Kenosis

Kenosis — the Greek term for 'self-emptying,' drawn from Philippians 2:6-8 — enters the depth-psychology corpus along multiple, sometimes converging vectors. In strictly theological usage, as elaborated by Bulgakov, kenosis names the successive self-limitations of the divine Persons: the Son's incarnational abasement, the Holy Spirit's measured penetration of creaturely weakness from the very act of creation, and the parallel kenosis of Ecclesia-Luna moving toward her own darkening and death. Jung receives this tradition chiefly through its alchemical refraction — the moon's self-emptying into the solar Christ at the new moon, Ephraem Syrus's notion that kenosis unburdened creation of its prefigurations — and through his own psychological reading of the Philippians hymn as the archetypal pattern of divine descent into human limitation. In Memories, Dreams, Reflections, Jung frames the Incarnation as demanding an 'incredible kenosis' that strains the very coherence of monotheism. Von Franz imports the concept into analytic psychology as a model for the archetype's fall into matter — the descent of plenitude into embodied particularity. Louth and the Orthodox thinkers (Sophrony, Bulgakov) press a further, constructive point: kenosis is not a temporary concealment of deity but its very revelation, extending into a trinitarian, then an ascetic, imperative for human self-emptying. The term thus marks a critical intersection of Christology, alchemy, individuation, and the psychology of the God-image.

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If this God wishes to become man, an incredible kenosis (emptying) is required of Him, in order to reduce His totality to the infinitesimal human scale.

Jung identifies kenosis as the structurally necessary — and psychologically staggering — act of divine self-reduction that makes incarnation conceivable, while noting that the Christian God-image cannot accomplish this without fundamental contradiction.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Memories, Dreams, Reflections, 1963thesis

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Kenosis is an aspect of the love each divine Person has for the others… kenosis constitutes God, kenosis reveals God's love.

Louth, interpreting Fr Sophrony, argues that kenosis is not an occasional divine act but the ontological structure of Trinitarian love itself, making self-emptying the very definition of what it is to be God.

Louth, Andrew, Modern Orthodox Thinkers: From the Philokalia to the Presentthesis

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The kenosis of the Holy Spirit, strictly speaking, began with the very creation, when the Holy Spirit charged himself to preserve and to quicken the creature according to its own capacity.

Bulgakov differentiates three distinct modes of kenosis — of Son, Spirit, and Church — arguing that the Spirit's self-limitation, unlike the Son's, is coextensive with creaturely existence from its very origin.

Bulgakov, Sergei, Sophia, the Wisdom of God: An Outline of Sophiology, 1937thesis

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Just as the kenosis of Christ was fulfilled in death, even death on the cross (Phil. 2: 8), and out of this death the 'glory' of the divine nature was bestowed on Christ's 'form as a servant,' … even so it is with the parallel kenosis of Ecclesia-Luna.

Jung extends the kenosis concept alchemically, mapping the darkening and death of the Church-as-Luna onto the Philippians pattern, making self-emptying into sun a cosmic rhythmic process of death and glorification.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Mysterium Coniunctionis: An Inquiry into the Separation and Synthesis of Psychic Opposites in Alchemy, 1955thesis

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According to Ephraem Syrus, the kenosis had the reverse effect of unburdening Creation: 'Because the creatures were weary of bearing the prefigurations of his glory, he disburdened them of those prefigurations.'

Jung, citing Ephraem Syrus, presents kenosis as a cosmological relief-valve: Christ's self-emptying liberates creation from the intolerable weight of divine prefiguration, giving the concept an ecological-psychological resonance.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Mysterium Coniunctionis: An Inquiry into the Separation and Synthesis of Psychic Opposites in Alchemy, 1955thesis

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There is the same thing in the theological teaching about the kenosis of Christ, which refers to the biblical quotation where Christ shed his plenitude to come down as a servant and incarnate in man.

Von Franz uses kenosis as the theological prototype for the archetype's descent into matter, interpreting the self-emptying of divine plenitude as the structural analogue of what the psyche experiences when an archetype incarnates in concrete human reality.

von Franz, Marie-Louise, Alchemy: An Introduction to the Symbolism and the Psychology, 1980thesis

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For a right understanding of the kenosis, it is essential to grasp the fact that the glorification of Christ is at once his own achievement in virtue of his obedience to the end, and an effect produced in him by the action of the Father.

Bulgakov insists that kenosis and glorification are inseparable poles of a single soteriological movement, such that the self-emptying is never mere negation but always already oriented toward transfigured fullness.

Bulgakov, Sergei, Sophia, the Wisdom of God: An Outline of Sophiology, 1937supporting

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kenosis 125, 167, 177, 272–274, 309, 313

The index entry confirms that kenosis is a recurrent, structurally significant concept throughout Louth's survey of modern Orthodox thought, appearing across multiple thinkers and doctrinal contexts.

Louth, Andrew, Modern Orthodox Thinkers: From the Philokalia to the Presentsupporting

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kenosis, 141, 293n

The index citation in Jung's Psychology and Religion attests that kenosis is a named, indexed concept in his theological-psychological writings, cross-referenced to passages on incarnation and the God-image.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Psychology and Religion: West and East, 1958aside

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modelling his dealings with the students on Christ, who emptied himself and came alongside humankind.

Louth describes Bukharev's practical pedagogy as grounded in kenotic Christology, demonstrating how the theological concept translates into an ascetic and relational ethic of accompaniment.

Louth, Andrew, Modern Orthodox Thinkers: From the Philokalia to the Presentsupporting

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