Categories
Spirituality Theology

Guder on Missional

Some excellent quotes from Darrel Guder’s book “Missional Church“:

n      “[C]ulture is not a monolithic stationary entity that Christians should reject, accommodate, or even transform as a whole; it is, instead, a dynamic process with which Christians should interact in a critical, discriminating, and constructive manner.”

 

n      “The practice of hospitality is to cultivate communities of peace that intentionally structure themselves as safe and fearless spaces in the face of the despair and hostility of the world.”

 

n      “[M]issional communities are called to be peacemakers – reconciled and reconciling communities – making God’s peace visible through the quality of their life and ministry as model and invitation.”

 

   n      “[Missional communities] transform hostility and fear by creating safe spaces that welcome and honor the stranger.”

Categories
Law and Policy Spirituality

Elections and Hope

Excellent post on Jesus Creed.  A must-read for all of us during election season.

Categories
Law and Policy

Sarah Debates

So I’m watching the Palin-Biden debate right now.  She’s doing pretty well, I’d have to say.

Categories
Humor

For Mets Fans

This is a sad but understandable story.

Categories
Law and Policy

Palin's Greatest Hits

Ok, I know this video is a little unfair, since it strings together a bunch of clips out of context. And I know the other candidates mess up in interviews too. And I think Governor Palin seems like a relatively decent person. I’d love to have her and Todd and the kids over for a barbecue and talk politics. But really — the Vice President of the United States should be someone who is ready today to step into the Presidency. She is not ready.

Categories
Academic Law and Policy

Same Sex Marriage and Religious Liberty

Mirror of Justice points to a new book on the above topic edited by Douglas Laycock, one of the premier law-and-religion scholars in the world, and offers an interesting quick take on the book.  This is one we’ll have to read.

Categories
Spirituality

More from McKnight on Emerging and McLaren

Christianity Today Direct published two articles by Scot McKnight today:  “The Ironic Faith of Emergents” and “McLaren Emerging.”  Couple this with Scot’s recent if somewhat cryptic blog post about a “new network” and you might see the groundwork being laid for a missional church movement that is more self-consciously evangelical.  I think this is likely to be a good thing.  I have to confess that I’m a bit nervous — is this just neo-evangelicalism II?  Are we going to be centered tightly again on buzzwords that define who’s in and out?  I’m pretty sure this will not be so.  I’m guessing that this will be a way of popularizing what the best evangelical seminaries and colleges have been doing for quite a while — inculcating the value of a balanced faith that seeks understanding.  

We’re waiting for more details about the new network with baited breath….

Categories
Chrysostom Spirituality

Fools

Only a fool would attempt to change the world with a simple message of love and peace.  So we can conclude that Jesus was a fool.  Only fools would agree to follow such a man, and then continue his mission even after he had been killed.  So we can conclude that the apostles were fools.  Only fools would take seriously the message which a bunch of fools were preaching, and accept that message. . . . So let all happily admit we are fools.  Then we will happily commit ourselves to trying to change the world.

 — John Chrysostom (circa 370 A.D.)

Categories
Historical Theology Law and Policy Theology

A Morally Deficient Theory of Contract

The religious right in the U.S. emphasizes that its view of human freedom and democracy derives from Christian principles.  A significant pillar of the religious right’s economic theory is freedom of contract.  Under this view, government should avoid regulating private transactions because the individual parties to contractual agreements are in the best position to judge the value of their bargain and possess the moral freedom to make their own bargains.  A theological basis for this view is the inherent worth of the individual in the Christian tradition and the tendency of people with governmental power to abuse that power.

These are valid notions, but they are not the whole story.  In his chapter “The Christian Sources of General Contract Law” in the splendid Christianity and Law:  an Introduction, Harold Berman traces Western contract law to its medieval canon law roots.  Berman summarizes these roots as follows:

In subsequent centuries, many of the basic principles of the canon law of contract were adopted by secular law and eventually came to be justified on the basis of will-theory and party autonomy.  It is important to know, however, that originally they were based on a theory of sin and a theory of equity.  Our modern Western contract law did not start form the proposition that every individual has a moral right to dispose of his property by means of making promises, and that in the interest of justice a promise should be legally enforced unless it offends reason or public policy.  Our contract law started, on the contrary, from the theory that a prmise created an obligation to God, and that for the salvation of souls God instituted the ecclesiastical and secular courts with the task, in part, of enforcing contractual obligations to the extent that such obligations are just.

 (Christianity and Law, at 132).  This broadly social notion of contracts was modified, Berman notes, during the Puritan era.  The Puritans’ strong notion of total depravity made them less willing to place the authority to determine which obligations are “just” in the hands of a magistrate.  Moreover, the Puritans’ emphasis on order inclined them to seek the meaning of contractual documents in the literal words of the document rather than in an overarching contractual hermeneutic of justice.  However, even for the Puritans, “private” contracts were social obligations within the all-inclusive fabric of God’s covenantal relationships with people.  Private contractual relations were not really “private” — they were covenantal relations between people who were also bound in covenantal relation to God.  As Berman notes, 

the Puritan stress on bargain and on calculability (“order”) should not obscure the fact that the bargain presupposed a strong relationship between teh contracting parties within the community.  These were not yet the autonomous, self-sufficient individuals of the eighteenth-century Enlightenment.  England under Puritan rule and in the century that followed was intensely communitarian.

(Id. at 140).  

In the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Enlightenment, these theories of contract based on justice and covenant were secularized.  Justice and covenant were replaced with “the inherent freedom of each individual to exercise his own autonomous reason and will, subject only to considerations of social utility.”  (Id.)  These Enlightenment ideas “broke many of the links not only between contract law and moral theology but also between contract law and the comunitarian postulates which had informed both Catholic and Protestant legal traditions.”  (Id. at 140-41).

It is a shame, I think, that contemporary evangelical discourse about law seems to focus so heavily on notions of individual freedom to contract that are more post-Christian than Christian.  We seem to be left with two options:  the current prevailing secular legal theory of contracts, which is strictly realist and pragmatic and elides any notion of higher values, and the religious right’s libertarian view of contract, which elevates the individual far above the community.  I agree with Berman:  “[w]e may learn from history . . . that there is a third possibility:  to build a new and different theory on the foundation of the older ones.”  (Id. at 141).

Categories
Law and Policy Spirituality

Put Away Falsehoods

This is a good campaign-related site.