Blessed
Are the Peacemakers, Not the Warmakers
by Rev.
Emmanuel Charles McCarthy
by Rev. Emmanuel Charles McCarthy
DIGG THIS
Render
Unto Caesar
by
Archbishop Charles Chaput
Render unto
Caesar is a book written by a Roman Catholic Bishop, who can
only speak truth or falsehood as a person who is indelibly marked
as a Baptized and Confirmed Christian and Bishop. He wrote this
book out of and within a Christian ethos in general and a Catholic
mind-set in particular, and therefore it is herein evaluated for
good or for ill on that basis.
Charles Chaput,
the very conservative Catholic Bishop of Denver and a very nice
fellow personally, steers clear of any serious analysis of the primal
issue in Church-state relations, that either poisons or empowers
everything else. He does not seriously address in Render unto
Caesar the foundational problem of the morality of Christians
using violence in all forms against other human beings, and even
each other, under the guise of the word "state." In other
words he assumes as Gospel truth, and accepts, the Constantinian
definition of the content of Christian love – a definition and content
that is patently inconsistent with the definition and content Jesus
gave the word love by His words and deed. Specifically, Charles
Chaput’s definition of Christian love includes killing and maiming
people. Jesus’ does not. His understanding of Christian love cannot
be found in original Christianity. It comes into its own about 300
years later with Constantine.
Beyond this,
no more really needs be said about the book. If one accepts Chaput’s
understanding of Christian love, he or she may still have quibbles
and squabbles, or maybe even fist-pounding arguments, with him about
what he writes on this page or that, regarding the implications
and applications of his understanding of that love. But, if one
accepts Jesus’ definition of love, he or she will find an entire
book one cannot accept, because it is the Constantinian understanding
of love that underlies all thought in it.
Take for example
the book’s introductory quotation from the philosopher Henri Bergson:
The motive power of democracy is love. I agree. In fact on April
4,1971, I gave a public address of some length, subsequently published,
entitled, "Direct Democracy and Agape," on this very subject.
In it I referenced the word love exclusively to Christlike love,
specifically quoting in full 1 Corinthian 13 to be certain that
people would be clear about what I was saying. Since love is a word
with an almost indefinite number of meanings attached to it in English,
I felt truthful communication required this explicit clarification.
In Render unto Caesar the meaning of the word love slips
and slides like a drunken sailor all over the lot. Sometime what
is being said appears to be Christlike love, or at least a logical
deduction from it. Then on the next page it is clearly Constantinian
love. The confusing and commingling of these understandings of love,
understandings that exclude each other because of the logical Principle
of Non-Contradiction* are the piedi d’argilla on which Render
unto Caesar makes its stand for everything it presents as moral
truth in conformity with the teachings of Jesus.
*["X"
and "not X" cannot both be true; between "X"
and "not X" there is no middle ground.]
Now,
the saddest thing about Archbishop Charles Chaput’s book, Render
unto Caesar, is that 98% of the Christian Churches and Christian
leaders, from Moscow to Manhattan, from the Pope to Putin, agree
with him and think as he does in relation to the teachings of Jesus
and their relationship to the "state." They believe that
the piedi d’argilla on which this book stands are rock solid,
namely, that Christlike love includes Christians getting a hold
on the levers of the state’s power of violence. As previously noted,
they only disagree with Bishop Chaput, and among themselves, on
some of the details of the execution of violence – on which human
beings and on behalf of what causes Christ would approve killing,
maiming, torturing, destroying and desecrating other people under
the auspices of the "state." But, at root they all – Charles
Stanley, John Hagee, Alexei Ridiger, James Dobson, Reverend Ike,
Dimitrios Arhondonis, Hans Kung, Charles Chaput, Rowan Williams
and tens of millions of other Christian pastors and preachers –
are in complete agreement, getting the states power of violence
in the hands of good [by their particular standards, not Gospel
standards] Christians is faithful discipleship on the part of the
Church and on the part of those Christians who pursue this end.
An icon of
Jesus as a soldier firing a machine gun at another human being is
understood across the board to be a preposterous image of Jesus.
It is an image imparting a grave and destructive false witness.
But, what of the image of Jesus as Prime Minister of Israel, Premier
of Russia, President of the United States, or Head of State, Head
of Government and Commander-in-Chief of the military of the Vatican
City-State? Are these authentic images of Jesus or are they equally
false images imparting a grave and destructive false witness to
Christians and non-Christian alike? Indeed, does not each of these
images absolutely require the other? Does not the Christian soldier
killing and maiming people with a clear conscience require that
the Prime Minister, et al., permitting him or her to kill? And,
does not the Christian Prime Minister, et al., require the soldier
with the machine gun ready to pull the trigger on the PM’s command?
To have an image of a Prime Minister, et al. without including in
it a soldier at the ready to destroy human beings upon a given order
from the PM is like having an image of a Mafia Godfather without
his "enforcers" and triggermen. Both images are arrant
nonsense because of what they leave out. As the old song goes, "You
can’t have one without the other!"
