IntroductionFootnote 1
Robert Grosseteste was an English polymath who lived from about 1168 to 1253. He was the first lecturer for the Franciscan studium at Oxford, beginning around 1229, and from 1235 to the end of his life he was the bishop Lincoln, the largest diocese in England. Grosseteste wrote on a wide variety of topics, from the rainbow to the necessity of the Incarnation, and he was the only man of his day, as far as we know, who was both a serious theologian and a competent translator from Greek into Latin. After his works fell into the hands of John Wycliffe and Jan Hus, his legacy fell on hard times, but it received a second chance in the twentieth century through the work of S. Harrison Thomson, James McEvoy, and others. Since then, scholars have begun to give Grosseteste the attention he deserves.
The present study concerns the resonance between Grosseteste's unusual view of the death of Christ and Karol Wojtyla's personalism. I have chosen the word “resonance” because, of course, personalism as a philosophy developed several centuries after Grosseteste. Yet some of the themes that would surface in personalist thought had been anticipated in various ways in the Christian tradition. This article will illustrate a particular, and unusual, instance of this.
This study will proceed in three sections. First, it will explain Robert Grosseteste's unique view of the death of Christ at some length. Then, more briefly, it will suggest three ways in which Grosseteste's view resonates with Karol Wojtyla's personalism. In the third section, it will offer a proposal for how a contemporary Christian could appropriate Robert's view – to some degree – for meaningful personalist reflection upon the death of Christ.
Robert Grosseteste on the Death of Christ
It is possible that Robert Grosseteste was the first Christian thinker in the Middle Ages to hold that the physical trauma of the crucifixion was not sufficient to cause the death of Christ, medically speaking. Instead, Christ actively laid down his life at the moment of death.Footnote 2 While it has been suggested that Grosseteste was the only medieval theologian to hold this view,Footnote 3 I have noticed that Thomas Aquinas affirms the same view in his late Exposition of the Apostles’ Creed.Footnote 4 There, like Grosseteste, he sees the final cry of Jesus as evidence that he was not at the point of expiring physically when he laid down his life. It is possible that Grosseteste has influenced Aquinas on this point.Footnote 5
While Grosseteste mentions his view of Christ's death in multiple places,Footnote 6 I will focus upon the two most significant explications. The first appears in On the Cessation of the Laws, and the second in his sermon Ex Rerum Initiatarum. In discussing both of these texts I will be following insights gained from studies by James McEvoy.Footnote 7
Grosseteste wrote On the Cessation of the Laws while he was teaching the Franciscans theology at Oxford. The work bears the marks of developing from scholastic disputations, although Grosseteste has recast the material into a treatise in four parts. The passage that concerns us today appears in part 3, in the section where he is offering proofs of the divinity of Christ. One such proof is that he was able to separate his soul from his body by a mere act of will.
He makes two important points here. The first concerns ‘the soul's care for the body’, as James McEvoy and Richard Dales have called it,Footnote 8 and the second concerns the medical facts of crucifixion. I will treat them in reverse order, discussing the medical aspect first. Grosseteste argues that a crucifixion would not have killed a young, healthy man in only three hours. Perhaps he found this idea suggested by the indication in Mark that Pilate was surprised to hear Jesus had died so quickly,Footnote 9 or by the statement in John that he died before the other two men who were crucified with him.Footnote 10 His argument, however, is not based upon such testimony but rather on the assumption that blood loss would have been the cause of death. He says he would not have lost enough blood in that period of time. In fact, a crucified individual would die of asphyxiation rather than blood loss when the individual was no longer able to raise his body and get a breath of air.Footnote 11 But his point is well-taken. It appears to have been an unusually quick death,Footnote 12 and, as Grosseteste also points out, the Gospels indicate that Jesus had enough strength at the end to cry in a loud voice to the Father, ‘Into your hands I commend my spirit’.Footnote 13
Perhaps inspired by this statement, or perhaps by Jesus’ statement in John that he had the power to lay down his life and the power to take it up again,Footnote 14 Grosseteste says that the explanation for why Jesus died so quickly was that he actively laid down his life, something only a divine person has the power to do. This is the part about the soul's care for the body, an idea Grosseteste may have found in John Chrysostom or Avicenna.Footnote 15 He says,
But most evidently, it seems to me, he showed himself to be God when he died on the cross. For to separate one's human soul from one's healthy body and heart is beyond every created power, because the soul naturally desires to be joined to its body, and it abhors nothing so much as separation from its body through death. Hence it is naturally inseparable [from the body and heart] while it is in the heart and while the vigor of life has not yet died…Therefore, it is a work proper to divine strength and creative power to separate by one's own will one's soul from one's healthy body. And so when the Lord Jesus hung on the cross with a then-healthy body and breathed forth his own spirit by will, he performed a work divine and proper to divinity alone.Footnote 16
So then, Jesus did not die because of the crucifixion but through the supernatural act of breathing forth his spirit. It is worth noticing here that this is a sui generis act. No other embodied soul ever could, by a mere act of will, remove itself from its body. So Grosseteste is not saying that Jesus committed suicide. Every act of suicide involves destruction, or at least a forced interruption, of the vital systems of the body. Jesus did no such thing. Grosseteste rather is saying that, in this one special case, the separation of the soul from the body was not brought about by damage to the body but by a special divine act – the act of `laying down his life' or `breathing forth his spirit.'
