Pacifism and
Nonviolence are controversial and sometimes confusing topics. This is
compounded by the fact that they mean different things to different people. Not
everyone is in agreement as to what they mean as far as concepts, let alone what
are their limits and goals.
For some Pacifism is
an absolute. They extend this to refusing to eat meat or discipline their
children. Others live in fear of harming the smallest of insects which
represent Karma-condemned souls in a different stage of reincarnation or
perhaps they've become confused about the uniqueness of humanity versus the
animal world.
Some believe in a
Pacifism that encompasses the political realm and believe that all nations are
morally bound to lay down their arms. Others believe in a Pacifism that is
personal and individualistic. Some embrace non-violence on the basis of such
Pacifism. Others utilise non-violence as a means of political coercion. This
latter example is quite common and not a few political figures are associated
with it. These 'men of peace' in many ways are in fact quite willing to use the
violent power of the state. They use it against itself and once attaining
political power have no qualms about using the police and military to
accomplish their own goals... even sometimes masquerading as 'humanitarian'
concerns.
The Early Church was
largely hostile to the military or the notion of Christians holding political
office. This belief, reflected in the doctrine and ethics of the New Testament
was slowly abandoned in the late 2nd century as we read of
Christians appearing in the army. At that point it was still controversial and
many Churches would not tolerate their brethren enlisting. By the late 3rd
century the Church was becoming more at home with Rome. The Diocletian
Persecution would almost certainly have led to a return to the New Testament
except all these questions were thrown into doubt and confusion by the
conversion of Constantine.
Defenders of Christian
military service and government office discount the teaching of the New
Testament because of its hostile pagan context and contend the many teachings
and examples from the Gospels and Epistles are no longer applicable in the
post-Constantinian milieu.
Obviously the vast
majority of post-Constantinian 'Christians' embrace forms of violence that they
view as legitimate. There are many different criteria and all of them are (in
one way or another) mistaken. The seemingly 'orthodox' viewpoint not only
undermines New Testament ethics, in the end it is an assault on Scriptural
authority itself.
The confusion is
compounded as there are many varieties of Christian Pacifism that are in one
way or another mixed or blended with some of these aforementioned notions.
These too are mostly in error.
We must be clear. The
notion of Pacifism as an Absolute or Pacifism taken in an Idealist sense must
be rejected. Pacifism must not be 'written into' the doctrine of God. This
latter tendency is especially prevalent in Theologically Liberal circles where
God is not the Holy Sovereign but is instead a Grandfather-Gandhi-like figure
of their own imagination. Or in other cases 'god' is little more than an
impersonal force representing some kind of cosmic balance. Of course it must be
acknowledged that many if not most theological liberals do not embrace
pacifism. In fact some of their chief thinkers (Niebuhr for instance) are
hostile to it.
This view (Pacifism
within the Godhead) approaches the kind of sharp Old Testament/New Testament
dichotomy that must be rejected. The relationship between the Old and New
Testaments is complicated and one of the major doctrinal concerns of both the
New Testament and the whole of Church History. It's safe to say that most have
answered and even framed the question wrongly. There have always been
tendencies (and temptations) to Judaize and over-emphasize formal continuity
and from time to time there have arisen groups that dangerously overplay the
dichotomy or discontinuity. Dispensationalists, Theological Liberals, and
Liberal Pacifists tend to fall into this camp. Syncretism has also plagued the
Church from the days of the Apostles. Many have wed Biblical doctrine to philosophy
and/or culture. Its prevalence is in no way diminished in our own day and in
fact this syncretism reigns supreme in many Churches professing to follow
Scripture.
Regarding the
Christian view of the Old Testament, there's a tension at work that can be
fleshed out through careful study of the New Covenant. It is the Apostles who
show us the way, who teach us how to read and understand the Old Testament. The
New Covenant supersedes the Old and while there is a profound change in form
and context, the substance (Christ) always remains the same. This is the
starting point for all discussions of doctrine including this one.
