Augustine's vision of the church as belonging to the totus Christus – the ‘whole Christ’ – offers some of the most astounding language in the history of Christian thought for naming the church's union with God. ‘Let us rejoice and give thanks’, Augustine exhorts, ‘that we have become not only Christians but Christ himself! … The fullness of Christ, therefore, is both head and members.’Footnote 1 In modern theology, this doctrine has proved a valuable resource on several fronts. It is a cornerstone of communion ecclesiology,Footnote 2 a prophylactic against individualismFootnote 3 and a rich guide for naming Christ's identification with the sufferings of his people.Footnote 4 It is little wonder that Augustine's understanding of the church as belonging to the whole Christ has found such a wide and largely favourable reception.
Not everyone, of course, has rushed to applaud. A certain line of Reformed criticism, espoused most articulately by the late John Webster, takes the totus Christus doctrine to risk confusing Christ's divine perfections with the church's derivative status, thereby elevating the church above its creaturely status.Footnote 5 As Webster puts it: ‘The notion of the totus Christus – of Christ's completeness as inclusive of the church as his body – will be impermissible if it elides the distinction between Christ and the objects of his mercy.’Footnote 6 If the totus Christus is taken to mean that Christ's divine perfections are inclusive of creatures, Webster argues, one would be compelled to say that Christ is incomplete apart from the addition of something else, and this, in turn, engenders a truncated view of the person and work of Christ. ‘The ontological rule in ecclesiology is … that whatever conjunction there may be between God and his saints, it is comprehended within an ever-greater dissimilarity.’Footnote 7
To be sure, Augustine himself has some answers to these questions. In Sermon 341, a quintessential expression of the totus Christus, Augustine addresses the issue of whether Christ is ‘complete’ apart from the church. It is not the case that Christ isn't ‘complete’ (integer) apart from the body, Augustine argues, ‘but that he deigned to be complete (integer esse dignatus est) with us too’. Christ remains complete, not only as the eternal Word ‘but also in the very man whom he took on, and with whom he is both God and man together’.Footnote 8 Nevertheless, this critique raises important questions not only about ecclesiology but also about the nature of retrieval theology. How is Augustine's totus Christus doctrine retrieved, and how do such retrievals compare with the way the doctrine functioned in Augustine's own setting? These questions have been taken up in a recent article by David Moser, which responds to a range of Reformed critiques of the totus Christus doctrine to prove its value in contemporary Reformed theology.Footnote 9 I wish to add to this discussion an element that is often presumed but rarely given sustained attention – namely, the way in which the totus Christus doctrine relates to the doctrine of participation.Footnote 10 My contention is that contemporary retrievals that deploy the doctrine of the totus Christus to name an ontological unity between Christ and the church in participatory terms often obscure the more complex theological grammar in which Augustine articulated his views. On the one hand, modern theology often forgets that participation, for Augustine, functions to name the creature's ontological difference from God – its created status, its dependence on something external to itself – as much as it names the creature's unity with God. For another, Augustine's main categories for describing the totus Christus are not ontological but exegetical ones. The totus Christus doctrine is as much an exegetical product as a result of philosophical reasoning about of the church's metaphysical status. This is not to say, importantly, that exegetical-grammatical categories are incommensurate with metaphysics. Quite the opposite. Attention to the larger theological grammar in which Augustine understands the totus Christus has important ramifications for how we understand the meaning of the doctrine, and how it might be retrieved in contemporary theology. In the end, the doctrine of participation sustains an intensive account of unity between Christ and the church. But it does so by locating the doctrine within a more comprehensive metaphysical vision that upholds the ever-greater dissimilarity between God and creation.
In what follows, I first rehearse some of the main exegetical and grammatical tactics Augustine deploys to name the church's relation to Christ. Next, I outline four ways that participation functions in Augustine's thought, each of which shows how it serves to distinguish God and creation. The conclusion brings these two strands together and proposes a potential pathway for retrieving Augustine's doctrine of the totus Christus today.
Grammatical-exegetical arguments for the church's union with Christ
The main categories that Augustine uses to describe the church's relation to Christ in the totus Christus are what we might call exegetical and grammatical.Footnote 11 By exegetical, I mean that the totus Christus is primarily a doctrine that emerges from the need to articulate Christian scripture in a coherent and edifying way for his congregation. By grammatical, I mean tactics that involve the use of categories drawn from grammar and rhetoric in ancient educational contexts. While these may be distinguished from metaphysical categories, in the end they remain tethered to and commensurate with metaphysical conceptions of the church's relation to Christ.
