Tomáš Halík: A Theology for the Post-Secular

This article presents the work of Czech theologian and priest Tomáš Halík as a theology for the post-secular. The first section outlines three general post-secular themes woven throughout his corpus: the blessedness of spiritual seeking, a receptivity to the critical insights of atheism, and the affirmation of doubt and uncertainty as an integral feature of Christian faith. The second section then demonstrates what is distinctive about Halík’s contribution: his engagement with themes of both plurality and uncertainty in a single theological schema. I argue this is an apt response to the post-secular dynamics of the nova effect—as outlined by Charles Taylor and others—that is otherwise lacking in the literature to date.


Introduction
This article presents the work of Czech theologian and Roman Catholic priest Tomáš Halík as a theology for the post-secular.It is difficult to fully appreciate the contributions of Halík without knowing something of the biography that animates them.Halík participated as an active dissident under the Communist regime in Czechia during the 1980s. 1 He was persecuted by the secret police during this period and banned from university teaching due to being deemed an enemy of the regime.He was also involved in the Czech underground church and was ordained to the priesthood in secret. 2 To this day, following the Velvet Revolution and the collapse of the Communist regime, Halík remains an integral figure to the intellectual life of Czechia as the priest presiding over the Academic Parish of Prague.As both a scholar and pastor, he now navigates a post-Communist culture characterized by a widespread suspicion of institutional religion but a remaining openness to non-materialist accounts of reality and spirituality. 3And these unique life experiences-both extreme secularization under Communism and the spiritual ferment that has followed it-have profoundly shaped the post-secular theological focus of Halík.The term post-secular (like the term secular itself) is admittedly a nebulous one.Others have chosen alternative descriptions of what Halík contributes to the literature: "Tomáš Halík on Faith in a Secular Age" 4 or "Theology and an Age of Uncertainty." 5 But all these terms-"post-secular" or "secular" or "age of uncertainty"-ought not carry excessive weight.The theologian Graham Ward provides some helpful terminological guidance along these lines in a review of Charles Taylor's A Secular Age: The theologian does have a task [but one] quite different from the one presented to Augustine or Aquinas. . . .Whether we name where we currently stand "post-secular," "post-Utopian," "post-Christian" or the "age of authenticity" . . . the theologian is still called upon to articulate the grammar of the faith. 6is task of reimagining the "grammar of the faith" for our epoch is what this article suggests is characteristic of Halík's work.He interprets the message of the Gospel in light of shifting religious tides of Europe and the West-to read the signs of the times as he often describes it. 7In order to demonstrate this, the first section of this article examines three interlocking and related post-secular themes in his corpus: the importance of the searcher, atheism as an interlocutor, and the virtue of doubt. 8The second section then demonstrates what is distinctive about Halík's contribution: his engagement with themes of both plurality and uncertainty in the single theological schema.

Blessed Are the Distant
The first post-secular theme to be examined, "Blessed are the Distant," is a phrase coined by Halík to encapsulate a central thrust of his corpus: those on the margins of Christian belief-the uncertain, the doubtful, the reticent-are integral to the life of the church.This theme runs throughout Halík but is examined most extensively in Patience with God: The Story of Zacchaeus Continuing in Us. 9 Halík recounts how the story of Zacchaeus helped him interpret the emergence of swaths of new and hesitant religious onlookers in his own post-Communist context.In the midst of a post-Soviet religious revitalization, there also emerged the phenomenon of curious seekers, "those who were unwilling or unable to join the throng of old or brand-new believers, but were neither indifferent nor hostile to them." 10 He interpreted these Czechs as "Zacchaeuses," remaining in their fig trees and curiously appraising Christianity from a distance.Halík swiftly applies this paradigm beyond the confines of his own context to all seekers.He suggests that Zacchaeus might help us understand This article is therefore best construed as a partial interim report on his theology, subject to refinement upon more resources being made available and future publications.9. Tomáš Halík, Patience with God: The Story of Zacchaeus Continuing in Us, 1st ed.(New York: Doubleday, 2009).10.Halík, 3.  seekers in general, those on the margins across the various post-secular contexts in the West where institutional Christianity appears to be in decline.
