélou's understanding of the progressive nature of salvation history:
This includes in the first place, the unity of the plan of God which also presents a great diversity. It implies progress in different stages, within each of which there is growth. This is seen as a pedagogy on the part of God who adapts his blessings to man's conditions as a temporal being. The plan of God is to recapitulate all things in Christ. The pagan religions form the first stage of this education; to be followed by Judaism; and then by Christianity. Hence, on the one hand there is continuity between the religions, Judaism and Christianity; and on the other hand, discontinuity, since Christianity is a nouveauté totale.Footnote 40
Daniélou makes an important distinction between non-Christian religions themselves and adherents of these other religions. In The Salvation of the Nations, Daniélou writes “true religion” (which he defines as the Catholic religion) is “the religion in which God's grace has made answer to man's cry. In other religions grace is not present, nor is Christ, nor is the gift of God.”Footnote 41 However, in the same publication he contends that “No man is a stranger to the grace coming from Christ,”Footnote 42 and elsewhere he states that “pagan saints” were not strangers to grace.Footnote 43 The terms “pagan saints” or “holy pagans” are used by Daniélou to describe all those people, who were not part of the Old Testament covenant community but nevertheless attained a right relationship with God. Daniélou is here asserting that grace is available to all, but is not mediated by non-Christian religions. There is no salvation but through Christ. Those who are saved without knowledge of Christ (whether B.C. or A.D.) are not saved by their religions – only Christ saves. And if they were saved it was because they, in a sense, already belonged to the Church, for there is no salvation outside the church:
This obliges us therefore to accept the conclusion that the domain of Christ and of the Church extends beyond the limits of the explicit revelation of Christ and of the visible expansion of the Church. In every age and in every land there have been men who believed in Christ without knowing Him and who have belonged invisibly to the visible Church.Footnote 44
He finds support for this assertion in the Thomistic principle of Baptism of Desire.Footnote 45 Thus, the Church includes all who like Abel, express in their lives the supernatural quality of faith in the provident God:
They [Holy Pagans] are the intercessors for that immense body of pagan humanity, existing both before and after Christ, which has known Him, not in the fullness of His actual presence nor in the certitude of prophecy, but in that rectitude of desire which theology recognises as a form of Baptism.Footnote 46
All religions apart from the three monotheistic faiths (Judaism, Christianity and IslamFootnote 47) are classed, by Daniélou, as cosmic religions. According to Veliath, Daniélou maintains that these three are “not on the level of religious sentiment but positive revelation.”Footnote 48 In contrast, the cosmic religions are just human elaborations of a knowledge of God through nature: “As such they [cosmic religions] were unable in the past, and remain unable today, to lead to the saving faith which can only come from God's gracious intervention in the lives of people.”Footnote 49 Nevertheless, people living under this regime of the cosmic covenant can exhibit a proper faith–as shown by the “Holy Pagans.”
[They are] saints of the first covenant. They represent the initial stages of that divine educating of mankind which the history of salvation portrays. But by this very fact they exemplify the initial stages of that divine educating which the history of every man portrays.Footnote 50
However, it is important to note that although Daniélou considers it possible for an individual outside the visible Church to be saved, he considers this a “limit-situation which cannot constitute the basis for a theological approach regarding the salvific validity of non-Christian religions.”Footnote 51
