Peter Schmiechen is a theologian and former President of Lancaster Theological Seminary. He has published extensively on the subjects of Grace and the Church

Tag: war

Colonialism

      This spring I read the first two volumes of Rick Atkinson’s history of the Revolutionary War.  By the 4th of July I was ready to honor the sacrifice and courage of those who fought for independence.  Their achievement is crucial for our attempt to affirm community in our time for two reasons: the first is that our nation was not founded on claims to land, race or religion, but allegiance to liberty and equality; the second is that whenever community is compromised, it is helpful to celebrate liberty and equality.  Since these compromises are perennial, usually elevating people in ways relating to land, class/wealth, race and language, the American ideal requires continual renewal of hearts and minds to the very things at the heart of America, allegiance to liberty and equality.  Given this, I find reading this history a profoundly spiritual exercise, wherein we are called again to own our heritage in the face of all manner of compromise.

     This was a terrible war, preceded by a breakdown in relations between the King and those wanting independence. Before a shot was fired, the British governing class and military saw the rebels as ungrateful and disobedient. The colonists, by contrast, saw themselves as people who had created a new world by their invention and hard work, deserving equal status with citizens in England.  They thought their life should be governed by the same values and rules at work in their home land.  But things only get worse when people on both sides started being killed. Families were changed for the worse and women and children were on their own.  The final stage of most wars is the destruction of property, mass burning of towns and ports, rape and pillage.  In numerous cases it was official military policy to burn ports and cities along the coast for the purpose of punishing the rebels and destroying ports. One other thing running through all these reactions to the war: the Revolutionary War was a civil war.  It divided families as well as neighbors.  One of the sons of Benjamin Franklin remained a loyalist.  One cannot imagine any restoration between the two sides except for the British evacuation.  It is not surprising that many loyalists felt constrained to go to Canada or Nova Scotia or return to England.

      One thing which caught my eye was the rigid stratification of people.  The colonies were ruled by governors answerable to King, Parliament, and trading companies, supported by a ruling class of white men owning property.  Then came the ranks of those not owning land but secure in their life as merchants, craftsmen, farmers and laborers.  Women were of course part of all these classes, but dependent on men by marriage and family. 

      There were two other groups in this colonial world of great importance.  One was the native people of North America, who were continually pushed westward toward the wilderness as white settlements expanded.  This produced a sad and violent history.  In the recent War with the French, some tribes sided with the French but in the new war for Independence, some sided with the British against the colonies. The western regions were terrorized by violence which included killing, torture and scalping. The killing of whites in upstate New York and Pennsylvania was so brutal that Washington sent an army to the region for the purpose of destroying Indian villages, food supplies and crops.  Reading these parts gives one the impression that a basic pattern was set: either native Americans were to accept western expansion and occupation of their land or die. 

      The other group was black Africans.  It is estimated that there were 500,000 black Africans in the colonies in 1776, with roughly 450,000 enslaved.  While the majority were in the southern colonies, (e.g., Maryland had about 63,000 and Virginia had about 163,000), there were about 4,700 in Massachusetts, 19,000 in New York and 5,500 in Pennsylvania.  In other words, all the colonies participated in the practice of slavery.

      What we have then in each colony is a rather volatile set of social, economic and political relations.  The idyllic perspective of Europeans coming to America for the freedom to forge their identity and fortune, or even coming for religious freedom, tends to obscure the tensions. In actuality the colonists of 1776 were subject to the demands of trading companies, Parliament and King.  The increase in taxes (dare I use the word tariffs) and the desire for more profits by the trading companies increased the demand for more workers (white settlers or slaves).  This in turn implied more land, which in turn triggered more troubles with native Americans.  The King in turn needed more money to pay for the military to keep peace on the frontiers and to deal with ancient hostilities between Great Britain, France and Spain.  When the navy could not recruit sailors, men were pressed into service by force.  So, we have the strange contradiction: the founders began talking of equality of all people when everyone knew that was not the case: slaves were not free and serious divisions existed between landowners and common people as well as men and women. It was not a good time to either raise taxes or talk about taxation without representation.

