The Pentecostal Hypothesis: Christ Talks, They Decide
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On a daily basis Pentecostals deploy or enact this capacity through the use of the formula: "It does not make sense, but it makes spirit" in their decision-making processes. This is an alternate way of knowing that is keyed to a particular interpretative understanding of Jesus Christ as constitutive of and normative for the good decisions relevant to human flourishing. The book offers a critical-philosophical analysis of the social-ethical implications of this hypothesis intended for private decisions and social actions. This text is ultimately a critique of Pentecostal reason. In this book Wariboko explores the epistemological dimensions of everyday Pentecostal Christology, their interpretation of Jesus's character and nature as epistemology. For Pentecostals Jesus did not have an epistemology, but the story of his life as a whole is an epistemology. For them the validity of a truth claim is always (in)formed by the story of Jesus that claims them, the story that gives them the meaning and courage to affirm their decisions without fear of being contradicted by Enlightenment rationalism. What kind of normative sway does this orientation to modernity have over Pentecostals' pattern of thought? This book configures the response to this question with profound insights into the convergence of epistemology and Christology within the impelling matrix of a provocative social ethics. The epistemological in this book is not about the that of knowing, but the how (the performative dimension) of knowing, which is affective, emotive, and an embodied practice.
The Pentecostal Hypothesis is the capacity to resist conventional wisdom in social actions.
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The Pentecostal Hypothesis - Nimi Wariboko
The Pentecostal Hypothesis
The Pentecostal Hypothesis
Christ Talks, They Decide
Nimi Wariboko
The Pentecostal Hypothesis
Christ Talks, They Decide
Copyright © 2020 Nimi Wariboko. 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.
Cascade Books
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199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3
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paperback isbn: 978-1-7252-5451-0
hardcover isbn: 978-1-7252-5452-7
ebook isbn: 978-1-7252-5453-4
Cataloguing-in-Publication data:
Names: Wariboko, Nimi, author.
Title: The pentecostal hypothesis : Christ talks, they decide / Nimi Wariboko.
Description: Eugene, OR : Cascade Books,
2020
| Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers:
isbn 978-1-7252-5451-0 (
paperback
) | isbn 978-1-7252-5452-7 (
hardcover
) | isbn 978-1-7252-5453-4 (
ebook
)
Subjects: LCSH: Pentecostalism. | Philosophical theology.
Classification:
BR1644 .W37 2020 (
paperback
) | BR1644 .W37 (
ebook
)
Manufactured in the U.S.A. 08/21/20
Scripture taken from the New King James Version®. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Dedicated to
Elsie Nene Obed
Table of Contents
Title Page
The Pentecostal Hypothesis
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Interlude
Chapter 1: Who Christ Is
Chapter 2: Exegeting the Sermon
Chapter 3: This Is Not a Christology
Chapter 4: Sense and Spirit
Conclusion
Bibliography
Preface
The Pentecostal hypothesis is the capacity to resist conventional wisdom in personal decision-making. The book is about how Pentecostals use the paradigm of the Spirit in the form of the formula: It does not make sense, but it makes spirit
in their decision-making processes.¹ This paradigm is in/formed by an alternate way of knowing that is keyed to a particular theorization (that is, a way of seeing, thinking about, and experiencing) of Jesus Christ as constitutive of and normative for the good decisions relevant to human flourishing. The book also offers a critical-philosophical analysis of the social-ethical implications of this hypothesis intended for private decisions and social actions. It provides an explanation of the formula that allows Pentecostals to understand their own behaviors not only in terms of their common-sense categories or social meanings connected with the social practices of the hypothesis, but also in terms of continental thought or a system of relevances of philosophical theologians.