Halík argues that a shyness or an "aversion to crowds" often produces Zacchaeuses, a suspicion that truth "is too fragile to be chanted on the street." 11He suggests that a reflexive aversion to overconfidence can sometimes accompany Christian proclamation.For others, reticence exists because, like the original Zacchaeus, "their house is not in order [and] changes need to be made in their own lives." 12But Zacchaeuses remain curious even with their reticence.This is what makes them Zacchaeuses after all.For all their desire to remain hidden, they nevertheless "sense the urgent moment when something of importance passes by them.It has a force of attraction, as it had for Zacchaeus, who longed to set eyes on Jesus." 13 For Zacchaeuses are not merely distant-they are distant onlookers.
Halík argues that Christians must themselves become Zacchaeuses if they are to address Zacchaeuses.Like the apostle Paul, we must be willing to "become all things to all" (1 Cor 9:22, NRSVA).This will require rejecting the peddling of "ready-made but often facile answers" and accepting the call of being "seekers with those who seek, questioners with those who question." 14his vocation is not reducible to a detached and utilitarian mission strategy.Halík argues it is a good in itself to embrace the position of seeker.He recounts a time he encountered the slogan "Jesus is the answer" scribbled on a subway station in Prague.It was also coupled with a response: "But what was the question?" 15Halík agrees with the rebutting sentiment.He argues: Answers without questions-without the questions that originally provoke them, but also without the subsequent questions that are provoked by every answer-are like trees without roots.But how often are "Christian truths" presented to us like felled, lifeless trees in which birds can no longer find a nest? 16e "confrontation of questions" restores "real meaning" to statements of Christian dogma.For truth happens through dialogue; answers are not the end process of intellectual searching, as if there was a problem that is now solved.Rather, questions thrust us back into the exploration of mystery, and thus "we must never abandon the path of seeking and asking." 17Zacchaeuses are a gift because they shift us away "from apparently final answers back to infinite questions." 18 11.Halík, 5. 12. Halík, 5. 13.Halík, 6. 14.Halík calls this emphasis a new or "alternative" liberation theology. 19In the same way liberation theology has demonstrated the value of interpreting Scripture from the vantage point of the poor, "we can now offer another, different hermeneutic rule": "It is necessary to read scripture and live the faith also from the standpoint of our profound solidarity with people who are religiously seeking, and, if need be, with those who experience God's hiddenness and transcendence 'from the other side'." 20This is an exhortation to see things from Zacchaeus's perspective, a position of "observation and expectation." 21He suggests this ought to foster within us a "prior interest" in people "on the fringes of faith"-those in the gray zone "between religious certainty and atheism" or "doubters and seekers." 22his new theology of liberation is refracted through an ecclesiological lens in Halík; he believes Zacchaeuses ought to shape the ministry of the church.For his "prior interest" in people "on the fringes of faith" is not classically missional, namely, an interest in mere "conversion" or helping the uncertain become more certain.Halík argues we must move away from "the traditional believers-nonbelievers paradigm to the new seekers-dwellers paradigm" of the church in our new age. 23McGrath helpfully demonstrates 24 that this paradigm has its origins in sociologists Robert Wuthnow 25 and Charles Taylor (more on Taylor in a moment). 26Halík "emphasises the importance of the 'fringe'-the liminal zone at the interface between the church and the world." 27He calls this elsewhere the "anteroom of the church." 28avel Roubík and Martin Kočí suggest Halík's position implies that "Zacchaeuses will never become standard parishioners." 29 examine the implications of his approach.How willing is Halík to leave marginal seekers unchallenged by the Gospel and the call to tether themselves in mutual love to a parish or Christian community?