In his sermon, Ex Rerum Initiatarum, written about ten years later (1240-1243),Footnote 17 Grosseteste expounds the same view in the context of redemption, deepening the significance of his doctrine.Footnote 18 Again, there are two important points. Taking a cue from Anselm of Canterbury,Footnote 19 Grosseteste believes that the God-man must make satisfaction proportional to the debt of human sin. For Grosseteste, Jesus did this not by suffering a pain of infinite duration but by a pain of intense bitterness. Consequently, he needs the pain of the passion somehow to exceed infinitely the pain of an ordinary human death by crucifixion.
But since pain is a sensed privation of a desired good, an intensely sensed privation of what is intensely and most naturally desired is the most intense pain. Now, this life, and the union of the soul with a healthy body and with a healthy heart abounding in blood and vital heat is most intensely desired with a completely natural appetite…Therefore, the sensed privation and separation of the soul from a still-healthy body and heart is the greatest of all pains and far exceeds any pain that a mere creature can suffer.Footnote 20
This pain, the pain of separating his soul from his body by an act of will, is what Jesus voluntarily offered to the Father,Footnote 21 an offering of greater worth than the penalty owed for all human sin.Footnote 22 This act of redemption delivers those who are united with Christ by true faith, hope, and charity, and who persevere in voluntary imitation of Christ.Footnote 23
The other important point in this sermon concerns union with Christ. At the moment of his death, Christ makes possible a union with him in faith, hope, and charity through voluntarily offering his life to the Father on our behalf. Here again the context is a discussion inspired by Anselm's Cur Deus Homo. Right after saying, in effect, that only God can pay the debt and only a man ought to pay it,Footnote 24 Grosseteste addresses the problem of how the God-man can do saving works on behalf of other humans. The answer is that they are personally united.
He explains:
For the one who adheres to him with true faith, firm hope, and persevering charity, is not separated from his person, but united, and is one Christ with him. As a result, it is not the united individual himself who does works of faith, hope, and love, but Christ who works in him, and the things which Christ works for him, he himself works through Christ and in Christ. For if according to the law of friendship each of two friends is the ‘other self’ to his friend through the bond and union of love and through unity of will in moral matters – and if the Son is the ‘other self’ to the Father – will not they all much more be one in him who are sons of the God-made-man through creation and regeneration…?Footnote 25
The part about the ‘other self’ Grosseteste gets from Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics.Footnote 26 Robert has adapted Aristotle's idea in the interest of redemption. Since Jesus is the ‘other self’ to the redeemed, he can act in their place, both in the act of redemption and afterwards.Footnote 27
So then, from Ex Rerum Initiatarum we add to Grosseteste's theory of the death of Christ both how Christ's active breathing forth of his life on the cross was an infinitely worthy act of satisfactionFootnote 28 and how it brings the mystical person of Christ, that is, Christ with all the redeemed considered as one, to its full realization. To echo the wording of the Gospel of John,Footnote 29 Jesus laid down his life for his friends. This ultimate act of love makes the mystical personhood of Christ and his members both possible, as an act of satisfaction, and actual, as an act that they mystically share as friends.
Resonance with Karol Wojtyla's Personalism
With Grosseteste's unique view of Christ's death before us, we now can explore how well it resonates with three significant themes in Karol Wojtyla's personalism. I use the name “Karol Wojtyla” here to designate the man as a philosopher, rather than to delineate any particular time period of his life. I will build upon John Crosby's exposition of WojtylaFootnote 30 and add some of my own thoughts based upon the Theology of the Body catecheses.
