In the End, God . . .: A Study of the Christian Doctrine of the Last Things. Special Edition
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J. A. T. Robinson
The God revealed in Israel's story is the Lord of history--a God with good purposes for his creation and a God capable of bringing those purposes to pass. All biblical eschatology arises from this fundamental theological insight. If God is this God then what shape must the future have?
John A. T. Robinson explores biblical eschatology with an eye both to the text and to contemporary culture. Revealing the foundation of eschatology to be the experience of God by the community of faith, he calls readers to embrace the eschatological vision of the Bible, but to do so in a way that is alert to its mythic character.
In the course of these explorations Robinson also lays bare his own theology of universal salvation. But, contrary to what one may expect, this universalism is one that seeks to take both human freedom and the reality of hell with the utmost seriousness.
This special edition of John A. T. Robinson's classic text also includes a debate between Robinson and Thomas F. Torrance (played out across three articles from the Scottish Journal of Theology in 1949), an extended introduction by Professor Trevor Hart (University of St Andrews, Scotland), and a foreword by Gregory MacDonald (author of The Evangelical Universalist).
John A. T. Robinson
John A. T. Robinson was a New Testament scholar who served as Bishop of Woolswich, England as well as Dean of Trinity College, University of Cambridge. Among his many writings are Redating the New Testament, Honest to God, and Wrestling with Romans.
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In the End, God . . . - John A. T. Robinson
In the End, God . . .
A Study of the Christian Doctrine of the Last Things
special edition
John A. T. Robinson
Edited by Robin Parry
Foreword by Gregory MacDonald
Introduction by Trevor Hart
cascadelogoIN THE END, GOD . . .
A Study of the Christian Doctrine of the Last Things
Special Edition
This special edition of the text copyright © 2011 Wipf and Stock Publishers. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401.
In the End, God . . . Copyright © 1950 James Clarke & Co. Ltd., PO Box 60, Cambridge, CB1 2NT, United Kingdom. Text used by kind permission.
The three appendices (Universalism—Is it Heretical?
Universalism or Election?
Universalism—A Reply
) © 1949, Scottish Journal of Theology. Reproduced by kind permission from the editors of the journal.
"In the End, God . . . : The Christian Universalism of J. A. T. Robinson (1919–1983)" by Trevor Hart. Copyright © 2011 Wipf and Stock Publishers.
Cascade Books
An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers
199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3
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isbn 13: 978-1-60899-983-5
Cataloging-in-Publication data:
Robinson, John A. T. (John Arthur Thomas), 1919–1983.
In the end, God : a study of the Christian doctrine of the last things—special edition / John A. T. Robinson ; edited by Robin Parry ; foreword by Gregory MacDonald ; introduction by Trevor Hart.
xliv + 164 p. ; 23 cm. Includes bibliographical references.
isbn 13: 978-1-60899-983-5
1. Universalism—Biblical teaching. 2. Eschatology—Biblical teaching.
3. Salvation—Biblical teaching. I. Parry, Robin. II. MacDonald, Gregory. III. Hart, Trevor A.
bt821.2 .r6 2011
Manufactured in the U.S.A.
foreword
When I became a Christian back in 1984 I soon discovered that there were sound
theologians and unsound
theologians. J. A. T. Robinson was very definitely on the list of those I was told were unsound.
Now I ought to add that we evangelicals loved his 1976 work on Redating the New Testament¹ because it was very conservative. But this was in part because we could say, "Look! Even such a wooly-minded liberal as John Robinson argued for the historicity of such and such, and clearly he—being an apostate—had no axe to grind!" J
For the most part, our dislike of Robinson was grounded on his 1963 book, Honest to God—an attempt to reconceptualize the very notion of God
in ways that Robinson thought connected better with the modern world—but those of us who were aware of Robinson’s earlier explorations into universalism had extra reason to regard him as persona non grata. In our view Robinson was always a bad egg
and over time he got increasingly smelly
!
