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Justice Law and Policy Moltmann Spirituality Theology

Justice, Judgment and Reconciliation

The Sunday service on July 4 at my church was excellent. One of our younger pastors preached on the theme of “hope.” He managed to tie together some thoughts about hope rooted in our national history in the U.S. (there was a stirring reading from the Gettysburg Address) with his recent experiences on a missions trip in Cambodia. He observed how the Church in Cambodia is starting to produce little pockets of culture out of the ashes of totalitarianism, including economic and artistic renewal, in places where the gospel of freedom in Christ is being heard.

The ashes of Cambodian totalitarianism, of course, include Pol Pot’s killing fields, which our pastor visited. He described how the rains every year expose more and more of the bones of the estimated 1.3 million people who died during the Khmer Rouge’s reign of terror. We are grateful that, for all our ills, nothing like the Killing Fields presently exists in the U.S., in no small part due to some of the moral and legal principles we inherited, however imperfectly and haltingly, from Christian, Jewish, and other religious sources. And we are grateful that there are communities in places like Cambodia where the Church is shining the light of the Gospel in its fullness.

At the same time, we may wonder: where is the answer to the bones that cry out for justice? We are painfully aware of the limits of justice in this life. Very few of the perpetrators of this sort of violence are ever identified, judged and convicted. Often they remain in power, or simply dissolve into anonymity. We cry out to God with the Psalmist: “How long will the wicked, O LORD, how long with the wicked be jubilant?” (Ps. 94:3). We look for the final judgment, the terrible “Day of the Lord,” when the “white horse, whose rider is called Faithful and True” is unleashed — “With justice he judges and makes war.” (Rev. 19:11).

But how does this final judgment restore the victims of Pol Pot? My Evangelical Christian tradition in particular has emphasized that the final judgment is ultimately a sorting out of all those who have, during life, exercised faith in Christ from those who have not. The vast majority of Pol Pot’s victims were not professing Christians. Most had probably never heard of Christ. Are they condemned to Hell with their tormentors? Where, then, is “justice” for them? If final justice is mostly about one’s access to Christian teaching during life (or in Reformed theology, about one’s election by God), how does this provide any foundation for attempts to do “justice” during this life? Was Qohelet right after all: “Vanity of vanities! All is vanity”? (Eccl. 1:2).

One contemporary Christian theologian who has wrestled with these issues is Jurgen Moltmann. His most recent book, Sun of Righteousness, Arise!: God’s Future for Humanity and the Earth, summarizes his many decades of brilliant, if sometimes controversial and perhaps even heterodox, theological writing. I commend the reading of Moltmann to everyone, particularly to Evangelicals and others who are perhaps a bit too wedded to neat theological formulas, and this latest book of his is a great place to start.

Moltmann lived through World War II — he was a reluctant German soldier, became a POW, and returned to post-war Germany as a pastor and theologian — and as a result he has a keen eye for the problem of justice. For Moltmann, God’s “final judgment” must be conceived of as “not the great reckoning, with reward and punishment” but rather “the victory of the creative divine righteousness and justice over everything godless in heaven, on earth, and beneath the earth.”

Moltmann’s theology often wrestles with the meaning of history, hope, and freedom, and even “final” judgment, he believes must be “open” to the future: “Because the judgment serves this new creation of all things, its righteousness is not a righteousness related to the past, which merely establishes what is done and requires it. It is a creative righteousness related to this future, a righteousness which creates justice, heals and rectifies.” This is a judgment of restoration and reconciliation, akin to a truth commission in which the perpetrators of violence “must listen to [their vicitms’] accounts and learn to see themselves with the eyes of their victims, even if this is terrible and destructive.” The intention of this judgment is “to put right the disrupted relationships between people and nations; its intention is not to reward or punish individuals. . . .” The last judgment, then, should be imagined as “a peaceful arbitration whose purpose is the furtherance of life, not as a criminal court which decides over life and death.”

Here is a compelling vision of hope for the dry bones in Cambodia’s killing fields. They will meet their murderers in the eschaton — and they will be reconciled to each other, and all in the end will be saved.