To bring the relevant themes into focus, I will use a single line from Gaudium et Spes 24:3, ‘man…cannot fully find himself except through a sincere gift of himself’.Footnote 31 This line was one of Wojtyla's favorites.Footnote 32 I have counted eight separate passages in the Theology of the Body catecheses in which Wojtyla, as Pope John Paul II, refers clearly to this line.Footnote 33 Sometimes he invokes it to explain the meaning of sex in marriage, and at other times it relates to the choice of continence ‘for the kingdom of heaven’, that is, the celibate life of priests and religious.Footnote 34
The first theme I want to discuss is the basic idea of love as self-donation. If a man makes a sincere gift of himself, it is presupposed that he does so as an act of love. But an act of love has to be voluntary. Herein lies the attraction of Grosseteste's distinctive view. The event of Christ's death was a voluntary action. Furthermore, it was an act of self-sacrifice for the sake of his friends. On Grosseteste's account, then, the very moment of Christ's death becomes the ultimate instance of love conceived as an active gift of self.
Secondly, in Wojtyla's personalism, the gift of self to another is the way for a man to find himself fully. As Wojtyla explains this concept, genuine self-donation requires a prior self-possession. One cannot give what one does not have. Yet it is also true that through the gift of self a person more fully discovers himself or herself.Footnote 35 The parallel in Grosseteste's vision is the realization of the mystical personhood of Christ in the Church.
Here the match with Wojtyla's personalism is delightfully close. First, Christ's ultimate self-donation depends upon his absolute self-possession. Only a person who is God, and also man, can lay down his life by voluntarily giving up his spirit. No created person has such complete possession of himself.
And there is a second point. Not only does Christ's self-donation depend on his already complete self-possession, but it also results in a sort of self-discovery. All the redeemed come to be mystically included in Christ's selfhood. As said above, the very act of will by which Christ gives his life is the very act that makes the mystical personhood of Christ in the Church both possible, through satisfaction, and actual, through the shared personal agency of Grosseteste's version of Aristotelian friends.
The third resonance with Wojtyla's personalism concerns Trinitarian love.Footnote 36 Wojtyla saw the community of persons in the Trinity as the metaphysical basis for the gift of self among persons.Footnote 37 In Grosseteste's view, Christ's self-donation, while made for his friends, is made to the Father. Wojtyla applied his own view of Trinitarian love to the same effect: ‘That gift of self to the Father through obedience to the point of death (see Phil 2:8) is at the same time, according to Ephesians, an act of “giving himself for the Church.”’Footnote 38 Thus Grosseteste saw the Son's love for the Father as involving a complete and voluntary gift of himself, much as Wojtyla would later hold.
So then, Grosseteste, writing centuries before personalism became a philosophical current, developed a theory of the death of Christ that resonates strongly with Karol Wojtyla's personalism. Specifically, it resonates with Wojtyla's conception of love as an active gift of self, with his understanding of how self-donation requires prior self-possession and results in fuller self-discovery, and with his view of love within the Trinity.
Towards an Appropriation of Grosseteste's View
The question now is whether a contemporary Christian personalist can or should try to recover Grosseteste's view. There are good reasons why one may like to do this. It helps the personalist think of Christ as the ultimate example to follow, even at the very moment of his death. This would be a great source of inspiration, moving us to love, not as merely accepting the consequences of our choices but as actively willing our self-donation. Christ is more than just an example though. Grosseteste's view also makes our active self-donation simultaneously Christ's act of self-donation through our mystical personal union. On this level, I want Grosseteste to be right.
Another reason Grosseteste's view is attractive is that it helps give expression to the principle articulated in Gaudium et Spes 22:1, ‘that only in the mystery of the incarnate Word does the mystery of man take on light’.Footnote 39 Wojtyla believed that this idea was the theological lynchpin of the Second Vatican Council.Footnote 40 The Incarnation teaches us what it means to be human. Grosseteste's Christology, when understood through the lens of Wojtyla's personalism, can inform theological anthropology in this way.Footnote 41 But there is an obstacle to this project: namely, the fact that Grosseteste was obviously wrong about some medical aspects of crucifixion. Christ's weakened state from the events of the previous night and that morning, along with the fact that asphyxiation, not blood loss, would have caused his death, may suffice to render Grosseteste's medical argument unsuccessful. On the other hand, the accounts in the Gospels do indicate that Jesus died more quickly than most crucified persons, and the fact that he cried out right before he expired may indicate that he still had some vital energy.