By the time Robinson wrote Honest to God his thinking had moved on from where he was at in 1949 and 1950 when he wrote his first book, In the End, God . . . Indeed, in the second edition of In the End, God . . . (New York: Harper and Row, 1968) Robinson included two new chapters (not included in this edition) which reframed the old book in the light of subsequent changes in western culture and theology. He wrote: "I wondered, as I read [the original edition] after an interval in which so much water had passed under the bridge, how much of it I could make my own today. I was surprised. In one sense, I could never write it now. In another I found I wanted to alter remarkably little. I did not wish to withdraw anything of substance I had said. Yet I could not begin to say it like that now."
²
When I first decided to read Robinson’s exploration into universalism (during the period that I was rethinking my own beliefs on the issue) I had quite a lot of trouble chasing down a copy. In the end a visit to the library at Spurgeon’s College in London enabled me to read it, and a shrewd purchase at a second hand bookshop in Salisbury placed a copy of the original edition in my hands. So I read Robinson without having his ideas mediated through the filter of his later Honest to God thinking. And I think that this is indeed the best way to read In the End, God . . .—in the first instance, at least.
Rereading the book for this special edition was a fascinating experience. On one hand, it feels very dated. The social, ecclesial, and theological context in which he wrote has changed significantly (indeed, he himself was acutely aware of the changes in context between the publication of the first edition in 1950 and the second edition in 1968). Scholarship—both biblical and theological—has very definitely moved on, and eschatology is no longer thought of as an ugly duckling or the optional extra
for those who want to add a little quirkiness to life. And yet, on the other hand, I was struck by how insightful—indeed ahead of its time—Robinson’s book was, and how helpful it remains. I want to offer a few thoughts about that.
The theological interpretation of the Bible is very fashionable these days—and rightly so. What struck me on rereading In the End, God . . .
was what a deep and profoundly theological interpreter of Scripture Robinson was. At the very heart of this book lies a profound insight: that eschatology is not a road map for the future (in the sense that fundamentalists think that it is) but is, rather, a function of our doctrine of God. A distinctive biblical understanding of Yahweh, the God of Israel, is that Yahweh is the Lord of history and that, as a consequence, history has a telos. Thus Christian eschatology can never abandon this space-time universe but must embrace it within the end time, redemptive purposes of God. As Robinson says, eschatology is the explication of what must be true of the end, both of history and of the individual, if God is to be the God of biblical faith.
³ Any eschatology that does not comport with the biblical God—the loving Lord of history—fails to be an integrally Christian eschatology. The words loving Lord of history,
though not used by Robinson, capture the heart of his view of eschatology. This God is Lord
and will bring about his purposes. He is Lord of history
so those purposes concern this cosmos. He is loving
and so those purposes will be kind and good. Bad eschatology is derived from an inadequate doctrine of God. Everything else in the book flows from that core insight and it is an inspirational insight.
Robinson’s grasp of the fundamental importance of eschatology for perceiving the significance of life in the present is also very helpful. His insights into the way in which all present events must be seen in the light of the end and from the perspective of the end are spot on! And his appreciation of the fundamental unity of the first and second advents—that the second coming is, in part, a way of bringing out the eschatological character of the first—reflect a theologically sensitive reading of New Testament texts.
