McChurch - Welcome to Armageddon! We're Sorry! We'll Try And Do Better Next Time
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| The following article is located at: http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2007/september/35.90.html DO LIKEWISE Our Teachable Moment The David. P. Gushee | posted 9/26/2007 08:50AM This month the President will receive reports from commanders in the field about whether the troop surge in For evangelicals, one of the groups that strongly supported the war initially, one lesson is clear: We must become more discerning when our nation's leaders advocate a military solution. We have biblical resources for doing so, if we will draw upon them. In fall 2002 and winter 2003, before the Furthermore, many Christians believe it's not just natural, but also biblical. Many a war has been supported based on a reading of Romans 13 that says God-appointed government leaders are authorized to use the "sword" of state violence. For believers who understand the passage this way, it means that we should trust and obey our leaders when they give the word. Other Strands But the events of the last several years can help us recognize that this strand of the biblical witness must be interwoven with other, equally important strands. Here are some of them:
For me, the next time I am asked to support a war, my default setting will be no rather than yes. As a follower of Christ, I will have to be persuaded that the particular confluence of circumstances is so grave as to require a military solution. Before Christians sign off on another war, we must do our best to figure out whether the government has done everything possible to make peace. And there are lots of good, creative options. Glen Stassen's just-peacemaking approach, which includes measures such as nonviolent action and independent initiatives to reduce threats, provides helpful, practical options. (See Just Peacemaking: Ten Practices for Abolishing War.) In addition, we need to carefully rethink just-war theory. At its best, this post-biblical resource establishes rigorous criteria that help Christians apply critical thinking to any claim that it is time to go to war: just cause, competent authority, last resort, right intention, proportionality, and other tests. But sometimes just-war theory produces predetermined results depending on the prior loyalty of the person employing the theory. If we cannot reform how we use just-war theory, then we ought to abandon it and come up with something better. When the Copyright © 2007 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.
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