Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy |
|
Cronos
and his Children
Envy
and Reparation
Mary Ashwin
Chapter 1: Evil and Sin
Religions
and mythologies, which can be seen as the precursors of depth psychology, are
concerned with the presence of evil in the world and how it affects humanity.
Many now regard psycho-analysis as a religion and it behoves us to look at ideas
and attempts to understand how evil came into the world, and from there to look
at notions of envy as a sin as well as an important and potent factor in
psycho-analytical thinking.
The need for humans to try to understand evil is apparent in many myths.
The difference between moral and physical evil is not easy to delineate.
Although moral evil could be perceived as the product of an act of free will,
involving human responsibility alone, the almost magical conviction that the
human heart is contaminated, so to speak, from outside leads to social blame
being internalised as guilt. Even when there is a feeling of sin of which we are
the originators, there is the sense of being overwhelmed by a power that
corrupts us.
Moreover, each of us finds evil already present in the world; no one
initiates evil but everyone has the feeling
of belonging to a history of evil more ancient than any individual evil act. This strange experience of passivity, which is at the very heart of
evildoing makes us feel ourselves to be the victims in the very act that makes us guilty (Ricoeur,1987: 200).
The
seeming impossibility of not becoming mired in the swamp of sin that sucks us in
despite the struggle to extricate ourselves is eloquently put by Saint Paul,
'For the good that I would I do
not; but the evil which I would not that I do' (Romans,7;19).
Although physical evil can be recognised as the effect of natural causes
there is also the sense of there being an element of punishment. This is
particularly noticeable in sickness when plagues and epidemics cut swathes
through populations and groups. (The AIDS epidemic is an interesting contemporary example of this.) The
sickness attacks the individual and makes him suffer physically and emotionally. The illness, which was outside is now inside, and is acting aggressively
against the body and is experienced both as a malevolent power and to do with
one's own unwholesomeness. From there it is easy to see illness and death as a
punishment for evil.
Later, behaviour that transgressed tribal mores was seen as the result of the same evil force which occasioned other disturbing
physical manifestations. Later still this would be visualised as demons. Demons
were '... originally connected with disease, the most obvious form of ill, and
later, as a conscience developed, with moral qualities. Numerous
disease-metaphors describing sin are used
in the Bible and elsewhere and such
imagery has persisted down to this day (Bloomfield, 1952:28). Physical and moral
evil were conceived as different
aspects of the same principle. Physical ills were frequently explained in terms
of moral turpitude. From the earliest times evil was linked with disease and in
some ways still is. Robert Burton,
writing in 1621 in his treatise The
Anatomy of Melancholy talks of envy both as a sin and a disease.
A major cause of suffering is the violence
one human inflicts on another. To do evil almost always directly or indirectly
inflicts suffering on another. The overlapping of evil perpetrated and evil
suffered prevents them from being entirely separate. The function of myth is to provide a 'because' to the question 'why'. The function of psychotherapy is to explore the tangled web of perceptions, experiences and notions
that infect individuals with unbearable
feelings of unworthiness, sinfulness and culpability.
Myth, in narrating how the world
began, recounts how humanity
reached its present unhappy and uneasy state.
'Theogeny, cosmogeny, and anthropogenesis therefore form a single
narrative chain that scans the "great time" of origin. Order,
ambivalence, and omnitemporality are thus the major features of myth, owing to
which the mythical explanation can claim to provide an all encompassing framework for evil (Ricoeur, 1987:201).
In
earliest times man was pitted against the elements and large creatures; he must
have felt a sense of impotence. How was he to explain and attempt to control
physical problems that beset him? In order to combat his sense of helplessness
he resorted to magic. Magic was a way of being an active part of cosmic
functions rather than being at their mercy. The objects that were acted upon
were never indifferent; some acts were tolerated by the gods, others were
reserved for them alone and were taboo.
Manipulation of taboo was dangerous and required a ritual for subsequent
purification. The transgressing of a taboo was often necessary and unavoidable
and there would be no guilt. The offender had to be cleansed through magical
acts. There was no implication of personal culpability as there would be through
disobeying expressed divine will. 'What is dreaded by the "primitive"
is not offending a transcendent being but upsetting the cosmological order.
Thanks to myth, he knows what is taboo, and thanks to magical rites, he knows
how to do it: he confesses and expiates' (LeCocque,1987:326).