Robinson argues that the form in which eschatology is embodied is myth. Myth is a notoriously slippery word but, if used with caution and clarity, it can be helpful. I find myself in agreement with much of what he writes but, I confess, I am unable to go as far as he goes. My main concern regards what seems to me to be too sharp a disjunction between what Robinson calls kairos time (time as measured by significance and purpose) and what he calls chronos time (chronological clock-time).⁴ Now the distinction is helpful and does highlight important dimensions of eschatological time. But, whilst kairos and chronos can be distinguished with profit—and Robinson has some really helpful things to say on the basis of the distinction—they cannot be pulled apart without causing theological mischief. And sometimes Robinson seems to pull them apart too far. On occasion, he appears to suggest that Christian eschatology projects certain futures as no more than a way to speak of the theological significance of the present. Thus he writes that, "the Christian has no more knowledge of or interest in the final state of this planet than he has in its first . . . Of course, the Christian cannot say that the ‘events’ of the end will not literally take place . . . He can only declare that, as a Christian, he has no interest in these matters."⁵ But surely that is just wrong. If the cosmos will never actually be resurrected
at some future time then the very thing that invests the present with eschatological significance is voided and the myth becomes no more that wishful thinking—a false myth. How could a Christian be indifferent about such a thing? However, at other times Robinson seems conscious that the world really must come to a temporal destination (perhaps a better word than end
) something like that presented in the vision of the new creation if the claims embodied in the eschatological myths
are to be true. Thus he writes, The temporal end . . . will certainly reflect and embody the moment of ultimate significance (as the last move in chess match translates into finality the move that really won).
⁶ Absolutely! Perhaps the balance required is best found when he says, "the meaning of history must be vindicated within history and yet . . . the complete purpose of God must transcend history."
⁷
Robinson’s chapter on Paul’s theology of the body
(soma) is both a nice summary of some of the insights of his book The Body—a book that still warrants serious consideration—and represents a great example of the theological interpreter at work. The discussion is nuanced and enlightening. It offers a view of humanity as fundamentally embodied and as corporate. It is not the body that individuates the person—the boundaries of bodies are porous—but the call of God. Fascinating stuff! And the corporate solidarity expressed by the body allows Robinson to observe, almost in passing, that "not till all have found themselves in [the body of Christ], and everything is finally summed up in Christ, will this salvation be complete for any."⁸ This ideas—that the full salvation of any requires the final salvation of all—is one that warrants a fuller theological exposition.
As a universalist what most fascinates me about this book is the way in which Robinson tries to take with equal seriousness the biblical teaching on universal salvation and the biblical teaching on hell. It fascinates me because it is so original and so thought provoking. Traditionally universalists have tried to find ways to hold the two strands in the biblical texts together by arguing that they are, contrary to appearances, not inconsistent. So the texts about hell need not refer to a place of eternal torment but can be thought to refer to a temporary punishment. This universalist strategy—albeit worked out in different ways—runs through from Clement of Alexandria to the current day. In fact, for the record, it is my own strategy.⁹ Yet, surprisingly for a universalist, Robinson did not even dialogue with this view, except to dismiss it in passing. For him it was clear that the hell texts meant exactly what the mainstream tradition maintains—eternal separation from God. But, equally, the universal salvation texts—contrary to the claims of the mainstream tradition—really do teach universal salvation. So to hold the traditional view of hell would be, in Robinson’s estimation, to reject a significant dimension of the biblical witness.
How does one hold together two contradictory sets of witness? One option is to say, as many hopeful universalists
do, that each set represents a possible future—which possible future will be actualized is, in the end, down to human free choices. (In this book the article by Thomas F. Torrance in Appendix 2 represents this perspective, although Torrance does not refer to it as hopeful universalism.
) Robinson will have none of that! The Bible does not say that God may be all in all, but that God will be all in all!
So how does Robinson navigate the contradiction? By appeal to his theological claim that eschatology is actually about what must be the case in the light of the present encounter with God-in-Christ. Given that God encounters us in this way and, in Christ, reveals himself to be this God then we must speak of the future in this way. Once that move is made then Robinson has a way to handle the hell texts. They describe the real destiny of any who reject God-in-Christ. Such an existential stance towards God alienates one from eternal life and, if that route is plotted into the future, the only consequence can be eternal hell. The person confronted by the gospel faces two real paths with two real destinies associated with them—life or death! New creation or hell! But from God’s perspective it is absolutely impossible that any will fail to embrace salvation-in-Christ in the end. Universalism is the only possible end. Now, I have admitted that this is not my own way of holding the two sets of texts together but I have to confess that I often find myself returning to Robinson’s route and pondering it afresh. I do find it fascinating and, in many ways, deeply attractive. And, who knows, perhaps one day I will own it as my own. But for now I am very happy to commend it for the reflection of readers.
