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Making Peace With the Land?

When I was at the Duke Divinity Center for Reconciliation conference, I picked up a copy of their newest publication, Fred Bahnson and Norman Wirzba’s Making Peace With the Land: God’s Call to Reconcile With Creation. I enjoyed this book and I agree with its basic premise that God’s work of reconciliation, in which we are invited to participate, involves all of creation. It is part of our calling, therefore, to care for creation, which includes practices such as wise, sustainable agriculture.

At a number of points, however, I wonder if the authors protest too much. Let me offer a few thoughts as perhaps a friendly critique.

A big emphasis for sustainable agriculture of the sort Bahnson and Wirzba promote is the notion of “working with the land.” If a particular region is mostly savannah, say, or rain forest, then agricultural methods and crops appropriate to those regions should be used. Fair enough, as a matter of baseline practical wisdom. But there is also a theological and philosophical claim being made: God made this land savannah or rain forest, and therefore an effort to transform the landscape into a different kind of biome is an affront to the integrity of creation.

Here we run into a significant problem: what is savannah today might have been a swamp, or a sea, or a desert, or a forest, or an ice sheet during other periods of geological time. Part of God’s design for creation is that it constantly changes and that biomes continually flux and adapt. That is the genius of evolution. The notion that reconciling with creation requires preservation of a particular biome as it appears at some moment in geological time therefore seems to me highly problematic.

I should be clear that I am not here agreeing with Christian global warming skeptics who think polluting the atmosphere with globs of carbon is nothing to be alarmed about because creation will adapt. That’s nonsense. We humans are capable of transforming the land in terribly harmful ways, even catastrophic ways. But transformation-qua-transformation isn’t unnatural – it’s how the world is made.

A related theological-scientific problem is a notion that runs throughout the book concerning technology, particularly genetic modification. The authors clearly are against genetically modified (“GM”) crops and animals. But, once again, genetic modification is part of the genius of evolution. God is the great architect of GM crops and animals, from the root of the evolutionary tree of life to today, and beyond. When humans engage in GM technology, they are using God-given knowledge about the created fabric of biological life. Life was created modular and flexible, and there seems to me no principled reason why human understanding of these capacities is inherently violent rather than an aspect of the cultural mandate. Indeed, there is no kind of agriculture, however organic and sustainable, that doesn’t make use of old-fashioned GM: selective breeding.

This isn’t to say that modern industrial practices of GM are all good and healthy. From my perspective, one of the main culprits here is the patent law system, which too easily allows large multinational corporations to monopolize seed supplies. But again, the problem isn’t GM-qua-GM. The problem is the social-cultural-legal frameworks for what kinds of GM are done, and how the results are made accessible.

And this finally highlights what for me is another ambiguity in this book. Many of the practices mentioned could be a form of small-scale witness, such as a church growing a sustainable garden to help supply a local food pantry. Amen! But how do such acts of witness translate to broader cultural action, policy-making, and the living out of life in the every day world for those of us (most of us) unable to relocate to home farmsteads? There is a big tension here, only passingly acknowledged, between the already and not yet of eschatological time. The prophetic imagination still must connect with the present reality. I’d like to hear more about this from the authors and from my agrarianist friends.

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Law and Policy

They Preached Liberty?

Here’s a letter to the Editor of mine published in today’s Wall Street Journal in response to the editorial “They Preached Liberty.”

Categories
Law and Policy

Christians and the Supreme Court's Health Care Decision

I have a post up on Jesus Creed.  Here’s the text:

Thursday last week the U.S. Supreme Court issued its decision in National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius – the health care law case.  Not surprisingly, the talk shows, the newspapers, the blogosphere, Twitter, Facebook, and every other imaginable outlet are lit up with comments and arguments.  What should Christians think about this case?

I will offer some thoughts about how I think Christians should think about it. But first, and perhaps most importantly, I’d like to suggest that there is no single position that can be called the Christian view on this particular case.  It’s a complex issue in terms of economics, social policy, history, and the law.  Let’s try to give each other the freedom to express nuanced opinions on these difficult questions.

There are at least two common themes running through much of the Christian commentary on the decision.  On the right, the view is that the Court’s decision, as well as the law itself, represents a threat to freedom.  For example, here is something posted on the Trinity Forum’s Facebook page, from TTF Trustee Edwin Meese:

The Court was correct to find that Congress does not have the authority to compel purchases under the Commerce Clause.  But it erred in contorting the statute to declare the penalty a tax.  And the fact that the Court decided to allow this abuse under the government’s taxing authority, not the Commerce Clause, doesn’t change the fact that individual freedom has been dealt a serious blow.