One example we might consider here develops out of trinitarian theology. For instance, in On the Trinity 6, where Augustine treats John 17:21 (‘that they may be one as we are one’), Augustine claims that wherever scripture uses the word ‘one’ as a modifying rather than substantive adjective, it implies a unity of will rather than being.Footnote 12 The use of ‘one’ as a substantive adjective, by contrast, entails a unity of substance. When, for example, John 10:30 has Christ say, ‘I and the Father are one’ (a substantive adjective), scripture refers to a unity of essence. But when, by contrast, we read in 1 Corinthians 6:16–17 that ‘whoever cleaves to a harlot is one body’ or ‘whoever cleaves to the Lord is one spirit’ (both modifying adjectives), we should understand scripture as rendering a unity of wills, not natures. One does not become ‘one body’ with the harlot or ‘one spirit’ with God as a union of natures. These are but expressions of two wills coming into alignment.
The most significant use of exegetical-grammatical approaches is Augustine's use of prosopological exegesis – a key feature of the Expositions of the Psalms.Footnote 13 In ancient rhetoric, the grammarian's first task in reading a passage was to identify the person (Greek prosōpon) who was speaking in a text, which was no simple task given the material composition and typography of ancient texts. Making theological use of this grammatical rule, Augustine's main concern in totus Christus exegetical contexts is to teach readers how to understand passages of the Psalms that appear infelicitous to put directly in the mouth of Christ – such as having Christ confess wrongdoing for sins, admitting fear, deficiency, lack, etc. In his second enarratio on Psalm 30, we find Augustine explaining the matter in a characteristic way:
He [the Psalmist] is going to say certain things in this psalm that we think inappropriate to Christ, to the excellent dignity of our Head. … Some of the things said here may not even seem suitable for him in the form of a servant … and yet it is Christ who is speaking, because in the members of Christ there is Christ.Footnote 14
Augustine will say of these cases that we must understand Christ as speaking in the voice (vox) of the church as distinct, but not separate from, the perfected Christ who is ascended in heaven. Reading scripture well involves learning to discern when we are hearing the voice of Jesus the head and when the voice of his body the church. Crucially, though, the voice of the ascended Christ and the voice of Christ's body the church remain ‘one voice’.
Augustine's development of the totus Christus doctrine in the Psalms also emerges from reflection on several key passages of scripture that relate the unity of Christ and the church in different ways: members of a body (1 Cor 12), a marriage union (Isa 61:10; Eph 5:32) and, most intriguingly, Christ speaking within members of the body (Matt 25:31–46; Acts 9:4). Michael Cameron has called attention to the way that Augustine's use of prosopological exegesis institutes a deep intimacy between Christians and Christ. Considering the way Augustine's exegetical aims are linked to his developing understanding of Christology, Cameron argues that Augustine's exegesis of scripture in sermons to simple believers served as spiritual exercises for transforming their desires, consciousness and moral action.Footnote 15 The preacher's purpose, according to Cameron, was ‘to actualize the union of flesh between believer and Christ within consciousness, and to provoke responsive love’.Footnote 16 Through these engagements with scripture, the believer becomes attached to the flesh of Christ and ‘therefore in a sense constantly ascending to his divinity. … The reality of Christ our head ascended to heaven remains a promise of our future, but is approximated by increments in the efforts of this life.’Footnote 17 There is an extraordinary union invoked in such transformations.
While Cameron is surely right to express these moments of christological exegesis as ways of transforming Christians into the flesh of Christ, it is also true that the use of prosopological exegesis serves to keep in focus the distinction between Christ the head and his body the church. The following passage from the Expositions of the Psalms expresses this well:
Let us hear them as one single organism, but let us listen to the Head as Head, and the body as body. The persons are not separated, but in dignity they are distinct, for the Head saves and the body is saved. May the Head dispense mercy, and the body bemoan its misery. The role of the Head is to purge away sins, the body's to confess them. Wherever scripture does not indicate when the body is speaking, when the Head, we hear them speak with one single voice. We have to distinguish as we listen, but the voice is one.Footnote 18
By speaking of the union as a harmony of voices and as assuming another's ‘person’ or speech, Augustine speaks of the union between two distinct entities in a way that avoids raising the issue of whether created being is confused with divine being. In these instances, Augustine avoids blurring the creator Christ and the creature church by naming their mode of union as a union of speech. They are not one in substance but ‘one voice’.