It should be clear that there are aspects of the book that I feel uncomfortable with. To those already mentioned I could add Robinson’s discussion of theology as science
and his depreciation of chronos time in apocalyptic literature. Nevertheless, I have found myself impressed afresh at the enduing relevance and value of this little work and I really do hope it finds a new and enthusiastic readership in the twenty-first century.
Gregory MacDonald,
Author of The Evangelical Universalist (Cascade, 2006) and editor of All Shall Be Well
: Explorations in Universal Salvation and Christian Theology, from Origen to Moltmann (Cascade, 2010).
September, 2010.
1. Now available from Wipf and Stock.
2. J. A. T. Robinson, In the End, God . . . New York: Harper & Row, 1968, 1. Italics mine.
3. Ch. 2, 23.
4. Obviously I use kairos and chronos to refer to concepts as developed and described by Robinson and not as any claim about the meaning
of the Greek words.
5. Ch. 5, 62–63.
6. Ch. 4, 48.
7. Ch. 7, 88.
8. Ch. 7, 92.
9. See Gregory MacDonald, The Evangelical Universalist. Eugene: Cascade, 2006 / London: SPCK, 2008.
preface
The text underlying this edition of In the End, God . . . is the 1958 second impression of the original edition of the book (London: James Clark, 1950). I have made very few changes to it. The following changes were made:
the Americanizing of spellings
removing references from the main text and putting them into footnotes.
putting references into the Wipf and Stock house style.
on occasion I substituted dashes for commas to clarify the sentence structure.
the insertion of subheadings to highlight the flow of the argument and to make locating relevant sections of the book easier.
on a few occasions, I included a revision from the 1968 edition into the main text but, when I did this, I have indicated it by putting it inside square brackets.
In square brackets in footnotes I have indicated most of the changes that were made in the Second Edition (New York: Harper and Row, 1968). Some of the alterations were so trivial that I did not note them at all but any change that was possibly of interest—even if only to people like myself who need to get out more—I have included the revision in a footnote. Sometimes the original text is, in my opinion, superior to the revision, whilst other times the revision has the edge, but my purpose was not to mix and match to create my favorite version of the text—a hybrid, third edition—but to preserve the original edition whilst noting the later revisions.
After some deliberation I took the decision not to render the language gender-inclusive because it would have required a fairly extensive revision of the original text and my goal was to meddle with that text as little as possible. Readers must bear in mind that Robinson was writing back in 1949/1950 and cut him some slack.
Robin Parry,
September 2010
In the End, God . . .
The Christian Universalism
of J. A. T. Robinson (1919–1983)
Image9634.JPGTrevor Hart
¹
Between Orthodoxy and Heresy
John Robinson is best remembered nowadays as an agent provocateur in ecclesial and theological terms. The self-confessed radical
² became a household name more or less overnight in the early 1960s due to two particular acts of self-conscious provocation. First he appeared at the Old Bailey to defend Penguin Books against charges of obscenity in connection with their publication of an unexpurgated text of Lady Chatterley’s Lover.³ Then, just as the dust was settling and the press pack losing interest, Robinson published his own sensational
paperback, Honest to God—a popular work designed to introduce the man on the Clapham omnibus
to the putative intellectual and religious gains of a non-realist theology. The consequent notoriety was generated, of course, not by the man and his ideas alone, but by the office that he held.⁴ Robinson was the British media’s original Bishop behaving badly,
and the same ideas promulgated from the corridors of academe would have attracted far fewer column inches (and sold fewer copies of the book) than they eventually did. In reality, the arguments of Honest to God were not in any case especially radical when weighed in the balance by the theologically trained reader; but served up in popular form to a theologically uneducated public by one whose ministry was supposed to be a sign and guarantee of apostolic truth, they seemed quite radical enough, and the words controversial,
notorious,
and unorthodox
were quickly drafted into service by the writers of banner headlines and chat show hosts.
