The Emptied Christ of Philippians December 15, 2015 By Collegeville Institute John P. Keenan Wipf and Stock, 2015 Visit this title on the publisher’s website » Before the Gospels were written, long before the creeds of the Church were hammered out, Christ followers in Philippi sang a hymn of the Christ who, “although he was in the form of God . . . emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, being born as are all humans.” But this emptied Christ never fit neatly into later theologies of the church, shaped by Greek thought, concerned with being and essence. In Philippians, Paul struggles, stumbling over his own awkward words to express his hope, his eschatological faith, that he might “gain Christ and be found in him . . . and participate in his sufferings by being conformed to his death, if in some way I may reach to what goes beyond the resurrection from the dead.” Might we better comprehend Paul’s inchoate, even mystical, faith in Jesus Christ with aid from a less empirical world of thought than our western heritage offers? Might the thinking of Mahāyāna Buddhism guide us toward an awareness of a truth in the Christian faith that is more profound than anything reducible to historical “facts,” or even to human language? Like this post? Subscribe to have new posts sent to you by email the same day they are posted.