      As one works one’s way through two volumes (a third is yet to come), one begins to sense that the real problem between the rebels and the Crown was that the majority of the colonists were English.  To be sure, they did not live in London or Birmingham, but they thought they were subjects of King George and ought to be treated as citizens equal to their relatives throughout Great Britain.  When you read the list of charges against the King and his government in the Declaration of Independence, one gets the sense of profound disappointment and even betrayal.  These practices are not things you do to English citizens.  But the King, Parliament and Trading Companies saw very little wrong in treating colonies that way.  They thought colonists were different. Being colonists changed their status and created a world where many things were permitted, not just repression of indigenous peoples and designation of Africans as slaves.

       In this sense the war was about freedom from oppressive colonial structures.  This is not new or surprising, since we have been told this since grade school.  But here is something to think about:  the irony of the American Revolution is that while it threw off allegiance to an oppressive King, the founders basically maintained far too many aspects of the colonial world view and structures, thereby determining that the new nation would in fact be a colonial nation in law and spirit. 

      How so?  Well, let’s take the most obvious example, slavery.  There has always been agreement on the great achievement of the founders, but in my lifetime we have gone from a begrudging admission that slavery compromised that achievement to a full acceptance that slavery was an outright contradiction and regrettably laid the basis for a century of conflict.  This is very difficult to deal with and is usually treated as some sort of enigma or paradox at the personal level (e.g., Jefferson) or a political compromise to gain votes for the union (e.g., Adams).  In both cases they appeared to know their achievement was flawed but were unable to avoid it.  It should be noted that we are now confronted with an administration which wishes to reject all that talk of compromise and the history of injustice involved before and after the Civil War, all for the sake of a more positive view of our history.        
      A second obvious example where the colonial world view persisted was the acquisition of land.  Recall that England, like its European neighbors, assumed that each nation could claim land by force or purchase. And I must admit that it was often justified for religious reasons.  Called colonies, such lands were expected to produce natural resources, manufactured products for trading companies and function as military outposts for political interests.  Apparently the ability to do this was part of the divine right of kings and was somehow transferred to the newly formed government.  So, Jefferson’s approval of the Louisianna Purchase in 1803 ushered in over a century of land acquisition by war or purchase of Florida, the large southwestern region from Spain and the northwest region from England, Alaska in 1867, then an attempt to gain and hold Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippines from Spain, and the annexation of Hawaii in 1889 and the Virgin Islands in 1917.  How does a nation wishing to loosen the bonds of colonial structures take over so many territories and lands, all with indigenous peoples?

      Just as theories about land acquisition extended into the 20th century, the colonial mindset regarding cheap labor also extended to the present time.  Black slavery arose to meet this need and was justified by all sorts of theories.  In theory, emancipation was supposed to change that, but Jim Crow laws, segregation and election laws worked to make movement toward freedom a slow process, especially since it was vigorously opposed by white supremacists and actual law.

       Another important but limited example of bringing into the country low cost workers was the reliance on Chinese workers to build the trans-continental railroad in the 1860’s.  Then came waves of European immigrants who met the need of cheap labor, but in most cases did not become a permanent under-class.       

      The long history of immigrants from Hispanic countries to the south presents a very different and complex history.  Most of the immigrants came to America for asylum, work or opportunity for new life. The Pew Research Center estimated that there were 14 million immigrants without legal status in the US in 2023.  They have found work in major sectors of the economy:  construction, agriculture, food processing, manufacturing and the service sector. This creates an unusual development: since their work is essential to the total economy and there does not appear to be replacements, governments at local and state levels have not been quick to send them home.  But since they do not have legal status, they are in no position to object to their living conditions.  The result is that they have become a permanent underclass offering cheap labor, which means there is not much incentive for governments to improve their situation.  

