Gisela Fuchs, Auflehnung und Fall im syrischen Buch der Stufen
(Liber Graduum): eine motiv- und traditionsgeschichtliche Untersuchung
Robert A.
Kitchen
Sankt Ignatios Theological Academy, Södertälje, Sweden
Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute
George A. Kiraz
James E. Walters
TEI XML encoding by
Patrick Conlin
Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute
2019
Volume 22.2
For this publication, a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
license has been granted by the author(s), who retain full
copyright.
https://hugoye.bethmardutho.org/review/hv22n2prkitchen
Robert A. Kitchen
Gisela Fuchs, Auflehnung und Fall im syrischen Buch der
Stufen (Liber Graduum): eine motiv- und traditionsgeschichtliche
Untersuchung
https://hugoye.bethmardutho.org/pdf/vol22/HV22N2PRKitchen.pdf
Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies
Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute, 2019
vol 22
issue 2
pp 472–475
Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies is an electronic journal dedicated to the study
of the Syriac tradition, published semi-annually (in January and July) by Beth
Mardutho: The Syriac Institute. Published since 1998, Hugoye seeks to offer the
best scholarship available in the field of Syriac studies.
File created by Patrick Conlin
Gisela Fuchs, Auflehnung und Fall im
syrischen Buch der Stufen (Liber Graduum): eine motiv- und
traditionsgeschichtliche Untersuchung (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2012).
Pp. 423; €86.00.
Monographs on the Liber Graduum (Book of
Steps/Buch der Stufen) are still rare, although depending upon one's
language skills it is still humanly possible to read all the articles and
studies on this book. Gisela Fuchs' doctoral dissertation at the University of
Bonn has approached this enigmatic early Syriac work by an in-depth study of a
recurring cluster of ideas, images and references to the activity of Satan and
evil occurring throughout the corpus. Burrowing deep inside the language and
imagery of the Liber Graduum (LG), Fuchs unveils
surprising and often unnoticed dimensions in this anonymous collection. The
converse of the old adage can be true: by looking very closely at the individual
trees, one can better understand the forest.
Indeed, the references to Satan and his rebellion are, pun
intended, "legion." At first sight, the anonymous author's language about Satan
appears to be part of the biblical vocabulary employed heavily by him, but Fuchs
sees at play a more fundamental dynamic for the economy of the LG. Concentrating upon four m?mr? (Number
Seven: "On the Commandments of the Upright"; Fifteen: "On Adam's Marital
Desire"; Twenty-One: "On the Tree of Adam"; and Twenty-Three: "On Satan and the
Pharaoh and the Israelites") Fuchs identifies the central theme permeating LG as the argument and battle with Evil and labels the
author's persistent efforts to attain "victory over evil" as the summa theologica of the LG. The
title of this monograph, "Rebellion and Fall," reflects the nature of humanity's
struggle with Evil. The return to the lost Paradise of Eden by Adam and the
regaining of his original Perfection by means of apokatastasis, Fuchs nevertheless insists, is the Hauptthema of LG which prefigures the attempt
of the Perfect (gm?r?) of the LG
community to re-enter Eden.
The typology underlying this narrative is signified by the
relationship between Satan and Adam. Satan is the typos,
the Rebel who fell and was overthrown from heaven, who then becomes the teacher,
instructing and tempting Adam to obey him rather than God. Adam becomes the
student of Satan and obeys him, becoming the anti-type, for "Adam fell from
heaven with that same fall by which the Rebel had slipped and fallen" (m?mr? 21, section 18). "He (Adam/human being)," moreover,
"obeyed Satan and became Satan" (23.4). Fuchs traces the two variant traditions
which state that Adam "fell from heaven" (???) and "was driven out" (???) of
Paradise, noting that the two other principal characters in the biblical saga –
Eve and the Snake are considered by these traditions as "extras" who were not
essential in the ongoing drama. Adam wanted to be like God, and thus was induced
by Satan to enjoy eating with no mention of Eve's famous encouragement. Fuchs
could have cited here Philoxenos of Mabbug's memorable dictum from his Discourses that "the lust of the belly is the beginning
of all sin" (Discourse 10.60).
