Progressive Revival

No Moral Relativism Here

Thursday June 11, 2009

With yesterday's shooting at the Holocaust museum, I was reminded of a story told to me several years ago by a professor of when he had been a doctoral student. 

An eminent post-modern theologian had come to his university to deliver a lecture on morality.  The guest insisted that morality was completely embedded in culture, "and that there was nothing that was universally wrong from one culture to another.  "Nothing," he insisted, "there is nothing that has been wrong in all places, all times, and to all people."  Then he added, "I dare you.  I dare you to tell me one thing--one thing--that is always wrong!"

My friend, whom I knew to be a liberal Democrat and was also a serious Methodist, rather sheepishly raised his hand.  "You there," the famous lecturer called on him, "can you tell me something that is always morally wrong?"  The young student responded shakily, "I think so.  One shouldn't burn Jews in ovens?"

The post-modern theologian stopped, and he looked as Paul might have on the road to Damascus.  "That's right," he thundered.  "One shouldn't burn Jews in ovens.  That is one, universally true moral principle." 

Well, there it is.  A universal moral principle--along with a corresponding principle, "One shouldn't walk into the Holocaust museum and start shooting people."

Yesterday, all of the news commentators agreed that James W. Von Brunn's action was morally wrong.  And, whenever a criminal breaks violates the communal moral conscience, everybody asks, "Why?"  What was the source of his evil?  Where did he go wrong?  What triggered this episode?

As pundits discuss these questions on the airwaves, their answers will fall into two predictable camps.  Conservatives will emphasize that Von Brunn was a "lone wolf," a deeply troubled man, who, acted on a bad belief (hatred of Jews) and made a bad choice (to pick up a gun and shoot people).   Liberals will analyze anti-Semitism, placing Von Brunn's actions within a larger framework of structural sin involving racism.  Some may also comment on institutional sins--gun control laws, the current economic crisis, and the "climate" created by talk radio for example--as sources of Von Brunn's actions. 

This is, of course, an old argument.  For almost a century, conservatives and liberals have been arguing the same point about sin.  Conservative theologians believed that sin is a personal matter, a choice made to break a moral code, usually based in some flawed belief system; liberal theologians believed that sin resulted from structural evils, whereby people act out of subservience to some form of institutionalized sin.  Hence, conservative sought to reform individuals while liberals sought to reform systems.  What made someone sin?  The soul or structure?  The individual or institution?  And this theological division made its way into political life--and it has shaped the way we argue about moral events in our public discourse.

In the 1990s, biblical scholar Walter Wink wrote a series of books arguing a new progressive understanding of sin.  He suggested that Christian theologians needed to re-engage the ancient biblical idea of the "principalities and powers,"

In the biblical view the Powers are at one and the same time visible and invisible, earthly and heavenly, spiritual and institutional . . . the Powers are simultaneously an outer, visible structure and an inner, spiritual reality. (Wink, The Powers That Be)

In other words, sin--the "powers" are both.  They exist in the malformed soul and are intrinsically tied up in the ways in which the world and culture are structured.  Everything--and everybody--has both good and evil within. 

This integrated understanding of sin goes a long way to help understand Von Brunn, where inner and outer "powers" combined to push him toward a form of racial idolatry and personal wickedness that resulted in killing another person.  But an integrated understanding of sin also begs the question:  Where was I in this story?  What do I do to resist these dehumanizing powers?  What systems and structures that I am part of perpetuate the evil from which Von Brunn acted?  (Talk radio hosts, take note....)

To say that Von Brunn was a lone gunman in a lone incident misses the point.  However, to say that D.C. has weak control laws (which were recently weakened by the NRA) also misses the point.  Von Brunn lived--as all of us do--in a complex, connected web of unredeemed powers that act as a cancer in the world. 