It will be difficult for most Christians in Augustinian traditions — including most Evangelicals — to accept much of Moltmann’s vision, not least his universalism. Personally, from my theological perspective, I desire to do my best to account for the fullness of the Biblical witness in a way that coheres with the Tradition, reason and experience. Rev. 20 does not seem to me a picture of universal reconciliation, and the Tradition, reason, and experience suggest that some people will refuse to be reconciled. And yet, Colossians 1:2 seems tantalizingly inclusive: the Christian hope is that Christ will “reconcile all things to himself.” Perhaps those of us in Evangelical Augustinian traditions cannot rely on Moltmann, but I believe we can at least learn from him that the cosmic scope of salvation must be bigger than our limited horizons if there truly is to be final justice. And maybe this can lead us to learn from our Catholic and Orthodox brothers and sisters, from the early Greek Patristic writers and from contemporary Catholics such as Balthasaar and Ratzinger, a bit more about the meaning and hope of salvation.

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Spirituality

Enns on Doubt

Great post from Pete Enns on the value of doubt and how to doubt well. “Being a Christian does not mean being certain of everything all the time. Doubt is a normal and important part of the Christian life. When God seems most absent, it may be then that he is speaking to you most clearly. It is then that you realize that your faith is not a fortress but a journey, and God means to take you “further up and further in.””

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Epistemology Historical Theology Humor Law and Policy Photography and Music Spirituality

CLS v. Martinez: An Ugly Decision Arising from Ugly Circumstances

Today the Supreme Court released its opinion in Christian Legal Society v. Martinez.  If you have heard about this case from the press or from an advocacy group and are concerned about it, I’d encourage you to read the entire opinion as well as the concurrence and dissent.  The whole package is ugly, I think.  It seems that the principles of freedom of expression, association and religion have been mired in a Dickensian procedural swamp, which was either created by the majority or conveniently used by the majority to bypass the big issues presented by the case. I urge interested readers to peruse the entire 75 pages of all the opinions, so that you may experience for yourself how a question of important Constitutional moment can be drowned in the turgid waters of civil procedure.

The majority opinion, written by Justice Ginsberg, holds that U.C. Hastings’ “all comers” policy was content-neutral and reasonably related to the school’s policy of promoting a diverse forum for student activities.  The all comers policy stated that approved student organizations must admit any student to membership or eligibility for leadership, regardless of the student’s status or beliefs.  A pro-choice group, then, would have to admit pro-choice students, a Democrat club would have to admit Republicans, the Christian Legal Society would have to admit non-Christians or people who do not live according to the CLS’ views on sexual ethics, and so on.

Indeed, the all comers policy does seem content-neutral as Justice Ginsberg describes it.  On its face, the all comers policy itself seems silly and unworkable — it essentially would require that no student organization can stand for anything other than the principle that it is good to encourage diverse viewpoints — but not unconstitutional.

In contrast, the dissent, written by Justice Alito and joined by Justices Roberts, Scalia and Thomas, goes into great detail about the factual circumstances of Hastings’ adoption of the all comers policy.  In short, according to Justice Alito, the all comers policy was “adopted” as a litigation strategy late in the game.  The policy really at issue, Hastings’ “Nondiscrimination Policy,” only prohibited discrimination based on a select few protected categories — race, color, religion, national origin, ancestry, disability, age, sex or sexual orientation.  Enforcement of the Nondiscrimination Policy against groups, such as CLS, that discriminate in one of these categories on the basis of religious beliefs raises a very difficult Constitutional question:  do the freedoms of religion, speech and association mean that the government must accommodate religious groups that discriminate based on categories such as sexual orientation?

In a previous post, I summarized the issues in the case, and expressed my view that the whole thing was an unfortunate manifestation of ongoing confusion by Christians about the relationship between American government and Christian faith.  In his dissent, Justice Alito expresses disappointment with the majority and suggests that the majority’s opinion is “a serious setback for freedom of expression in this country.”  He might be right, but maybe not for the reasons he expresses.  In one sense, I’m glad the majority found a way to avoid deciding the more difficult issues presented by the Nondiscrimination Policy.  There is a hard tension between citizenship in the Church and citizenship in a liberal (meaning classically liberal) pluralistic democracy.  I don’t think it’s a tension that we in the Church should want to press up against so hard.  Sometimes, the wiser course for the life and mission of the ekklesia is to maintain a faithful witness without suing for full government recognition of all our rights.

