In a time of crisis
In a time of crisis, uncertainty, and policy debate, one would think
that Christians in the United States would agree: When in doubt, we should support our
leader and remain loyal to our nation.
Our leader, of course, is Jesus Christ. Our nation, of course, is the
people called church, spread around the globe. Our pledge of allegiance, of course, is one
that can be sung from within "every tribe and language and people and nation"
(Revelations 5:9). Of course?
As the Bush administration prepares for war with Iraq, some matters
certainly are legitimate topics for debate and Christian discernment. Christians of good
will must discern which of the many competing messages about Iraq are coming to them in
good faith, and which are manipulative. At its best, the centuries-long debate between
pacifist and just-war Christians can help deepen a shared commitment to confront injustice
and stand up for the defenseless. In turn, those who believe wars can sometimes be just
are obliged to discern whether this war would qualify. Meanwhile, those resolved to
respond first as Christians will continually wonder how to live out Christian love of
neighbor within overlapping roles such as employee, passport-holder, family member, office
holder.
Yet for all this, one thing should need no debate whatsoever. The first
Christian creed was the simple confession "Jesus is Lord." Kyrios, lord,
king, Caesarperhaps today we would say president. Biblically, to confess Jesus as
Lord means that in every nation except the church, whoever is known as king, Caesar, or
president is not really our leader. Leaders of the nations deserve respect and
prayer. Ordinary laws and policies ordinarily deserve civil obedience, not disobedience.
But if Jesus is Lord, no other leader deserves unquestioned support, muting of doubts, or
stifling of conscience. Every Christian must someday expect to obey God, not human beings.
Biblically, this conviction is anything but isolated. It has roots in
Israel's faith that Yahweh alone was their king. It extends throughout the New
Testament, and bears fruit in the continuing witness of the church. Following
Christ's own death, the apostles invited Roman centurions to faith and appealed to
Rome's own sense of itself as protector of justice. Yet they never forgot that they
followed a lord who rivaled Caesar. Indeed, the New Testament closes with fresh and
apocalyptically poignant reminders that through martyrdom, Christians were sharing in
Christ's nonviolent war against the idolatrous claims of empire.
TO BE SURE, Romans 13 urged Christians living near the heart of the
empire to be subject to governing authorities. They needed that reminder because they were
learning lessons like those in the previous chapter, Romans 12, just well enough that
imprudent, unprincipled resistance to authority could be a temptation. Those lessons? Do
not conform to the world but allow God's grace to transform you into a contrast
society; practice hospitality toward strangers, renounce vengeance, meet evil with good,
order all your relationships peaceably. That God was at work placing the world's
authorities in order was not a blank check for the state, but was simply one more
reflection of early Christian confidence that their lord, the crucified but risen Christ,
was the lord.
If Christians in the United States are confused about who our leader is
and whether we ought to close ranks in support of President Bush, that is probably because
we are also confused about our citizenship. If our first loyalty is to Christ, the
appropriate way to express it is by identifying with the entire Body of Christthe
nation called church that spreads across borders and around the globe.
The opportunity to relearn this lesson has never been greater. Whatever
the negatives of globalization, Christians plugged into its new networks of communication
have no excuse for ignorance about how our actions affect fellow citizens in the worldwide
household of faith. Iraqi Christians will die from bombs ostensibly targeted at the Saddam
Hussein regime. Pakistani Christians are already under attack because Christianity is
identified with U.S. policies.
The least that American Christians can do is factor in loyalty to
fellow Christians around the globe as we determine our stance toward leaders named Bush,
Husseinand Jesus. But that is only a minimum. In the lead-up to the November
elections, one secular anti-war group coined the slogan, "Regime change begins at
homevote!" Christians might better say something else: "Regime change
begins at homeworship!"
If we have forgotten why authentic worship must change the regime that
guides our lives, defines our true nationality, and then charts our international
relationships, then we have forgotten the one we claim to worship as lord, president,
unquestioned leader.
Gerald W. Schlabach is associate professor of theology at the University of St. Thomas
in Minnesota.
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