But even if there is a prima facie contentedness with leaving Zacchaeuses outside the church and its blessings, Halík's account is multifaceted.Halík certainly believes this liminal fringe must always exist within the church-there always needs to be Zacchaeuses.But he does not suggest Zacchaeuses never move in or out of the "anteroom" of the church.Halík argues that the "need for teaching, for persuasion and conversion, and for providing answers to the questions of seekers" remains; 31 analogously, Jesus "healed the sick and led the hungry to be filled." 32The primary emphasis of Halík is simply that baptized dwellers must never lose the spirit of anteroom seeking.In this sense, Christians stand with Zacchaeuses even in their church membership.From their vantage point, we glimpse how God appears to marginal seekers and are gifted a "new, exciting, necessary, and useful religious experience." 33

Thank God for Atheism
This reading of seekers leads to a closely related theme in Halík: his engagement with atheism."Critical Atheism Helps [Christianity]," Halík succinctly argues. 34For the opposite of faith is not atheism but idolatry.He claims that "if atheism is simply a critique of theism, of a specific understanding of God, it can be useful to the faithful by reminding us that each human notion of God is merely like a finger pointing at the moon, rather than the moon itself." 35It can help us, in the terms of Wittgenstein, to not conflate the signifier and signified. 36he qualifier "critical" atheism is important because Halík does not affirm all expressions of atheism.This subtlety is a strength of his work.He avoids reducing atheism to an abstract monolith detached from its varied and particular expressions. 37or example, Halík rebukes the ideological atheism he encountered under Communism.He also explains that in his own Czech context many people call themselves atheists but are better described as "apatheists": "they do not even think enough about God to categorically deny his existence." 38ather, atheism as critical unbelief is where Halík finds an ally: the sharp and thoughtful atheism of someone like a Nietzsche or Feuerbach.This of course is not a novel idea.For example, Merrold Westphal offers a similar contribution in his essay "Taking Suspicion Seriously.""The atheism of suspicion [and not every form of modern atheism] can provide helpful conceptual tools for personal and corporate selfexamination." 39This kind of atheism, which "can fulfill an iconoclastic role, can be an ally with faith in faith's fight against caricatures and ersatz spirituality, against the human-all too human-images of God whose creation and worship has been forbidden by the biblical faith." 40he iconoclastic interlocutor of atheism pushes Christians back to what Halík often describes as the God of Good Friday or the God of Job. 41Halík believes that "a certain type of honest atheism," one that mourns "the tragedy of the world," might find resonances with these biblical pictures of God. 42For example, in the cases of Job and Jacob, we are shown that "God loves those who wrestle [and] quarrel with [him]." 43ence, the kind of atheistic protest that emerges from the tragedies of life is the kind of "wrestling" Christians must "integrate" into their own beliefs. 44alík believes Christians must learn to befriend or integrate the atheistic spirit within each one of us: Make him an accomplice and aid to our faith by allowing him to watch over our experience of divine transcendence, preventing us from getting too comfortable in the light of Mount Tabor, helping us not think we possess God when we next have a religious insight or experience his closeness-if we give him that important task, he can teach our faith to be humble.I pray, "I believe; help my unbelief, that it might guide my faith to ripen." 45e embrace of critical atheism purges idolatrous faith.
To be clear: Halík is not merely addressing atheists in this discourse.Christianity should learn from the "incomplete truth" of atheism too: "To use for its own benefit the fact that, during the modern era, it was subject, more than any other religion, to the purgative flames of atheist criticism." 46In essence, Halík is proposing a paradigm shift: rather than seeing atheism as an enemy to battle with in our post-secular age, it should be reinterpreted as a thorn in the side of Christianity.It is a grace-even if at times a thorny or painful grace-that might "awaken our faith from the complacency of false certainties" and refine misconceptions about the God we worship.

Little Faith
The borders between the two major themes explored so far and the next theme, "Little Faith," are blurred and porous in Halík.The idea that Christian faith is or even ought to be "little" or fragile, intermingled with doubt and uncertainty, is intimately connected to his receptivity to spiritual seeking and critical unbelief.But the theme is distinct enough in Halík's work to warrant particular attention, especially in Night of the Confessor: Christian Faith in an Age of Uncertainty.