⁵
Given all this, the fact that in his writings on eschatology Robinson should break with the mainstream of Christian orthodoxy across the centuries, declaring himself to be a convinced believer in the final restoration of all things, might be thought likely to provoke little surprise. What may surprise us, though, are the grounds on which he had arrived at this conviction and the sorts of arguments he deployed in articulating and defending it. Far from sitting loosely to or uncomfortably with the core tenets and claims of biblical and creedal faith, Robinson situates himself and his argument in the thick of them, building his case by constant and careful reference to the character and purposes of God as revealed in Scripture, and to the human condition as laid bare by God’s response to it in the person and work of Christ. Apokatastasis, he argues, is a doctrine to be believed passionately precisely on the basis of all this and not in spite of it, being the most fitting and appropriate vision of the world’s end in God’s hands given the larger shape and substance of divine revelation to humankind. Thus, in his earliest published treatment of the question, Robinson took as his starting point Emil Brunner’s description of the doctrine of universal restoration as a menacing heresy, endangering the Biblical faith,
and argued directly the contrary: universalism was, he insisted, both profoundly biblical and, in that sense at least, profoundly orthodox.
⁶
The essay in question, though, was not written by the author of Honest to God, but more than a decade earlier when Robinson was tutor in New Testament and Ethics at Wells Theological College, and it contained materials dating back even further than this.⁷ The piece appeared in the pages of the recently established Scottish Journal of Theology, earning an immediate published rejoinder from one of the journal’s founding editors, The Rev. T. F. Torrance.⁸ The editors afforded Robinson the courtesy of a brief reply, in which he graciously but firmly held his ground, insisting that Torrance had misunderstood both the grounds for and the nature of his major lines of argument.⁹ Evidently, what was needed in order to forestall further misreading was a fuller treatment, laying bare some of the methodological and substantial commitments that undergirded and surrounded his articulation of the doctrine of apokatastasis itself. The opportunity for this came with an invitation to contribute a volume on eschatology to a series on Theology for Modern Men.
In the End, God . . . , Robinson’s first book-length publication, duly appeared in 1950, including in its introduction a note of thanks to Dr T. F. Torrance for kindly reading the whole MS. and suggesting invaluable criticisms.
¹⁰ Consideration of the last things had definitely come first, then, in the chronology of Robinson’s career as a scholar and writer, and while he was still some years away yet from his personal concern with the end of God
in the other sense.
¹¹
This fact alone might be thought sufficient to account for the unashamedly confessional tone of Robinson’s eschatology and his preoccupation with establishing apokatastasis as an orthodox Christian hope, a consideration we might not naturally associate at all with the doyenne of South Bank Religion.
¹² To some extent this is correct. Robinson himself admitted that his theological perspective had shifted significantly in the intervening years, and that "I wrote In the End God . . .
at a time when I was at my most right-wing in theology."¹³ The most profound shift, of course, had been precisely his self-conscious embrace and advocacy of a version of non-realism, preferring now to think and speak of God not as a Being existing in himself,
but instead as the depth of our existence,
¹⁴ a Rubicon the crossing of which places one in territory where talk of orthodoxy and heterodoxy no longer pertains in quite the same way, and which is bound to affect the sense attaching to all eschatological statements, bound up logically as these are with a conception of God as a personal and purposeful agent. Yet looking back on the matter Robinson himself was reluctant to configure things in terms of a radical interruption, as though before Honest to God I was reasonably orthodox and conservative
and since then I have believed less and less!.
¹⁵ No doubt most of us, too, would tend to narrate the pattern of our own personal development in such a manner that later chapters arise naturally and meaningfully out of earlier episodes, playing down whatever discontinuities and U-turns our lives, like all lives, actually contain. In Robinson’s case, though, (and for our particular purposes) the threads of undoubted continuity are interesting and worth paying attention to.
Robinson was always an enigmatic mixture of different impulses and commitments. Born into the very heart of Anglican establishment and a family with a proud missionary heritage,¹⁶ it is clear that even in the later radical
years his commitment to the Christian