The other day my 10 year-old son asked
me who Pope Benedict was and why it was a big deal he was retiring.
After admonishing myself about not talking to my children about this,
we discussed the ideals, principles, beliefs, and moral convictions
that Protestants and Catholics share while emphasizing the need for
charity in our areas of disagreement. Afterward I asked him, “So
where did you hear about Pope Benedict, anyway?”
His response shocked me. “Well it's
been on the news and the radio a lot, but mostly I've heard you
talking about him.” I thought about the last couple of weeks and
realized he was right. Pope Benedict stepping down impacted me
emotionally and spiritually in ways that I failed to recognize but
that my son clearly noticed. Pope Benedict spoke with grace,
dignity, and strength to moral issues that concern me in the same way
they concern him and that agreement fostered the comfort that those
of us who share those concerns had a great ally in him. I am sad.
A friend recently expressed similar
feelings on-line and was chastised by a commenter that understood the
celebration of those common purposes as politically motivated and
therefore (1) driving a further wedge between politically liberal
Christians and those of us who – in their mind - equate politically
right leaning agendas with Christian agendas and (2) is somehow
indicative of a too narrow focus on the part of those who supposedly
see abortion and gay marriage as the defining issues for politically
active Christians.
It is a little perplexing when
Christian critics hammer people like me for being
insensitive and focused on abortion to the exclusion of other issues
and then - in a moment of complete lack of self
awareness - proclaim that unlike me they care about all sorts of
other things. Unlike me and the monstrously obsessed and divisive
conservative evangelicals like me, they care about war and sex slaves
and poverty and are charitable to people that disagree with them.
After all, I presumably support war mongering, pro sex slavery,
poverty loving policies because of my callous focus on abortion.
Scott covered the difference between
contingent evils and intrinsic evils (see
here,
here, and
here), but even given a greater
understanding in how we process the moral differences between actions
like taking innocent life in abortion, taking innocent life in war,
and taking life in capital punishment it is decidedly uncharitable to
see another's efforts in one area as evidence of their lack of humane
concern in other areas.
Lets take differing views on war as an example, though we could just as easily look at poverty or capital punishment. My personal views on war have changed more than once over the years. As an atheist, I tended toward a total war mentality.
Early in my Christian walk I leaned more toward pacifism than I do
now. Then (1) a consideration of Just War Theories and (2) a real
concern about what kind of armies would wage wars if properly
functioning moral people abstained entirely from warfare moved me
away from pacifism. I am not pro-war by any stretch of the
imagination, but the issue appears far more morally complex than
some others seem to believe.
A passionate young man with absolute views recently told me
that any military intervention on foreign soil is immoral even in
cases of genocide. “You will never stop the killing, no matter what
you do.”
I pointed out Lt. General Rome'o
Dallaire's book Shake Hands with the Devil about his experiences in
Rwanda. A Canadian commander of UN forces states that if he could
have simply re-tasked the military presence assigned for evacuation
to peace keeping efforts he possibly could have stopped the killing
that ended with 800,000 human lives being taken in 100 days. He
wasn't advocating fighting a war but merely being there to deter mass
murder till the situation could be stabilized. I then asked him to consider Samantha Power's book A Problem from Hell on genocide
in the 20th century and how the U.S. responds to it.
Whatever your view of Ms. Power's politics, it is difficult to read
that book and walk away with anything other than the impression that
how to use our military in the face of great evil is NOT a cut and
dried issue.
There is no obvious moral superiority
in stating that one is more anti-war than others without a serious
discussion about what you mean when you say that. I hate war as do my
friends whose sons and daughters are in harms way. We just recognize
that we hate other things worse than war. There is an argument to be
had – in the best since of that word – but to declare one side
superior to the other by nature prior to the argument is question
begging at its worst. And assuming that a person focusing their efforts on one area is thoughtless toward other issues is simply wrongheaded.
In Amusing Ourselves to Death, Neil
Postman draws out distinctions between functional information –
information “tied to the problems and decisions readers had to
address in order to manage their personal and community affairs”
and non-actionable information that became available to us originally
through telegraphy and ultimately now available in massive quantities
through world wide media and internet service. He argues in the
following excerpt that this new glut of information evokes powerful
emotional responses in us toward information that we can't really
take meaningful action on in our lives:
“You may get a sense of what this
means by asking yourselves another series of questions: What steps do
you plan to take to reduce the conflict in the Middle East? Or the
rates of inflation, crime and unemployment? What are your plans for
preserving the environment or reducing the risk of nuclear war? What
do you plan to do about NATO, OPEC, the CIA, affirmative action, and
the monstrous treatment of the Baha'is in Iran? I shall take the
liberty of answering for you: you plan to do nothing about them.”
This inability to take meaningful
action is not a by product of lack of concern. Most people simply
cannot do anything in their daily lives to impact issues of this
magnitude. In this light, we are all faced with the task of sorting
out what Postman calls the “information action ratio” when
learning about evils. I cannot stop sex slavery. I cannot stop war. I
cannot stop poverty. In my adult life I have never kidded myself that
my voting for an elected official would greatly curtail these types
of evils. Both Democrats and Republicans wage wars. Both Democrats
and Republicans hate poverty and sex slavery, though they may differ
in how to legislatively deal with the former.
Here is where I may be crazy. I think
that we can impact abortion. I believe information on abortion is
functional information and that educating people in our community
about what abortion is, how we identify unborn human life, and what
our moral responsibilities are to other people can change how our
community behaves. Beautiful little hands of lives that were spared
have often grabbed my fingers while their grateful mothers shared
stories about the people that cared enough to reach out to them
before they did something out of fear they would regret forever. It
doesn't get more immediate or real than that.
I also believe that equipping people to
understand their Christian worldview and to rationally, logically,
and graciously explain and defend their beliefs to others helps the
community. Both of these goals are meaningful to my life, I act on
them daily, and see those actions produce results.
By necessity we must engage in the
political process to achieve goals and it is obvious to all
reasonable people that in this area the political parties are not
equally committed to the same principles. Whatever the individual
beliefs of those who comprise the parties, one party sees as a good
to be preserved what another party sees as an evil to be curtailed.
What does all of this have to do with my being sad about the retirement of Pope Benedict? Those of us who share the conviction
that abortion is a great evil and that the Christian worldview is
both defensible and important to our world community are losing a
great ally. Pope Benedict is a bold and outspoken ally. In an age dominated by what he termed the tyranny of relativism that often angrily shouts down dissent that is no small thing. His position offered a greater platform to
meaningfully impact major issues than most people will ever enjoy, and
he used that platform to express heartfelt and rationally defensible
positions that often matched my own.
If you confuse the affection
this fact evokes from Protestants cooperating in an effort driven by
the mutual convictions on what is good and right and noble as
political posturing that unnecessarily excludes left leaning
Christians then it might not be me who is too politically minded.