The difficulty was that although the killing of animals was necessary for
survival, they were also worshipped; their forgiveness had to be invoked before
the kill. LeCocque sees the further
reparation as magical, Bolle (1967) holds that although the successful hunter would be honoured and purification rites
ensued there was a consciousness of man's intrinsically sinful state as well as
awareness of individual wrongdoing.
Creation Myths
There
are many myths of paradise and the fall which could indicate both a sense of
individual transgression as well as an inherited or inherent 'sinful state'.
Perhaps the earliest
chronicled
creation story is Sumerian. It is usually placed in the second millennium B.C.
Campbell (1968) recalls there is a Sumerian seal from 3500 B.C. depicting the
serpent, the tree and the goddess giving fruit to a visiting male. In the legend
of the Huluppu-tree,
'In the first days, in the very first days...
In
the first days when everything needed was brought into being' (Wolkstein
& Kramer,1984;4),
Innana,
daughter of Nanna the Moon God and
Ningal the Moon Goddess planted a tree in her garden. The tree grew and in its
boughs the Anzu-bird roosted, in its roots the serpent 'who could not be
charmed' rested and the 'dark maid Lilith built
her home in the trunk'(p.6). They
would not leave despite all Innana's tears. Not until Gilgamesh came to the
garden; he cut down the tree and killed the serpent; the bird and Lilith fled.
Innana and Gilgamesh are joined and Innana comes into her own as Queen of Heaven
and Earth.1 However, Lilith and the serpent, as personifications of dark, disruptive
forces, which were thought of as evil, were now abroad in the world. In the second millennium B.C., the Egyptians were emerging from their
devotion to the Osirian cult, '... an awesome, terribly dark affair of massive suttee burials...'(Campbell, 1968;348),
and moving into the religion of the god of light, Re. In this system, there had
been since antiquity a conscious principle, Atun. He alone without feminine help
fertilised himself and produced the first divine couple. Very early on Atun was
associated with Re the god of the sun. Nevertheless the Egyptians remained
preoccupied with death as their temples, tombs and monuments show. Pyramid texts
(c.2350-2175 B.C.) show an assessment of a man's moral behaviour so the
divinities could judge what kind of after-life he was worthy of. Later (1500
B.C.) The Book of the Dead described
the journey of the soul after death through the underworld and showed the
judgments of Re, the guardian of truth and goodness. There was also the belief
that a man's soul was weighed at death against a feather; sinful souls tipped
the balance. Already there was the notion that the life lived on earth
influenced the nature of the life of the hereafter. Acts not committed in order to
display virtue were listed; this is one of the earliest examples of sin listing.
In the biblical account of creation (Genesis 2 and 3) God creates the
world and places Adam and Eve in it to be fruitful and multiply. The only
stricture is that they may not eat of the fruit of the tree of knowledge, if
they do they will die. The serpent
approaches Eve and tells her she will not die if she eats the fruit, but that
her eyes will be opened and she will be like God, knowing both good and evil.
Eve, desiring the fruit and the wisdom it will impart eats and takes some fruit
to Adam. God curses the serpent and promises enmity between him and his seed and
woman and her seed hereafter. In this tradition the serpent is the symbol of
temptation and evil. In tempting Eve what were its motives ? It would seem the
serpent envied God and his ability to create a world that was perfect and wanted
to disrupt and spoil the innocence and perfection; maybe it envied God his place
high above in Heaven when the serpent moved along the ground; maybe it envied
Adam and Eve their uncomplicated, artless happiness. Adam in taking the fruit Eve offers is guilty of pride in wanting to be
like God.
Here we find a theme similar to that of the Greek tragedies: man's pride
(hybris) prompts him in Promethean fashion to assert himself against Fate (moira),
with the result that retribution (nemesis) comes upon him for his deed'
(Anderson, 1976:175).
Orphism
and Gnosticism
The
Orphic mysteries were perhaps the first pagan religion that incorporated a sense
of sin not dissimilar to that of Christianity. 'The Orphics regarded the soul as
celestial in nature, as a spark of
Dionysus imprisoned in an evil body. They felt that purification, which the
Orphic ritual provided, was essential' (Bloomfield, 1952;8). The idea of
purification, so central to Orphism, could only have taken hold if disease and sin were thought of as being closely connected.