      Many are of the view that the solution must involve a path to citizenship, for the sake of these long-suffering people as well as the restoration of the principle of equality and the hope tied to the American dream of welcoming immigrants.  That makes sense since the vast majority of these people came for political asylum, work and a way to improve their lives.  Citizenship would break with the colonial past of subordinating some as a sub-class of cheap labor.  But it would require extending to these immigrants fair housing, education and health programs, which in the current political climate is a major challenge

      In recent years the compromise of the principles of liberty and equality over slavery has been called our original sin.  As a theologian, I find this comment insightful.  Original sin, in the logic of Christian doctrine, refers to an act and a state of being.  The act was the decision to enslave and transport humans from Africa to the colonies.  But this became a policy as well as the acceptance by the majority of people in the colonies to live with this inhumane practice. In other words, slavery consisted of a specific act but it soon became embedded in the culture and laws of the land.  Moreover, by 1776 it was so out of control that the founders had to compromise their understanding of equality of all people in order to gain support for the new Constitution.

       In this essay I am asking that you expand your understanding of that original sin.  Slavery was part of something much larger, namely, colonialism.  This was the original sin:  that the King and trading companies and colonists could take the land by force, dispel by force indigenous peoples, bring over slaves, and use the land with one thought in mind, namely return on investments.  It is frightening to consider how the Founders rejected the idea that King and aristocrats possessed the entitlement to arbitrarily rule over others, but then to find that the Founders transferred such entitlements to themselves, claiming the right to take other people’s land or enslave people.  While the Civil War finally rejected this idea, holding people in a subordinate status was then recast as segregation and written into all sorts of laws denying liberty and equality.  That willingness to deny the humanity of people reappears in the creation of a permanent underclass of immigrants providing cheap labor.  It also continues to appear in the exclusion and subordination of women—another group excluded from full equality in the founding documents.

                  Running through our history is the question: Who belongs?  If the answer is not certain people defined by race, religion or class, it would appear that the answer is those who love liberty and equality.  But history shows many answers have been given, some being the source of great pride in our nation, but others revealing great sorrow.  Apparently we are continually tempted to forsake liberty and equality.  It may well be that some, like white nationalists, never made such a commitment. 

      It is absolutely necessary that our re-telling of our history include the acknowledgement of those original sins, not to wound or make people feel bad, but because allegiance to America involves repentance as well as loyalty.  No one expressed this better than Abraham Lincoln in the Gettysburg Address. What happened at Gettysburg was a call to re-commit to the original ideal: a national founded on liberty and equality.  But now we are confronted with those who refuse to speak of the contradictions, or how very destructive ideas like colonialism have impacted our history.  Prohibiting certain speech and banning books are openly affirmed.  But you cannot cover up or deny the truth of our history.  Any attempt to do that only makes things worse, since in such a case you compound the original problem by proposing that we tell what is not true.  We can only affirm the greatness of our history by accepting the whole truth.  One can only get to the truth by going through the hard truths in our history. That is very challenging work but it is the only way to overcome the things which would destroy us.  If you want a text to understand this, then remember that only the truth can set us free.

Christians and Jews Part II:     Current Issues and the Goal of Peace

Central Thesis

      In Part One I summarized Paul’s view, set forth in Romans 9-11, that the New Covenant in Jesus in no way meant that God had abandoned the Covenant of Moses.  Indeed, God intends for the two communities to live in peace until a final time when God will reconcile all things.  I want to use this perspective for understanding the current relations of Christians and Jews, especially in light of contentious issues in the Mideast as well as the United States.

1. The State of Israel should have access to land in Palestine.

      Anyone who has looked at material relating to the creation of the State of Israel after WWII finds that while there was general agreement that Israel should have land, it has never been decided how much or how Jews and Palestinians should share the land.  As a result, the history of the State of Israel has been one of several wars and continuous disputes over land.  For the record, I am in favor of the existence of the State of Israel, but even more, that Jews live in peace.

