I feel a
little ‘cheeky’ this morning….as I have reflected on the information that
Vatican sources considered Liberation Theology too ‘Marxist’ and therefore too ‘political’
to be fully respected and supported.
Has the embeddedness
with capitalism and the money ‘interests’ also been too political? Or, has the association with the political,
economic, corporate and academic ‘elites’ been just a natural affiliation with
all ‘sorts’ and ‘degrees’ of men and women? Is the prohibition of abortion,
from the church’s theological position, a political or ideological interference,
or merely a strict adherence to the notion of refusing to insult or sully God’s
sacred gift of life? And, if that is so, what about the life of the circle of
the infant? Just as war implicates both the deciders and those who carry out
the orders, whose life matters, the Ukrainians, or the Russians, or both? The
Palestinians or the Israelis or both? Formerly in Northern Ireland, the Roman Catholics
or the Protestants, or both? Language,
after all, is how we paint, erase and re-paint the epistemological landscape as
well as the place in the landscape for our theology.
Just as it
is no longer acceptable to consider the voiceless, homeless, poverty-stricken,
illiterate, unemployed, and mentally disadvantaged as an ideological issue, it
is also important to refuse to link any legitimate attempt, including the theological,
to lift up those millions as an exclusively political, economic, or ideological
issue. It is the human condition we are talking about and we must bring the
whole of the human being, and our shared capacity to integrate, respect and deploy
various ‘academic’ and ideological theories and practices (praxis), to the
table. And that smorgasbord of talent and experience is and always will be
necessary if we are to carry out our shared responsibilities.
Given the
blatant disregard and contempt for any ideology, except their own
self-aggrandizement, of the oligarchs, tyrants, and despots, perhaps the rest
of us can bring ourselves ‘out of the closet’ of our own myopia. Mass media,
saturated as it is with the vocabulary and the principles of politics and
political ideology, and pitting democracy against oligarchy, despotism and tyranny,
has locked the public discourse into another binary, black-white, zero-sum
oscillation.
Either-or,
whether in political or even ethical or moral questions, begs and inevitably
results in ‘reductionisms’….there is no other legitimate or reasonable or
conventional position, and for both sides, the presumption that ‘God is on our
side’ is part of the script. Combatants in wars have for centuries invoked the
support of the, or more than one, deity. However, invoking God as a
lawyer/advocate/leader/hero of a political ideology, is nothing short of a
reduction of God, for human satisfaction and glorification.
Theology,
belief in and discipleship with God is not reducible to such a cognitive, psychological,
philosophical, sociological, scientific and certainly not political ‘equation.’
Just as human life cannot be reduced to any one or any combination of these modes
of thought, also modes of operating, so too, neither is God. One of the
implications of this premise is that the church too has to ward against falling
prey to the many and various charlatans who would attempt to marry their
personal political agenda to and with God. And the challenge of such a temptation,
given how unconscious one’s (everyone’s) vulnerability to such a ready invocation
of God as political ally, is no mean matter. Indeed, resistance to such a temptation
will inevitably require the questioning of all forms and iterations of authority,
power and public acclaim. While the church and Christian theology generally has
taken the position and view that its adherents can and do see and separate the
secular from the sacred, at least in one’s personal and private existence. The larger
question of salvation for the whole world, and its interpretation, application and
expectations and demands remains freighted with many questions especially those
of a theological nature.
The
conventional vernacular, and its proliferation among the masses, premised as it
is on the dominance and absolute authority of the literal, the empirical, the
scientific perception and mind-set, leaves the imagination out of the
cognitive, perceptual and psychological as well as the theological equation. What
also escapes any and all of the classifications of human thought and cognition
is something humans have, it seems from the beginning, considered ‘evil,’ harmful,’
‘abusive,’ ‘intolerable,’ inexcusable,’ ‘constricting,’ ‘imprisoning,’ ‘dehumanizing,’ and ‘excessive,’ and ‘worth
fighting to limit, erase, minimize or even eliminate.’
Given that
the concept of God is and always will be fraught with the limits of human imagination,
it seems more likely, if not predictable, that most of us humans can more
likely agree with what constitutes, comprises and demonstrates itself as ‘evil’.
So the both philosophic and pragmatic question for each of us, irrespective of
our denominational adherence, or our religious tradition, but certainly for
those espousing Christianity, is to summon the courage, and the faith and the
humility to seek to find, and then to reflect and to imagine how best to
non-violently, creatively and unequivocally to confront the evil we see,
experience, and even anticipate with force (borrowing a simple, yet profound,
epithet from Tolstoy.
For most of
us, we can and do see and react to what we consider ‘evil’ from another human
being, especially if and when their behaviour impacts us directly. As we learn
about being disregarded, as one of the more prevalent iterations of being ‘hurt,’
we also attempt to discern whatever we can about the reasons, motivations, or
even the lack of awareness of the perpetrator, and then decide whether or not
to confront, and how and when. When a mother or father abuses his or her child,
we now know that such abuse says more about the parent than it does about the behaviour
of the child. Similarly, in schools, some teachers have such an overriding need
for classroom control that, while they may have constructed a military
boot-camp, students will eventually ‘quit and stay’ which happens to be another
of the more passive-aggressive approaches to what we consider ‘unacceptable,’
or in our view ‘evil.’
