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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-07-19

  • “God’s grace comes sometimes like a kick in the teeth, leaving us broken, wholly unable any longer to deny our need.” — Belden Lane #
  • “God is never what Pharaoh, Ahab, and Herod expect.” — Belden Lane #
  • Glad garrett is out of hospital and at the lake #
  • Ps. 88: “my soul has had enough troubles.” #
  • “God can only be met in emptiness, by those who come in love, abandoning all effort to control, every need to astound.”. — Belden Lane #
  • “The Bible’s witness has an annoying way of subverting one’s theology and loosening one’s doctrinal presumptuousness.” — David Dark #
  • “When one is free from the need to impress the one or fear the other, all can be loved.” — Belden Lane #

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Spirituality

Epileptic Theology

Garret’s arms twist at sharp angles.  His eyes, vacant and unfocused, stare fixedly away into a void, veiled windows to a soul suddenly plunged into primordial darkness.  His brain fires primeval charges summoned from deep within the tohu wa bohu, his body tensing and releasing with their staccato rhythm.  Slowly the seizure subsides and he comes back, my little boy again inhabiting the body that betrayed him.

Nothing messes with your theology more than your own child’s disability.  My boy has “epilepsy and apraxia of speech”:  a diagnosis that tells me what I already know, that he has seizures and can’t process language.  We communicate with some halting words, some signs, some pantomime.  We medicate and wonder when the seizures will strike again, if they will ever cease.

In the dark watches of the night my soul cries out to the Lord:  If he “cannot hear, how can the preacher share the good news with him,” to follow up on St. Paul’s vexing question in Romans 10?  What is “faith” for a boy with a miswired brain?  What is “hope” for the man whose heritage is shattered by rogue synaptic currents no one can control or predict?

Jaideep’s arms twist at sharp angles.  His eyes, vacant and unfocused, stare fixedly into a void.  His brain fires its last chaotic charge, the death rattle shuddering to a stop.  Born on the trash heaps of Mumbai, dysentery and malnutrition absorb him into their hoary embrace.  He lived and died a Hindu without hearing of the carpenter from Nazareth. Where were faith, hope and love for this eikon of God?  Is he any less precious than my epileptic apraxic boy?

God of the mucky stable afterbirth, bearer of sharp-glassed leather on bare back, wearer of spit and thorns, whose arms were twisted at sharp angles fastened with nails, abandoned, god-forsaken Son with agonized cry for eternal perichoretic dance interrupted by Death’s convulsions:  how will you redeem this suffering?  Do you hear Garret and Jaideep’s cries?

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-07-12

  • Put Garrett on the “bus” for Union Street School. Sigh. #
  • Presenting “Rational Competition Policy and Hatch-Waxman Reverse Payment Settlements” at brown bag (www.tgdarkly.com/hw.pptx) #
  • Hitting the links #
  • Hospital w garrett #
  • Home, waiting to hear if Garrett will get out of hostpital today we can go on vaca. #

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Justice Law and Policy Spirituality Theology

Caritas in Veritate: Markets and Justice

Pope Benedict on markets and justice (Caritas in Veritate, para. 35):

In a climate of mutual trust, the market is the economic institution that permits encounter between persons, inasmuch as they are economic subjects who make use of contracts to regulate their relations as they exchange goods and services of equivalent value between them, in order to satisfy their needs and desires. The market is subject to the principles of so-called commutative justice, which regulates the relations of giving and receiving between parties to a transaction. But the social doctrine of the Church has unceasingly highlighted the importance of distributive justice and social justice for the market economy, not only because it belongs within a broader social and political context, but also because of the wider network of relations within which it operates. In fact, if the market is governed solely by the principle of the equivalence in value of exchanged goods, it cannot produce the social cohesion that it requires in order to function well. Without internal forms of solidarity and mutual trust, the market cannot completely fulfil its proper economic function. And today it is this trust which has ceased to exist, and the loss of trust is a grave loss. It was timely when Paul VI in Populorum Progressio insisted that the economic system itself would benefit from the wide-ranging practice of justice, inasmuch as the first to gain from the development of poor countries would be rich ones[90]. According to the Pope, it was not just a matter of correcting dysfunctions through assistance. The poor are not to be considered a “burden”[91], but a resource, even from the purely economic point of view. It is nevertheless erroneous to hold that the market economy has an inbuilt need for a quota of poverty and underdevelopment in order to function at its best. It is in the interests of the market to promote emancipation, but in order to do so effectively, it cannot rely only on itself, because it is not able to produce by itself something that lies outside its competence. It must draw its moral energies from other subjects that are capable of generating them.

