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You Are Not Your Own

On the Nature of Faith

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Abstract

Paul’s political theology as been employed negatively as a critique of empire and positively as a means of finding new figures of activism and militancy based around a universalistic claim to equality. I begin by arguing that the return to Paul is nothing new and that the history of Christianity, from Marcion to Luther to Kierkegaard, can be understood as a gesture of reformation where the essentially secular order of the existing or established church is undermined in order to approach the religious core of faith. Paul has always been the figure for a reformation, I argue, motivated by intense political disappointment. The double nature of the address in Paul is fascinating: both how Paul was addressed by the call that transformed him from a persecutor of Jewish Christians into a preacher of Christ’s gospel; and the addressee of Paul’s call, namely the various churches or communities that he established and which are identified as the refuse of the world, the scum of the earth. But the central concern of this Chapter is the idea of faith understood not as the abstraction of a metaphysical belief in God, but rather the lived subjective commitment to an infinite demand. Faith is understood here as a declarative act, as an enactment of the self, as a performative that proclaims itself into existence. Faith is an enactment in relation to a calling that is proclaimed in a situation of crisis where what is called for is a decisive political intervention.

I then turn to Marcion. The radicality of Marcion’s position is that his hyper-Paulinian affirmation of faith comes at the price of a disavowal of the experience of law, in particular as it is expressed in the Hebrew Bible. This leads Marcion to cut the cord that connects ‘Old’ and ‘New’ Testaments, or the orders of creation and redemption, and replace the affirmation of one god with two, where monotheism becomes dualism: the god of creation is not the same being as the god of redemption proclaimed by Paul. Following closely von Harnack’s reading of Marcion, the seductive power of this heresy becomes clear: what is announced in Paul’s Epistles is something absolutely new for which the only proof is the proclamation of faith. This brings us back to the contemporary return to Paul and the disavowal of the figure of law that is at its core. I argue that the Paulinism of Agamben and Badiou is actually a crypto-Marcionism that risks a radical antinomianism in its attempt to break the connection between law and faith. Against this tendency, I give a reading of Romans 7 and 8 that tries to give a different and hopefully more plausible understanding of the relation between faith and law: if law and sin were not within me, then faith would mean nothing. Our wretchedness is our greatness.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    For a rather different, but wonderfully detailed, account of Paul’s politics, that attempts to show the extent of Paul’s debt to the traditions of Hellenistic popular and political philosophy, see Blumenfeld (2001).

  2. 2.

    All references to Paul, unless indicated, are to the Revised Standard Edition, given in Meeks (1972). I have also, on occasion, checked translations from the Greek using Marshall (1933 [1882]).

  3. 3.

    See, for example, the final paragraph of State of Exception (Agamben 2005a, p. 88) which begins, ‘To show law in its nonrelation to life and life in its nonrelation to law…’

  4. 4.

    See Agamben (2005b, pp. 133–34) where he refers to unpublished lectures by Foucault given in Leuven in 1981 called ‘Mal faire, dire vrai.’ This is closely related to the also unpublished fourth volume of the History of Sexuality, The Confessions of the Flesh, which deals with the practice of confession and monastic discipline.

  5. 5.

    As Agamben relatedly writes in The Coming Community, ‘The lover wants the loved one with all its predicates, its being such as it is. The lover desires the as only insofar as it is such – this is the lover’s particular fetishism.’ (Agamben 1993, p. 2)

  6. 6.

    For a selection of the writings of the Apostolic Fathers.

  7. 7.

    I owe these thoughts to conversations with Lisabeth During.

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Critchley, S. (2015). You Are Not Your Own. In: Welchman, A. (eds) Politics of Religion/Religions of Politics. Sophia Studies in Cross-cultural Philosophy of Traditions and Cultures, vol 8. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-9448-0_2

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