Friday, September 27, 2013

#19 Something about a Christian Ethic

Right now, I am unemployed.  I used to work in a church as a youth pastor, but I didn't play the church game well, and I was unwilling to play it.  So now, I'm without a job in a new city trying to figure out what to do with my life.  I've come to the realization that I really like to study and talk about faith, but when it comes to managing in a church context it all became too much for me.  I nearly walked away from my faith, now I realize that I probably just shouldn't be employed by the church.  I'm in the midst of trying to figure out what is next...

While that is all going on, I have taken the time to read a couple of books.  There are three book in particular that have made an impact on me.  The first is Red Letter Revolution.  This book is basically a conversation by two people who are trying to take what Jesus said seriously, Tony Campolo and Shane Claiborne.   These two tend to make the news, in certain circles, for living differently from most Evangelicals.  Claiborne is part of a kind of protestant monastic community in Philadelphia.  Campolo is sociology professor at Eastern University who is know for saying things that upset our supposed Christian sense of Ethics.  To me there was nothing new in this book.  They talked about critically applying Jesus' expressed Ethics as we see especially in "The Sermon on the Mount" in Matthew 5-7. You know the Beatitudes and  turn the other cheek and such. The impact this book on me was that it helped me realize how sparingly we actually try to apply Jesus' Ethics.

The second book that had an impact on me was called Peace by Walter Brueggemann.  Brueggemann is a Hebrew Bible scholar who usually has some pretty fantastic things to say, so he is always worth the read.  Again nothing Earth shattering or new in this book.  He spent a lot of time talking about Shalom, which has a deeper definition of peace then our English word.  This is peace is about community and justice.  Not retributive justice with an eye for an eye but a restorative justice where everyone is treated as a child of God with respect and love.  It is about sharing power and really is an imagine of the Kingdom of God which we mistakenly make into a concept of where we go when we die.  That kingdom was the expectation of Israel and is what Jesus was talking about all the time.  The Kingdom of God is near, which is a kingdom of peace of shalom.  Again it made me think about how we don't really want to apply Jesus' Ethics on our own lives today.  We make it about a coming Kingdom forgetting that the kingdom is being realized today.  We are supposed to live Shalom now, like that kingdom (or empire if you'd like, it is the same word in Greek) is already fully realized.

The third book is called, Peace in a Post-Christian Era by Thomas Merton.  Merton was a Trappist Monk who was also a profound writer in the 1960s.  As a monk in this time period everything that he wrote to be published had to approved by the church.  This book was never approved during his lifetime because it was considered inappropriate for a monk to write about these things.  Merton apparently had hard time with this but tried to be obedient to the church.  You can be obedient and unhappy at the same time.  What was inappropriate for Merton to write about was the Cold War arms race.  Some say that having lots of nuclear weapons kept the Soviets from using nukes on us because they were afraid of the retaliation.  Merton was pointing out the serious danger in this thinking and trying to build a good moral argument again nuclear proliferation using Jesus' Ethics.  So basically the church didn't want to hear how Jesus' thoughts say on turning the other cheek can be applied to the arms race.  Merton's ideas didn't go along with conventional thinking at the time, so it wasn't published in his lifetime.

As we all know we managed not to blow up the world during the cold war, so good use of restraint on both sides of that staring contest.  There was a missile crisis or something with Cuba and the USSR, but happily no nuclear fallout.  Still the striking thing in this book was that here was someone trying to apply Jesus' Ethics to our lives and he got censored by the church of all things for it.  It was a political issue that church didn't want a monk weighing in on, but still can it be bad to try to apply the teachings of Jesus to our lives?

All of these people draw from other sources in the Bible, too.  For instance, Merton like Peter's words, of "Do not repay evil with evil" (1 Peter 3:9).  But mostly all of these people were drawing from the Sermon on the Mount and other ethical teachings from Jesus.  Do you really know what Jesus taught?  Do you really think that we are supposed to apply these things to our lives?  It seems that our Ethics are not really based on Jesus' teachings but on other things, like consumption and politics.

To wrap this rambling mess up, I would like to just put some Ethical statements out there for you. Ready?

Love your neighbor as yourself (Matthew 22:39/Leviticus 19:18)

Do not repay evil with evil or abuse with abuse; but, on the contrary, repay with a blessing (1 Peter 3:9)

Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who abuse you. (Luke 6:27-28)

Turn the other cheek (Luke 6:29; Matthew 5:39)

Do to other what you would have them do to you (Luke 6:31)

We are both Sinner and Saint--this one is Martin Luther, but keeping this in mind makes you more gracious especially with yourself.

How can you live these things out?  It seems counter-cultural to our current set of norms, yet so familiar and cliched.  Isn't this a frame for what a Christian Ethics should look like?  At least the start of one?

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