Christian Pacifism is
a New Testament teaching and yet most manifestations claiming that label fall
far short of it. And when cast in an improper form and context these 'false
pacifisms' can indeed represent serious error. In terms of temporality they are
in one sense to be commended to the degree they're not championing war and in
some cases murder, as the historical Constantinian Church has been all too
eager to do. This 'Constantinian' label would include both the Greek and Latin
entities as well as the proponents and descendants of Magisterial Protestantism.
The latter would include both Confessionalists Churches as well as modern
Evangelicals.
As a quick aside I
hope to explore in another piece... it has almost been forgotten that at one
time many Fundamentalists largely embraced a Pacifist position. Sadly that
legacy has been lost, both in terms of memory and doctrine.
In other words it
must be admitted the non-pacifist view is the 'majority' position vis-à-vis
Church History. But given that the New Testament (built on the examples of the
Old) anticipates large-scale world-affirming apostasy, this sad reality is
hardly surprising, if not to be expected.
Though they're
rightly not celebrating the spilling of blood, many Christian Pacifists
introduce distortions within the doctrine of God that ultimately work
themselves out in a destruction of Biblical Christology. Christ is the Prince
of Peace but not the Holy Judge. The Herem
or Divinely sanctioned Holy War of the Old Testament becomes so offensive
that many fall into blasphemy when dealing with it. For some, Eternal
Punishment is transformed from being righteous judgment to a monstrous denial
of the Pacifist principle.
Many Traditionalists
(embracers of the Constantinian heritage) rightly condemn these syncretic forms
of Christian Pacifism. By rejecting as it were 'half' of Christ's nature and
person they have but half a gospel... in another words, no gospel at all.
And yet many pro-war
and violence Constantinians even while defending Christological orthodoxy have
actually devoted their lives to evil service, murder, lies and theft. They do
these things wearing uniforms, wrapping themselves in flags and deceived by
empty words. They justify their deeds by hiding behind man-made institutions.
Knowing nothing of Christ and His Kingdom they too make shipwreck of the faith.
They are known by their fruits.
Genuine Christian Pacifism as taught in the New Testament is
something quite different. Again it is not absolute or universal vis-à-vis This
Age. It is contextual. It is eschatological, an ethic of Heaven which we as
citizens of that Kingdom live out in This Age to the glory of God. It is
covenantal, an ethic only properly understood by those who possess Heavenly
citizenship.
We, like our Lord are called to be slaughtered sheep. This
does not mean that all of us will feel the whip or face the executioner. But
all who live godly (in whatever culture) will suffer to some extent. Is Paul to
be taken seriously or are his words only for a pre-Constantinian audience? The
suffering may be in the form of disadvantage, second-class citizenship and
poverty accompanied by ridicule and scorn. Genuine Christians have particularly
suffered in the context of 'Christendom' within the so-called Christian State.
By definition false, and warned against in the New Testament, all so-called
Christian states are necessarily heretical and thus faithful Christians will undoubtedly
suffer under their rule... at the very least in terms of Spiritual suffering.
The persecution, while at times extreme, during other eras can all but
disappear. But with that comes the danger of seduction. The latter has largely
been the story of the Enlightenment/Christian syncretism represented within the
United States and its culture.
Though there is suffering here too... for the faithful.
Perhaps those who have flourished need to revisit these questions.
The Peace Ethic we live by is rooted in Heaven... the realm
that knows no sin. Our union with Christ allows us (through the Spirit) to
experience that now. We have a foretaste and through the Spirit we begin to
desire and live out that ethic and reality even though in This Age and in this
sin-corrupted flesh we are doomed to fail... and the world will eagerly use
violence against us.
Failure does not mean that we are therefore justified to
embrace the inverse. The Heavenly Peace Ethic is rooted in Spirit-life and
indwelling. It is in that sense individualistic and redemptive. It is part of
the antithesis we experience vis-à-vis the world. Once again it is covenantal
and this is essential in understanding the next question.
Is the Pacifist Ethic binding on the unbeliever? The
unbeliever is called to turn away from sin and embrace Christ through faith.