Regardless of whether we find Grosseteste persuasive concerning the medical cause of Christ's death, his view may still be correct in its main points. Even if Jesus did die of asphyxiation, medically speaking, it still can be true that he actively laid down his life at the moment of death. The fact that the person who died is God actually seems to require this. As a divine person, he had the power to keep body and soul together, even if the body was physically ruined. This means that, when the body was ready to expire, Jesus had to consent to the separation of his soul from his body, unlike any other embodied spirit. He could not die without an act of will in which he allowed physical ruin to have its natural effect – the separation of the soul from the body. This act of willing to give up his life was the active gift of himself to the Father for the sake of his friends.
I would suggest that in this view Grosseteste was faithfully following the teaching of the Fourth Gospel. In this Gospel, Jesus is presented as a divine person, the very Word of the Father.Footnote 42 In this Gospel, Jesus raises Lazarus from the dead.Footnote 43 If he could raise Lazarus from the dead, he certainly could keep himself alive. Most importantly, in this Gospel, Jesus expressly says that he has the power to lay down his life and the power to take it up again, clearly referring to his own death and resurrection.Footnote 44 Since the resurrection of oneself is an act requiring divine power, the parallelism in Jesus’ prediction seems to suggest that his death also is an act requiring divine power. Thomas Aquinas interpreted John's Gospel similarly, although he reasoned in the opposite direction. Beginning from the fact that Jesus’ death was his own divine act, Thomas argued that his resurrection likewise was his own divine act.Footnote 45 The wording of the prediction also requires that the Word, rather than the Father, be the one thought of as exercising divine power to bring about Christ's death. Finally, John's Gospel says that Jesus ‘handed over’ (parédōken) his spirit when he died.Footnote 46 Although this could be read as nothing more than a euphemism for death, the fact that Jesus said he would lay down his life makes it more likely that the language of giving up or handing over indicates a true act carried out by Jesus. Grosseteste's view provides a way to conceptualize this act.
Paul Griffiths has defended a view similar to that of Grosseteste. Arguing from the accounts of Jesus in the Gospels, Griffiths suggests that the human flesh of Jesus when he walked the earth could only be damaged if he consented to such damage.Footnote 47 In Griffith's analysis, the death of Christ did occur as a result of physical trauma,Footnote 48 but the whip and nails could only damage his flesh because he allowed it to happen.Footnote 49 This also may follow from his divinity. If Christ has the power to lay down and take up his life, it seems likely that he also has the power to prevent any particular damage to his body. Thus he must choose to allow all such damage to occur.
So even if we do not revise our medical understanding of how Jesus died, the important features of Grosseteste's view, and their personalist value, can survive. On this account, Grosseteste was right to hold that Christ had to breathe forth his Spirit actively but perhaps wrong about why this was necessary. Jesus had to lay down his life not because his body was still healthy, but because as God he had the power to keep his body alive, no matter how damaged it was. He also had the power to prevent each individual injury. This means that Jesus was actively willing, not only passively accepting, his death both leading up to and in the moment when he died. It was an active gift of himself to the Father for his mystical body. And, if we like Grosseteste's view of satisfaction, it still can be true that in this ultimate act of self-donation Christ makes his mystical personhood in the Church both possible and actual.
In conclusion, it appears that Robert Grosseteste, in his view of the death of Christ, adumbrated some important personalist concepts that would ultimately find clear expression in the writings of Karol Wojtyla. I do not think Grosseteste's view actually influenced anyone to help develop these ideas. Rather, I think he is a witness to the fact that these ideas are nascent in the very Gospel accounts that were equally sources of inspiration for both Grosseteste and Wojtyla.
Further, Grosseteste's view remains relevant for Christians today, inasmuch as Grosseteste can inspire us to see the death of Christ as the ultimate act of love – in Christ's gift of himself to the Father, in Christ's self-possession prior to giving himself, and in the realization of the mystical personhood of Christ and the Church that results. This opens a way for a personalist Christological anthropology in which the Christian would see suffering for others as the occasion for an active, rather than a passive, gift of self and would see such actions as the very acts in which Christ continues actively to give himself in love.