This book explains what this hypothesis entails for understanding Pentecostal epistemology, how it challenges the modernist imagination, where it leads to profound theological and philosophical insights (contradictions), and why it is politically and ethically significant to study it. Pentecostal epistemology is a mode of knowing that creates and sustains a space, a horizon for human flourishing. The epistemological is also where the sensation of being truly committed to Jesus Christ, as Pentecostals understand it, is at stake. Pentecostal epistemology is ultimately about living well, Pentecostals living well in the common. The epistemological, like the political, is the site where being in common is at stake,
and "having access to what is proper to existence, and therefore, of course, to the proper of one’s own existence."² There is the epistemological so long as there is the political, being-together. The epistemological happens because the political happens. The political is where the epistemological, the truth breaks out. The happening of the epistemological, that is, the uncovering of the phenomenological veil over reality, the deliberate movement from sense data to spiritual data, standing against conventional wisdom, is the condition under which Pentecostals believe they can really ask what is at stake in being-together and in their own human flourishing in the common. The understanding of the political and human flourishing always already belongs to the space, the horizon opened by the epistemological. This unconventional epistemology has found its way into some segments of mainstream politics in many countries.³
Conservative Pentecostal Christians have recently generated extensive political and media attention as leading pastors in their circles play prominent roles in presidential campaigns and inaugurations in the United States. Their critics have questioned—or even maligned—their moral-political rationality with its accompanying theological model of the state. But both critics and scholars have left unexplored their pattern of thinking and the justification behind their reasoning. Understanding Pentecostals’ epistemology is important for deciphering their pattern of thought and the moral-political rationality it contours and injects into the public square. Such an effort to be germane and fair must begin by understanding conservative Pentecostals on their own terms. On their own terms
here means offering a thick description of what Pentecostals take themselves to be saying, doing, and purposing in their epistemic practices when they engage in spiritual examination or decision-making. Put differently, it is to enter the inner world, logic, and truth of the Pentecostal particular mode of thought and unconceal it without disparaging it at first impression. By the phrase on their own terms
I also mean offering an adequate account (keyed to their own way of seeing the world in awe and mystery) of the Pentecostal sense of imagining and feeling that is enacted in the ability to imagine non-existent possibilities, to see one thing as another, and one thing in another, to endow a perceived form with a complex life.
⁴ This book is an attempt to understand the epistemology of Pentecostals on their own terms.
This book frames the basic problem of Pentecostal thinking or everyday decision-making as a twin demand for justification—the justification of revelational
reason and the justification of religious discourse in the Pentecostal public. The key insight from the analysis of this problem is that revelational reason is not self-sufficient or self-referential, but always points beyond itself or redirects spiritual understanding back to the empirical use of the senses. Centering on a radical yet faithfully Pentecostal reading of the tension between immanentist sense and transcendent spirit, and drawing on the fluid intersectionality of disciplines, this writer argues that Pentecostal epistemology must be located within Christology. In other words, the epistemological disposition of Pentecostals shown in this book is responsive to the promptings of Christology. Before now, scholars have not explored (or have left uncritically undeveloped) the depth and brilliance of the convergence of epistemology and Christology in Pentecostal practices. This book’s focus on epistemology surely runs toward a new way forward for Christology, but this is not a Christology (ceci n’est pas une christologie). On the contrary, I provide a significant, philosophically informed alternative to perpetuating the trend toward anti-modernity, dogmatism, and anti-reason in many recent studies on Pentecostal epistemology, without downplaying the hazards of religious obscurantism. In the book’s core, critical theory, dialogism, and theology converge around problems of the void (gap) between sense and spirit, and the notion of split Christ that sutures the gap. I intend to approach this with an originality, depth, and clarity that students of religious studies, social ethics, and theology, at all levels of training in philosophy of religion, will find illuminating.
If, indeed, these students find something worthy and respectable in the thinking of ordinary Pentecostals, then this book will have accomplished one of its goals. Furthermore, another purpose is to help arrest the growing trends of knee-jerk shaming and aggressive humiliation of ordinary Pentecostals and their ideas by both liberal and conservative scholars. In America, everyday Pentecostal theology has generally been marginalized or summarily rejected as incoherent, unintelligible, foolish, or even poisonous. This reasoning is pervasive and persistent.
Being Pentecostal in America means that your very rationality is a problem. You cannot escape the gaze, the stereotype, the awareness that others view you as an epistemological throwback to a bygone world. Your worldview is a problem that must be observed and caricatured, analyzed and degraded, solved and dissolved in the acid of modernity. Between you and the other Christians or scientific America,
there is always a question hanging over your head: How does it feel to be primal, primitive, and a problem in twenty-first-century modernity?
In the fall of 2003, I went for a pre-application visit to Princeton Theological Seminary as I investigated schools for doctoral programs in theology. A female professor told me, You went to Oral Roberts University for your MDiv—you must be a fundamentalist.
I politely asked, What does it mean to be a fundamentalist?