Halík introduces the aim of Night of the Confessor in a way that aptly summarizes the impetus behind much of his theology: to take a stand against "facile belief." 47Halík opposes the kind of Christian faith that would be an anathema to a Zacchaeus, namely, "providing simplistic 'pious' answers to complex questions." 48The better way is to face complexity and doubt head-on.It is wrong to "conceal our crises . . .evade or elude them." 49Rather, by moving through them, we are remolded "into a state of greater maturity and wisdom." 50For crises of religion-both on the macro-scale of dwindling Western Christianity and the micro-scale of individual faith crises-are "enormous opportunities opened to us by God." 51 This theme, introduced at the start of Night of the Confessor, is picked up and expounded further in the chapter "Give Us a Little Faith." 52The title of this chapter is inspired by the Gospel passage Luke 17:5-7: "The apostles said to the Lord, 'Increase our faith!'He replied, 'If you have faith as small as a mustard seed . . ..'"Halík presents a provocative interpretative question: 53 "Isn't Jesus saying to us with these words: Why are you asking me for lots of faith?Maybe your faith is 'far too big.'Only if it decreases, until it is as small as a mustard seed, will it give forth its fruit and display its strength." 54Halík adds that, like a mustard seed, our faith might even need to fall to the ground and die to be reborn fruitful.In the paradoxical logic of the Gospel: it might be through the diminution of our faith that we find advancement.Here "little" faith is not synonymous with simplified or "childish" faith but quite the opposite: "The opposite of the 'little faith' I have in mind is actually 'credulity,' the overcasual accumulation of 'certainties' and ideological constructions, until in the end one cannot see the 'forest' of faith-its depth and its mystery-for all the 'trees' of such religion." 55McGrath rightly summarizes Halík's concern here: "One of the core challenges facing Christianity is the misguided quest for false certainties." 56alík argues that the alternative to certainty is that our faith must be crucified before it can be resurrected.This is because faith in its primal form and naiveté, often received in childhood or at conversion, is eventually confronted by the "multivalence of life": 57 complexity, paradox, and suffering shatter simplistic conceptions of reality.And yet many respond to confrontations with this multivalence by attempting to retreat to the security of their beginnings, "either the 'childish phase' of their own faith or some imitation of the Church's past." 58hese themes are picked up again later in Night of the Confessor in the chapter "Discreet Faith."It begins with Halík recounting a time he was invited to speak at a "mega-rally of young Christians" that he ultimately declined: "I have never felt at ease among religious enthusiasts." 59He proceeds to explain his hesitancy: "A touch of scepticism, irony, and commitment to critical reason as a permanent corrective to any tendency to superficial religious enthusiasm is . . .a prerequisite if we are not to drown out the real voice of God with our own whooping and shouting." 60As per the chapter's title, Halík's inclination is toward the importance of discreet faith.
The most serious objection Halík has to such events is "the brazenly casual way that people there trumpet out the great words of our faith through loudspeakers." 61For as Nicholas Lash argues, 62 "it is the tragedy of modern western culture to have fallen victim to the illusion (widely shared by believer and nonbeliever alike) that it is perfectly easy to talk about God." 63 Halík rejects the possible rebuttal that sound pedagogy involves starting with simplifications and building up to complexity. 64He suggests this is inevitably a "dumbing down" that often results in wholesale contemptuous rejection of religion later in life. 65hose that work in this "simplification industry" never deliver on the promise of the 55.Halík "next stage" that is needed when inevitably one encounters the "multivalence of life."Halík proposes an alternative model of discipleship in post-Christendom: from the beginning to the end of the pedagogical journey the disciple must be made aware that the God they are being put in touch with is the depths of all reality.When someone is "introduced into the faith they need to be told clearly that they are being introduced into a world of mystery and depth." 66And this is a theme-God as Mystery-we will reexamine in due course as central to his distinctive contribution to the post-secular discourse.

Nova Effect Theology: The Value of Halík amidst the Post-Secular
These themes in Halík are self-evidently apposite in a post-secular age.Halík ought to be commended for presenting them in an especially accessible and pastorally sensitive fashion.And devoting time to simply explicating these insights as I have in the first half of this article is a necessary task in itself given his relative underexposure in the Anglosphere. 67But one might nevertheless question what Halík contributes to the post-secular discourse that qualifies as particularly new or distinctive.For instance, there is already a range of constructive theological reflections about religious uncertainty. 68Neither is genial engagement with atheism alien to Christian thought. 69 But the second half of this article aims to demonstrate that Halík achieves more than merely transposing or popularizing the insights of others.I will argue that across his corpus-by engaging with the motifs of both uncertainty and religious plurality via the mystery of God-Halík provides a distinct contribution to an underexplored feature of the post-secular: a pervasive amalgam of uncertainty and plurality along the lines of what Charles Taylor calls the nova effect.I will first briefly outline this feature of the post-secular as articulated by Taylor and others.Then we will be well positioned to appraise the distinctive contribution Halík makes amidst these societal conditions.