If the necessary expiation was not
achieved through the rituals the soul transmigrated to another body. The goal
was to escape the cycle of death and rebirths, thus releasing the soul from
carnality and becoming true untainted spirit. Much of Orphism evolved into Gnosticism.
Orphism had an influence on Plato, and, Bloomfield asserts, although
Plato was not a dualist he opened the door to dualism. Bloomfield suggests that
while there is evil, some type of ethical and metaphysical dualism is necessary.
Aristotle however was less concerned with the metaphysics of evil; his ethical
thought is based upon his belief in the importance of desire and his concept of
virtue as a mean and evil as an extreme. Ontological dualistic tendencies rooted
in spirit-matter opposition were strengthened by the Gnostics. Basically they
believed that the world, matter, the body were inherently evil.
Judaism had a different view of evil, for, naturally, metaphysical
dualism could not be tolerated. The whole world was potentially good, evil was
rebellion against God's law, and essentially inner, though often personified as
demons and evil spirits. However, as the Gnostics noticed, if God created
everything, then, ipso facto, he must
have created evil as well.
Unless there is an absolute dualism, which is difficult to stomach, the
reality of evil is, in effect, denied; for, assuming one good, omniscient, and
omnipotent God, evil must only, in the last analysis, be appearance. A strictly
logical mind could see that. And strictly logical minds, driven by the evil
around them, did (Bloomfield, 1952:11).
The Gnostic answer was that the world
was wicked and created by an evil power. This unrelenting, bleak hopelessness
had to relieved, however, and a redeemer found. The
Christian Gnostics found him in Jesus, the messenger of the transcendent God,
who came down to earth to save mankind. He is certainly not the son of Yahweh,
who was viewed as the evil creator, but his adversary. So there were two Gods, a
higher more serene God and Yahweh. The Yahweh of the Old Testament was too
petty, unpredictable and moody, too human to be the God. In this teaching the serpent was the divine instrument of God.
From the infinity of the realm of the higher godhead the divine serpent
fell, and this fall was due to the schemes of Yahweh, the creator of this fallen
world, which is a mixture of divine light and deepest darkness. For the God of
the Old Testament could not create the world from nothing but did so by
'engulfing a quantity of the light of the infinite true Father. This light, the
Spirit, he lured, conjured or ravished downward into Matter where it is now
entrapped' (Campbell, 1968:156).
The second descent of the serpent was voluntary and was to strike back at
Yahweh by creating Adam and Eve to break his commandment. Yahweh retaliated by
delivering the Ten Commandments to Moses, an 'impossible set of moral
laws'(p.156). The serpent's reply was to return yet again in the form of Jesus
who was not himself a redeemer but a vehicle for the redeemer. So the 'heresy'
of the Gnostics was that in order to achieve eternal life the laws of Old
Testament had to be disobeyed. Thus, in this tradition, it is necessary and
sanctioned to break the law, to sin. Jesus
stirred the implacable hatred of the Pharisees and Sadducees by his new
interpretation of ancient laws. Saint
Paul wrote, 'Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law'
(Galatians,3:13). But not from guilt.
The
Soul Journey
With
that brief summary of some of the ideas of evil prevalent in early times, we
come to sin and the concept of the seven most important sins. Bloomfield's
thesis is that the seven cardinal sins, which appeared in Christian theology in
the fourth century, are a product of the eschatological
belief which is called the Soul Journey, and was central to Gnosticism. The Soul
Journey was a particular manifestation of the Otherworld Journey which is part
of the cultural inheritance of humanity and is spread throughout civilisations. What is common to all the Otherworld Journeys is that it is the journey either of a living person or, post-mortem, of a
soul into the underworld to receive teaching , information or revelation.
In the Sumerian myth, Innana Queen of Heaven and Earth goes down in the
lower world to attend the funeral of her sister's husband. She goes though seven gates losing her clothing at each gate until she
stands naked before her sister Erishkigal Queen of the Underworld. Erishkigal, inconsolable in her loss and perhaps envying Innana her
living, potent husband, and upper
world glory, strikes her dead; Innana is hung on a hook as rotting meat for
three days and nights. When she
does not return after three days and nights her faithful servants start to
gather help for her rescue.
The Book of the Dead contains accounts of journeys in the underworld. In Greek mythology there are
several examples; Orpheus and Eurydice, Persephone, Aeneas all undertake these
journeys and are irrevocably changed by them. Today these accounts of Otherworld Journeys are often understood in terms
of individuation, a rite of passage on the way to maturity.