      If peace is the ultimate goal, then it follows that such a peace must involve the Palestinians.  This is implied in the persistent attempt to find a Two State Solution—an idea that no one has been able to achieve. But the idea is essential for peace, since it affirms that Jews and Palestinians both have some level of claim to the land and that the two sides can only find peace if they acknowledge this.

      This brings us to the great problem, leadership on either side seems unwilling to make this commitment.  Mr. Netanyahu and Hamas have opposed the Two State Solution and actions by both sides further alienate the other side.  (I am referring to the brutal massacre of Oct 7 and the war against Gaza since then.)  Hamas must take responsibility for that atrocity and Netanyahu must take responsibility for the military strategy since Oct 7.  Most important, Netanyahu and Hamas must take responsibility for not pursuing a settlement before Oct. 7, 2023. Recall that Netanyahu first came to power in 1996.  There were precedents for the two sides seeking a solution.  For example, in 1993 Israel and the PLO chose to work toward peace.  From the standpoint of all the violence and suffering this was unthinkable.  But when the alternatives are more war or some form of settlement, it is necessary.  It was this which prompted Yitzhak Rabin to say: “Peace is not made with friends.  Peace is made with enemies, some of whom—and I won’t mention names—I loathe very much.”  (New York Times, Sept. 5, 1993, sec. 4, p. 1) 
      There is an inevitable dynamic between possessing the land and peace.  Israel wants land and peace, but there can be no peace if it does not involve peace for Palestinians.  Another way of saying this is that peace in the region cannot be found by military force. In fact, it might be said that attempts to acquire all the land makes the chances for peace less likely.

      Given this complexity, it becomes all the more important for there to be leadership toward a settlement from states in the region as well as Europe and the United States.  One of the disappointments is the failure of American presidents to work for peace on a continuous basis and not just when it is politically appropriate in terms of elections.  My impression is that while Biden disagreed with Netanyahu, he was unable to change the war policies, whereas Trump has given unqualified support to Netanyahu and has been intermittent in pressing for a settlement.  Now, in the midst of a crisis of starvation in Gaze, Trump makes public statements about the need for assistance, but without comment on the military policies of Netanyahu which produced the humanitarian crisis.  This is also unfortunate in that while the current warfare works against a solution, it would appear that in 2025 there are more Arab states open to a settlement than in many years. 

2. Issues in the US

      In Part One, the point was made that Christians need to examine their own tradition and documents, as well as preaching and teaching, in order to determine whether there is an anti-Jewish bias. The point is worth repeating. This is something Christians should do in order to change the way Christians think about Jews. It is the basis for a comprehensive strategy of living with Jews in peace. It is not enough to show remorse and sympathy when violence occurs against Jews and places of worship.  Before dealing with public crises we need to have in place a culture of friendship and trust.   

      If Paul wrote in a time when Christians were the minority with respect to both Jews and Gentiles, today we find that Christians far outnumber Jews in the US.  Given that, it is appropriate to emphasize the need for Christians, as citizens, to ask how government and other institutions can protect the Jewish communities.  Living in peace does require some restraint of those intending ill will.

      Another issue is evangelization of Jews.  In light of the long history of tensions, the tragedies of the 20th century as well as the current problems, I think it is inappropriate to sanction programs to evangelize Jews.  To seek to convert Jews to Christianity is to take away their tradition and identity as Jews.  If we are to live in peace and wait for God to resolve the differences between the two covenants, then we should not threaten families and synagogues with the loss of members to Christian churches. 

      Finally, if we are to live in peace, then we might consider simple acts of religious friendship: we ought to pray for Jews; engage in celebrations together (e.g., Thanksgiving), learn to listen to our Jewish neighbors, and as Rabbi Soloveitchick has proposed, share in discussing humanitarian concerns.