Daniélou argues that the Old Testament envisages cosmic revelation only in the generations before Abraham.Footnote 52 After Abraham the Gentiles are considered as “knowing not God.”Footnote 53 However, with the Advent of Christ this changes. The message of Christ is addressed to all. “The universal call to salvation makes its appearance.”Footnote 54 Daniélou points out that this raises questions regarding the position of pagans who preceded Christ (but lived after the call of Abraham). He suggests the answer is to be found in St. Paul's affirmation of a continuous revelation of God “made by way of the cosmos and directed to all mankind… .To this exterior revelation there is conjoined the interior revelation of the conscience.”Footnote 55 Daniélou finds further support for his argument in his assertion that St. Paul likens the case of pagans in his own day to those of primitive humanity prior to Abraham.Footnote 56
Salvation history reaches its apex in Christ. Christ's resurrection is the decisive event for all history which nothing can surpass. Christ's saving presence within time is now continued by the Church. Christ “inaugurates the stage that will not pass away. So there is nothing beyond Christianity.”Footnote 57 Pre-Christian religions (he mentions Judaism and Buddhism as examples) are not so much false as old–survivals of ancient civilizations.Footnote 58 Daniélou judges therefore that:
The error of the Jews is strictly an anachronism, because they would arrest the development of God's plan, and perpetuate an obsolete pattern of reality. Origen, following Melito of Sardis, described the Old Testament as a preliminary sketch – something indispensable at one stage, but of no further use once the work is finished.Footnote 59
Daniélou considers all religionsFootnote 60 other than Judaism and Christianity to be “doubly anachronistic”– superseded by Judaism and then by Christianity. Christianity, in contrast, is the “eternal youth of the world.”Footnote 61
The covenant with Noah was the true religion of mankind until the covenant with Abraham was made; but from that moment it was superseded. From the time of the Gospel it has been doubly obsolete; it is anachronistic twice over. What is wrong with the heathen religions is that they have not made room for revelation.Footnote 62
Anomalies such as Islam are “regressions”.Footnote 63 Islam is a special case due to its Jewish and Christian borrowings.Footnote 64
[Islam] is a very particular case, for Islam appeared after the beginning of the Christian era and, on the whole, it was grafted on the Jewish trunk. It is an extension of Jewish monotheism and at the same time it contains certain elements derived from Christian heretics.Footnote 65
Daniélou's paradigm considers the primary relationship between other religions and Christianity, to be one of fulfilment. In The Lord of History, Daniélou suggests the Christian mission is ultimately about engaging in the fulfilment of history.Footnote 66 Paul Knitter suggests Daniélou's fulfilment model views other religions as “imperfect” or “negative” preparations for Christ.Footnote 67 For Daniélou, fulfilment encompasses both a perfecting and a replacing of the former religion. Pagan religions are “divine pedagogy.”Footnote 68 Revelation “purifies paganism”.Footnote 69 The Church “does not despise pagan teaching, but sets it free, fulfils and crowns it.”Footnote 70 To become a Christian is not to change one's religion but to move from the plane of religion to that of truth.Footnote 71
Religions are one of creation's most remarkable aspects and contribute to its splendour. How, then, could Christianity destroy these religions? Christianity with it's mission not to destroy but to fulfill, to save what has been created?Footnote 72
However, Veliath maintains that in Daniélou's fulfilment theology there is also an element of destruction:
Christianity presents a double relationship to religion, historical and dramatic. By historical, Daniélou means that between Christianity and religions, there is a chronological relationship inasmuch as Christianity represents that to which all the others lead; but at the same time ‘dramatic’: While it is true that Christianity fulfils the religions, it is also true that Christianity destroys them. Consequently, once they have found their fulfilment in Christianity, the religions have to die to make room for Christianity.Footnote 73
Daniélou's understanding of the relationship of other religions to Christianity employs (and is arguably dependent on) the analogy made between the Old Covenant and other religions. More precisely, he utilizes a dual analogy here. The first is the analogy made between those he considers to be outside the Old CovenantFootnote 74 and people beyond the reach of the Gospel today. The second is the analogy drawn between the religion of the Old Covenant (that is the Old Testament Jewish faith) and non-Christian religions today.