Of
course, Jesus' descent into Hell after his death and before his resurrection
three days later is central to Christian dogma. Jesus' descent to Hell was to
set free those held captive by their sins and introduces the teaching of
atonement for sins.
Dante's Divine Comedy is
perhaps the most famous example of the Otherworld Journey in Western European
literature. He, with his companion Virgil, visits Hell and meets the souls of
the damned. In Purgatory they meet souls who are not damned nor, as yet,
virtuous enough to go straight to Heaven. The doctrine of Purgatory is not
scriptural but is, Dorothy Sayers says in her introduction to Purgatory, 'of early Patristic origin and seems to have been first
clearly formulated by the Alexandrian Fathers' (1953:54).
Dante clearly held to an early, more pure doctrine that purgatory was a
place of where sins were purged by cathartic pain. This, unlike Hell, was not a
place of punishment. It was later that the debased and bureaucratic view of
Purgatory became accepted; the sale of indulgences and the ability of the
mourners to buy expiatory masses for their loved ones to shorten their time in Purgatory which in some way led to the Reformation.
Dante arranges Purgatory into seven cornices and each one is devoted to
the purging of what are usually called the seven deadly sins. However, less
misleadingly, they are also called the cardinal or capital sins which are
recognised by the church as the fountain-heads from which all other sins
ultimately spring. They were not only serious moral offences but gave rise to
other sins.
Interestingly, in Hell, Dante met a victim of envy who in despair
committed suicide for which he was damned (Canto xiii). But it is in Purgatory,
on the second cornice, he meets the envious whose eye-lids have been sewn up
with wire (Canto xxxiii l.70); the eyes which could not bear to look on the joy
of others. This could also be an allusion to the awful power of the envious or
evil eye.
To return to Bloomfield's idea of the seven cardinal, or capital sins,
being a remnant of the dogma of the Soul Journey. The Gnostic belief in the Soul
Journey was to provide a solution to the problem of evil and to bridge the
barrier of spirit and matter. Briefly, the Soul Journey is about the individual
soul which emanates from God or from an upper world and descends through seven
or eight spheres of planets gaining the characteristics of each until it enters
earth in the newborn infant. At death the soul leaves the body and ascends to
the Godhead or upper world, having given back to the seven spheres their
elements. 'So, although the Gnostic conception of the maleficent planets faded
out, the seven cardinal sins remained in the orthodox theology of the Church, as
a remnant of all this Gnostic and Hellenistic speculation, unknown to the
faithful'(p.36).
The listing of sins was an ancient and widespread practice; for example the Egyptians pyramid texts has lists of sins not committed.
The naming of the sins was believed reduced their power; once named a sin can be
subject to control and expulsion. This is not unlike the analytic practice of
encouraging patients to 'name ' their fears and anxieties in order to reduce the
power of the unexpressed or
unconscious phantasy. The early church fathers in their writings were concerned with lists of
sins. Tertullian (160-220) was the first to use the term deadly sin and also he
gave authority to the use of the number seven. Bloomfield cites Adverssus
Marcionem iv,9 as the reference.
The
Theology of Sin
Having
explored ways in which our ancestors tried to explain why there is evil in the
world and the origins of the concept of the seven deadly or cardinal sins, we
come to look at sin and how it is viewed from a theological viewpoint. Sin is more than a transgressing of accepted social mores, there is the element of displeasing a higher power, and
from this sense of failing to act correctly comes a sense of unease or guilt.
Both Christianity and Judaism place the emphasis firmly on wilful disobedience
to explain why humanity sins. Sin is seen as a revolt against the will of God,
it is a disruption of what is religiously sanctioned or required. Sin always
indicates the result of a power of evil its causes are human pride,
insubordination and self-centredness. Roman Catholicism has long held that evil
is power outside man and into which power he falls but by the grace of God.
In Judaism, in biblical Hebrew, there are about twenty words for sin. One
commonly used is hata which
means to miss the mark, to fail. Rabbis rarely talk of sin in the abstract but
focus on specific sins; the rabbinic term for sin is averah from the root avar, passover; sin is seen as a rejection of God's will.