Until that bridge is crossed, there is a vast chasm between us and them. We
live in and by the Kingdom of Heaven. They live in and by the world. The
commandments of God are foolishness to them. That's not to say that they're
just something 'silly'. No, according to Romans 8, they're literally
incomprehensible. Without a heavenly context with which to place such concepts,
the Kingdom Ethic is to them not only insane but immoral and anti-social. They
will hate us as we're told. They will call us evildoers. They will consider us
to be the immoral ones because we're not 'contributing' to the Babel they would
build. This is also true of the disciples of Constantine, the apostates
building Babel with a cross on top.
So be it. Trying to impose Christian ethics upon the
unbeliever can only be described as folly and in reality harms the testimony of
the Gospel in producing a pseudo-righteousness. One need only listen to many
presidential speeches to discern how unbelievers can utterly twist Scriptural
phrases and concepts. For that matter one need only attend the average
Evangelical church to hear much of the same.
Lost, they make shipwreck of the meaning of Scripture and
fall into blasphemy, usually applying the Spirit-redemptive work of Christ to
their labours and wars as a nation... waged in the name of and for the purposes
of peace.
These are lies, straight from the pit.
Men will proclaim their affection for the Sermon on the
Mount, but only as a wistful ideal. No one believes it to be an ethic that can
govern society. And indeed, it cannot. That's not what it's for. Unbelievers
can neither follow it nor understand it. It's really that simple. The idea of
legislating it is absurd. It is the ethic of Heaven, for those born from above
and led by the Spirit.
So does that mean the state is off the hook? No, the
unbelievers will answer for their unbelief and their wicked deeds. God will
judge them as Paul says. In terms of Providence they serve a purpose. They are
unwitting agents, servants and ministers of God's Restraining Hand. They don't
exercise power and vengeance to glorify God. In fact they cannot and this is
true on several levels. That's not what the state is for. It is as Paul teaches
a means of restraint, a means of keeping the world from descending into chaos,
so that the Gospel can go forth. We can be thankful (on one level) for the
state but that's a far cry from venerating it, let alone signing on to its
mission. It's not for us. Paul is drawing a sharp contrast between the
Christian in Romans 12 with the sword bearing vengeance machine that is the
state. The 'good' the state defends and promotes is not covenantal. It is a
fallen and imperfect 'good'. It is a self-righteous good.
It is a 'minister' in the same sense that Pagan Rome was (the
context of the Epistle to the Romans) or Assyria, Persia or Babylon in the Old
Testament. Assyria was God's servant-axe, Cyrus was on the one hand a head
crowning a Beast-power, and on the other hand he was (in Providential and
prophetic terms) a deliverer-king, a quasi-messianic figure who metaphorically
provided the political basis for the Covenant People returning to the Edenic
Promised Land.
And yet it must be understood, especially with Cyrus, that
the illustration breaks down, because like Solomon the earthly picture was
incomplete and a failure. It was only a shadow hinting at the Christocentric
Reality that was to later appear.
We are called to follow the laws, pay our taxes and live
godly lives. The state will (ideally) leave us alone which is what we desire.
Paul makes this clear in 1 Timothy 2 and 1 Thessalonians 4. Peter also reflects
this in 1 Peter 2.
Pacifism could be described as part of our calling to be in
Christ and to come out from this world. We live as strangers and pilgrims. In
abandoning vengeance in the light of grace, our faith is in God's Providence
and the final judgment. God's vengeance will fall on the earth. We don't
believe that because God is described as love or that Jesus being the Prince of
Peace necessitates or results in Divine Nonviolence. Man seeks his own prestige
and power. Violence rooted in covetousness and pride.
God's violence (as it were) is holy and just and for a right
motive. Love and peace can only exist in the realm of righteousness and
holiness.
Those that hear the command to take up the sword in Luke 22
have misunderstood Christ's words. We are not called to take up the sword but
to take up the cross.
Continue reading part 2
Continue reading part 2