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Michael DeFazio
01 April 2008 @ 08:12 am
Rethinking Christ and Culture (3)  
Third (see below), I have long thought that the accusation of “naive” simply doesn’t make sense when used by a non-pacifist of a pacifist. I get this all the time: “You're being naive. You want a world that doesn’t exist. In the real world, violence is necessary to deal with evil.” So often I want to say, “No, you want a world that doesn’t exist. In the real world, violence simply doesn’t deal effectively with evil - at least not as well as you imply.”

People often bring up Hitler as the prime example of when it was necessary to engage in violence. That may or may not be true, but it is a fact that even though Hitler is now dead, evil continues to wreak havoc on our world. Killing Hitler did not stop the birth and accession to power of men like Saddam Hussein or Osama bin Laden. (I only pick these two because in my culture they are the two most recent and baddest bad guys.) The fact is that we live in a world where evil is and will continue to be, and nothing we can do will change this fact.

Of course one can make the argument that evil must nevertheless be restrained or minimized, and that violence is necessary for this task. First, while the first part is true, it is no way proven, or even likely in my opinion, that continuing the cycle of violence is the most effective way to minimize the world’s violence. Second, even if it were, that says nothing about the responsibility of Jesus-followers to participate in this violent restraint. If it is true that our central task is not effectiveness in making the world a bit safer place, but rather faithfulness to the gospel and lordship of Jesus the Messiah, then the whole point is moot. (Again, I’m oversimplifying, but it really does seem this clear to me, at least some of the time.)

As for the main point I’m trying to make, I was glad to see Carter similarly picking apart this idea that pacifists are somehow more naive than non-pacifists when it comes to living in a violent evil world. We must all first acknowledge what can and cannot be expected to result from our attempts to mitigate evil, whether through the use or the rejection of violence. No program or system or commitment is going to rid the world of evil and/or war. And, second, we must allow this realism to bring to light how we are and should evaluate our actions in this regard. Which question is more important: What actions will most effectively minimize evil and suffering in this world? What actions will most faithfully witness to the gospel and lordship of Jesus Christ? Perhaps they are the same question; then again, perhaps not. (And now, by the way, we come full circle, for it makes no sense to opt for the second question apart from the reality and promise of resurrection.)

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Michael DeFazio
31 March 2008 @ 11:14 am
Rethinking Christ and Culture (2)  
Second (see below), I've been thinking lots lately about the significance of confessing Jesus as "fully God, fully man." For a long time I haven't given much weight to such theological affirmations (scary, I know), because I could not see how they mattered or were essential to the Scriptural gospel. I wrote them off as fourth century Greekified aberrations from (or at least unnecessary formulations of) New Testament truth. But thanks to some suggestions from I don't remember where, I came to see that confessing this means that Jesus becomes determinative for our portrait of true divinity and our paradigm of true humanity.

That is, believing that Jesus was fully God means that any picture of "God" that isn't congruent with Jesus is not (faithfully) describing the One True God. (In my estimation, this would include the Calvinist God, as well as the God who can't allow sinful people into his presence, or who must punish people even though he doesn't want to.)

Moreover, believing that Jesus was fully human means that his whole life is a model of what it means to be truly and faithfully human. We should therefore pattern our entire lives after his life - including the so-called public or political parts - which I of course think means renouncing the use of violence even in defense of justice (among many other things).

In addition to confirming the convictions that were already developing in me, Carter highlighted a totally new thought for me in this regard. It is often said that Nicene Christology (i.e. Christ as fully God and fully man) is more Greek than Hebrew in that it separates thinking about Jesus from the actual Christ of history. That may in some ways have been the case, but Carter argues the opposite: by affirming that it was in the form of a fully human life that God embodied Godself, we can never separate our thinking of God from the specific life of this Jew from Nazareth. (This is important because otherwise Jesus becomes part of some "god" totally disconnected from us and our real lives.) Taken this way, Nicene Christology, at least in theory though often not in practice, totally affirms and protects the humanness and thus the Jewishness of our Messiah-Savior-Lord.

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