Regarding the first analogy, Daniélou considers the Noahic Covenant to be valid for all people in all places today outside the Judaeo-Christian tradition:
They [Holy Pagans] are the intercessors for that immense body of pagan humanity, existing both before and after Christ, which has known Him, not in the fullness of His actual presence nor in the certitude of prophecy, but in that rectitude of desire which theology recognises as a form of Baptism.Footnote 75
[They are] saints of the first covenant. They represent the initial stages of that divine educating of mankind which the history of salvation portrays. But by this very fact they exemplify the initial stages of that divine educating which the history of every man portrays.Footnote 76
Daniélou's scheme permits this analogy because of the way he divides the pre-Christian history of salvation into the cosmic covenant (pre-Abraham) and historical covenant (after Abraham). I will later argue that the entire Old Testament era is part of one and the same overall covenant, and that this analogy is therefore problematic.Footnote 77 Of more direct relevance for the current thesis is the analogy Daniélou draws between the Old testament Jewish religion and other religions: The following quotes show how Daniélou uses this analogy:
It was for Him, for Christ, the centre of the world, the centre if history, not only that the Jewish people had been prepared, but that all these pagan civilizations – the conquests of Alexander, the thinking of Socrates and Aristotle – had also been prepared.Footnote 78
Just as the convert Jews rightly saw in Christianity not the destruction but the fulfilment of their faith, so likewise would these pagans be conscious that in their adherence to Christ, far from denying what was best in themselves, they were on the contrary finding its completion.Footnote 79
With regard to the “authentic religious values in the pagan tradition” they represented a revelation parallel to that in the Old Testament, a preparation for Christ in the pagan soul.”Footnote 80 Daniélou quotes from Augustine to support his position here: “It is necessary to include within the Church all the holy people who lived before the coming of Christ and believed that he would come just as we believe He has come.”Footnote 81 He then immediately extends this principle beyond Israel:
It is important to note that this preparing for Christ is not confined to Israel. The authors concerned always make it clear that it is a question of the preparation for Christ as related in the Old Testament; but in the Old Testament Israel does not come into the picture until the eleventh chapter of Genesis. All the preceding chapters are devoted to recounting the religious history of mankind before Israel…To be exact, therefore, it should be said that the Old Testament describes the preparation for Christ first of all in the cosmic covenant, illustrated by the early chapters in regard to pagan humanity, and after that in the Mosaic covenant.Footnote 82
Daniélou considers the concept of covenant to be key in understanding salvation history.Footnote 83 The current writer also affirms this. However, there appears to be a certain lack of clarity in Daniélou's scheme regarding the nature and progression of the covenants. In some of his writing he suggests that the first covenant is that made with Noah.Footnote 84 Indeed, he calls the pagan saints “saints of the first covenant”,Footnote 85 but elsewhere he suggests the first covenant is that made with Abraham:
God intervenes in history to accomplish a certain plan. We first glimpse this plan when He makes the first covenant with Abraham and thereby founds what is to become the Judaeo-Christian religion.Footnote 86
To conclude this exposition, I will summarise the key characteristics of Daniélou's scheme and offer a classification for it. On the continuum outlined in the Introduction, Daniélou's fulfilment approach is located toward the “discontinuity” pole. He emphasises the distinction between religion and revelation, natural and supernatural, nature and grace, knowledge of God and saving faith.Footnote 87 Within Daniélou's three-stage understanding of salvation history, non-biblical religionsFootnote 88 are natural, and are relegated to the prehistory of salvation, they have no abiding value. Judaism has been superseded, and is therefore now an anachronism. Grace and salvation are not mediated by non-Christian religions. However, no-one is a stranger to grace, and salvation is available to adherents of non-Christian religions, reaching them as the divine response to the universal religious aspiration. Although he uses the terms “preparation” and “pedagogy”, Daniélou, does not see non-Christian religions themselves as playing any part in salvation, and they are not providential instruments raised up by God. Rather, they represent natural responses to the revelation of God made known in the cosmos and the conscience. They contain some truth, but are inevitably vitiated and corrupt. Henceforth, I shall refer to this approach as “Fulfillment 1” or “F1.”
Karl Rahner (1904–1984)
Karl Rahner's theology or religions is based on the dual axioms of God's universal salvific will and the necessity of Christian faith, which Rahner holds in tension. He insists salvation is solus Christus, but at the same time maintains there are those who are saved who have not responded to the Christian message because they have not had the opportunity to respond, through no fault of their own.Footnote 89 His theological anthropology maintains that humankind is created by God and is destined to union with God. Humans carry more than just a passive potency for self-transcendence in God. What Rahner calls the “supernatural existential” is built into us by God's free initiative of grace. This spurs our intentional activity toward him – an activity that is destined to become historically concrete in the categorical or thematic order, that is through religions.Footnote 90