The Post-Secular and the Nova Effect
A central aim of Taylor in the somewhat sprawling A Secular Age is to provide a "summary over-view" of what he calls "the currents and cross-currents in the polemics around belief and unbelief." 71And the nova effect is a concept articulated with this purpose in mind.Its primary concern is how contemporary post-secular conditions of belief are shaped by religious plurality. 72Indeed, the term nova is shorthand for exploding plurality: the "ever-widening variety of moral/spiritual options" catalyzed by the existential vacuum left by humanist alternatives (e.g., "a purely self-sufficient humanism . . .accepting no final goals beyond human flourishing" or "Providential Deism") 73 to Christian orthodoxy. 74And the effect of this explosion of options is, according to Taylor, an increase in an awareness of the fragility of our own already adopted solutions.Plurality is inherently fragilizing.71.Taylor, A Secular Age, 299.It is important to clarify Taylor's use of the term belief.He does not use the term to refer merely to propositional assent-the kind of thing selected on a census form (and I follow Taylor in this article).Taylor understands that most discussions of secularization focus on a decline in belief in this narrower sense.He concedes that this is understandable given Christianity has from its outset been uniquely tethered to creedal statements.But Taylor suggests a more textured account of belief and unbelief is needed and indeed employed in his work.He treats belief and unbelief throughout A Secular Age "not as rival theories" but as "alternative ways of living our moral/spiritual life, in the broadest sense . . .as lived conditions, not just as theories or sets of beliefs subscribed to" (4-5).In another succinct passage, almost amounting to the thesis of A Secular Age, Taylor sums up the nova effect in the following terms: "The mutual fragilization of all the different views in presence, the undermining sense that others think differently, is certainly one of the main features of the world of 2000, in contrast to that of 1500." 75If everybody in your life believes (or disbelieves) like you do, then questions about your own perceptions of the cosmos "don't as easily arise." 76But plural modernity ensures questions do easily arise.The self-evident givenness of our account of life cannot be sustained.Belief is now one "embattled option" among many. 77laims like this are not exclusive to Taylor.Hans Joas, in Faith as an Option: Possible Futures for Christianity, explicitly signals agreement with Taylor and argues, "It is obvious that the conditions for transmitting (or rediscovering) faith are also very much affected by the tendency towards increased options." 78Likewise, Peter Berger, despite Taylor and Joas distancing themselves from features of his account, also suggests pluralism is a defining feature of religiosity in modernity: "Pluralism . . .has enormous implications for the individual and his beliefs.Neither the individual's self nor his worldview can any longer be taken for granted." 79And Alasdair MacIntyre explores throughout his corpus the concept of 75.Taylor, 303-4 (emphasis added).76. Taylor, 304.77.Taylor, 3. Taylor recognizes that a thin plurality-the mere coexistence of faiths-is not new (e.g., ancient India, Ottoman Empire).But what is unique today is the ability to construe our religious neighbors as more than an "other" or "stranger" whose way of life is too "incomprehensible" or inconceivable for myself but as like us.Now the religious other has a form of life that we can even imagine ourselves partaking in with some imaginative effort.Taylor distances himself from Berger-I think too hastily-because he reads in his work the suggestion that all become uncertain of their beliefs due to pluralism.Joas is critical of this too.He also reads Berger as misconstruing religious faith in terms of epistemic cognitive assent and economic preference and choice rather than passive self-surrender before the transcendent.These are legitimate queries to raise about Berger's account.But Berger does make space for increased certitude-a process of fundamentalization-as another response to pluralism.In either case-amidst the convergences and divergences of their accountsall three are attempting to capture a post-secular fact: pluralism shapes and affects belief in various ways.

Hans Joas, Faith as an
inter-traditional encounter and "epistemic crises" in a fashion similar to Taylor's concept of fragilization. 80ot that all these accounts are in total consensus; there are both trivial and nontrivial discontinuities.But there is still significant convergence among them.This further ratifies what Taylor attempts to articulate with the nova effect: Western post-secularism is a context in which pluralism profoundly affects religious belief.And it is these particular conditions of belief-the nova effect-that I want to suggest that Halík uniquely engages in what follows.

Halík: A Theology for the Nova Effect
How the theology of Halík addresses the so-called nova effect or fragilization is perhaps more obvious in light of the first half of this article (and I will therefore devote less time to it).Halík endorses a life of faith that is intermingled with doubt and opposes a facile belief constructed upon false certainties.And this is partly grounded in a recognition of the multivalence of life-reality is riddled with paradox and interpretive ambiguities.
