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Jordan Peterson wrestles with the wrong God
We Who Wrestle with God
by Jordan B. Peterson | Allen Lane | 2024, 576 pages
We Who Wrestle with God is Jordan Peterson’s fourth book, succeeding the lesser known Maps of Meaning: The Architecture of Belief (1999), and his two very successful works: 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos (2018) and Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life (2021).
The genesis of the present work seems to be the 2017 series The Psychological Significance of the Biblical Stories, which was delivered both live and as podcasts. The objective in this series was much the same as this book: to analyse archetypal narratives in the Book of Genesis as patterns of behaviour vital for personal, social and cultural stability. The present work is to be followed by a similar work based primarily on the New Testament.
The book however has not been well received.
It has been panned by some critics, for example James Marriot in The Times (“Repetitive, rambling, hectoring and mad) and Helen Coffey in The Independent (“I gamely try to drag my brain kicking and screaming through the tangled mixture of waffle and bluster, needlessly archaic language and sweeping, unequivocal statements posing as absolute truths”).
It received gentler but actually more pointed criticisms such as those of John Gray in the New Statesman (“Peterson’s self-made God is a symptom of the modern Western malady, rather than a cure for it.”) and Rowan Williams in the Guardian (“This is an odd book, whose effect is to make the resonant stories it discusses curiously abstract”).
Over the course of the 500 pages of We Who Wrestle with God, Peterson looks at the Bible stories of Adam and Eve, Cain and Abel, Noah, Abraham, Moses and Jonah, and draws out the meaning or the moral of each story, the moral generally being that without moral rectitude one is doomed. These Bible stories are generally paralleled with ancient mythology, in particular the Babylonian Enuma Elish creation myth.
The morals which Jordan Peterson draws from these stories are ones which Jordan Peterson has courageously defended, even at the cost of his own health, in the face of huge opposition: the damaging nature of porn and sexual licence, the good of monogamy, the need for society to be founded on some sacred principles, and that boys are boys and girls are girls.
Nevertheless, as one works one’s way through the book it becomes clear that while the values he defends are quite Christian, his underlying worldview is certainly not.
Firstly, he is a radical pragmatist. His fundamental guiding principle that “what is most deeply necessary to our survival is the very essence of ‘true’.” He recognises, for example, the uniqueness of the Bible, not on account of an intrinsic sacrality, but because it has produced the West.
Secondly, he firmly adheres to the bizarre doctrine of the collective unconscious espoused by Carl Jung, whereby the human mind is biologically hard-wired with a series of fundamental archetypes or primal symbols which act as “deep cultural coding” or “maps of meaning” (to use Peterson’s own phrases), presumably to assist with one’s survival and flourishing. These archetypes manifest themselves in all kinds of human artefacts: mythologies, literature and cinema … and the Bible.
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Peterson is in essence subjecting these iconic Bible stories to a Jungian reading. Virtually all the characters, actions and things which appear here become “mythological tropes” which can be interpreted with breath-taking ease. We are told that the six days of creations “means” that life “will constantly move from good to very good”; that “created in the image of God” “means” the human spirit is “the mediator of becoming and being”; and so on.
There is virtually nothing which resists to a Jungian interpretation: why the ground is cursed, why Adam and Eve clothe themselves, why they are expelled from paradise, why the cherubim have flaming swords, why Abel kept sheep, who are the mysterious Nephilim of Genesis 6:4, what the rainbow represents (“it represents the ideally subdued community”, in case you were wondering); what is the significance of Lot’s backward glance, of David fighting Goliath, of the burning bush, of the staff of Moses…. The Jungian gaze can also penetrate the meaning of extra-Biblical human productions: the Pietà, Harry Potter, Superman, Cinderella’s glass slippers, Obi-wan Kenobi’s light saber and so on, and so on.
And so, one is left with the impression that the original text will mean “whatever he wants it to mean” as one critic has put it.