There are other forms of grammatical techniques in Augustine's understanding of the relationship between Christ and the church, but these examples suffice to highlight some of the main ways that Augustine described the totus Christus. By drawing on grammatical categories, Augustine can express the union of Christ and the church within a biblical framework. It is an exegetical approach that helps resolve difficulties in understanding the unity of scripture and to promote charity within the body of Christ. Grammatical categories also serve both to distinguish as much as join Christ the head with the ecclesial body.
Augustine on participation
If the totus Christus is primarily an exegetical approach to naming the unity of Christ and the church, how should we understand it in relation to Augustine's doctrine of participation? In attending to Augustine's reflections on participation, we see that these, too, like the totus Christus formula, provide guidelines for articulating the unity between Christ and the church in terms of theological categories that maintain a clear distinction between divine and creaturely being.
While we should be hesitant to describe Augustine as constructing a systematic metaphysical theory, certain key moments allow us to understand how the grammar of participation functioned in his thought.Footnote 19 There are at least four main contexts in which he deployed participation language: first, in his use of pro-Nicene categories to describe the relationship between Father and Son and between God and creation; second, in anti-Manichaean contexts to refute their doctrine of dualism and substantial evil; third, in his account of Christian redemption as deification; and fourth, as referring to the heavenly city's sharing in divine immutability. In each, participation expresses the creature's ontological dissimilarity to God as much as it emphasises union.
Participation in pro-Nicene theology
Participation language underwent important transitions in the Nicene controversies of the fourth century.Footnote 20 Before Nicaea – as well as afterwards among opponents of the Nicene formula – participation language could be used with a certain degree of fluidity. One could speak unproblematically about Christ or the Spirit ‘participating’ in God, which helped combat third-century Monarchian tendencies. By the latter decades of the fourth century, however, to speak of the Son or Spirit participating in God implied an unacceptable hierarchy in the Godhead. Instead, the language of participation became reserved for naming the creature's dependent status in relation to God.Footnote 21
Augustine was heir to these debates, mostly following Latin pro-Nicene sources like Hilary, Victorinus and Ambrose, while also making key developments of his own. In several passages in On the Trinity and the Homilies on John, Augustine explains the relation between Christ and creatures in terms owing clearly to pro-Nicene traditions. The Son, he will say, has life in himself; the Son does not participate in life as something alien to his own nature. Immortal life is not a quality of the ‘solo God’, Augustine puts it in On the Trinity, but of the three divine persons. Christ, therefore, has immortal life as internal to his being, while creatures only have immortal life only through participation: ‘it was by becoming partakers in his everlasting life that we in our own measure have been made immortal. But the life everlasting of which we have been made partakers is one thing, and we who shall live forever by participation in eternity is another.’Footnote 22 When Augustine comments on John 5:26 in the Homilies on the Gospel of John, similarly, he uses participation language to designate Father and Son as equally belonging to the divine nature, which is characterised by ‘life itself’ – a concept closely aligned with immutability.Footnote 23 The soul, by contrast, constituted by change, receives happiness and beatitude only through participation in God.Footnote 24
Augustine will still want to distinguish the Son from the Father through the language of ‘giving’ and ‘receiving’, though he avoids linking the latter term with participation. As he puts it in the 22nd homily on the Gospel of John, ‘He [the Father] does not live as one who participates, but lives without change, and is himself entirely life. So he gave the Son the possession of life; just as he has, so has he given. Then what is the difference between them? That the former has given, the latter has received.’Footnote 25 He identifies the Father's ‘giving’ the Son life with the Father's ‘begetting’ of the Son. He then specifies the character of the Father and Son's having life in se: it is ‘not to be in need of life from anywhere else, but himself to be the fullness of life, from which others who believe might draw life as long as they live. So then, he gave him the possession of life in himself.’Footnote 26 Here, Augustine makes a clear distinction between the life in which creatures participate and the creatures who participate in life. While both the Father and the Son have life as something integral to divine essence, not something in which one member or another participates, Augustine can also make distinctions within the Godhead using the language of begottenness and givenness. The Son's begottenness is tantamount to ‘being given’, neither of which entails the creaturely status implied in participatory relationships.