This emphasis is especially fitting in a context of mutual fragilization where, in the language of both Taylor and Berger, our own worldview can no longer be so easily "taken for granted." 81The multivalence of reality is foregrounded.And Halík provides theological resources to aid Christian living amidst this experience rather than providing trite apologetic to quickly resolve dissonance.As per the English subtitle of Night of the Confessor, his is a theology for "Christian Faith in an Age of Uncertainty." 82ut the particularly distinctive contribution of Halík is in his engagement with the causes of fragilization too-the nova.In the first instance, Halík is aware of these pluralistic post-secular currents.He is a close reader of Charles Taylor (as well as Peter Berger and Hans Joas). 83And these themes feature in his work.For example, the role of religious plurality amidst globalism is recognized in his engagement with Berger and José Casanova in his primarily sociological essay "The Transformations of Religion in the Process of Globalization." 84 But perhaps where Halík is in clearest agreement with Taylor in A Secular Age is in I Want You to Be. Here-critiquing a minimalist approach to tolerance that merely undergirds a non-integrated multiculturalism-Halík suggests a new form of engagement with the cultural other is needed: Our world, the "global village," has become too cramped for us to live undisturbed like that alongside each other.Our numbers have grown, and, like it or not, there are more and more people who are "different" from us.Our fences are not as far apart as they used to be.We can see into the kitchens and smell the aroma of exotic soups from the dining rooms of those others.We can overhear family rows that we had no inkling of before. . . .Nolens volens we live together-and therefore we must find different rules for this coexistence than simply "keep out of my circle." 85full-orbed treatment of Halík on tolerance is beyond the scope of this article.But what is clear, even when setting aside the normative thrust of these comments, is that Halík is cognizant of the unique form of contemporary plurality and its influence on Christian life and faith.
With this emphasis in mind, it is little wonder that Halík often engages in reflection on other religious perspectives throughout his corpus, given his interest in responding to the post-secular.Here I refer not primarily to his direct use of sources from alternative traditions-although this permeates his work. 86I refer instead to how Halík thinks about the fact of religious difference itself.He provides a theological paradigm that attempts to explain the existence of other religious perspectives.
Engagement with this theme is most explicit in a section of Night of the Confessor.Halík describes his approach as perspectivism: "The perception that we all look from our own particular limited perspective and fail to see the whole." 87Halík suggests this is an approach that rejects relativism-he really does take from his vantage point Christianity to be true-though without looking "acrimoniously at people who view reality from a different angle." 88He rejects the claim that all religions are the same or equally valid; this is a judgment beyond the capacity of human creatures.In fact, the more Halík becomes familiar with other religions the more he is aware "of their differences, their variety, their plurality, and their incomparability." 89his perspectivist approach to alternative traditions surfaces across his work.And it is of course not unique to Halík.It explicitly draws on Karl Rahner and a Vatican II-inspired inclusivism-a via media between exclusivism and pluralism in both its commitment to Christian faith and receptivity to alternative religious perspectives and their "anonymous Christians." 90 But what is crucial for the purpose of this article-and in particular the argument I am developing in this second section-is not the veracity or even the details of Halík's approach (though further critical engagement with Halík on these issues ought to be pursued).I am simply demonstrating the fact Halík has an approach: Halík not only addresses the nova effect but equally the nova.This might prima facie seem a trivial observation.But this is in fact an especially distinctive contribution of his post-secular theology.Halík brings together under the single theological schema issues of both religious conviction and religious plurality.
There has of course been extensive engagement with both of these themes in Christian theology but almost aways as discrete topics.To demonstrate such a claim is not possible here.But a cursory look across the "other religions" literature in recent decades is sufficient to recognize that the question of the uncertainty or epistemic tensions that arise in encountering other religious perspectives is at least peripheral if not absent.
Take a volume like Christian Uniqueness Reconsidered: The Myth of a Pluralistic Theology of Religion. 91This is a useful text to treat as representative since it includes a variety of contributions from informed and diverse commentators in the religious plurality discourse of the late twentieth century.Yet none of the themes addressed really broaches questions concerning the relationship between plurality and ongoing religious conviction. 92 ).92.The fact that these questions are being asked-that this discourse became so prominentperhaps itself indicates the effect of religious pluralism on religious conviction.The nova effect necessitates this literature (even while it is somewhat ignored within it).