Peterson gives scant importance to the literal meaning of the texts he examines. In approaching the Bible in this way, he violates the first classic rule of scriptural exegesis: that the literal meaning of the text is foundational and primary. Subsequent “spiritual” meanings, such as morals to be drawn, or allegories to be identified must be firmly founded on the literal meaning. And this is where the hard work of exegesis begins. This requires a knowledge of things like the original language of the text, historical context, parallel texts, the genre being used, etc. None of this is to be found in We Who Wrestle with God.
In his zeal to uncover Jungian archetypes, Jordan Peterson pays little attention to the scholarly task of unearthing the literal meaning of the texts in question. No bibliography is provided but a cursory look at the table of notes at the end of the book is quite revealing. Of the almost 600 reference notes at the end of the book, only are handful are to works of scriptural exegesis, and virtually none of these would appear in a work of serious scriptural investigation.
Most of the commentaries he references date from the 19th century and are available on biblehub.com. Where it comes to matters psychological on the other hand, the references are abundant and scholarly, being taken from academic works and journals. This just reinforces the impression that the scriptural texts and stories serve as mere cyphers – nothing in themselves but deriving their importance as a code for some stoic moral tale or cultural symbol.
But what is more serious, his rush to allegorise the texts means that he misses some of the fundamental lessons they convey.
Perhaps the most egregious case is in his interpretation of the Genesis account of the creation of the world, which he repeatedly treats as equivalent to other ancient creation myths, such as that in Babylonian Enuma Elish, or from Chinese Taoism, leading him to render the Hebrew term for “the deep” or “the waters” (tohu wa bohu) in Genesis 1:1 as “The Dragon of Chaos”, when, according to the Jewish scripture scholar Umberto Cassuto, it simply means the “chaos of unformed matter”.
For Peterson all these creation accounts tell the same story: creation involves a never-ending battle between a spirit of order and a sinister spirit of chaos, between good and evil. While the good spirit generally has the upper hand, the spirit of chaos is always lurking at the root of things, waiting to attack.
The problem with this is that the Genesis account says no such thing, in fact far from echoing other creation myths Genesis is attacking them! It presents a vision of creation profoundly at odds with all other creation myths. In the words of the great Umberto Cassuto:
Then came the Torah and soared aloft, as on eagles’ wings, above all these notions. Not many gods but One God; not theogony, for a god has no family tree; not wars nor strife nor the clash of wills, but only One Will, which rules over everything, without the slightest let or hindrance; not a deity associated with nature and identified with it wholly or in part, but a God who stands absolutely above nature, and outside of it (Umberto Cassuto, A Commentary on the Book of Genesis: from Adam to Noah).
How wrong Jordan Peterson is to draw an equivalence between these competing accounts of creation. In Genesis there is anything but “the eternal dynamic of order and chaos”. But this is not a merely technical error. Ideas have consequences, and ideas about the constitution of all of creation have far-reaching consequences.
Peterson’s conception of creation is closer to the Manichaean than the Judeo-Christian. Throughout the entire book looms the spectre of “hell” (it is mentioned 117 times in the book), “the abyss”, “existential catastrophe”, “an endless wasteland”; creation and life is a burden that we have to “hoist … on our shoulders”; our relationship with God who “calls us out into the terrible world” is – as the book’s title suggests – a titanic struggle.
One finishes the book drained.
Peterson’s God is the depersonalised “eternal spirit of Being and Becoming”, “the unity that exists at the foundation or stands at the pinnacle” and is real “insofar as its pursuit makes pain bearable”. It is pragmatic to follow the dictates of this “God” (“the best strategy of defence”) but utterly absent is the sense that God might love us, and that we might even be able to requite this love. Anything that might suggest such a relationship is always sanitised through the use of scare quotes; there can be no belief, faith and religion but only “belief”, “faith”, and “religion”.
Sadly, for a book whose subtitle is “Perceptions of the Divine” one is struck by the sheer absence of God.
Forward this to friends!