3. The current war in Gaza          

      The attack of Oc. 7, 2023 by Hamas involved a campaign of terror which included murder, rape and destruction of communities.  Over 2000 Israelis were killed and around 250 were taken hostage.  Some hostages have been return, but not all, and some have died while held prisoner.  Netanyahu responded with a general military response leading to over 60,000 dead and the destruction of much of Gaza. The food supply has been interrupted and reports of starvation and lack of medical care appear each day.

      Given the brutality of this attack against Gaza, it has been very difficult to talk about this war.  Any expression of sympathy for the people living in Gaza, as well as charges of genocide against Israel, prompt charges of lack of support for Israel and antisemitism.  By contrast, support of Israel’s military strategies is criticized for being blind to the horrors of this war and enabling the war to continue.  The immediate needs, however, are a ceasefire and enabling food supplies to reach Gaza.

       In this situation I would prefer to keep separate Mr. Netanyahu’s military strategies from the State of Israel.  In the United States it is assumed that one may criticize a president and still be a loyal American.  War is a strategy which must be chosen from many military and political options, in light of consequences and goals.

      The first problem with Netanyahu’s military strategy is the difference between the harm done on Oct. 7 and the effects of the war in Gaza since then.  Not only are the consequences disproportionate, it must be asked how high must the death count go before enough is enough.   Some would dismiss this question by referring to the fact that all war is horrible and compare the damage in Gaza to that of other wars; where the US has engaged in examples of indiscriminate killing of civilians.  But such a reference does not justify more examples of this.  The bombing of German cities in WWII, which has come under serious criticism both from the perspective of whether it was effective as well as whether it was moral.  Nor is it effective to argue that the bombing of Gaza is justified because Hamas uses civilians and hospitals as shields.  But that assumes the strategy of bombing civilians is the only alternative.  If we declare Hamas to be a terrorist organization, should we not be held to a higher standard?  If the bombing has not been enough to prompt a call for a ceasefire, certainly the current crisis of starvation should motivate the Netanyahu government to rethink the indiscriminate military campaign and allow the food and medical supplies to reach the people of Gaza. 

      The second problem is the lack of clarity regarding goals.  Upon taking office in 1996, Netanyahu rejected the idea of a Two State Solution.  It is also the case that Hamas has rejected it as well.  While the Two State Solution was never achieved and may be difficult to enact, endorsing it at least made clear that one recognizes the right of the other to be in Palestine.  Without it, one’s intentions are unknown.  This becomes important when we see the general destruction of buildings in Gaza as well as the crisis of starvation.  Without knowing what Netanyahu intends, it would appear that the goal is the annihilation of the Palestinians in Gaza, or at least their removal.  At the current rate of destruction, Gaza will become uninhabitable. Moreover, since both Netanyahu and Trump openly discussed the removal of the Palestinians from Gaza, there is a serious need for a clear statement of goals.

      The final issue that needs to be raised is the lack of American leadership in discussions for a ceasefire and ultimately a settlement.  The recent bombings of Iran also raise this question.  To be sure, there can be no peace in the region as long as Iran funds and encourages groups like Hamas or on its own seeks nuclear weapons.  But these matters cannot be settled solely by military force.  It is difficult to see how Iran will change its policies without initiatives from the US, Europe and Arab states. In that process, the US has usually taken a leadership role.  

      This two part essay started out with an interest on my part to talk to Christians about the relation of Christians and Jews. I was also concerned about the danger of making things worse by the way we speak about this very subject.  The discussion of Paul’s views in Romans 9-11 brought me to something which I can heartily affirm: God had created the covenant of Moses and has not abandoned the Jews: God has also created the covenant of Jesus as a message of peace to all nations.  In the comments offered her, I have tried to draw out the implications of this Pauline perspective.   