This passage sets up an important contrast between “markets within a moral framework” and “markets as a moral framework.”  Most “conservative” pundits today suggest that “markets” are the most moral form of economic structure because markets preserve individual liberty.  It is true that individual liberty is an important value, and that free markets emody that value.  However, that is not the end of the story, pace the conservative / libertarian wags.  A truly Christian vision of the good society recognizes that individual liberty is only one virtue within a broader constellation of virtues.  “The greatest of these is love,” St. Paul said (1 Cor. 13:13).  Markets are only “moral” when liberty is governed by love.

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Culture Epistemology History Law and Policy

Evangelicals and Slavery

John Patrick Daly’s book “When Slavery Was Called Freedom:  Evangelicalism, Proslavery, and the Causes of the Civil War” should be required reading for anyone interested in the relationship between Christian faith and public policy in America.

Daly traces the ways in which evangelical Christians supported the pro-slavery cause in the antebellum South.  As Daly notes, evangelicals in the North tended towards abolitionism, and used theological and Biblical arguments in support of their position.  But evangelicals in the South overwhelmingly supported slavery, and likewise used theological and Biblical arguments in support of their views.

It’s tempting to make a “no true Scotsman” argument at this point:  the Southern evangelicals, we would like to suggest, were using theology and scripture improperly, as a mask for their greed.  In a sense, I would argue along these lines.  Like nearly all Christians today, I think it’s clear that a properly developed Biblical theology must consider slavery a great evil.

However, in another sense, this kind of argument is anachronistic.  The Southern preachers who supported slavery really believed that Divine Providence had ordained the institution of slavery in the American South for the benefit of both the white and black populations.  Interestingly, according to Daly, they for the most part did not rely on earlier arguments from creation and geneology (i.e., the so-called “curse of Ham”), but rather mostly framed their arguments in terms of Providence.  Moreover, the Southern preachers argued that the revivalistic fires of the Second Great Awakening burned hot in Southern states where slavery flourished.  For many antebellum Christian leaders in the South, Providence and Revival confirmed the righteousness of slavery.

Of course, to us today (and to most Northern theologians at the time), this was a tragic, awful, horrid betrayal of Christian principles.   The lingering question is, do we have the courage to question our own beliefs about how our faith ought to relate to the pressing issues of our day?

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Justice Law and Policy Religious Legal Theory Science & Technology Spirituality Theology

Caritas in Veritate

An extensive new Papal Encyclial was just issued concerning social teaching in light of the current economic crisis.  This is an important document, which all Christians should carefully consider.  I hope to do a number of posts on it.  A taste:

We recognize . . . that the Church had good reason to be concerned about the capacity of a purely technological society to set realistic goals and to make good use of the instruments at its disposal.  Profit is useful if it serves as a means towards an end that provides a sense of both of how to produce it and how to make good use of it.  Once profit becomes the exclusive goal, if it is produced by improper means and without the common good as its ultimate end, it risks destroying wealth and creating poverty.

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Biblical Studies

Codex Sinaiticus Online

This is very cool:  an online repository for the full text of the Codex Sinaiticus, one of the oldest (4th C.) and most complete copies of the Greek New Testament and the Septuagint (Greek translation of the Old Testament).  The Codex Sinaiticus is significant for the history of formation of the Biblical Canon, the continuity of the text, and the editorial process by which those who produced the Codex shaped the authoritative text.   These last two points — continuity and editorial process — obviously are somewhat in tension.  The “Bible” was not invented by later scribes — serious scholarly effort was invested in accurately transmitting the collection of texts that were important to the Christian community.  But neither did the “Bible” drop from the sky fully-formed.  Even in the fourth century, Codex Sinaiticus evidences some degree of editorial flexiblity in the scribal community, as well as a broader view about which texts should be maintained together (the C.S. includes “apocryphal” books such as 2 Esdras as well as Christian epistles that are not included in the canon, such as the Epistle of Barnabas).