Rev. Gavan Jennings is a priest of the Opus Dei Prelature. He studied philosophy at University College Dublin, Ireland and the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross, Rome and is currently the editor of Position Papers.
Image credit: Jordan Peterson website
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Emberson Fedders commented 2024-11-27 18:20:17 +1100What on earth is a “Creation scientist”?
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Jürgen Siemer commented 2024-11-27 17:43:53 +1100I have seen many videos from Jordan Peterson, and I feel a lot of sympathy for him. He has helped a lot of people.
It is obvious that he himself fights with God.
You need to see, where he is coming from: he has an education in psychology / psychotherapy and he started his journey, it seems, from an agnostic or atheistic position.
He has seen a lot of suffering, and he honestly wants to help those, who suffer from certain things that are fundamentally wrong in our society, especially young men and women.
He is suffering himself.
But why all this suffering?
Sometimes suffering can be too much, it seems, and it can really become difficult to stay upright and protect one’s own dignity.
Remember that many of us suffer: diseases, accidents, divorces, child deaths, bancruptcies, being ridiculed or mocked by employers, friends and neighbors. There are many problems, pain and suffering, even if we do have the luck to live in a country not at war.
There are many people who begin hating the creator, whom they accuse of allowing all this senseless pain.
Jordan seems to struggle with that, too, yet is drawn to the truths in the Bible.
Who of us has the strengths and dignity of Hiob, to follow his example in reality, even if we understand intellectually, that Hiob is right.
Mr Peterson is, like us, on a journey. He is going into the right direction.
So let us pray for us, and him. We do need God’s guiding hand to stay on course. -
Angela Shanahan commented 2024-11-27 15:09:38 +1100I am so glad that this discussion has gone to the really important things in life.
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Steven Meyer commented 2024-11-27 14:37:05 +1100mrscracker, sounds like a dreadful waste of perfectly good ice cream and gin.
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mrscracker commented 2024-11-27 14:09:37 +1100Instant coffee is pretty dreadful but it’s what my parents drank at home. Neither one cared much for coffee in the first place. My mother preferred tea. My daddy doctored his morning coffee with ice cream and gin. I guess that’s one way to disguise instant coffee.
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Steven Meyer commented 2024-11-27 13:08:36 +1100Angela Shanahan, your Italian father is obviously a wise man :)
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Steven Meyer commented 2024-11-27 13:06:15 +1100Patrick Obrien
I don’t “believe in” evolution. I believe the evidence.
I know so-called “creation science” is junk.
But I’m not going to argue the point with you. Once you’ve thrown yourself down that rabbit hole there’s no coming back. -
Angela Shanahan commented 2024-11-27 12:23:46 +1100Instant coffee, is poison!..or so my italian father thought. Grim disciplinenis a very apt description of Jordan petersen’s philosophy. he doesn’t seem to be able to crack a smile at all. ( or as my great granny would say, “looks like he dropped a fiver and picked up thre’pence”
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Trotsky Lives! commented 2024-11-27 11:35:10 +1100Personally, I am quite OK with instant coffee, as long as it’s hot and has caffeine. It is certainly far cheaper. I think that Jordan Peterson would agree with me. His first rule of life is “Stand up straight with your shoulders back.” Drinking instant coffee seems consistent with that rule. I googled “Jordan Peterson” and “instant coffee”, however, and I was unable to confirm this. Perhaps other readers could shed some light on the subject.
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Patrick Obrien commented 2024-11-27 11:08:53 +1100Steven Meyer. Your point is understood. I used to believe in evolution, too. Frankly, the work of Creation scientists destroys the possibility that evolution can be true. Start studying them for a few years. St. Augustine did not have the benefit of their research. Too bad my Catholic Church has surrendered;
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Steven Meyer commented 2024-11-27 10:59:57 +1100Malcolm McLean
Heaven is not made of water. It’s made of whisky.
Hell is made of instant coffee. -
Steven Meyer commented 2024-11-27 10:59:04 +1100Patrick Obrien
So how do you interpret scripture?
