| Mapping the Brain: A Pathway to God by Paul W. Walaskay Dr. Walaskay is assistant professor of religious studies at the University of Rochester, Rochester, New York. This article appeared in the Christian Century March 7, 1979, p. 246. Copyright by the Christian Century Foundation and used by permission. Current articles and subscription information can be found at www.christiancentury.org. This material was prepared for Religion Online by Ted & Winnie Brock.        For
you created my inward parts; you knit me together in my mother’s womb [Ps. 139:13]. These lines are reminiscent of a rather quaint
natural theology. But there are rustlings offstage as a cast of scientists
discreetly parts the curtains to reveal some stunning new implications for
natural theology. Over the past 40 years neurological
researchers (most notably Wilder Penfield, and more recently Harry Whitaker at
University at Rochester) have been mapping the functional terrain of the brain.
They have isolated areas of the cerebral cortex that control our various
sensory perceptions and motor functions. They have also found that each
hemisphere (right and left) of the brain specializes for the accomplishment of
distinctive types of mental activity. The work of the left hemisphere is primarily
logical thinking, language ability and mathematical functioning. It processes
information linearly and sequentially. The right hemisphere is primarily
responsible for our orientation in space, for artistic endeavor and holistic
mentation. It seems, to process information in a more diffuse way
than does the left hemisphere and is able to integrate scattered bits of
seemingly disparate data. “If the left hemisphere can be termed predominantly
analytic and sequential in its operation, then the right hemisphere is more
holistic and relational, and more simultaneous in its mode of operation”
(Robert Ornstein, The Psychology of Consciousness [Viking, 1973], p.
68). In everyday life most of us rely heavily on the
analytic left hemisphere. Our Western culture, in fact, is primarily “left
hemispheric” in its application of rational thinking to almost every facet of
human existence: science, economics, politics, education, religion, law (the
French word for law, droit, comes from “right hand,” the hand that rules
and is controlled by the left hemisphere). The East, on the other hand, has
been guided in the main by the right hemisphere, with its nonrational view of
life. I have noticed in Israel, for example, that there is no such thing as
queuing up at a bus stop or a ticket office -- one often feels fortunate that
bus drivers bother taking the same route each time or that tickets are printed
at all. The lateralization of the brain provides a
surprising and curiously close analogue to religious experience and expression
it suggests an interpretive tool which can with caution be applied to the
classical theologians. Neurological research reveals a sophisticated yet sound
biological basis for speaking of religious life. And the religious experience
of such a writer as the apostle Paul bears naïve yet eloquent personal witness
to what we are discovering about the brain. IThroughout the history of Christianity
theologians have struggled to convey their bimodal perception of religious
life. Paul of Tarsus was the first Christian theologian to write
autobiographically about his religious experience and to name the power that
held together two very diverse sides of that experience. Paul wrote a strange statement in II Corinthians
5:13: “If we are insane [exestemen], it is for God; if we are sane [spohronoumen],
it is for you.” Reinhold Niebuhr once quipped: “It is almost impossible to
be sane and a Christian at the same time.” I suppose that all of us contain
mixed measures of sanity and insanity, of madness and reason. The passage cited
above enticed me to leak more closely at those passages where Paul uses the
language of madness (nonrational, right hemispheric) and reason (rational, left
hemispheric). Paul’s “sanity” language clusters around two
sections of his Corinthian correspondence: I Corinthians 1-4 and II Corinthians
11-12. In I Corinthians he wrote: Christ [sent me] . . . to preach the gospel and
not with rational wisdom [sophia logou], lest the cross of Christ be
emptied of its power. For the word of the cross is folly [moria] to
those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God
[I Cor. 1:17-18]. Paul proceeded to be more specific about how his
teachings came across to the Corinthians: I did not come proclaiming to you the testimony
of God with sophisticated arguments or wisdom. Rather I decided to know nothing
among you except Jesus Christ and him crucified. For I was with you in much
weakness, fear and trembling; and my speech and my message were not persuasive
words of wisdom, but the demonstration of spirit and power, that your faith
might not rest in the wisdom of men but in the power of God [I Cor. 2:1-5]. Here he was recalling his own insecurity and
inability to communicate the gospel effectively. At least some in the church of