His theology of religions is given extensive treatment in various essays in his Theological Investigations.Footnote 91 In one such essay he outlines this in a four-stage thesis–the first three of which are of particular import to our study. In his first thesis, Rahner proposes that the fact Christianity understands itself as the absolute religion and demands adherence, must be balanced by the difficulties in discerning “when the existentially real demand is made by the absolute religion in its historically tangible form.”Footnote 92 Rahner wants to leave open the question of when in time “the absolute obligation of the Christian religion has in fact come into effect for every man and culture.”Footnote 93 Thus those who lived before Christ, and those who live after Christ but have never encountered the gospel through no fault of their own, are not excluded from salvation. The universal demand of the Gospel cannot be seen in isolation from the historical and existential situation. D'Costa suggests this avoids the difficult exclusivist claim that all religions are rendered invalid at the moment of the incarnation.Footnote 94
His second thesis states that until the moment when the gospel really enters the historical situation of an individual, a non-Christian religion, even one outside the Mosaic covenant may be lawful. Salvation history is coextensive with world history–it is not limited to the period of the Old and the New Testaments. In history each person experiences God's free offer of grace. This is not necessarily thematically apprehended in Christianity, but is always concretely and existentially in Jesus Christ.Footnote 95 It is therefore a priori quite possible to suppose that there are supernatural grace-filled elements in non-Christian religions. The religions of pre-Christian humanity must not be regarded as simply illegitimate from the very start but be seem as quite capable of having a positive significance. They can, in short be “lawful religions”.Footnote 96 Lawful religions can contain errors, as did the Old Covenant.Footnote 97 However, the Old Covenant remained lawful until the time of the Gospel, and according to many Christians, was then grafted onto and fulfilled by the New Covenant. Thus non-Christian religions can be lawful up until the time when Christianity becomes a historically real factor for their adherents. They can be “a positive means of gaining the right relationship to God and thus for the attaining of salvation, a means which is therefore positively included in God's plan of salvation.”Footnote 98 Rahner defends this assertion by appeal to the Old Testament Israelites, who were saved without possessing any explicit knowledge of Christ. Rahner accepts that: “This thesis is not meant to imply that the lawfulness of the Old Testament religion was of exactly the same kind as that which we are prepared to grant in a certain measure to the extra-Christian religions.”Footnote 99 He acknowledges that:
The main difference between such a salvation-history and that of the Old Testament will presumably lie in the fact that the historical, factual nature of the New Testament has its immediate pre-history in the Old Testament. Hence, the New Testament unveils this short span of salvation-history distinguishing its divinely willed elements and those which are contrary to God's will. It does this by a distinction which we cannot make in the same way in the history of any other religion.Footnote 100
However, the thrust of his argument is clear, as D'Costa explains: “The important point to note is that the Old Covenant facilitated and provided the concrete means by which many attained salvation. Rahner then suggests that these theological considerations may be applied, at least in principle, to other non-Christian religions.”Footnote 101
Rahner's third thesis follows the second. Because grace is mediated through religions, not despite them, adherents of other religions should not be viewed as totally devoid of truth and salvific grace. They may already have accepted God's grace as it is made known to them. However, God's grace and salvation cannot be divorced from Jesus Christ–thus these believers can be considered as “anonymous Christians”.Footnote 102 This anonymity can only be lifted by communicating the explicit message of the gospel. On this basis, Rahner proposes degrees of membership of the church from full membership descending into a “non-official and anonymous Christianity, which can and should yet be called Christianity in a meaningful sense, even though it would not describe itself as such.”Footnote 103
From this brief overview of Rahner's theology of religions it is evident that his assessment of other religions is far more positive than Daniélou's. While both maintain it is possible for non-Christians to be saved, Rahner (contrary to Daniélou) proposes that the religions are instruments of salvation (but always related to Christ and the Church). There are supernatural elements in other religions arising out of grace.Footnote 104 Rahner maintains other religions are “lawful”, but this lawfulness is only provisional – it is valid only up until the occasion of historical and existential encounter with Christianity. Rahner employs the Israel analogy, and although he acknowledges the unique relationship between Old and New Covenants, this acknowledgement seems to be undermined by his overall position. Rahner makes less distinction between natural and supernatural, religion and revelation, than Daniélou does. He perceives a greater (but not full) continuity between other religions and Christianity. Salvation history is coextensive with world history and other religions are positively included in God's plan of salvation. On the fulfilment continuum already referred to, Rahner's approach is located between the discontinuity and continuity poles–being perhaps slightly closer to the latter. I shall refer to this Rahnerian form of fulfilment as “F2.”