Fundamentalists are like Osama bin Laden; they are terrorists,
she replied.
I was highly offended, but in control of my emotions; after all, I was a tall and big black male. I replied, I am not a fundamentalist.
Her next question was this: In your opinion, how old is the earth?
At Oral Roberts I was taught the historical-critical method of biblical interpretation,
I replied. The meeting did not go any further but quickly ended. I had spent more time waiting for her than having a discussion with her. She was over an hour late to our appointment.
How does it feel to be a problem?, W. E. B. Du Bois might have asked me and other Pentecostals. How does it feel that your (presumed) epistemology is a contagion to which the good students of an Ivy League institution should not be forcibly exposed? What was it about my Columbia University MBA background and Wall Street experience as an investment banker and management consultant that did not speak to this scholar about my fitness to engage in critical intellectual discourse? Why is it that my first-class (summa cum laude) degree in economics did not inoculate me against this powerful woman’s prejudice about my charismatically inflected stupidity? How does it feel to be told by a male, world-renowned senior professor—on the day you defend your dissertation in record time and earn summa cum laude honors—that we nearly did not admit you because you were a Pentecostal. I am happy that we did not make the mistake.
I ask you again, How does it feel to be a problem? How does it feel to have four strikes against you even before you walk into your first doctoral seminar? I am a black man, Pentecostal, African, with a heavy Nigerian accent. How does it feel to be a problem? How does it feel to carry the excessive weight of racial inequality, denigrated geographical identity, religious-sectarian prejudice, and stigmatizing-tongued inequality? To borrow the language of Melissa Harris-Perry, how does it feel to be a black male carrying excess weight and living in a crooked room of modernity/postmodernity/structural racism?⁵ How does a Pentecostal begin to define himself or engage in epistemological discourse, let alone orient himself in the academy, when he is already defined by stereotypes?
Many Pentecostals feel that that they live in a crooked world and they do not want to align with the images, social imaginary, and expectations of the distorted world. Unwilling to bend precipitously, they take chances at shifting or bending
modernist epistemology to fit their straightened backs. So, they have come up with the distinctions of justification, such as it-makes-spirit and it-makes-sense.⁶ An action or decision does not make sense, but it makes spirit because the decision or action does not match
or accurately correspond
to some picked-out feature of reality or the world,
though it ‘fits’ or ‘coheres’ within [their] given system of established beliefs or within [their] given cognitive picture.
⁷
It-makes-sense
refers to an action or behavior that corresponds
with facts
out there in the world or fits
with the conceptual schemes defined by worldly standards that do not genuinely and meaningfully speak about God or permit reference to the transcendent. It-makes-spirit
does not deny the importance or authenticity of sense data. In fact, Pentecostals make use of them. The restriction they impose upon them is that they can only serve as experiential inputs to spiritual knowledge, which must eventually be intentionally translated into practical reason (empirical sense) so that it can be utilized at the nitty-gritty levels of common-sense experience. Such transmuted reason or sense must always remain in reference to transcendence.
⁸ There is a two-sided character to the rationale
of it-makes-spirit. Pentecostals claim to find
or discover
information from the nonphysical realm, but they must make
sense of it to challenge all who undermine their flourishing, mock their life-view, and despise their God.
In this perspective on life, an action, behavior, or decision is commendable or good when it-makes-spirit; otherwise it is bad. A decision is bad, primarily, insofar as it does not involve the carryover of values from Christology to (transform) epistemological practices and effect transformations in the believer’s devotional life. The question of truth, as Robert Cummings Neville taught us, is the carryover of value from the object into the interpreters’ experience by means of signs, as qualified by the biological, cultural, semiotic, and purposive contexts of the interpreters.