Participation in anti-Manichaean polemic
Augustine also deployed the doctrine of participation to refute Manichean thought, especially Manichaean cosmologies that associated matter with evil. In this context, as Emilie Zum Brunn has shown, Augustine placed a strong emphasis on Exodus 3:14 to understand the immutability of the divine nature in contrast with the ontological poverty of non-being.Footnote 27 For Augustine, only God has true being, because God is both immutable and eternal. Between God and non-being, creation is held or suspended in being. Its sheer existence is the lowest form of participation, but in its ‘tending’ towards God it aspires to a more intensive, active form of participation. In De beata uita, Augustine contrasts the creature's ‘being held’ by God (haberi a Deo), a characteristic of all creation, and the Christian's aspiration to ‘hold God’ through participation in wisdom (habere deum).Footnote 28 Another nice summary, which uses the language of participation in particular, is found in another early treatise, The Catholic Way of Life and the Manichaean Way of Life. There he writes:
There is one good that is good supremely and in itself, not by the participation of any good but by its own nature and essence (non participatione alicuius boni, sed propria natura et essential); and another good which is good by participation, and by having something bestowed (aliud quod participando bonum est et habendo). Thus it has its being as good from the supreme good, which, however, is still self-contained, and loses nothing. This second kind of good is called a creature, which is liable to hurt through falling away.Footnote 29
We see here the way Augustine characterises the good as that which is a good in itself – ‘self contained’ – not gaining being from something external to itself. This kind of view can be found in later writings. In Confessions 7, for example, we find similar statements about creaturely participation. Augustine says that when he looked upon created things, he ‘saw that neither can they be said wholly to be or absolutely not to be. They are because they came from you.’Footnote 30 For Augustine, creation both exists and does not exist to the extent that creatures are viewed in relation to the God who truly exists. Creation could not exist at all if it did not participate in some degree in the God who is true being, existing immutably.
Participation in Augustine's theology of deification
The doctrine of participation was also a key element in Augustine's theology of deification.Footnote 31 Here, too, though, it serves primarily to qualify language about the creature's union with God as a mixing of substances. Augustine retains elements of the basic Platonic grammar of participation, but he develops these ideas through focusing on Christ's primary ‘sharing’ in human flesh. As Augustine's understanding of Christ's humanity matured, he developed a more sophisticated understanding of Christ's flesh as serving more than a merely exemplary function. Christ's human flesh becomes the medium through which Christians are joined to Christ's divinity – per Christum hominem ad Christum Deum.Footnote 32
The downward and upward dimensions of participation prompt Augustine to speak of deification in a way that preserves the creature's distinction from God. A passage from Expositions of the Psalms 49 encapsulates this nicely:
It is clear that he called men gods being deified by his grace and not born of his substance. For he justifies, who is just of himself and not from another, and he deifies, who is god of himself and not by participation in another. But he who justifies himself deifies, because he makes sons of god by justifying. ‘For to them gave he power to become sons of god’ (John 1:12). If we have been made sons of god, we have been made gods; but this is by grace of adoption and not of the nature of our begetter.Footnote 33
Humanity cannot participate in the divine nature itself – not simply because of sin but also because human nature is unlike like the divine nature. A similar thread underlies other passages where Augustine deploys deification language. In City of God 14.13, Augustine comments that ‘created gods are gods not in virtue of their own being but by a participation in the being of the true God’.Footnote 34 In Expositions of the Psalms 94.6, likewise, Augustine draws on participation language to avoid saying that creatures share in the divine nature: ‘God calls them gods in virtue of participation, not nature; they are gods by the grace through which he willed to deify them.’Footnote 35 When Augustine speaks of the Christian's deification, the language of participation helps keep clear the fundamental distinction between creator and creature.
Participation in eternity
One final set of texts to consider on Augustine's doctrine of participation are those that speak of the ‘heaven of heavens’ (caelum caeli) and the ‘eternal Jerusalem’ as created entities that share in God's being in the hereafter in such a way that their mutability is functionally halted.Footnote 36 Confessions 12 and Expositions of the Psalms 121 are the two most important passages. In the former, Augustine describes the ‘heaven of heavens’ as a ‘kind of intellectual creature’ that, while not coeternal with God, nevertheless shares in God's eternity in such a way that it ceases to be mutable: ‘Without any lapse to which its createdness makes it liable, by cleaving to you it escapes all the revolving vicissitudes of temporal progress.’Footnote 37 While the heaven of heavens could, because its nature remains mutable, potentially fall away, it remains functionally immutable as long as it cleaves to God – a cleaving that Augustine describes with the language of participation.