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Spirituality

The Christian Faith of Manute Bol

This is a great piece in WSJ on Manute Bol’s Christian faith.  Bol was a professional basketball player, who was known more for his size than his skill.  Here’s an excerpt:

When his fortune dried up, Bol raised more money for charity by doing what most athletes would find humiliating: He turned himself into a humorous spectacle. Bol was hired, for example, as a horse jockey, hockey player and celebrity boxer. Some Americans simply found amusement in the absurdity of him on a horse or skates. And who could deny the comic potential of Bol boxing William “the Refrigerator” Perry, the 335-pound former defensive linemen of the Chicago Bears?

Bol agreed to be a clown. But he was not willing to be mocked for his own personal gain as so many reality-television stars are. Bol let himself be ridiculed on behalf of suffering strangers in the Sudan; he was a fool for Christ.

During his final years, Bol suffered more than mere mockery in the service of others. While he was doing relief work in the Sudan, he contracted a painful skin disease that ultimately contributed to his death.

Bol’s life and death throws into sharp relief the trivialized manner in which sports journalists employ the concept of redemption. In the world of sports media players are redeemed when they overcome some prior “humiliation” by playing well. Redemption then is deeply connected to personal gain and celebrity. It leads to fatter contracts, shoe endorsements, and adoring women.

Yet as Bol reminds us, the Christian understanding of redemption has always involved lowering and humbling oneself. It leads to suffering and even death.

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Photography and Music Spirituality

James Emery White on the Crisis in Evangelicalism

Scot McKnight reviews James Emery White’s new book on Jesus Creed. I read Scot’s review and scanned the book on Amazon preview.

Sigh. I’m sure this is unfair, but books like this make me want to convert to Catholicism or Eastern Orthodoxy. For all of Dr. White’s emphasis on Truth, pragmatism, orthodoxy and the Church, the problem with Evangelicalism has been that its fundamental tenet of foundationalist Biblicist inerrancy is obviously untrue and unworkable, its doctrinal emphasis has ignored the historic center of Trinitarian orthodoxy, and it has no functional ecclesiology through which to mediate theological understanding. It’s not working and it’s losing influence because it’s fundamentally broke. (Note: I am using the term “Biblicist inerrancy” to distinguish this from the sort of “functional infallibility” that I think is a more appropriate model for Biblical authority. See my comments on Billy Graham and Charles Templeton below).

White sounds the gong of the “correspondence” theory of Truth. There are enormous epistemological issues over the “correspondence” view of Truth, various ways of construing it, and so on. These are deep waters. Sorry, but it’s grossly inadequate for a non-philosopher theologian just to say the word “correspondence.” It becomes a distracting fight. Many serious theologian-philosophers (e.g. Nicholas Wolterstorff) have demonstrated why foundationalist-correspondence theories of Truth are inadequate from a Christian perspective.

White talks about orthodoxy and doctrine but at least from the preview I could see doesn’t really offer a basis for defining what is finally and absolutely orthodox, other than an apparently softer version of the Biblicism that is now dramatically failing Evangelicalism.

As an example, he tells the famous story of Billy Graham and Charles Templeton. Templeton takes Biblical criticism and scholarship seriously, and loses his faith. Billy pietistically says “God, this is your word, and I believe it,” and goes on to become Billy.

If evangelical faith is going to survive, it needs to bring Billy and Charles together. A correspondence theory of truth tied to Biblicistic inerrancy simply is a failure unless one has the capacity, like Billy, to put intellectual concerns on the shelf and focus on pragmatics. I’m not knocking Billy here at all — maybe many people are designed by God and called take Billy’s approach, and they don’t need to do the difficult work required for serious scholarship.

But we are living in a time when the average American is far better educated, far better connected, far more cynical, and far more savvy than in Billy’s heyday of the 1950’s. Evangelicalism will be dead within the next generation if the best it can muster is the same common-sense, naive, foundationalist Biblicism that caused it to lose its credibility in the first place.