The Islamic view is that sin is divided into two categories; dhanb,
which is a failing, shortcoming or limitation and the consequence of which is a
sanction and ithm which is a wilful
transgression and incurs punishment. It is the three semitic religions that are
concerned with sin, though in varying degrees. Christianity gives it the most
attention; Islam the least.
Buddhism and other eastern religions produce concise ethical rules,
teaching non-violence, truthfulness, not stealing, not mis-using sex and the
restraint of selfishness. Some include the concepts of karma and or
reincarnation. Karma is an idea
that one's life is the fruit of one's own actions. Reincarnation suggests that
the spirit will return to earth after death again and again in order to clarify
and release it from limitations, which are the equivalent of sin, until a delivery from egoism is attained. In this respect this belief system is
very akin to Gnosticism.
Original
Sin
'...
how comes it that men are tried with suffering, and above all oppressed with
their own inescapable shame?' (Mackintosh, 1912:531) Theologically, the answer
lies in the doctrine of original sin God gave man free will, set him in paradise and told him not to eat the
fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. Adam, having free will, ate the forbidden fruit. In exercising his
God-given free will he disobeyed God and sinned. He sinned and all humanity is rendered sinful. '... human beings not only share a corrupt nature, which they obtain by
inheritance, but they also share in Adam's guilt. The solidarity of the human
race is such that all are guilty because all were mystically present in Adam
when he sinned' (Urban, 1995;127). However,
Christianity teaches that as God's creature, man yearns for union with God which
can only be achieved by seeking perfection; a perfection which, because of
original sin, is impossible.
Life is full of paradox, it is part of the human condition. The
philosophy and practice of psychotherapy is shot through with paradox, yet the
guilt and ensuing suffering that emanate from striving for the impossible are
more than paradoxical, they are what provide psychotherapy with its endless
stream of unhappy, despairing patients. In psychological terms, the weight of
apparently inherent culpability could be to do with the persecutory flavour of
envy and the effect that has on the immature and weak ego leading to precocious
guilt in the infant. (Stein, 1990 and Spillius, 1993).
As the early church expanded and became institutionalised so it became
necessary to formalise notions of sin. Sin was seen as an offence against God; a
word or deed or desire in opposition to the eternal word of God. Saint Augustine
of Hippo (354-430) formulated the prototype of the doctrine of original sin in
order to counteract the attractive heresies of Pelagius who believed that man
was inherently good (Against Secundinus the Manichean).2 Specifically, Pelagian heresy averred that man could attain salvation through
his own efforts, whereas Augustine maintained that the supernatural gifts that
man was originally endowed with were lost in the fall. Thus man suffers from
inherited moral degeneracy and moreover has inherited the legal liability for
Adam's sin. From these evils he can only be saved by divine Grace. Augustine
seems to have been an early adherent of infant observation noting, 'Myself have
seen and known even a baby envious; it could not speak, yet it turned pale and
looked bitterly at its foster-brother (397:7). Later, in 1547, the Council of Trent formalised the
definition of original sin and is now seen as, 'The hereditary sin incurred at conception by everyone being as a result
of the original sin of choice of the first man, Adam' (Peter, 1966:780).
In neither Islam nor Judaism is there a concept of original sin. In the
Islamic traditions the responsibility for the fall and the expulsion from
paradise is not Adam's but Satan's. Although, in Judaism, rabbis do not see sin
as hereditary - that man's sin is inevitable because of Adam's disobedience -
their view is 'far removed from liberal optimism regarding man's inherent
goodness' (Encyclopedia Judaica, p.1591). Indeed the rival schools of Hillel and
Shammai spent over two years debating whether it would have been better for man
not to be created because of his propensity to sin. It was decided that it would
have been better if he had not been created but since he had been 'let him
investigate his deeds' (ibid). An early presentiment of psychoanalysis as the
Jewish science perhaps.
Biblical
Envy
In
Milton's Paradise Lost Satan envied God and wanted to spoil Heaven and take
it over. He is foiled, so he and the other fallen angels construct Hell as a
rival to Heaven and assume the powers of death instead of the forces of life and
seek to destroy what God had created. Long before the fall sin, in the form of
envy, had entered the world, and this is noted in the Apocrypha, 'By the envy of
the devil death entered into the world' (Wisdom,2:24).
