Trendy,
Modern, Emergent Evangelicals Want To Bomb Darfur
by
Bill Barnwell
by Bill Barnwell
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Count me as
a loud dissenter to one of the latest trendy causes of many younger
Evangelicals: Darfur. I have no desire to push our already overstretched
military to intervene and bomb foreign warring factions into peace,
love, and happiness. Interesting how many of the same people who
complain about our continued military presence in Iraq (and I join
in their criticisms) want the UN or the US to start dropping bombs
in Darfur to kill even more people in the name of humanitarianism.
Darfur is certainly
a troubled region. You can read about this very unstable area of
Sudan and its long and complicated background here.
However, according to some younger "emergent
church"-type Evangelicals and a coalition of other voices
on the left and right, the situation isn’t really all that complex.
We have the power to easily solve the crisis. What’s needed is "social
justice," they say. Apparently the socially just thing to do
is bomb Sudan, invade yet
another country, and involve ourselves in yet another messy civil
war. Alas, the
facts are always a little more complicated than the humanitarian
enthusiasts would have you believe.
So, while many
progressive Evangelicals are calling for our exit in Iraq, they
are also simultaneously calling for our entrance into Sudan. Their
problem is not so much that bombs are falling; they are just are
in disagreement with where the bombs are falling. Progressive
Evangelicals will take issue with that statement and say they merely
support sanctions and UN peacekeepers to start with, and then maybe
the tanks and bombs. But if history is any judge, once we insert
ourselves into a "UN peacekeeping mission," we seemingly
never leave. A timetable is set and pushed back year after year.
"Peacekeeping" also tends to be a prelude to "war-making."
And as Richard Land (the Southern Baptist Convention’s head of their
Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission) says, any peacekeeping
mission will need the necessary "military
teeth."
According to
some of our anti-Iraq war, pro-peace Evangelicals, all we need to
do is just give war a chance in Darfur. This turnaround is similar
to the peacenik left-wingers who in '99 traded in their lava lamps,
open-toed sandals and Grateful Dead CD’s for machines guns during
their euphoria to bomb Serbia for "humanitarian" reasons. Of course,
those laptop bombardiers weren't the ones actually going to war,
just like the belligerent rightwing bloggers and radio personalities
are not the ones serving in Iraq today.
Yet eight years
later that region is still largely a mess and most the stated reasons
for going into that war turned out to be exaggerations or untrue.
We were told Milosevic was a "new Hitler" even though he was losing
a province every couple of years and his country's economic and
military strength was puny. Allegations of genocide were overstated
and atrocities were revealed on both sides. There's certainly real
atrocities going on in Darfur right now (and that are worse than
existed in Kosovo), but I have no reason to believe that we are
going to make the situation all better with tanks and bombs, and
apparently neither do many of the aid workers actually on the ground
over there.
And what of all those millions of dollars raised by the "Save Darfur
Coalition"? Well, according
to this recent New York Times article, it's actually
not getting to Darfur and not doing much if any relief. And what
do relief workers think of this proposed UN military intervention
being pushed for by various left-wing gunslingers and their hipster
Evangelical buddies? They claim it will result in more carnage and
more damage, not less.
Note that most
people attracted to a particular cause think that war should be
waged long before all other options are exhausted or facts on the
table (See Iraq in the summer 2002–early 2003). Personally as a
Christian, I really don't see the New Testament ethic pointing towards
a promotion of military strife, certainly not before all the facts
are in and all options exhausted. For every Christian who plays
some "gotcha" game with me by pointing to the various wars of ancient
Israel, I ask them to actually look at what the New Testament has
to say. Romans 13 grants the state the authority to punish its own
transgressors, but I don't see this as giving blanket authority
for waging undeclared do-gooder wars against other sovereign territories
wars that often cause more harm than good. And this is a
disputed point, but some NT Greek scholars would contend that the
"sword" being referenced in Romans 13 is a small defensive dagger.
Whatever it is, its best application for today probably isn't Humvees
and stealth bombers against foreigners and "collateral damage" (a.k.a.
innocent civilians).
But I'm a realist, and I know war is not likely to go away anytime
soon. As a practical matter, however, I don't see this one meeting
a theological or constitutional smell test. Certainly not yet at
least. If someone could actually make a convincing case that bombing
the bad guys of Darfur would result in a net positive, even though
it would probably inflict its own evils, I might entertain such
utilitarian notions even though that kind of moral equivocating
troubles me. But more likely you'd have a situation similar to what
happened in Kosovo, an area most people today have long forgotten
about which is still quite screwed up. Or you could have American
ground soldiers get in the middle of a bloody and messy civil war.
I think we're already in the middle of one too many of those as
it is.
There is also the unfortunate reality that even though America is
big and strong, it is not able, nor should it try to correct all
the wrongs in the world. And as we are now seeing, it doesn't always
work to try and force people to resolve their differences and get
along happily ever after, even when you try and force them with
a government-paid-for gun. Also, whether we want to admit it or
not, we are just too stretched economically and militarily to insert
ourselves into a never-ending stream of global conflicts, even ones
like Darfur that involve real human rights abuses.
Make
no mistake, both the left and right love military force; they just
love it for different reasons. Putting the humanitarian crusaders
in charge would not necessarily reduce America’s involvement in
foreign wars and entanglements. They too love to play the role of
Globocop. Keep that in mind before you enlist in their brigades
to hop aboard the Darfur bandwagon.
June
22, 2007
Bill
Barnwell [send him mail]
is
a pastor and writer from Michigan. He holds both a Master of Ministry
degree and a Master of Arts in Theological Studies degree from Bethel
College in Mishawaka, Indiana. Visit his
blog. Bill is also a Mortgage
Consultant and Loan Originator who can serve clients
throughout the country.
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