I do appreciate White’s emphasis on the virtue of civility, however. That alone can go a long way.

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Law and Policy Spirituality

Travis Greene on Patriotism in Church

I posted my Memorial Day reflection on Jesus Creed, and got this comment from Travis Greene, which I think is awesome:

I wonder if those who are able, according to them, to easily hold patriotism and faith together without idolatry would do us weaker folks, whose consciences are troubled by this particular meat we see as sacrificed to idols, the favor of not singing loud songs in praise of America during church. You may be easily able to pledge allegiance to a nation but keep God first. You may be able to have a flag above the altar and remember which is more important. But it sickens me, and I know I’m not alone, and I wonder if for reasons of mission, ecclesiology, and simple compassion, you could just let this go.

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Spirituality

Churches and July 4

There’s a good discussion going on at Jesus Creed on how churches should handle July 4.  It’s interesting and encouraging to see how some of the pastor-commenters wrestle with the fact that July 4 falls on a Sunday this year.  The sentiment seems to be that some kind of recognition is appropriate, but that the dangers of idolatry and triumphalism are real.

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Spirituality

Pruning the Vines

Below is a wonderful video I found on a winemaking site called Crushnet.  I used it recently to facilitate a discussion of Jesus’ parable of the vine.  Two things struck me:  (1) pruning is the most important part of growing wine grapes; and (2) the pruning and growing seasons take up much of the years’ work before any fruit is ready for harvest.

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Law and Policy Religious Legal Theory Spirituality

Christians and Memorial Day

I enjoy Memorial Day. As an American, it feels right to remember and celebrate the sacrifices of our soldiers. As a Christian, however, I feel ambivalent about this kind of celebration. Pageantry, uniforms, parades, and the rhetoric of civil virtue — all of these things are seductive. It is so easy to fall into idolatry, to equate my polis with the City of God.

I wonder whether any Christians cheered during Titus’ triumphal procession through Rome in 71 A.D., after his armies had destroyed Jerusalem. Here is how the Jewish historian Josephus described it:

Now it is impossible to describe the multitude of the shows as they deserve, and the magnificence of them all; such indeed as a man could not easily think of as performed, either by the labor of workmen, or the variety of riches, or the rarities of nature; for almost all such curiosities as the most happy men ever get by piece-meal were here one heaped on another, and those both admirable and costly in their nature; and all brought together on that day demonstrated the vastness of the dominions of the Romans; for there was here to be seen a mighty quantity of silver, and gold, and ivory, contrived into all sorts of things, and did not appear as carried along in pompous show only, but, as a man may say, running along like a river.

Among the spoils Titus carried into Rome were the treasures of the Second Jewish Temple:

But for those that were taken in the temple of Jerusalem, they made the greatest figure of them all; that is, the golden table, of the weight of many talents; the candlestick also, that was made of gold, though its construction were now changed from that which we made use of; for its middle shaft was fixed upon a basis, and the small branches were produced out of it to a great length, having the likeness of a trident in their position, and had every one a socket made of brass for a lamp at the tops of them. These lamps were in number seven, and represented the dignity of the number seven among the Jews; and the last of all the spoils, was carried the Law of the Jews. After these spoils passed by a great many men, carrying the images of Victory, whose structure was entirely either of ivory or of gold. After which Vespasian marched in the first place, and Titus followed him; Domitian also rode along with them, and made a glorious appearance, and rode on a horse that was worthy of admiration.

For all the excitement of Titus’ memorial parade, it must have been a frightening and sad day for Roman Christians, most of whom likely would still have thought of themselves as Jews. Indeed, the Biblical book of Revelation reflects Christian attitudes towards the Roman polis of this time:

After this I saw another angel coming down from heaven. He had great authority, and the earth was illuminated by his splendor. With a mighty voice he shouted:

“Fallen! Fallen is Babylon the Great!
She has become a home for demons
and a haunt for every evil spirit,
a haunt for every unclean and detestable bird.
For all the nations have drunk
the maddening wine of her adulteries.
The kings of the earth committed adultery with her,
and the merchants of the earth grew rich from her excessive luxuries.”