⁹
The meanings of good, bad, and truth within this life-view are always imbricated in the purposive connection between epistemology and Christology that Pentecostals have forged in the last hundred years. Pentecostal epistemology, as we shall amply demonstrate later, is not as a disciplined investigation or interrogation of knowledge but a response to the voice of Christ rising from the deep of the self. It is a response to a talking Christ: a call and response that is weaving the fabric of knowledge that empowers born-again believers’ existence. Epistemology is a matter of interpreting the master’s voice (its own semiotic reality) and applying its import to ordinary life. The Christ that talks here is the Jesus as a personal savior that intimates the believer about things-in-themselves, objects and situations stripped of their empirical appearances, and enables her to grasp such abstracted
things that transcend
human sensory capacity. He communicates in this superior
way with the Pentecostal Christian because she believes that she has crafted herself by the techniques of the self on the self such that her born-again subjectivity transcends
not only the reality that it ineluctably inhabits but also the intentional referential purview of her human (sinful) thoughts. Here her holy
subjectivity (in sweet dogmatic dream) entertains the presumption that it can give itself its own sense and declares itself lord
over empirical reality. These two transcendental loci are always involved in Christ talk and its reception. Here we see that it-makes-spirit starts off its life as suspended between transcendence, and its journey into sense or practical reason must also remain in reference to transcendence.¹⁰
The statement (formula), indeed, speaks to Pentecostals’ conception of knowledge. In their reckoning, true knowledge does not exist independent of the experience (or subjectivity, interiority) of the knower. Knowledge is not an external, objective substance independent of the knower’s individual consciousness, and in theory is not available to everyone. It-makes-sense in this context refers to the secular conception and practices of knowledge that hold that knowledge is generally available and accessible to all, whereas it-makes-spirit refers to an alternate conception and practices of knowledge that are embodied and generally not available to everyone. The enunciation of it makes spirit
is a valued marker of the rhythm of a person’s closeness to God. Knowledge here is considered to be (or is a reaching-out to) a refined, pure essence of godliness, intimate experience of God. Knowledge is a spirit as it floats above dense materiality, all that easily ensnares humanistic epistemology. It is a manifestation of the spirit of knowledge, if not the spirit of knowledge himself (Isa 11:2). Knowledge is a kind of distilled essence, changeless core, irreducible substrate, a dynamic perfection of a Pentecostal’s walk with Jesus Christ. Knowledge is metaphysics of the presence of God; the supreme being is present without mediation, a secure ground of thought that is proper to knowledge and meaning, is good and self-identical, correct and pure, and not secondary, derivative, or complicated. Thus, to make spirit
is to say that one has made it or is making it to the rarefied, warm level of intimacy with God the Holy Spirit. To make spirit
is to strategically or ideally turn to this proper, original ground of knowledge and existence in order to make everyday decisions as a born-again believer.
What kind of normative sway does this orientation to decision-making, life-view, or intrinsic obligation to a religious life have over Pentecostals’ patterns of thought? This book configures the response to this question with profound insights into the convergence of epistemology and Christology within the impelling matrix of a provocative social ethics. In the process of rigorously analyzing the patterns of thought, this writer tracks and clarifies the seemingly intractable and enigmatic language of spirit in everyday practices and neatly sorts out the confusing interpretations of the dialectics of sense and spirit—indeed, their overlap—in the Pentecostal linguistic frame of reference. The book demonstrates that Pentecostal patterns of thought and language practices are rooted in the abyss of divine freedom or voluntarism.
The belief and practices concerning the axiomatic
statement of decision-making are also linked to their comparison of God’s promises with those of human beings. In this case, sense implies human word/promise and spirit connotes God’s word/promise. It-does-not-make-sense means the particular action (decision) the believer is taking is not premised on human promise, which is usually plagued by uncertainty, slipperiness, and ambiguity. It-makes-spirit signifies the yea-and-amen certainty, unambiguity, and the unshakable promise of God (2 Cor 1:20). It-does-not-make-sense-but it-makes-spirit is, indeed, a liturgical language, a ritualized use of words to suspend legitimate doubts about the meanings of human intentions or actions. It is a liturgical expression of speech that defers questioning and scrutiny of their (believers’) words—hoping to lodge them in a safe realm where words have the force of deeds. Pentecostals believe that it is not through their own power or might that their utterances can reach this realm, but the immanent Spirit of God. The whole axiom or aphorism is geared to circumvent the logic of Babel, the preeminent display of human sense lifting itself to reach God. The liturgical expression of it-does-not-make-sense-but-it-makes-spirit is the opposite of the Tower of Babel. Babel, which means the ‘the gate of God,’ is man’s attempt to open the gate of the place where truer words were never spoken.
¹¹ Pentecostals do not want to reach God, enter into the gate of the place above where the truest words are spoken, or to open the windows of heaven for themselves here on earth below by building or standing on the concrete towers of human sense, but on their intangible words offered to God in faith, in spirit and truth.