1600 years ago Augustine of Hippo, one of the most revered Church Fathers, understood it cannot always be taken literally. You should read:
On the Prudence and Openness in Interpreting Sacred Scripture, when Biblical Passages deal with our Knowledge of Nature
https://inters.org/augustine-interpretating-sacred-scripture
Quote:
Now, it is a disgraceful and dangerous thing for an infidel to hear a Christian, presumably giving the meaning of Holy Scripture, talking non-sense on these topics; and we should take all means to prevent such an embarrassing situation, in which people show up vast ignorance in a Christian and laugh it to scorn.
End Quote
Evolution is a fact. I suggest you deal with it and follow Augustine’s advice.
More recently Pius XII weighed in with:
DIVINO AFFLANTE SPIRITU
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS XII
ON PROMOTING BIBLICAL STUDIES, COMMEMORATING
THE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF PROVIDENTISSIMUS DEUS
TO OUR VENERABLE BRETHREN, PATRIARCHS,
ARCHBISHOPS, AND OTHER LOCAL ORDINARIES
ENJOYING PEACE AND COMMUNION WITH THE APOSTOLIC SEE
https://www.vatican.va/content/pius-xii/en/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-xii_enc_30091943_divino-afflante-spiritu.html
Also from the Catholic Catechism:
CCC 110 In order to discover the sacred authors’ intention, the reader must take into account the conditions of their time and culture, the literary genres …
See also CCC 85, 112, 117, and 159
In other words, the Catholic Church, unlike the Evangelicals, has never embraced biblical literalism. Even before Augustine, another Church Father, Origen of Alexandria, expressed doubts about a literal Garden of Eden.
So why does an atheist Jew like me have to teach you guys about your own faith? -
Patrick Obrien commented 2024-11-27 03:27:48 +1100So much makes sense when the outdated concept of evolution is discarded. Try doing that, Jordan.
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Malcolm McLean commented 2024-11-26 23:52:31 +1100Hello Angela. It’s doctor. And I know Hebrew. Heaven is made of water. That is why we are saved by the blood and water which flowed from Jesus’ side and on to the land. You can’t go to Heaven unless you are baptised with water.
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mrscracker commented 2024-11-26 23:23:54 +1100Dr. Peterson is on a journey and good for him.
Many of us have mistaken ideas about God and faith. Archbishop Fulton Sheen said something about people who hate religion only hate what they think religion to be. Jordan Peterson doesn’t hate God or faith. He’s still on a path of discovery. God bless and protect him along the way. -
Anon Emouse commented 2024-11-26 23:12:08 +1100I don’t know, anyone who puts himself in a medically induced coma to kick a benzo addiction should be treated with a healthy degree of skepticism
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Christopher Szabo commented 2024-11-26 19:46:27 +1100I would go easy on Jordan Peterson. I do not see him as a fellow Christian, because he refuses to state his faith, which the very first Apostles already had to do, then the early Martyrs, and down to today. I do, however, see him as an ally, and we need allies!!
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Angela Shanahan commented 2024-11-26 18:21:37 +1100Jordan Petersen is an academic psychologist. How else , but through Jung would he describe the biblical stories. he is saying he is ‘wrestling’ with the idea of God. give the guy a break!
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Angela Shanahan commented 2024-11-26 18:19:10 +1100Dear Mr, Maclean- codswallup
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Malcolm McLean commented 2024-11-26 18:17:13 +1100Heaven is made of water. And on many occasions in Bible, God brings first creation, then salvation, through water. Genesis 1, the flood, the parting of the Red Sea, and the parting of the Jordan, all part of the theme.
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Emberson Fedders commented 2024-11-26 15:36:19 +1100I think it is pretty obvious that Jordan Peterson is not religious in any commonly accepted sense of the word. I suggest that he pretends to be some sort of ‘academic Christian’ so as to enlarge his readership base with a more credulous audience.
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