After the fall, in the Biblical myth, things went from bad to worse. Adam
and Eve had two sons and one brother murdered the other. The reason for this was
that Yahweh favoured Abel's offerings of firstlings from his flock and had no
regard for Cain's agricultural offerings: the start perhaps of the friction
between the nomad and the farmer. So first Yahweh wished to keep humanity in a
state of innocence or as perpetual children because he was jealous of his
excellence and secondly in rejecting Cains's offerings he naturally stirred up
sibling rivalry, jealousy and envy.
Envy was recognised as a dangerous and treacherous emotion by the writers
of the Bible, though in the instance of Jacob it is condoned. Jacob is
considered the ancestor of Israel; he achieved that position through trickery.
We are told Esau and Jacob fought even before they were born,in the womb. 'And
the children struggled together within her'(Genesis 25:22). Esau was born first,
though Jacob had hold of his heel. As firstborn Esau would have all the rights
of primogeniture and his father's blessing. Jacob envied his position and stole
his brother's birthright and the blessing. Many would view these as acts of
envious duplicity but the theologian Anderson writes, '... Jacob shrewdly
tricked his brother out of his birthright (25:27-34), and later tricked him out
of their father's final blessing (Gen. 27)' (1976;183).
There are many other accounts; Rachel envied her sister's fecundity
(Genesis 30) and Joseph's brothers envied his favoured position in his father's
affections and his coat of many colours; they were also incensed by his dreams
showing that he would be made ruler over them, which Joseph, hubristically, kept
telling them (Genesis 37). However Joseph prospered through his brothers' envy
for, having been rescued from the pit where his brothers had cast him, sold and
taken to Egypt, through his interpretations of Pharaoh's dreams attained great
office - prime minister of Egypt (Genesis 41).3 Proverbs speaks of envy being the 'rottenness of the bones'(14: 30), and later
'wrath is cruel, and anger is outrageous: but who is able to stand before envy?
(27:4)
In the New Testament there is the parable of the labourers in the
vineyard (Matthew, 20:1). 4 Saint Paul exhorts the early Christians against envy (Romans 1:29; Philippians 1:15; 1 Timothy 6:4). and in his letter to Titus points
out the noxious effects of envy had on himself before his conversion, 'For we
ourselves were... living in malice and envy, hateful and hating one another
(Titus 3:3).
The
Seven Deadly Sins
Theological
writers were much concerned with sin; they wrote copiously about it and in great
detail. Aquinas in Summa Theologica deals
painstakingly with every aspect of sin and admits that whereas there are seven
capital sins there are only four capital virtues. Sin does seem to be more
interesting than virtue, particularly when the chief virtue is cited as
Prudence. (Summa Theologica Q lxi article 2).
Theologically there are differences between deadly or mortal sins, and
cardinal or capital one, but to the layperson they need not be important.
Bloomfield (1952) asserts the muddle originated in the Middle Ages. However for
my purpose I shall use them interchangeably and use the terms to mean the seven
most serious sins.
The concept of the seven cardinal sins is a product of the Hellenistic
age, an age which is of great importance in the understanding of the bases of
both Christian and Mohammedan civilisations. The Hellenistic age can be taken as
after the death of Alexander in 323 B.C. to the fall of Rome and the Western
world in the fifth century. 'The history of the seven cardinal sins in the
Middle Ages begins with a pupil of Evagrius,
Cassian , whose list is of great significance' (p.60).
The number of deadly sins in various listing varied between four
and eight. Cassian's list, which Bloomfield asserts came from Egypt, leaves out invidia (envy) and usually listed eight sins (p.71). Bloomfield also says that a
hundred years later Gregory the Great (540-604) in Moralia discusses the capital sins in his exegesis on Job xxxix 25. It was he who added invidia to the list. The debates, at that time, on the most heinous of sins centred
around pride and avarice. Pride, the sin of rebellion against God and of
exaggerated individualism and avarice which as Saint Paul declared was the root
of all evil (1 Tim. 6:10). The list usually stood as pride, envy, anger,
gluttony, sloth, lust and greed or
avarice.
Envy
as a Sin
Jacob's
Well is a
fifteenth century manuscript written
as an allegory which sees the sinful body of man as a pit full of oozy water and
mire which has to be cleansed painstakingly by degrees until it becomes a 'fit
receptacle for the limpid waters of Grace' (Brandeis,1900:vi). It describes each
of the seven deadly sins and suggests an antidote; for envy it is Love.