Walter Wink proposed that:

Redemption means actually being liberated from the oppression of the Powers, being forgiven for one's own sin and for complicity with the Powers, and setting about liberating the Powers themselves from their bondage to idolatry.  The good news is nothing less than a cosmic salvation, a restitution of all things, when God will "gather up all things in Christ, things in heaven and things on earth". . . The gospel, then, is not a message about the salvation of individuals from the world, but news about a world transfigured, right down to its basic structures. (Wink, Powers That Be)

Progressive Christianity is in no way a morally relativistic vision; instead, it is emerging as a morally integrated theology.  We need to examine all the powers-at-play in Von Brunn's reprehensive moral act--to name and resist the Powers is one way to transformation.   It is wrong--in every case, everywhere, for everyone, and every institution--to target people and deny them basic human dignity because of their race, ethnicity, religion, gender, and sexual identity.  And equally wrong to let the "little" sins that contribute to the bigger evils to pass unchallenged.  

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Comments
Your Name
June 12, 2009 3:48 AM

I don't know what to say. I have read so many stories. I didn't know which ones were real, and which ones were just stuff in the news.
What can I do besides much prayer and humility?

SuzanneWA
June 14, 2009 5:28 PM

I think it's wrong to blame individual "sins" on "talk radio." If the bombasity on them "inclines" an unstable person to commit a senseless act - murdering someone - then I can see your point. But lumping the speakers on talk radio to instigators of violence, is going beyond the pale.

I agree with the blogger who said that liberals and conservatives BOTH have their place in a sinful society. There is good as well as bad, in either one. To say one is more moral than the other, is to give it more power than it deserves. Of course I condemn Mr. Von Brunn for his murder of an innocent man; but who's to say he wasn't committing a "hate" crime against a black man? Who KNOWS what was really in his mind when he pulled the trigger? And, who's to say there might have been further mayhem, had he not been stopped? All unanswerable questions; but grist for the mill. Excellent article...

DC
June 14, 2009 8:39 PM

It is unassailably wrong to burn anyone in ovens. Genocide, ethnic cleansing, or any other term that means killing people because of their race, ethnicity, or religion are always wrong.

And it seems to me that the issue here is not so much about conservatives and liberals, lone wolves or conspiracy theories, but about the way we treat the mentally ill and the way we make guns available. What is immoral is that we put people at risk this way because of our inability to come up with a way to keep guns away from disturbed individuals.

Your Name
June 21, 2009 5:49 PM

I believe that we need to start with an assumption of the Christian faith based on at least the Genesis story of Creation that says that God created the world as good in order to have relationship with it. God also gave humans the freedom to make choices in that relationship. When the choice was one of controlling life by one's own will power and of satisfying one's desires, the relationship was broken. Skipping many steps in between, this leads me to say that we make a covenant with the faithfulness to God way of live and to the self-serving destructive way of life. This is true as individuals and larger groupings. How we live out those covenant each day usually means at the end of the day we have honored by covenants. God is finally in charge of the end of the world and its goodness. Our choice seems to be how we will participate with God in the goodness during each day of our lives. The principle of morality may be of secondary importance to our loyalty to the covenant that we live with God for good or that we refuse to live with God for good. (Good being defined according to the teaching of the biblical prophets and Jesus, especially as summarized in the Sermon on the Mount.)

rpage
June 21, 2009 5:53 PM
http://www.saltandlightpages.com

Thanks Dr. Bass. What would you say is the roll of "covenant" in the issue of living morally or immorally?

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Diana Butler Bass and Paul Raushenbush both stand firmly within the Mainline Protestant tradition and, along with guest bloggers of all religious backgrounds are dedicated to the revival of religious progressivism and its influence in American politics.

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Diana Butler Bass
Diana Butler Bass is a commentator and scholar in American religion. She is the author of seven books including A People's History of Christianity: The Other Side of the Story (HarperOne, 2009).
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Moderator of the Progressive Revival blog and the Associate Dean of Religious Life at Princeton University.
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