Corinth simply dismissed him as an idiot. In the II Corinthians passage Paul also linked
foolishness with this own difficulty in speaking the gospel. This time he was
not defending his message but his apostleship. I wish you would bear with me a little
foolishness [aphrosunes]. Do bear with me! . . . I think that I am not
in the least inferior to these superlative apostles. Even if I am unskilled [idiotes]
in speaking, I am not in knowledge [gnosis]. . . . I repeat, let no
one think me foolish; but even if you do, accept me as a fool [aphrona], so
that I too may boast a little [II Cor.11:1-16 Again Paul felt on the defensive and forced to
flaunt his credentials: I must boast;
there is nothing to be gained by it, but I will go on to
visions and revelations of the Lord. I know a man in
Christ who fourteen years ago was caught up to
the third heaven . . . and he heard things that cannot be
told, which man may not utter. On behalf of this
man I will boast, but on my own behalf I will not
boast, except of my weaknesses;. . for when I am weak, then
I am strong [II Cor. 12:1-10).   Once more Paul was relating the trouble he had
with speaking to his being perceived as a fool; yet on the other hand he
“saw” more things than others, he had revelations and visions in
abundance, and for him that was the ultimate sanity, a thing to boast
about. Abundance of visions and lack of speech, sanity and insanity, weakness
and strength -- significant contrasts in the Pauline personality. “I am sane
for you, but crazy for God”; rational among people but nonrational through
encounter with divinity. “When I am weak, then I am strong.” There is strength
in weakness, and weakness in strength. IIThe recent literature about the brain’s
hemispheric specialization has led me to some surprising insights about Paul’s
complex personality. Physiologically the two hemispheres “communicate” with
each other through a bundle of neural fibers called the corpus callosum. We
term the integration of the modes of awareness “consciousness,” which involves
such aspects as an inward awareness of sensibility (a system of internal
perception), an awareness of self, and an awareness of unity (the fusion of
internal and external stimuli). This implies that emotion and thought,
intuition and cognition are so integrated that the mind works as one entity.
The complex brain is able to differentiate, compartmentalize and also relate
various diverse pieces of information. It is clear from his
autobiographical statements that Paul was able to move freely from one mode of
consciousness to another, from the left hemisphere to, the right, and back
again -- from law to grace, from mystical experience to ethical evaluation. And
in his bimodal religious experience he discovered an internal unity: “By the
grace of God, I am what I am” (I Cor. I:10). The experience of Christ in him,
Paul’s Christ-mysticism, put him in touch with his primordial being, his
essence, his self. The revelation of Christ had come to him in his mother’s
(Gal. 1:15-16). For Paul, Christ was the power of God, the dunamis of
being. And he meant “being” not only as a general ontological term but
“specifically with reference to himself: “Christ in me, the power of God in me,
the dunamis of my being.” Paul experienced the power of being by
the grace of God:  “My grace is sufficient for you, for
power is made perfect in my weaknesses [the weaker side, the right hemispheric
experiences],’ ‘that the power of Christ may dwell in me; . . . for when
I am weak, then I am strong [II Cor. 12:9-10] Paul also experienced an internal unity in
Christ; he was more than a Pharisaic Jew, more than a Hellenistic Jew; from his
conception he had been “in Christ” and as an adult he realized that being “in
Christ” meant having the power of God, the power of Being itself. And nowhere
was this power more clearly self-evident to Paul than in his weaknesses, in his
inability to verbalize (weak left hemisphere) and, his many visions (strong
right hemisphere): “I have seen things that are not utterable” --  the ineffable vision, the mark of the
Christ-mystic. In his quest for sanity he had become insane for God. The Chilean psychiatrist Claudio Naranjo
suggests that  the relationship between the quests for sanity
and enlightenment might be seen as that between the minor and the major
mysteries of antiquity. While the former aims at the restoration of “true
man,” “original man,” the goal of the latter was the transcendence of the
human condition, the acquisition of some degree of freedom from the needs or
laws that determine ordinary human life by assimilation to a radically different
state of being [The Heating Journey (Pantheon, 1973) p. 17]. Naranjo’s description of the mystic fits Paul
rather well. Paul’s mysticism is a quest for both sanity and enlightenment;
he recovers for himself the original, primal, true person, and he enters a
radically new state of being, the new creation. Paul can say: “By the grace of God, I am what I
am.” For him it is Christ who gives unity to his bimodal, existence.