Enuye is werst of alle synnes. why? for opere synnes are contrarye to on
vertew, as pride contrarye to lowness, leccherie is contrarye to chastite, coueytise is contrarye to largenesse, & so
of opere synnes. but enuye is contrarye to alle vertuys & to all goodness.
perfore enuye is not only wyked, but it is the werst of alle synnes.(p.82) 5
The
writer goes on to particularize the areas where envy works. Envy has three
corners: the heart, the mouth and the deed. Each corner is said to be three feet
in breadth, which are three examples of envy. The heart's are, judging falsely,
thinking badly of another's goodness and being jealous of another's welfare. The
examples of envy in the mouth are slander, bitterness, which means to
exaggerate, and to spread calumny and backbiting. Lastly envious deeds are,
restraining a man who commences well, ruining a man who tries to do right, and
discrediting the name of a good man.
Traditionally envy is second to pride in the list of seven deadly sins,
though Burton (1621) thought it was incurable except by a miracle and cites
Saint Basil (Homilia de Invidia) as having the same pessimistic view.
Psychotherapists and their patients must sometimes fear that this is so, though
Klein is confident that by 'analysing over and over again the anxieties and
defences bound up with envy and destructive impulses, progress in integration
can be achieved ‘ (Klein 1957:231).
At first glance, envy seems to differ from other sins because they
each point to a goal in itself not evil, except when indulged to excess.
Gluttony is hunger gone wild for example. Lust is sexual desire run rampant.
Anger is self-assertion enraged. In contrast, envy presents itself as feeling
demeaned by another's good fortune and wanting to belittle the other's good to protect oneself. Envy
wants to make something alive into something dead (Ulanov, 1983: 91).
Pride was given its pre-eminence because it was thought to be the first
sin to be committed and which led to all others; Adam's sin was pride. But was
it? Was Adam guilty of pride or
envy?
Envy is, seminally, about discrimination. It must be remembered that,
initially, before the sadness at another's joy, before the need to spoil, the first glimmer of apprehension is the recognition of something good; that
acknowledgment may be painful and instantly contaminated by wanting it for
oneself, hating it, or needing to spoil it, but the nascent energy is
discrimination; sifting, sorting all the stimuli that enter the awareness and knowing this is good and, therefore, desirable. Were Eve and Adam, in reaching for the
fruit and the knowledge of good and evil, proud in wanting to be like God, or
envious and covetous in desiring denied consciousness?
Central to pride is the impetus towards an end, a desire, a need, an
ambition to be, to achieve, to have something which one does not already own.
This sounds very like covetousness which, as I have already said, is close kin
to envy in that there is the desire for something, but covetousness lacks the
need to destroy and despoil which characterises envy. The Lord Buddha announced
that the root of all evil and suffering in life was desire. Desire is perhaps
another face of covetousness. It seems there is quite a lot of weight behind the
contention that it is envy from which all other sins breed.
Perhaps pride holds its place at the head of the league table as it is,
surely, pride that leads to questioning the will of God and a violation of this
is a definition of sin. However it could be looked at in another way: to
question God's will is a step towards putting humans on a more equal footing
with God. This can seen as pride but could it not also be seen as emulation? But
to emulate God is seen as prideful rather than loving admiration for in
emulating God we forget our lowly station.
Davidson (1912) in his contribution on envy in The Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics links it with emulation,
noting that, although it is often taken as a synonym for envy, it is very
different from it. Emulation is
neither selfish nor malevolent and, essentially, it is not associated with
hatred. It is rather an 'exhilarating emotion, drawing forth and strengthening
our activity, and it is the condition of progress and healthy development in the
individual, and it is the result of aspiration or the pursuit of an ideal'.
It could be said that God was none too sure of his ascendency and that is
why he was so jealous as he frequently told his people. However, Ulanov writes,
Here was a God who did not envy his creatures as Zeus did, for example. This God loved his flock, and his wrath was aroused only when they were
unfaithful to him. He was a jealous God but not an envious one. He grew angry
out of love, not out of a wish to hurt or belittle (1983;135/6).
Zeus punished Prometheus for intervening on behalf of humanity and
stealing fire. Zeus in keeping fire
from humans is akin to Yahweh withholding knowledge from Adam and Eve. So
Prometheus' role is similar to that of the serpent in making the chasm that
divides God from man less absolute. The line between envy and emulation is a
thin one. Wanting to raise humans nearer to God's infinite superiority can be
seen as envious; envy finds it hard to tolerate difference from an inferior
position. According to the Bible
the history of the world started with an act of rebellion against God. The
vengeance that followed is awesome.