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-07-05

  • Irish music lyric heard today: “There was music there, in the Derry air.” Ok, that doesn’t sound right, does it? #
  • writing about Hatch Waxman settlements. Some subjects are ripe with endless wonder… #
  • xlant brown bag by Bryan Lonegan: dyk that child soldiers often are denied asylum in the U.S. because they ‘re labeled “persecutors?” #
  • Golf #
  • 4th of july parade #

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Humor Science & Technology Spirituality Theology

Eschatology: The Holocaust Test

Recently we watched the movie Freedom Writers, which is about a high school teacher who works with inner city students.  It’s a little hokey, but not a bad movie.  At one point, the teacher brings the kids to a holocaust museum, and they meet with some camp survivors.  A somewhat incongruous thought struck me at that moment:  can my theology handle the Holocaust?

Of course, no theology, no reasonable system, can “handle” the Holocaust.  That kind of evil by definition defies reason.  What I mean is, does my theology provide a system of justice that can account for the victims  of the Holocaust?

I’m starting to think of this disturbing question as the “Holocaust Test.”  A theology that can’t pass the Holocaust Test seems too small.  Human history is filled with holocausts.  The Nazi Holocaust is unique in its focus on the Jewish people.  Yet we can also speak of African slavery, of communist dictatorships and gulags, of the killing fields of Cambodia, of Rwanda and Uganda, and so on.  What does our theology say about the innocent blood — the blood of men, women, and young children — that cries out from the ground of human violence?

I’m afraid the very conservative brand of Evangelical theology I’ve inherited fails the Holocaust Test.  The individual eschatology in this system is simple:  those who have heard and responded to the Gospel are in Heaven; those who have not are in Hell.  Anne Frank, and the millions of other Jewish children who died in the Holocaust, simply are lost (assuming they passed the “age of accountability,” whatever that might be).  All of the Jewish adults who died in the Nazi camps, simply are lost.   We should state the logic of this theology in terms that are as unflinching as its teaching:  the residents of Berkenau and Auschwitz went straight from the gas chambers to the flames of Hell.

Obviously, I’m not the first person, or the first Christian, to realize that this view of eschatology is grossly inadquate.  There are many ways of thinking about Christian eschatology that avoid the simplistic poles of hyper-exclusivism and universalism.  On the Roman Catholic side, after Vatican II, there has been much reflection on how the grace extended in Christ through the Church can spill over to non-Catholics and non-professing-Christians.  On the Protestant side, there is Barth, who was a universalist of sorts, and more “evangelical” voices such as Billy Graham, John Stott, Dallas Willard, and others who are by no means universalists, but who strongly suggest that the mystery of God’s salvation cannot be circumscribed by what is visible to us in the human context.

The Holocaust Test forces us to tread in some difficult waters.  I don’t think the Biblical witness, or the Tradition, or reason or experience, support true universalism.  It seems abhorrent to me to suggest that Anne Frank and Hitler share precisely the same fate, whether in Hell or in Heaven.  Freedom means that we have freedom to reject God, and many do reject God, which is the definition of being “lost,” now and in the eschaton.  But, at the same time, the crabbed little “four spiritual laws” view of individual eschatology can’t possibly be the whole story if there is such a thing as divine universal Justice.

What do you think?

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-06-28

  • Camping and telescopes with Connor at Cherry Springs — clear skies! http://tinyurl.com/3xqsuo #
  • Cabelas then home #
  • “Justice always wants to hang out with equality, and equality is a real pain in the ass.” — Bono #
  • Quiet saturday– yardwork, whiffle ball #

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