How each of
these early encounters impacts us, (and we have all had some of them) can and
often does generate a counter-response, whether that response is contained in
thought, feeling and attitude, or expressed openly in conflict with others.
And, just as in a car accident, it is the second-impact that is the most ‘telling’.
If we can
approach a man or woman who has, willingly and overtly, or unconsciously and imperceptibly,
hurt us, and begin a conversation about our experience, depends on an
assessment or discernment of both of the person’s adaptability to listen,
reflect, remain open to criticism and also to conciliation or reconciliation.
Given the
churches’ preference for defining and implementing sanctions on sin, considered
as a private and personal act, the matter of institutional ‘evil’, including
the feasibility and likelihood of the church’s own culpability, has been left
primarily to opposing politicians, the law and the media. Here comes the
monster of such public approbrium, something today that is called ‘structural
evil’….meaning that it is baked into the cake of the culture, institutions, and
traditional and conventional perceptions, beliefs, and attitudes.
Of course,
at this point we are envisioning the intersection of what we call politics with
the perceived systemic ‘evil’…and the often disregarded prospect of whether and
if this specific abuse can or will be ameliorated by those political actors and
structures whose purview includes the ‘evil.’
From
Britannica.com, we read, under the definition of Liberation Theology:
Liberation
Theology, a religious movement that arose in late 20th century roman
Catholicism and was centered in Latin America. It seeks to apply religious
faith by aiding the poor and oppressed through involvement in political and
civic affairs. It stresses both heightened awareness of the ‘sinful’
socioeconomic structures that cause social inequities and active participation
in changing those structures.
Liberation
theologians believe that God speaks particularly through the poor and that the
Bible can be understood only when seen from the perspective of the poor. They
perceived that the Roman Catholic church in Latin America was fundamentally different
from the church in Europe—i.e.. that the church in Latin America should be
actively engaged in improving the lives of the poor. In order to build this church, they established communidades de base (base communities),
which were local Christian groups, composed of 10 to 30 members each, that studied the Bible and attempted to meet
their parishioners’ immediate needs for food, water, sewage disposal and electricity.
A great number of base communities, led mostly by laypersons, sprang into being
throughout Latin America.
The
birth of the Liberation Theology movement is usually dated to the second Latin American
Bishop’s Conference, which was held in Medellin, Columbia in 1968. At this
conference that attending bishops issued a document affirming the rights of the
poor and asserting that industrialized nations enriched themselves at the
expense of developing countries. The movement’s seminal text, (Teologia de la liberacion) A
Theology of Liberation, was written by Gustavo Gutierrez, a Peruvian priest and
theologian. Other leaders of the movement included the Belgian-born Brazilian
priest, Jose Comblin, Archbishop Oscar Romero of El Salvador, Brazilian theologian
Leonardo Boff, Jesuit scholar Jon Sobrino, and Archbishop Helder Camara of Brazil.
Now 58
years later, who can argue persuasively and convincingly that the industrialized
nations have not enriched themselves at the expense of developing countries?
Who can argue persuasively that the poor have not been categorically and deliberately
ignored, demeaned, left homeless, and hopeless in our streets, and social
policy and social philosophy has neither improved or even given prominence to
their individual and collective lot? And ‘the poor’ cannot be limited to those
failing to meet the poverty line of socioeconomic statistical determination. It
must include the indigenous, the migrants, the refugees, the victims of war,
the victims of either or both a failed health care system or the complete absence
of such a system, the victims of refused education, the victims of racial
conflicts and effectively those considered ‘non-persons’ in our affluent and insouciant
elite culture.
Of course,
the Canadian Blood Services commercials proudly declare that ‘giving helps both
the giver and the recipient’…and philanthropics are hourly begging, pleading
and praying for checks. And the Good Samaritan continues as the image of the
Christ, when, as we have been reminded by John Klopeborg and the Jesus Seminar,
the Jew taken for dead in the ditch is more emblematic and representative of
the Christ, in their shared, collective view.
There is no
ideology in any nation, developed or developing, that does not consider and perhaps
even enacting policies that might lift some of the burden of the dispossessed.
And yet tokenism, political dilettantism, posturing, and in the words of a
local politician who considers advocating for nuclear disarmament ‘virtual
signalling,’ the world, especially among the oak board rooms of the rich, and the
political backrooms of the political operatives, continues to pay lip-service
to the dispossessed.
They suffer
most the ravages of climate change and global warming; they suffer most when social
programs are eliminated; they suffer most, as does everyone, when an ethical and
moral moron such as Elon Musk declares the single trouble with contemporary culture
is its embrace of empathy.
Please help this scribe be even more convincing and effective in making the case that it is time for radical, prophetic Christian discipleship! Time for mere statements has to give way to time for putting bodies on the line.
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