Jacques Dupuis (1923–2004)
The aim of Jacques Dupuis in his magnum opus Toward a Christian Theology of Religious Pluralism,Footnote 105 is to work towards a genuinely Christian theology of religious pluralism.Footnote 106 He builds on his earlier approach of “theocentric Christocentrism” which sought to:
open up a theological perspective which, while holding fast to faith in Jesus Christ as traditionally understood by mainstream Christianity and church tradition, would at the same time, integrate in their differences, the religious experiences of the living religious traditions and assign to those traditions a positive role and significance in the overall plan of God for humankind, as it unfolds through salvation history.Footnote 107
Dupuis argues that salvation history operates as an “important hermeneutical key for Christianity's self-understanding as well as the way in which it situates itself in relation to world history in general and to the history of religion in particular.”Footnote 108 However, it is not “exempt of theological problems” and Dupuis believes “the Christian view of salvation history allows for a more positive appraisal of other religious traditions than has often been held.”Footnote 109 He questions whether it is right to see other religions as transient. Instead, Dupuis suggests they could have “a lasting role and a specific meaning in the overall mystery” of the relationship between God and humanity.Footnote 110 His Trinitarian model allows for the abiding validity of other religions by stressing “the universal presence and activity of the Word of God and of the Spirit of God throughout human history as the mediums of God's personal dealings with human beings independently of their concrete situation in history.”Footnote 111 Therefore, for Dupuis, the idea that salvation history began with Abraham must be dismissed:
Every attempt to situate the beginning of salvation history in the vocation of Abraham, and thereby to reduce its extension to “sacred history”, must be firmly resisted. Such an attempt, wherever it is made, always betrays an a priori tendency to discount any personal engagement of God with humankind prior to and outside the tradition that issues from the call of the biblical patriarch.Footnote 112
Instead, Dupuis suggests salvation history coincides and is coextensive with the history of the world.Footnote 113 He maintains that the Noahic covenant is cosmic, or universal and this is a fundamental assumption in his thesis. “The covenant with Noah constitutes the lasting foundation for the salvation of every human person.”Footnote 114 He distinguishes between general salvation history (which is universal) and special salvation history (which is particular). In the latter “God's revelation-salvation becomes ‘thematized’ and categorical.”Footnote 115 Dupuis recognises the concept of special salvation history is, of course, clearly realised in the Jewish and Christian traditions but states that it need not be reduced to these traditions:
For other religious traditions too may contain prophetic words interpreting historical happenings as divine interventions in the history of peoples. In fact, the Judeo-Christian revelation itself testifies to saving acts performed by God on behalf of other peoples. Such historically tangible saving deeds of God are analogous to those performed by God in favor of Israel according to the Old Testament record – notwithstanding the fact that the Christian tradition ascribes to the history of Israel the singular distinctive character of being the immediate historical prologue to God's decisive saving intervention in the Christ-event.Footnote 116
In his effort to account positively for the value of other religions in the economy of salvation, Dupuis draws on the relationship between the Old and New Covenants as an analogical basis for the relationship between other religions and Christianity. Dupuis acknowledges the unique bond between Israel and the Church, and that between the Old and New Testaments, and notes that:
Such a scheme readily lends to the idea that in the advent of special revelation history and, specifically, of the Christ event, pre-Christian religions belonging to the ‘general’ history of salvation are run past and ousted, having become obsolete or even ‘illegitimate’.Footnote 117
Nevertheless, he believes the question must be asked:
whether the history of other peoples cannot play for them, in the order of salvation, a role “analogous” to that played for the Hebrew people by the history of Israel, as comprising historical events whose divine salvific significance is guaranteed by a prophetic word…. .Israel and Christianity obviously represent a singular case, owing to the unique relationship existing between the two religions; however… .it may furnish, mutatis mutandis, an emblematic model for the relationship between Christianity and other religions.Footnote 118
For Dupuis the relationship between Judaism and Christianity serves “as a catalyst for the reorientation of the relationship between Christianity and the other religions.”Footnote 119 His position here is similar to Rahner–an attempt is made to acknowledge the sui generis nature of the relationship between Old and New Covenants, but as I will argue later, his theology of religions fails to do so adequately.