      Whether these comments are helpful is not for me to say. I have tried to stay within the perspective provided by Paul: God intends Christians and Jews to live in peace.  By extension I think this must include Muslim neighbors.  Many things have not been addressed.  I do not think it helpful to raise the question of genocide, since such a category only enflames passions.  Nor is the discussion aided by rejecting all comment on the war as antisemitic.  It also needs to be noted that behind the Pauline perspective are the traditions which Christians share with Jews regarding the sanctity of life, the need for justice and the ultimate goal of peace.  Paul clearly speaks from within those traditions, namely, that God intends us to live in peace.  History has demonstrated that while military action may be necessary in the cause of peace, such action alone cannot generate a ceasefire or a settlement for the long term. 

The Truth Shall Set You Free

            When I was teaching courses on the Bible at Elmhurst College, John 8:32 was a wonderful opening to what religion was all about: “The truth shall make you free.”  Enrollments had shifted to the Social and Natural Sciences, reflecting the cultural shift that truth had to do with facts and the ability to use and control all sorts of things: institutions, markets and even nature itself. So it was very counter cultural to suggest that Jesus was not thinking of truth as facts but the relation between ourselves and other people, nature and God. It had to do with life rather than death, harmony rather than division. For this reason I don’t do very well on a Bible quiz dealing with people and places. 

            Christian writings often appeal to Genesis 2 to describe how things were meant to be, before they were torn apart by deception and falsehood. This idyllic picture can be helpful even though one need not take Genesis 1-2 as a literal description of the origin of things.  So consider the image: The newly created humans know the truth: they know that they are human and not God, that God is God and may be trusted; and that freedom and life are found in loving one another and God. It may be called Paradise because of the harmony between all. The humans trust one another and there is no fear, even though they are naked, i.e, defenseless. But when they seek the knowledge of good and evil, which belongs only to God, the harmony is broken and they are afraid of one another and of God. In that state, they must protect themselves from one another (therefore they put on clothes) and hide from God. Note, in that situation they are no longer free but are governed by fear and the need to defend themselves.  From this perspective, the truth which brings freedom is the truth that restores relations between humans and God. In other words, truth is the means to repair the damage of deception and falsehood.

            But things change. We are now at a point where it is necessary to affirm that truth also has to do with facts and that whatever our intentions, messing with facts can cause a serious break in relations with nature, one another and with God. This is not surprising. Facts tell us about specific things, but also about the relations between things. If I say Cleveland is in Ohio, that means that it is east of Chicago. But that’s an easy one. When your wife asks the question: “Where were you last night?” this seemingly factual question could prove to be a very important relational question.

            Human discourse requires that we tell the truth about facts. Family life, business, education, history, science, health and yes, politics, are all about getting the facts straight. All my life it has been suggested the politicians sometimes misrepresent things, shade the truth, and even say things which are false. But I have never known a president who willingly and without shame, tells us so many false things as the current president. It first appeared that he just had a penchant for exaggeration or making sweeping statements. But then it was declared that what he said were “alternative facts.” It took a while to understand this, but it is hard to accept is as normal or right.

            Insisting on falsehoods is marked by two things. The first is that it is not just exaggeration, but a deliberate attempt to create a new reality or alternative world. By misrepresenting oneself one theoretically becomes what one hopes to be—a successful business man, a great deal maker, and even a candidate that never loses.  All the limits and setbacks which most people have to accept are dismissed.  All the adjustments one has to make living with the people in the real world are unnecessary.  Life is defined any way one chooses.  It really is an alternative world, which can only be maintained by continually defending it and adding on extensions to the original falsehood. The whole thing is a house of cards.  When it finally falls apart there is a sense of betrayal, like unto the exposing of false idols.