The more recent movement of comparative theology, somewhat reticent about pluralism discourses emphasizing a priori rather than a posteriori appraisal of religious difference, goes further.Representative figures such as James L. Fredericks or Francis X. Clooney-themselves practitioners of sustained interreligious discourse-recognize that rich encounters with a religious other can be "frightening and confusing . . .destabilizing" and that the "pressures of diversity" religious communities face can be "bewildering." 93But this feature of inter-traditional encounter is mentioned in passing and then left otherwise undeveloped.
The same trend can be observed from the other direction: literature on doubt and uncertainty tends to avoid considering plurality.This is true concerning literature on the issue in general. 94But where this absence is most stark is in theological responses that explicitly engage with the nova effect and fragilization.Religious diversity is not addressed in Believing Again: Doubt and Faith in a Secular Age despite it being conversant with Taylor. 95Nor does Andrew Root tackle this feature of fragilization at length when attempting to directly respond theologically to these themes. 96This is all to highlight (all too briefly I might add) a consistent vacuum in the literature.The questions concerning religious plurality (the nova) are separated from questions about religious conviction or belief (the effect).
The closest one might come to a counterexample is a text like Paul J. Griffiths's Problems of Religious Diversity. 97And this is somewhat conversant or at least sits adjacent to a relatively recent discourse in analytic philosophy about religious disagreement. 98But these conversations, albeit Griffiths's less so, have a particularly philosophical timbre.This is not to disregard their insights.It is simply to recognize their primary aim to pursue a constructive theological response rooted in Christian sources for the life of faith and the church.
Here I suggest Halík provides something distinctive.He marries within a single theological corpus the nova and the effect.To augment the title of this article: Halík provides a theology for a nova effect-age.
Lest one thinks this is a coincidence-Halík does have wide-ranging interests and so perhaps it is by happenstance that these two themes appear in the same corpus-one need only observe the singular theological rationale that undergirds his two-pronged engagement with both plurality and fragilization: God as mystery.Halík argues that "God is mystery-that should be the first and last sentence of any theology." 99McGrath notes that Halík is thinking downstream from his teacher Jan Patočka and a modernist rejection of a God that can be rationally mastered. 100But Halík also moves in a much older apophatic tradition.He argues, "[The] inexhaustible source of inspiration for this type of theological reflection-the source, moreover, that almost all the great mystics, as well as the ancient theologians, including Thomas Aquinas, drew on-will undoubtedly be so-called negative theology (or apophatic theology)." 101mphasizing apophaticism is hardly distinctive given its rich history and current resurgence in contemporary theology. 102But how Halík employs this theological apparatus, with both the nova and its effect in its crosshairs, is particularly novel.In the first instance, his affirmation of "little faith" and his rejection of "facile belief" is precisely due to the mysterious direction of our faith-the God of Mystery we trust in.To have a faith that is "too big, too noisy, and too human" fails to grasp the theological axiom that lies at the heart of Halík's theology: "The Mystery which likes to speak through its silence and reveal itself through its hiddenness." 103he same can be said of how Halík engages with the theme of plurality.In the passage from Night of the Confessor on perspectivism cited earlier, the central emphasis is an apophatic one: "Truth is a book that none of us has read to end." 104 Likewise, in Patience with God, the reason given for constructive engagement and dialogue with alternative traditions, even while remaining rooted in our own, is summarized by what Halík calls an Ignatian maxim: "God is always greater, semper maior." 105Halík suggests, drawing on the work of French theologian Joseph Moingt, that our God is the God of others whom no one can monopolize.Because our "God remains a radical mystery," we cannot presume mastery of Him when engaging with those outside the bounds of the church, whether it be the critical atheist, the Zaccheaus-like seeker, or the religious other on our doorstep. 106o summarize: it is not a coincidence that both plurality and uncertainty are integral in Halík's work.As I have demonstrated, he is acutely aware of the ways contemporary plurality shapes Christian faith today.And his engagement with both of these themes is not a random or disparate affair produced by his characteristically sprawling reflections.Rather, a singular and conscious theologic-God as mystery-animates his two-pronged engagement with both plurality (nova) and uncertainty (effect).He does indeed set out to articulate faith in an age of uncertainty-as again per the subtitle of Night of the Confessor.But Halík is aware that this uncertainty germinates and festers in an ecosystem of exploding religious diversity.And this makes Halík an especially pertinent theological interlocutor for the post-secular.