The direction of Dupuis' latest theology of religions is described by him as “inclusive pluralism.”Footnote 120 This, as the name suggests, tries to combine inclusivism and pluralism:
It represents a qualified pluralism allied with a broad inclusivism. It thus offers the key for a theology capable of accounting at once for the Christian faith in Jesus Christ universal Saviour and a positive role of the religions of the world in God's plan for humankind.Footnote 121
This is a “qualified pluralism” because he insists that the ultimate reality towards which all religion tends is the Triune God.Footnote 122 The “Christian Trinitarian God represents the Ultimate Reality an sich”.Footnote 123 Within this developing paradigm Dupuis is proposing a dynamic, complementary fulfilment:
The complementarity intended here is not a mere simple complementarity, understood as a “one way traffic”. Such a one-way complementarity would mean that, while it is true that the other religions must find their “complement” in Christianity, the reverse is in no way true, as these have nothing to contribute to Christianity. To hold such unilateral complementarity would amount to going back to the “fulfilment theory” in the theology of religions, according to which all other religions represent but different expressions, in the various cultures of the world, of the universal aspiration of human beings for union with the Divine Mystery. All would then be merely “natural” religions, destined to find the fulfilment of their aspirations in the only “supernatural” religion, which is Christianity. It is easy to see that this theory, largely abandoned today by theologians, makes true interreligious dialogue inconceivable. Christianity has nothing to receive but only to give, nothing to learn but only to teach. There can be no dialogue between religions, but only a Christian monologue directed to the others.Footnote 124
Dupuis suggests here that the type of fulfilment theology which sees Christianity and Jesus Christ as the fulfilment of other religions is “largely abandoned today.” However, as will be seen below, fulfilment theology still represents a major theme in Catholic theology or religions, and is far from abandoned in official Church teaching.
On the fulfilment continuum already established, Dupuis' approach is located at the continuity pole, for his approach maintains greater continuity between other religions and Christianity than Rahner's (and far more so than Daniélou's). Dupuis avoids the distinctions between natural and supernatural, religion and revelation. Grace is mediated through other religions, which are salvific. They have abiding value and are not invalidated by encounter with Christianity. Salvation history is coextensive with world history. Other religions are providential, having been raised up as preparations for Christianity. The fulfilment of these in Christianity however, is not to be seen as unidirectional, for Christianity is also complemented by its encounter with the Other. Henceforth, I will refer to this position as “F3”.
Conclusion: Daniélou, Rahner and Dupuis compared
There are many similarities between Rahner's, Daniélou's and Dupuis' approaches. All three suggest that the relationship between the Old and New Covenants has some analogical application to this relationship between other religions and Christianity, and all believe that Christ or Christianity is in some sense a fulfilment of prior revelation found in other religions (not just Judaism). However, there are also important differences between the three, and highlighting them will emphasise the various nuances of the fulfilment theory.Footnote 125
According to Hedges, there are two main areas of variation in fulfilment theology, and each may be seen as bipolar, having two extremes (a “weak” and a “strong” form), between which a range of options exists. The first variable is the assessment made of the teachings and experiences of non-Christian religions:
There is a graduation of differences from those who regard the teachings of the non-Christian religions as essentially negative, but redeemed either through some recognition of the need for God, or due to some primal revelation [the “weak” form], through to those who are ready to speak of the religious experience of Hinduism and Buddhism as being on a par with Judaism, and who see the non-Christian saints as being comparable to the Christian saints [the “strong” form].
The second variable involves the assessment made of the origins of other religions:
[A] bipolarity appears between those who believe that the non-Christian religions have been created through the Providence of God, and represent part of His divine plan, and believe that they actively point, therefore, towards Jesus [the “strong” form]. The other extreme consists of those who would suggest that, while the non-Christian religions may have similarities to Christianity, and provide points of contact, these similarities are due only to the fact that there is a common religious instinct in man, and that God has not actually prepared the non-Christian religions as teachers for other nations. However, this does not mean that they cannot be seen, or used, as ‘preparations’ for Christianity, in that their teachings may be used as pointers to Christianity, but merely makes a statement about their ontological status. [this is the weak form]
I suggest that in terms of these variables, Daniélou, Rahner and Dupuis, represent progressively “stronger” versions of fulfilment. This should be clear from the brief expositions given above, but I will now draw attention to some particularly pertinent points.
