At this point we are interested in discovering the ways in which Anselm’s theory of satisfaction found in Cur Deus Homo is supportive of the structures of empire. First off, he wrote the book intending to defend the immutability, the impassibility, and the omnipotence of God against objections from Muslims and Jews who claimed that the incarnation served to expose the weakness and simplicity of the Christian God. From Anselm’s perspective, nothing could have been further from the truth. A second objective was to show forth the fact that the incarnation was a logical necessity; he was not content to argue that it was merely a rational possibility. In making his case, he was taking for granted categories of thought provided by the hierarchical logic of Norman imperial feudalism, and presuming the inherent superiority of this brand of reasoning to that of his opponents. All in all, he sought to accomplish through intellectual argumentation what the crusaders had desired to achieve through the use of brute military force; the disclosing of the supremacy of the Christian God and empire over that of the Muslims.
A deeper inspection of Anselm’s theory of satisfaction is necessary if we hope to see its fundamental links to the logic of the Norman empire. When speaking of the relationship between God and humanity, Anselm regularly invoked the imagery of Feudalism. This was a hierarchical framework in which vassals paid homage to lords. Peace and justice, along with the welfare, stability, and unity of the empire were considered to have been entirely dependent upon the maintaining of this crucial order. Honor was that which enabled the relationship between lord and vassal and furthermore it was that which ordered society. If the lord’s honor was violated then order would begin to collapse into chaos. The restoration of this fundamental order would be coincident with the restitution of the lord’s honor. There were only two ways in which the this honor (and thus order) could be restored; punishment or satisfaction. Obviously satisfaction was the preferable option being that this approach attempted to overcome relational violations by peaceful means rather than by alternative forms of punishment such as vengeance and war. For Anselm, sin was that which had dishonored God and disrupted the created order. The satisfaction procured by the God-man brought about the restoration of both. Thus the incarnation, rather than being a threat to the omnipotence, the immutability, and the impassibility of God (or for that matter, of the empire) actually establishes and strengthens them.
Anselm took for granted the universality of the logic of the Norman empire and the feudal order. As far as he was concerned, this was just the way in which the world generally functioned; it was the eternal and unchanging order of creation designed to facilitate peace and justice, and moreover to express the unalterable nature of God. These underlying assumptions were foundational for his Christology, and as a result of its widespread acceptance, the minds of many theologians over the centuries have been unconsciously shaped by and molded after the form of Anselm’s Norman imperial hierarchical logic. In fact, if his model is to be in any sense effective in our day and age, his presuppositions with regard to the hierarchical structuring of the universe and the classical attributes of God need to remain firmly in-tact. However, if these assumptions continue to be met with approval, the door will inevitably be left wide open for the hierarchies of subsequent generations to fill in the gaps left by the disintegration of Anselm’s feudalistic framework. This, along with his complete lack of interest in the life of Christ, can certainly contribute to the shoring up of imperial-like hierarchies. In reality, those who have appealed to the theology of Anselm since the late eleventh century have typically been very anxious to uphold its hierarchical underpinnings (which of course also provides justification for their own authority). Perhaps this is a major reason for its extraordinary popularity?