Then I heard another voice from heaven say:
“Come out of her, my people,
so that you will not share in her sins,
so that you will not receive any of her plagues;
for her sins are piled up to heaven,
and God has remembered her crimes.
Give back to her as she has given;
pay her back double for what she has done.
Mix her a double portion from her own cup.
Give her as much torture and grief
as the glory and luxury she gave herself.

In her heart she boasts,’I sit as queen; I am not a widow,and I will never mourn.’
Therefore in one day her plagues will overtake her:
death, mourning and famine.
She will be consumed by fire,
for mighty is the Lord God who judges her. (Rev. 18:1-8)

Why are things so different for American Christians? Here are some snapshots of Church groups marching in the Hawthorne, New Jersey Memorial Day parade. The first two show the representatives of the local Catholic parish:

The next is from a Reformed church:

Here is the Episcopal parish:

And a nondenominational evangelical church:

It’s interesting to note how each of these local church bodies expressed their differing relationships to culture through these marchers.  The Catholic entry was old-school Northeast Italian Catholic:  American civil religion as generational heritage.  The Reformed church’s float offered an integration of the cross and the flag:  American civil religion as common grace.  The Episcopal church knit together themes of peace, prayer, flags, and troops:  American aging hippie counterculture meets civil religion.  And the independent evangelical church advertised its gospel outreach through “vacation Bible school” (complete with a web address):  American consumer culture meets civil religion.

In contrast with Revelation 18’s sentiments towards Rome, the fact that such a variety of Christian congregations all participated without irony in a parade honoring armies and wars seems striking.  Of course, there are two thousand years of history between John’s Apocalypse and Memorial Day 2010.  The Constantinian Settlement, Christendom, the Reformation, the Enlightenment, and the close connection between Protestant Christianity and the founding of the United States, all help explain the difference:  America in 2010 is not first century Rome, and our wars are not Rome’s wars.

And yet….  Has every American war been manifestly just, a clear defense of ordinary, peaceful people against oppression? Certainly not. Even if we concede that the “just war” criteria are universally valid (a concession I’m not prepared to make in light of other alternatives, such as the “just peacemaking” approach), many American military conflicts fail that test. It’s painful to remember that so much of United States territory was taken from Mexico and from native peoples by illegitimate force. World War I, in retrospect, seems like a pointless waste of millions of lives, fueled by stupidity and pride. The conflicts in Korea and Vietnam remain controversial, and there seem to be very strong arguments that the present Iraq War was initiated on false pretenses and contrary to international law. Even the American Revolution appears ambiguous when judged by “just war” standards. Would the Church today sanction violent revolution over unfair taxation? I hope not, given the ludicrous amount of property taxes we pay in New Jersey.

World War II, the “good war,” seems like the only modern American conflict that clearly was just in its inception. But even with the good war, there is the problem of how the fighting was carried out. The fire bombing of Germany and Japan, and of course the atomic bomb, introduce grave moral ambiguities into the story of the greatest generation.

So, I celebrate Memorial Day.  I sincerely salute the veterans as they march or drive by my lawn chair.  I eat hamburgers and drink iced tea.  I remember the truth that “greater love has no man than this, that he lay down his life for his friends.”  (John 15:13).  I give thanks to God for freedoms of religion, assembly and speech, and for the prosperity of economic freedoms.  But I wonder whether our religion has become perhaps just a bit too civil in the face of war.

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Hope Spirituality

Hopeful Thought for the Day

More from Augustine’s Confessions:

Who will grant me to find peace in you?  Who will grant me this grace, that you would come into my heart and inebriate it, enabling me to forget the evils that beset me and embrace you, my only good?  What are you to me?  Have mercy on me, so that I may tell.  What indeed am I to you, that you should command me to love you, and grow angry with me if I do not, and threaten me with enormous woes?  Is not the failure to love you woe enough in itself?  Alas, for me!  Through your own merciful dealings with me, O Lord my God, tell me what you are to me.  Say to my soul, I am your salvation.  Say it so that I can hear it.  My heart is listening, Lord; open up the ears of my heart and say to my soul, I am your salvation.  Let me run toward this voice and seize hold of you.  Do not hide your face from me:  let me die so that I may see it, for not to see it would be death to me indeed.