So, is the
Christian who orders the trigger pulled any more or any less a faithful
follower of Jesus and His Way, a true images of and witness to Jesus
and His Way of love (Jn 13:34, 15:12, Catechism of the Catholic
Church # 1970, 2822) than the Christian soldier who upon orders
pulls the machine gun trigger thereby cutting another human being
to pieces? Practically all PMs and their "enforcers" in
Western civilization over the last 1700 years have been and are
Baptized Christians!
The piedi
d’argilla of Charles Chaput’s book is the piedi d’argilla
of just about every Church and pastor today, and for most of
Church history. From House Churches, to Pentecostal Churches, to
Glass Cathedrals, to Rock Basilicas – First World, Second World,
Third World and Fourth World – nearly all Churches and Church leaders
and Church members have been trying to be Pilgrim Churches and Pilgrim
people while standing and walking on these ever corroding and corrupting
feet of clay, that is, on a presentation and enfleshment of the
truth and love that Jesus taught, that is not the truth and love
that Jesus taught.
Nothing in
the teachings of Jesus says or even suggest, that for His disciples
violence becomes acceptable when done as part of a crowd – whether
the crowd names itself a state, a corporation, a Church, an army
or any combination thereof. Render unto Caesar as noted above
steers clear of this primal issue and simply assumes that it is
a settled matter that followers of Jesus can be faithful followers
of Jesus and kill and maim people, or order the killing and maiming
of people, e.g., war, abortion, capital punishment, etc. if it is
done under the auspices of the "state." As mentioned above
an icon of Jesus firing a machine gun is universally experienced
as preposterous because of what it says on the pages of the Gospels
about who He was, what He taught and how He lived. Does the Baptized
follower of Jesus, who is expressly commanded by Him to "Love
one another as I have loved you," have available to him or
her – morally, spiritually and ontologically – a body and a soul
that have the authority to render to Caesar in an act of homicidal
violence?
Render unto
Caesar is a book by a Christian and a Bishop about love, politics
and Jesus. But, it is not a book about the love that Jesus teaches
in the Gospels nor is it a book about the politics of Jesus. It
is a book that says one can achieve Christ’s ends by using unChristlike
means. To believe this disconnect between ends chosen and the means
chosen to achieve them "requires a peculiar kind of self-hypnosis,
or moral confusion, or worse," to use Charles Chaput’s own
words from another context. God is not mocked, we reap what we sow.
It makes no difference if we re-name corn "wheat," or
re-name violence "Christlike love." Nor, does it make
any difference for how long we have been re-naming corn "wheat"
and violence "Christlike love." It is equally irrelevant
what personages of distinction re-named corn "wheat,"
and violence "Christlike love." What we will get in reality
for sowing corn and violence is a harvest of corn and violence,
and their fruits!
Render unto
Caesar is a book, that if it had courageously disciplined itself
to proclaiming that love, and that love only, that Jesus taught,
that is, a nonviolent love of friends and enemies in imitation of
Him and in fidelity to His teaching, could have been an authentic
prescription for Christianity being that salubrious mustard seed
which planetary humanity so desperately longs for and needs for
its healing and peace. Instead it is a prescription for more of
the same old addictive poison that for over a millennia and a half
the Churches have been pouring into the minds and hearts and bodies
and blood of Christians and non-Christians – the poison of the cross
of nonviolent love turned upside down and made into a sword, and
then sold to humanity in a bottle with the label "Christlike
love!"
November
4, 2008
Fr.
Emmanuel Charles McCarthy is a priest of the Eastern Rite (Byzantine-Melkite)
of the Catholic Church. Formerly a lawyer and a university educator,
he is the founder and the original director of The Program for the
Study and Practice of Nonviolent Conflict Resolution at the University
of Notre Dame. He is also co-founder, along with Dorothy Day and
others of Pax Christi-USA. He has conducted retreats and spoken
at conferences throughout the world on the issue of the relationship
of faith and violence and the nonviolence of the Jesus. He was the
keynote speaker at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee for
the 25th anniversary memorial of the assassination of Rev. Martin
Luther King, Jr. there. He is author of several books, including
these: All Things Flee Thee because Thou Fleest Me: A Cry to
the Churches and their Leaders to Return to the Nonviolent Jesus
and His Nonviolent Way; Christian Just War Theory: The logic of
Deceit; August 9: The Stations of the Cross of Nonviolent Love.
He has also authored innumerable articles on the subject of violence,
religion and the nonviolent love of friends and enemies taught by
Jesus by word and deed. His audio/video series, BEHOLD THE LAMB,
is almost universally considered to be the most spiritually profound
presentation on the matter of Gospel Nonviolent Love available in
this format. BEHOLD THE LAMB is now available on
mp3CD through his website, either at the cost of $5.00 for a
disc or it can be acquired directly by an mp3 downloaded from
the website for no cost. Rev. Emmanuel Charles McCarthy was
nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for his life's work on behalf
of peace within people and among people. He may be reached and his
work may be accessed at the Center
for Christian Non-Violence.
Fr.
Emmanuel Charles McCarthy Archives
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