On the left, the decision, and the law itself, are viewed as an important victory for justice.  Here is Jim Wallis of Sojourners:   “This is an important victory for millions of uninsured people in our country and ultimately a triumph of the common good.”  Nevertheless, Wallis qualifies his praise:

While I believe the decision is reason to celebrate, it doesn’t mean that this legislation is somehow the flawless will of God; it is an important step in expanding health care coverage and reducing long term costs, but it still is not perfect and more work is yet to be done.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops opposed aspects of the law but did not ever argue for its repeal.  Their concerns about the law were not based on the notion of universal health care itself, which is something Catholic Social Teaching supports (or at least can be read to support).  Rather, the Bishops are concerned that the law that seems to support abortion, compromises rights of conscientious objectors, and does not provide adequately for immigrants.  In their statement on the Court’s decision, the Bishops conclude:

Following enactment of ACA, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) has not joined in efforts to repeal the law in its entirety, and we do not do so today.  The decision of the Supreme Court neither diminishes the moral imperative to ensure decent health care for all, nor eliminates the need to correct the fundamental flaws described above.  We therefore continue to urge Congress to pass, and the Administration to sign, legislation to fix those flaws.

Before I offer my thoughts on these varying representative perspectives, let me step back and note once again that each of them represents good faith efforts to think Christianly about the Court’s decision.  The fact that they finally offer different visions of the end result should give us pause before we argue that there is only one faithful way to think about it.

That said, from my own perspective, the Trinity Forum / Edwin Meese comment is the most theologically problematic of the three I’ve referenced.  Even more problematic, I think, are the more extreme libertarian critiques of the law heard in many outlets.  Meese’s comment is at least measured in tone, which is not the case with much of the libertarian rhetoric that feeds into what many Christians have said and are saying about “Obamacare.”  How quickly does the dreaded “s” word – “socialism” – arise in many of these comments?

I wonder when “individual freedom” became the sine qua non for Christian social ethics about health care? It seems to me that Christians of all people should be willing to sacrifice some of their “individual freedom” in order to ensure that everyone, particularly “the least of these,” has access to health care.  In scriptural and Christian theological terms, true “freedom” is not libertarian license, but rather is the full participation of a person in God’s self-giving love.  And true “freedom” is never about isolated individuals – as God is a Triune community, so we as human beings can only be truly “free” in community.

Of course, even if we agree that Christians should be willing to give up some “individual freedom” to facilitate health care for others – or, perhaps better, that Christian freedom means moving beyond selfishness —  the question remains whether such care should be provided through government, through private associations, through Churches, through families, and so on.  There is a long and tangled tradition of Christian political theology on all of these questions – and, at least in my opinion, there is no simple right answer.  It isn’t enough here merely to refer to “sphere sovereignty” or “subsidiarity,” just as it isn’t enough merely to refer to the immanent “peaceable Kingdom.”  I do think some ways of working through this are much better than others, but these are the subjects of long and carefully worked out philosophies that can’t be reduced to sound bites.  (For a flavor of what I think is a wonderful example of contemporary Christian political theology regarding public goods and markets in areas such as health care, see Pope Benedict’s Encyclical Caritas in Veritate).

From my perspective there is less to criticize in Wallis’ comment on the decision.  Nevertheless, I would much more significantly qualify my enthusiasm for the result because of Justice Roberts’ reasoning on the taxing power.  In fact, ultimately I think it’s a poorly reasoned judicial opinion that opens a can of worms concerning what the government can call a “tax.” It seems to me troublesome development that the Constitution’s taxing power can extend to a choice not to buy a product – a choice not to act.  I don’t want to pay taxes, for example, for choosing not to buy a car or a bicycle or broccoli.  This really does seem to expand the government’s economic power in ways I find troubling.

While “individual freedom,” in libertarian terms, is not the central concern (as I see it) of Christian social ethics, nevertheless the integrity of the person very much is a central concern.  And this does mean that persons, not States, finally are the basic subject of politics, and that freedoms of the person and of private associations of persons are of basic importance.  An essential function of any just political structure therefore must be to hold the State’s power in check through the rule of law.  Whether the majority or the liberal-wing dissenters in the Sebelius case were right about the commerce clause issue – itself a legally and historically complex question — I believe the commerce clause should have been the basis for the decision rather than the taxing power. In my view, the payments required for uninsured persons under the individual mandate clearly are a “penalty,” not a “tax,” and therefore they should stand or fall as an exercise of federal governmental power under the commerce clause.

Given my reference to Pope Benedict’s Caritas in Veritate, it’s perhaps not surprising that I personally find the USCCB statement about the Court’s ruling the most appropriate of the three I’ve referenced.  In my view, Christians should desire that all persons have access to decent health care, and markets alone cannot meet this goal either from a moral or a pragmatic perspective.  A Christian social ethic therefore should recognize that it is a necessary and appropriate function of government to facilitate universal access to healthcare. However, where “healthcare” includes things like elective abortions, which raise serious moral concerns for many persons and religious associations, appropriate exemptions should be included.  And I fully agree with the U.S. Bishops that, particularly from a Christian perspective of welcome, immigration reform is essential, not least as in relation to education and healthcare.

So, I don’t have a final answer concerning how Christians should thing about the Sebelius case and the health care law.  I hope, however, that we can try to think about it in more careful and theologically nuanced terms than usually surface in popular debates.