In his treatment of “preparation” and “fulfilment” Dupuis suggests these two concepts are “opposite”Footnote 126 positions. He suggests the fulfilment theory views all other religions as natural–“varied expressions of homo naturaliter religiosus.”Footnote 127 Only Christianity is the divine response to God, that is, supernatural. Salvation reaches the members of other religions as the divine response to the human religious aspiration but the prior worldview plays no part in their salvation. He suggests Daniélou's approach is an example of this fulfilment category.Footnote 128 In direct contrast with fulfilment is preparation, which Dupuis calls the “theory of the presence of Christ in the religions” or the theory of “Christ's inclusive presence.”Footnote 129 The various religions are ordained by God in salvation history–but to the decisive event in Jesus Christ. The preparation theory refuses to separate nature from grace, it attempts to transcend the dichotomies between the human search for self-transcendence and “God's stooping down to meet us”.Footnote 130 Members of other religions are saved by Christ not in spite of their religion but through that religion.Footnote 131 No religion is purely natural. They play a positive role before the Christ event as praeparatio evangelica, and they keep “even today a positive value in the order of salvation.”Footnote 132 Dupuis offers an exposition of Rahner's theology of religions as an example of this category.Footnote 133
Dupuis is correct to recognise the differences between fulfilment and preparation, but I see little reason why such a strong dichotomy is needed. As I have argued above, I consider it more accurate to see here, a continuum characterised by various bipolarities, between which there is a range of intervening positions. For example, Dupuis describes Daniélou as being representative of the “fulfilment” approach, but as I have shown, Daniélou also incorporates elements of “preparation” in his scheme. I concur with Hedges, who asserts that although “it would be possible to use the term “fulfilment” without reference to “preparation”…it is, to say the least, normative within fulfilment theology for the two to go together.”Footnote 134 With this qualification in mind, I maintain that Daniélou, Rahner and Dupuis place increasing emphasis on the “preparation” pole. All three hold a progressive theology of revelation within history in which Christ forms the apex. In this respect they share a common fulfilment perspective. In contrast to Daniélou though, Rahner and Dupuis make a less strict distinction between the natural and supernatural orders, than Daniélou. All agree that humans are never complete strangers to divine grace, but for Rahner and Dupuis this grace is always at work in humans in concrete ways– that is through religions. On the contrary, Daniélou maintains this grace is operative apart from these non-Christian religions.Footnote 135 Because of this conviction Rahner and Dupuis come to a very different assessment than Daniélou, of the role and meaning of non-Christian religions. Rahner states: “In view of the social nature of man… it is quite unthinkable that man, being what he is, could actually achieve this relationship to God … in an absolutely private interior reality and this outside of the actual religious bodies which offer themselves to him in the environment in which he lives.”Footnote 136 James Fredericks argues that for Rahner “the notions of a natural and supernatural order are merely ‘remainder concepts’: although they may be helpful as conceptual clarifications, they refer to a ‘Holy Mystery’ in which the human and the divine are already incomprehensibly and profoundly interrelated.”Footnote 137 Michael Barnes suggests: “Rahner presents us with an important alternative to the fulfilment theory of Daniélou by allowing for the sacramental presence of the Holy Spirit within the religions.”Footnote 138
In a similar vein, Dupuis contends that Daniélou is “unduly restrictive” in his appraisal of the extent of salvation history. For although Daniélou affirms that the “cosmic religion” that preceded the Abrahamic covenant already belongs to the “concrete historical supernatural order” this is not in the sense that God would have manifested himself personally through it. According to Daniélou, under the cosmic covenant, God's self-revelation is only through the cosmos – and is thus only the “prehistory” of salvation based on a natural knowledge which God gives through the creation.Footnote 139 Thus, for Rahner and Dupuis, non-Christian religions cannot be seen as merely natural expressions of human wisdom and aspiration as with Daniélou. It follows also that Christianity cannot claim to be the only supernaturally revealed religion.Footnote 140 Other religions mediate supernatural grace to those who follow them. They are not merely preparation, they are supernatural acts of God that make saving grace available. Neither can they be relegated to the “prehistory” of salvation as Daniélou does.
Dupuis argues for a continuing role for other religions, even after the Christ event: “They [other religions] keep, even today, a positive value in the order of salvation by virtue of the operative presence within them, and in some way through them, of the saving mystery of Jesus Christ.”Footnote 141 In contrast, Rahner suggests that other religions have only provisional value. Non-Christian religions before Christ “in principle were positively willed by God as legitimate ways of salvation,”Footnote 142 though they were overtaken and rendered obsolete by the coming of Christ and his death and resurrection.Footnote 143 However, we cannot define the precise moment at which that obsolescence takes place in the experience of any individual.Footnote 144 It happens only when “Christianity in its explicit and ecclesiastical form becomes an effective reality.”Footnote 145 Dupuis considers Rahner's view that religions remain “lawful” only up to a point in time as a “weak expression which continues to suppose their provisional and transitory character.”Footnote 146 Daniélou also maintains that other religions have only provisional value, as was seen above, but for Daniélou their provisional nature is emphasised even more strongly–they are superseded by both Judaism and Christianity. They are “doubly anachronistic.”