Digital Logos Edition
“He descended into hell.”
Hans Urs von Balthasar, one of the most influential theologians of the twentieth century, placed this affirmation of the Nicene Creed at the heart of his reflection on the world-altering events of Holy Week, asserting that this identification of God with the human experience is at the “absolute center” of the Christian faith. Yet is such a descent to suffering really the essence of Catholic belief about the mystery of Holy Saturday?
Alyssa Lyra Pitstick’s Light in Darkness—the first comprehensive treatment of Balthasar’s theology of Holy Saturday—draws on the multiple yet unified resources of authoritative Catholic teaching on Christ’s descent to challenge Balthasar’s conclusions. Pitstick conducts a thorough investigation of Balthasar’s position that Christ suffered in his descent into hell and asks whether that is compatible with traditional teaching about Christ.
Light in Darkness is a thorough argument for the existence and authority of a traditional Catholic doctrine of Christ’s descent as manifested in creeds, statements of popes and councils, Scripture, and art from Eastern and Western traditions. Pitstick’s carefully argued, contrarian work is sure to spur debate across the theological spectrum.
“As Christ truly died, His soul was separated from His body, and each went to its proper place after death, the body to the tomb, and the soul to the abode of the dead.1 The Descent is also implicit in the article on the Resurrection, since it is from both the tomb and the abode of the dead that Christ arose.” (Pages 9–10)
“Christ voluntarily allowed Himself to be handed over to the death” (Page 36)
“One may ask, ‘From where did He rise?’ The answer is simple, ‘From the tomb and from where a soul goes after death.’ The text cannot refer only to the resurrection of Christ’s body from the tomb. To say ‘He rose’ is to refer to the Person, not just His body. Although separated from each other in death, both the body and soul of Christ remained united to the divine Person of the Word.8 But Christ’s soul was not ‘where’ His dead body was, but separated from it; otherwise, His body would still have been alive. Therefore, since the creed says, ‘He rose,’ and He refers to the Incarnate Word, it professes that Christ rose in both His body and His soul.” (Page 11)
“For the soul of a living person is in fact located where it acts, i.e., coextensively with his body. We can see how the soul is located by its acts by considering that a person’s soul no longer acts in an amputated finger, and so must no longer be present to it. Likewise, a separated soul is located where its powers are in act, and so it can rightly be said to be in that place.” (Page 11)
“There one sees Christ freeing Adam and Eve from their graves, and the broken gates of hell beneath His feet. In the West, this doctrine of a triumphal Descent of Christ was held universally until the Protestant Reformation, and then also afterward by the Catholic Church. It remains, then, part of the heritage of Christians of all denominations.” (Page 1)
Pitstick’s book is a challenge to those who regard Balthasar as an entirely trustworthy theologian, ranking with the greatest masters of the Tradition. She subjects his understanding of Christ’s descent into hell to a searching critique and shows it to be seriously at odds with the teaching of the fathers and Doctors of the Church.
—John Saward, associate lecturer, Blackfriars, Oxford University
This severe, but forcefully argued, study will have to be borne in mind in all future assessment of Balthasar’s theological doctrine.
—Aidan Nichols, John Paul II Memorial Visiting Lecturer, Oxford University
Alyssa Pitstick gives no quarter. She notes instances in which Balthasar, in her view, misrepresents scriptural, patristic, and magisterial texts and simply ignores aspects of the tradition inconvenient to his argument. . . Pitstick has thrown down a gauntlet that other theologians should not ignore. . . . Thanks to Pitstick, a new and lively debate over Balthasar’s achievement is almost certainly under way.
—Richard John Neuhaus, First Things
An impressive book. Pitstick has had the courage to challenge a major theological reputation head on, and has done so with great skill. The result is the most sustained and detailed criticism of Balthasar’s theology yet published in English, and a work of acute argument in its own right.
—New Blackfriars
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