Paul is strong and weak, sane and insane, 
foolish and wise, and it is his mystical experience of the risen Christ
that allows him to live beyond this bimodality. There is one final binary aspect to Paul’s
Christ-mysticism: ecstasy and ethics. The Corinthians were not yet ready for
the full impact of Christ-mysticism; they were not yet “spiritual persons, but
babes in Christ.” On one, hand the experience of “being in Christ” was truly
esoteric and ecstatic. This aspect of Christ-mysticism the Corinthian
Christians knew well. They were making bold claims about their many spiritual
gifts -- tongues, prophecy, healing -- all magnificent, all praiseworthy, all
useful. Nonetheless, anyone who settles for the
trappings of mysticism is at best “a babe in Christ” For Paul that which
completes the experience of being in Christ is love, agape. To possess
both the ecstatic experience” and agapeic love renders a person “mature.” The
mature Christian, therefore, takes ethics (left hemisphere), as seriously as
ecstasy (right hemisphere). Combining the two locates the Christian “in Christ”
and makes possible the Imitatio Christi. IIIThe post-Pauline patristic literature provides
ample variations on the bimodal theme so clearly manifest in Paul’s writings.
Toward the end of the second century Tertullian chided: “What has Jerusalem to
do with Athens, the Church with the Academy? . . . A plague on Aristotle who
taught dialectic!” For Tertullian the regula fidei of itself was
sufficient for Christian life. More complicated speculation was deemed useless. Fortunately, few theologians have heeded this
lonely Latin voice, choosing rather to struggle with the complexity of human
experience and expression. With no intention to oversimplify the complexity of the
theologians I cite, I will briefly state the duality present in their
conceptual worlds and how each duality is resolved. Throughout his life Augustine struggled with
“the Inner and the Outer.” God, for Augustine, was totally present as the
inside of the inside and at the same time totally present beyond us as wholly
other. He is Truth that resides in nature and beyond nature, and this Truth may
be reached by two paths: faith and the inner light. Since pure reason is of
itself too weak to discover Truth it needs to be aided by the written record of
faith. Since eternal wisdom is beyond words, one has a glimmering of wise
insight by paradoxically going beyond one’s own soul into the deep and silent
realm of interiority. This two-sided searching by means of biblical study and
inner quietude is resolved in our personal and collective memories. “The mind
is not large enough to contain itself,” says the great bishop, but memory, more
encompassing than mind, is the timeless dwelling place of God. Augustine, undaunted by Tertullian, ushered in
the millennial rule of scholasticism. The great king of the realm was, of
course, Thomas Aquinas, who used Aristotle’s scepter to tip the theological
world away from subjective Neoplatonism as interpreted by Augustine. The
“angelic doctor” arrived just as Christian thinkers were choking on a large
piece of conceptual roughage called “the twofold truth.” Being astute observers
of the world, the sophisticated thinkers could claim a truth in natural
phenomena that clearly contradicted a divine truth revealed in Scripture. But
then it was necessary to remind oneself that one was, after all, a Christian
and accordingly must admit that the revelations of Christianity are also true
even if they are nonsense. It was Aquinas who said there is not simply one
convoluted path to Truth, full of logical lacunae and nonsense, but two
distinct paths: each beginning with its own premise, each following its own
logical progression of thought, each ending in Truth. One can argue on the
premise of faith to the God of faith, or one can begin with nature and
ultimately arrive at a concept of the God of nature -- and, indeed, they are
one and the same God, Being (ens) itself. Natural and revealed theology
need not stand as contradictory opposites or be homogenized as a delicate
synthetic substance susceptible to breaking down at the least challenge.
Aquinas saw that at the end of these two long paths, which came together
somewhere near the horizon, was Truth, and in that Truth resided God the prime mover
of all thought and faith. I would suggest that the biological analogue of
the brain’s lateral specialization can be a useful hermeneutic tool in
understanding the lives and contributions of such complex theologians as Paul,
Augustine and Aquinas (not to mention Ignatius of Antioch or Martin Luther).
Through the two hemispheres of the human brain, each making distinctive
contributions to human activity, a fresh way is provided for comprehending the
traditional tension between faith and reason, ecstasy and ethics, eros and
agape. In “split-brain” religion, these poles of human experience and
expression are neatly compartmentalized, often mutually exclusive, and
sometimes demonic and destructive. In the mature person, with the mind of
Christ in which there is no divided cognition, the active and the receptive
provide for a flowing fullness. I would not want to confuse biology with
divinity. I do not mean to suggest that one group of brain cells mapped out by
researchers and excited by electrodes will produce visions of God. But my
reading of the classical theologians shows that they share common loci of
reason and revelation. Further, these loci bear a striking functional
similarity to the specialized tasks of the left and right hemispheres of the
cerebral cortex. While we cannot take literally the relationship of the brain
and belief, the analogy does provide a valuable way to order what we and others
have thought and experienced.  |