It should be noted that Augustine does not link the ‘heaven of heavens’ concept from Confessions 12 explicitly with the church – a connection that is much easier to grasp in the discussion of the heavenly Jerusalem in the exegesis of the Psalms.Footnote 38 In his exposition of Psalm 121:3 (‘our feet are standing in your gates, O Jerusalem; Jerusalem, which is being built as a city whose participation is in Idipsum’), Augustine interprets Jerusalem as the heavenly city that shares in divine immutability in such a way that it ceases to be mutable: ‘The city that participates in the Idipsum shares in that stability; … [the Psalmist] cries out, “Our feet were standing in the forecourts of Jerusalem”; for there all things stand and nothing passes away.’Footnote 39 Here Augustine's reflections are even more thoroughly christological. While it is too much for human minds to understand sharing in God's being, he argues, they can cleave to Christ's flesh and so be made capable of participating in the divinity of the Word:
Hold onto what Christ became for you, because Christ himself, even Christ, is rightly understood by this name, I AM WHO AM, inasmuch as he is in the form of God. In that nature wherein ‘he deemed it no robbery to be God's equal’ (Phil. 2:6), there he is Idipsum. But that you might participate in Idipsum, he first of all became a participant in what you are; ‘the Word was made flesh’ (John 1:14) so that flesh might participate in the Word.Footnote 40
The main idea to note here is that, even for this sphere of creation – the highest form of participation, in which creaturely mutability is held in check – participation language is deployed once again as a way of safeguarding divine transcendence. As close as the caelum caeli or eternal Jerusalem comes to overcoming the creator–creature gap – even to the point of ceasing mutability – Augustine retains a precise level of clarity in observing the way participation language upholds the more fundamental distinction between God and creation.
The preceding passages are just a small sampling of Augustine's reflections on participation. In each of these four examples, however, participation describes powerful expressions of creaturely union with God. At the same time, however, this language names the more fundamental dissimilarity between God and creatures. Any conjunction between God and human creatures is premised upon – to return to Webster's language – an ever-greater dissimilarity.
Conclusion: Augustine on the church's participation in Christ
How, then, should we understand the relation between Augustine's doctrine of participation and his doctrine of the church as part of the totus Christus? While Augustine rarely uses the language of participation to describe the church's relation to Christ as part of the totus Christus, what we find in the use of grammatical-exegetical techniques is closely aligned with the way in which the doctrine of participation functions in his thought. It is not the case that grammatical categories of distinguishing Christ and church are non-metaphysical.Footnote 41 Rather, grammatical accounts of the totus Christus correlate with Augustine's doctrine of participation as ways of safeguarding the distinction between God and creatures in a way that makes possible an account of their close union.
Put differently, Augustine's understanding of participation should not be understood as disturbing the strong emphasis on the church's union with Christ. Rather, it provides a rich theological canvas in which the church's sharing in Christ can be drawn with bright colours. For Augustine, participation language involves naming the creature's ontological subordination to God – its creation out of nothing, its dependence on God. Participation stresses that creatures are not immutable or eternal, but that they gain existence and growth in likeness to God by cleaving to God. Augustine can say rather plainly that Christ is ‘whole’ even without the ecclesial body; he deigns, however, to be whole by including the church (Sermones 341.12). He also uses a variety of grammatical strategies to texture the difference between Christ and the church. The church and Christ speak in one voice. They are one in will, not in nature. This emphasis aligns with the grammar of participation Augustine deploys, conceptualised in pro-Nicene and anti-Manichaean contexts and extended in a theology of deification and the eternal Jerusalem's sharing in divine immutability. Both grammatical conceptions of the totus Christus and the doctrine of participation articulate the way in which the church remains in intimate union with Christ without thereby threatening the creator–creature distinction. Even where the eternal city is said to share in God's eternality to such a degree that its fundamental mutability is checked, it retains its creaturely status, since its immutability is a gift received by cleaving to God. Indeed, part of the condition of receiving this gift is maintaining the humble recognition that it does not have these qualities in itself but only through participation.
To return to the criticism of the totus Christus with which we began, we are now at a place to recognise how the doctrine may be better understood amid contemporary retrieval theologies. This study presents both challenges and opportunities for retrieving Augustine's doctrine of the totus Christus. If proponents draw on Augustine to proclaim the deep communion that occurs between Christ and church, while detractors worry that it obscures the creator–creature distinction, Augustine himself provides important resources for navigating these poles via recourse to the doctrine of participation. The Websterian warning that the totus Christus doctrine must guard against blurring creator and creature is answered by Augustine's doctrine of participation, which upholds, not threatens, the creator–creature distinction. The doctrine of participation grounds the ontological alterity of God and God's creatures, while still providing the metaphysical foundation for naming their intimate union. Augustine meets Webster's critique by arguing that the creature's participation in Christ never amounts to a transgression of the fundamental gap between creator and creature. In this atmosphere, participation affirms the ‘ever-greater dissimilarity’ between God and creation, even as it lays claim to a bold affirmation of the church's intimate communion with its holy Lord.Footnote 42