Do words spoken in faith remove all ambiguities of human utterances? The axiom may be a nice way to deal with the ambiguity of human sense, but it also introduces its own version of ambiguity. While it reinforces the spirituality of the speaker—and, perhaps, enhances her authority—it simultaneously places her action under God’s judgment or in the shadow of false claim. All this begs for a full study of liturgical and sociological implications of Pentecostal religious language. We will not yield to this temptation in this book, as I have determined to limit our study to the theological and social-ethical issues of the formulaic statement.
The theological intensity or boldness of the Pentecostal aphorism invites a meditation on the ultimate goal of Pentecostal decision-making. What are Pentecostals up to when they espouse or avow the statement It-does-not-make-sense-but-it-makes-spirit
? It seems to me that the ultimate goal of this epistemological frame is twofold: (a) uninterrupted unity with Jesus Christ as the ground of their decision-making, decision as complete transparency to Christ as the ground of their being, and (b) the continuous self-surrender, sacrifice of the who
of autonomously free deciders to themselves as theonomous deciders. In this way decisions are directed to the infinite God and toward the finite believer—whose life has been grasped, shaken, and transformed by the Holy Spirit—regarded as a symbol of God (John 5:19). Decisions that meet the criterion of it-does-not-make-sense-but it-makes-spirit bring down (or re-cognize) the infinite God to (as in) the finite concrete realm of everyday activities and the finite up to (into) him. All these comprise the meaning of the symbol it makes spirit.
¹²
The philosophical density of the Pentecostal axiomatic
statement invites some comparison with Alain Badiou’s notion of event and its site.¹³ There is something evental about the way spirit and sense are juxtaposed in the statement. The decision, the act that is regarded as making spirit or as spirit-informed that does not fit within or could not have arisen from the circumstances, is the event
that seems to appear from nowhere. The event does not make sense given the site of its appearance. It shouldn’t have happened, but it did. The event ruptured normality and demonstrated that what was considered reality, the order of the situation, was grounded on a void,
a cracked arrangement, an inconsistent multiple.
If we do not want to go this far into philosophy, we can say that in the eyes of Pentecostals the event seems to have dissolved the circumstances that birthed it, so it does not make sense
ultimately means it was impossible for the event to have arisen from its site, from the now retroactively disarranged arrangement of circumstances. All this reminds me of what the philosopher of science Paul Feyerabend once said in his 1975 book Against Method: My trick is to present events which dissolve the circumstances that made them happen. Given the circumstances the events are absurd, unheard of . . . they simply do not make sense.
¹⁴
The philosophical sugestiveness of It does not make sense, but it makes spirit demands some methodogical clarification about how we are going to handle the claim it makes. While one is not looking forward to its philosophical testability, it behooves this writer to offer a word or two about the method he would deploy to elicit its truth-value, epistemic status, and ethical significance. The values (truth, epistemic, and ethical) of the claim must be examined or determined neither in isolation from other descriptions, sentences, or constructs of which it is a part nor by a particular set of observations. This book studies the claim within the broad description, version and theory of the self, world and God as put forward by Pentecostals. We must acknowledge that the truth, epistemic, and ethical values of the claim, as Cornel West might put it,
pertain to bodies of knowledge, descriptions, versions or theories of self, world and God, not to atomic sentences, autonomous statements or isolated claims. . . . When one puts forward knowledge claims from the vantage point of a religious description, version or theory about the self, world and God, one is attempting to support or defend a particular description, version or theory that tries to promote the valuing of certain insights, illuminations, capacities and abilities in order honestly to confront and effectively to cope with the inevitable vicissitudes and unavoidable limit situations in life.¹⁵
Now a word or two about the origins of this text. I was provoked to undertake the work of this book by a Pentecostal minister on Long Island, New York: Pastor Elsie Obed. She had invited me to speak at her church annual conference on November 25 and 26, 2017. She assigned me the topic of Who Christ is. I could not decide on how to approach the topic until the night of November 24, less than twelve hours before I was scheduled to speak. Just before midnight, the idea came to me of interpreting Christ as the one who enables his followers to inhabit the crack between sense and foolishness, meaning and meaninglessness, by configuring their ways of knowing. I delivered the lecture-sermon (which is now chapter 1 of this book) without notes in the morning. Moments after I delivered the lecture, the idea came to me at 12:14 p.m. to deeply interrogate all that I had just said.