Conclusion
This essay has presented the theology of Tomáš Halík as a valuable and distinctive contribution to the post-secular.The themes Halík foregrounds in his corpus-blessedness of spiritual seeking, his extensive engagement with atheism, and the affirmation of doubt and uncertainty-are much needed in our current milieus.But I have shown Halík provides something especially distinctive to a well-trafficked post-secular discourse in addressing the unique amalgam of both plurality and fragilization in modernity, namely, the nova effect.Due consideration of this contribution promises to nudge long-running pluralism and uncertainty discourses in theology closer together rather than being kept asunder.And even more crucially-at least for the future thriving of the Western church-further attention to Halík in the Anglosphere promises inspiration for the critical task of crafting a grammar of faith for the post-secular epoch that confronts us.
And much of what Halík has to say about Zacchaeuses is a refraction of earlier scholarship from someone like Karl Rahner, whom Halík explicitly draws on in his engagement with the concept of anonymous Christians. 7066.Halík, Night of the Confessor, 56.67.This is slowly changing.I have already cited the important work of Czechs Roubík and Kočí, "Searching the Altar of an Unknown God.
" More recent work has been published by McGrath, "On the Threshold of Mystery."And Adela Muchova brings a useful practical theological lens in "Pastoral Practice of the Academic Parish of Prague," Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Theologia Catholica Latina 66 (2021): 56-91.Furthermore, the recent translation Touch the Wounds has received ample attention in book review form.themes.For a more recent conversation along these lines, see Žižek, Milbank, and Davis, The Monstrosity of Christ.70.Karl Rahner et al., Karl Rahner in Dialogue: Conversations and Interviews, 1965-1982 (New York: Crossroad, 1986).
This is analogous to what Taylor elsewhere calls a social imaginary: Charles Taylor, Modern Social Imaginaries, Public Planet Books (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2003).72.Here two things need to be noted.First, I say post-secular conditions of belief while mindful of the arguably misleading title of the book A Secular Age.Any careful reader can discern that Taylor is exploring the ways our current age is not merely secular but also thoroughly post-secular in its religiosity.Secondly, although I am focusing on A Secular Age, these ideas appear in embryonic form in his earlier works.For example, see Charles Taylor, Sources of the Self: The Making of the Modern Identity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010), 11.For further exploration of the relationship of these two texts on this theme of plurality, see Fergus Kerr, "How Much Can a Philosopher Do?," Modern Theology 26, no. 3 (June 8, 2010): 321-36, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0025.2010.01610.x.73.Taylor, A Secular Age, 18, 221-69.74.Taylor, 299.
Option: Possible Futures for Christianity, Cultural Memory in the Present (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2014), 89.Joas is not persuaded that plurality ruffles belief.He argues on the contrary that optionality can increase religious attachment.But I would suggest this emphasis is at the expense of a more well-rounded account of the diversity of responses plurality can engender.It can perhaps increase attachment for some and be destabilizing for others.Notably, Joas does in Do We Need Religion?hint that "pluralism does not weaken faith but can, under specific conditions, strengthen it"(38,emphasis added).But this is undeveloped in his corpus.79.Peter L. Berger, A Far Glory: The Quest for Faith in an Age of Credulity, Anchor Books ed.(New York: Anchor Books, 1993), 86; Peter L. Berger, The Many Altars of Modernity: Toward a Paradigm for Religion in a Pluralist Age (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2014).
Even a cursory scan of the subject index will indicate that this issue is absent.88.Halík, 104.For further attention to how this corresponds to the idea of pluralistic robust realism, see Hubert L. Dreyfus and Charles Taylor, Retrieving Realism (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2015); and for plurality more generally, see, for example, Taylor, "Understanding the Other: A Gadamerian View on Conceptual Schemes," in Dilemmas and Connections: Selected Essays (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2014), 34-47.89.Halík, Night of the Confessor, 105 (emphasis original).90.Halík, Patience with God, 2009, 46-67.91.Gavin D'Costa, ed., Christian Uniqueness Reconsidered: The Myth of a Pluralistic Theology of Religions, Faith Meets Faith (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1990