The literal and figurative nexus of this falling and eating is the
Tree in the Garden of Eden. Fuchs aligns the uses of a "Baumsatanologie" (21.1;
cf. Fuchs pp. 165-166) as sources of the fall and expulsion of Adam and Eve from
Paradise. They obeyed and learned from Satan, and so Satan is "personified" as
the Tree, from which people still eat. The author of the LG countered with a "Baumchristologie": people eat from "the Tree of
Life, that is our Lord" (20.7); "The good tree, in that world of light invisible
to the eyes of flesh, is our Lord Jesus" (21.2); "...the Tree of Life of the
Garden of Eden by which people are saved from death, this Tree being the
Life-giving Spirit..." (29.19).
Fuchs identifies a passage as a "hymn of the Fall of Adam" (15.7),
in which Adam watches the animals and desires to become like them sexually.
Hating the celibacy of the angels, he wants to become greater than they are and
to be like God, causing the angels great distress. Showing how the "imitation of
the animals" echoes Psalms 49:13 and 8:6, Fuchs then offers an excursus from
other sources on this tradition of humans watching the animals in order to learn
how to behave sexually.
This activity of animal watching is used several times by the
Author to illustrate the straying desires of Adam and Eve for sexuality and lust
and their lack of trust in God's providence. They hated celibacy or holiness
(qaddīšūtā), so God relented and allowed them to
marry. The couple did not realize that God possessed the ability and will to
eventually give them children without lust or sexuality. In this vein, the
Author recites the surprising tradition that "If all people desire to become
holy (i.e., celibate), I (God) would create for them children just as I made a
daughter for Adam from himself, without marriage and
without lust" (25.3; Syriac text, Patrologia Syriaca III,
737:26-740:2). This subtle insertion reflects the concept that Adam had in
essence given birth to Eve, by the agency of God and without sexuality (Adam's
rib), and therefore she was his daughter which itself is a prefiguration or
type of the Virgin Birth.
What the Author has been rehearsing throughout his writings, Fuchs
deduces, is a protological anthropology which presents the narrative of the
origins of human existence and the emergence and fall of Evil, a predominantly
negative and still functioning narrative. She identifies two early works that
provide similar tendencies towards such a protological anthropology as
background for the Author, the Apocalypse of Moses and
the Life of Adam and Eve. The former work appears to have
been translated from Syriac into Armenian and a Greek version is extant as well,
and the latter has some of its content in the Syriac Cave of
Treasures. How much access the Author would have had to these works or
knowledge of their traditions remains a question.
Fuchs' analysis and insight into this strong current in the LG of the origins and operation of Evil, along with the
pairing of Satan and Adam as type and anti-type in the Author's reconstruction
of salvation, demonstrate an intellectual curiosity and creativity that invites
the reader to look more deeply into this text. Her perception that these
traditions and motifs provide the primary hermeneutic for the entire work has
tremendous validity, especially as the practical theology and spiritual
direction of the Author towards the implementation of Perfection continue to be
deciphered.
A gentle note, nonetheless, about these "trees" which constitute
this "forest" is worth mentioning. Fuchs recognizes that the return of Adam and
his descendants to Perfection and re- entering Eden is the essential movement of
this work. The Author expends much time and energy presenting the nature of this
return to Perfection and how he believes it should be accomplished in this
non-Edenic world. The reason the LG is one of the most
important texts for early Syriac Christianity lies not so much in its
theological construction of the Perfect and Upright way of life, but in our
ability to read how this construction and movement was implemented, worked well
for a time, and failed perhaps miserably, and anonymously. The unique scenario
of the Perfect falling from Perfection, with the lowly Upright rising to near
Perfection in the Author's estimation, leaves behind much of the biblical
imagery, tradition history, and innumerable motifs employed, especially given
the virtual mid-sentence ending of m?mr? 30, in which the
fate of the Author and his community disappears from history. The "trees" Fuchs
has identified and classified tell us a tremendous amount about the character of
early Syriac Christianity and the influences at play upon it and especially the
LG, yet we still are straining to encompass the whole
forest of the LG in one glance.
Fuchs has provided a rich resource for the nooks and crannies of
the discourse in the LG. One gains a new appreciation for
the depth of learning and sophistication of that anonymous author, comprehending
more about his theological mind-set and worldview. Anyone who embarks upon the
study of this early Syriac work should find a place for this volume on their
desk at the beginning of their journey.