Man is a creature, related to the ground and responsible before Yahweh.
This is his God-given lot. Therefore, revolt against Yahweh is none other than a
revolt against man's humanity - a revolt that evokes the judgment of God. Man's
punishment is that henceforth he must live in suffering and anxiety, with the
threat of death hanging over him like a sword of Damocles (Anderson:p.175).
Adam
and Eve, and all humanity, are roundly cursed, 'Unto the woman he said, I will
greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception: in sorrow shalt thou bring forth
children... And unto Adam he said... cursed is the ground for thy sake: in
sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy life' (Genesis 3:16/17).
Repeatedly the Israelites are smitten with God's jealous vengeance when
they show any sign of turning away from him. But consider Job; a man who was
'perfect and upright and one that feared God and eschewed evil' (Job 1:1). God summons Satan and asks 'Hast thou considered my servant Job, that
there is none like him in the earth a perfect and an upright man, one that
feareth God and escheweth evil?' (Job 1:8) Terrible events overtook Job but 'in
all this Job sinned not nor charged God foolishly'(1:22). Jung, in An
Answer to Job, points out that at the time Job was written there were many
contradictory descriptions of Yahweh. Here was a
... picture of a God who knew no moderation in his emotions and suffered
precisely from this lack of moderation. He
himself admitted that he was eaten up with rage and jealousy and that this
knowledge was painful to him. Insight existed along with obtuseness,
loving-kindness along with cruelty, creative power along with destructiveness. Everything was there, and none of these qualities was an obstacle to the
other (Jung, 1979;3).
In
fact the Old Testament shows a God who is multi-facetted, containing both good
and evil. As Jung says he synthesises all the oppositions in his
totality. Christianity undid that with its insistence that God is entirely and
wholly perfect, and has been labouring ever since with the contradictions and
dichotomies that predication spawns.
2. Augustine, before he converted had been a Manichean which was
regarded as an heretical sect
by Christians. Manicheaism was founded in Persia and was based on a primeval conflict between
the realms of darkness and light. The Zoroastrians condemned the sect, though they too taught that the world was a
battleground of two equal gods , one the force of good, the other the force
of evil.
3.
There is an interesting tale in
the Arabian Nights, the Envier and the Envied in which a man is envied by his neighbour
and, like Joseph is cast into a hole in the ground , in this instance a
well. As a direct result of the neighbour's attempt on his life he becomes
acquainted with knowledge not otherwise available and through it becomes the
ruler of the land.
4.
A landowner went out early one morning to hire labourers for his vineyard;
after agreeing with them the usual day's wage he sent them off to work.
Going out three hours later he saw some men standing idly in the market
place and told them to join the others in the vineyard, telling them he
would pay them a fair wage. Off they went. The landowner went again at noon
and again an hour before sunset; each time
he found groups standing around with no work and he hired them with the same arrangement.
At sunset he told his steward to go and pay the men, beginning with those who came last and ending with the first. Those who had worked
but an hour were paid a full day's wage. When it was the turn of the men who
had started at the beginning of the day, they expected some extra payment
but were given just the same as all the others. The men were disgruntled and complained to their employer that they had sweated all
the day in the blazing sun and the late-comers had only worked for an hour.
The owner told them that he was not being unfair to them; they had agreed
the payment. If he chose to be generous and pay the last the same as the
first that was his business. He told them not to be envious because he was
kind.
5. The wording of the declaration that envy is the worst sin is
strikingly similar to Chaucer's.
Brandeis says in his preface to Jacob's
Well that, from the watermarks on the vellum of the manuscripts, he
reckons that it was written 1440. He remarks that neither the form nor the form of the book is original and there were numerous
penitential manuals in prose and verse of which The
Parson's Tale was one. Most were derived either directly or indirectly from Le
Somme des Vices et de Vertues by Frere Lorens. Chaucer was writing The Canterbury Tales from
1386 or 1387 onwards (Coghill 1982) and he died in 1440. So it is difficult
to know exactly where this insightful definition of envy originates, or
whether there was a sudden flowering in psychological understanding in the
collective unconscious at that time.
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