            The second aspect of living in an alternative world is that it requires accomplices and enablers.  In the micro-world of the family, the whole family has to adjust and go along.  In larger communities, those who are supposed to be the guardians of reality in all its forms must decide to accept the aberrations imposed by the alternative world.  Take for example, the attempt to create an alternative history of America, where the facts of slavery, segregation and repression are suddenly never to have happened, or at least in their true form.  We are supposed to somehow work out a new relation with African Americans without any reference to the real history, which is banned because it makes some uncomfortable and allows others to perpetuate an alternative history, as in the attempt to redefine the Civil War by saying that it was about States’ Rights or economics.  The problem with this is that it misrepresents reality and thereby perpetuates the original inequality.  White and black people are not seen as who they are, or what they have experienced, or what is currently the state of America. The truth is swept aside and replaced by false claims.  Truth, as respect for facts, is thus betrayed.

            The consequences of insisting on falsehoods and trying to live in a bubble of make believe are obvious.  One is that it initiates a continual process of defending what is false in order to perpetuate the original falsehood. Some states have now resorted to using the power of laws to force people from challenging the falsehoods.  With our President it began with arguments about crowd size at his first inauguration, and culminated in the false claim that he won the 2020 election.  This was followed by the false claim that January 6 was not an attempt to overthrow the election.  Four years later it required pardons for hundreds of people convicted of crimes relating to January 6, since their convictions repudiated the claim that the event was a peaceful protest. At each point he sought to create an alternative world and in each case people around him were forced to play the game.  Elected officials, party leaders, religious leaders, news media chose to take up residence in this fantasy world rather than resist and acknowledge the truth.   Most recently, in February 2025, he repeated the false claim that the U.S. spent 350 billion in support of Ukraine.  But to everyone’s surprise, the President of France would not accept this and corrected the President in the White House: in fact the figure was closer to 110 billion, while NATO allies had contributed 130 billion.  Yet he repeated the false claim when he berated Mr. Zelensky.  So it goes, on and on, to perpetuate an alternative world.

            When a President insists on misrepresent the truth, those around him are forced to accept what is not true. Even though so many defer in silence or share in confidence that they don’t believe the fabrications, the damage is done. They are forced to lose their integrity in order to be loyal and keep their jobs. 

            The larger consequence is the way disagreements over facts lead to breaks in relations between people and groups. All these years of maintaining false claims creates a general breakdown in political discourse.  Those in the president’s orbit no longer may say what they know to be true.  The culture of false claims therefore sets people against one another, at all levels from family and friends to political opponents to world leaders.  No wonder things fell apart in the Oval Office on Feb. 28.  Mr. Trump wants to create an alternative history regarding the war, where Mr. Putin is not an aggressor, and move on to business regarding precious metals.  But the man sitting next to him was trying to save his country from destruction, which includes loss of thousands of soldiers and civilians, cities laid waste and the unimaginable, 20,000 children being abducted.  It is hard to get past the refusal to deal with these facts.  This is why we need to tell the truth.  False claims distort and malign people.  We must tell the truth because it is the first step toward right relations.  Recall that in the South Africa Peace Process, the process toward reconciliation began with telling and owning the truth regarding what happened. 

There was a time in Protestant theology when it was very fashionable to make a distinction between facts and broader values and relations. So, one could point to Jesus as the One who brings the truth about salvation, which has little to do with the facts of this world. That distinction may or may not have been appropriate in the 1960’s and 70’s as I struggled to find a point of connection with college students. But it is not appropriate now.  Creating an alternate world of false facts only isolates and divides. And that means, even if it is not the real intent, that division and war never end.  On the very eve of Lent, it is worth remembering that Jesus’ announcement of the presence of the Rule of God began with the call to repentance.  And what is repentance other than telling the truth about what is, about what we all have done, and about the consequences of our actions.  In this world, telling the truth can be painful.  Of course it makes us uncomfortable, but since when is our comfort the standard for what we say.  Only the truth about what has happened in our history, about what is happening in Ukraine and Russia, or Israel and Gaza, can set us free, no matter how uncomfortable or painful it may be.

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén