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THE HEALTHY CHURCH: EMBODYING THE CROSS
IN PERILOUS TIMES
[Editor’s Note: At the turn of this new millennium, Catalyst is
interested in assisting the seminarian in answering the question, “How might
the church be the church?” Michael Gorman contributes the tenth of eleven
essays that explore the characteristics of the Healthy Church.]
The whole history of Christianity, and the history of the world,
would have followed a different course if it had not been that again and
again the theology of the cross became a theology of glory, and that the
church of the cross became a church of glory.
—Theologian Emil Brunner, The Mediator, 1927
The cross is “the signature of the one who is risen.”
—Biblical theologian Ernst Käsemann, Perspectives on Paul, 1969
America is Rome, now and for the foreseeable future.
—Political scientist Ronald Dworkin, 1999
American Christians are living in perilous times. I do not refer to terrorism,
or to some alleged clash of civilizations, but to the grave temptation at
this moment in world history to turn the theology of the cross into a theology
of glory, of worldly power—particularly American power. That would be an
apostasy, as the Letter to the Hebrews warns, from which restoration might
indeed be impossible.
Nevertheless, there are political and spiritual leaders (sometimes themselves
at the pinnacle of power) who are seducing the church into thinking that
Jesus spells power: personal power, economic power, and especially military
power. Of course this is not the first time in world or Christian history
that such power has been associated with Jesus and his cross. The word “crusade”
may currently be banished from public discourse, but it underlies much public
sentiment and even more political policy.
These bold claims need demonstration, more than this brief essay can provide.
But I hope to show at least in a preliminary way how the quotations cited
above provide for us the hermeneutical lens through which we must now perceive
ourselves as the church in the US and thereby begin again to embody the cross.
I will take the quotations in reverse order.
American Idol: The Reality of Empire
There is growing sentiment across the American intellectual spectrum—from
voices like N. Chomsky, C. West, J. Wallis, R. Bellah, and even G. Will—that
the US is becoming an empire with a zealous, misguided messianic mission
of world hegemony, forced conversion to American interests, and unilateral
preemptive war against those who resist. It is difficult to interpret The
National Security Strategy of the United States of America (September
2002), recent foreign policy, or the presence of US military bases in more
than 100 countries in any other way. It is not that American imperialism
and messianism are new creations of the current administration (as Captain
America and the Crusade against Evil by R. Jewett and J.S. Lawrence [Wm.B.
Eerdmans, 2003] clearly demonstrates). But the breadth and depth of the vision,
its infiltration among Christians, and its evangelical character, as articulated
by the current president, are arguably greater and more dangerous than ever.
The dangerous religiosity of G.W. Bush’s war rhetoric that began at the National
Cathedral on September 14, 2001, was soon placed in the context of a greater
theo-political vision (cf. The National Security Strategy). The
Washington Post immediately and correctly noted that “Bush Shifts Strategy
from Deterrence to Dominance” and that the plan “gives the US a nearly messianic
role in making the world ‘not just safer but better.’” Like Rome of old,
the current administration plans to save the world through peace and economic
prosperity, but also through war and unrivaled military power. In fact, The
New York Times rightly suggested that the document seemed like something
issued by a Roman emperor or Napoleon. The heart of Bush’s “War Cry from
the Pulpit” (as a headline in The Washington Post described it) in
September 2001 has become the watchword of his entire crusading presidency:
“[O]ur responsibility to history is already clear: to answer these attacks
and rid the world of evil.... [W]e ask almighty God to watch over
our nation, and grant us patience and resolve in all that is to come....
And may He always guide our country. God bless America” (emphasis added).
A local church has joined the imperial crusade; its sign has no witty proverb
and announces no services; it merely reads, “May God Bless the U.S.A. and
Our Troops Everywhere.”
It is providential that NT scholars have recently been stressing the imperial
context of the earliest churches and of the correspondingly counter-imperial
character of the gospel in many of its first-century incarnations—whether
living congregations or written Gospels and letters. We now know that to
be Christian was, and therefore ought always to be, inherently opposed to
the very soul of empire: domination. Jesus himself says that every imperial
system is based on domination. He continues, “But it is not so among you,”
where cruciform service is the antithesis of empire and the norm of life
together (Mark 10:35-45).
In theory, then, we ought to have the resources—the entire NT!—both to name
and to resist imperialism, especially when it is cloaked in the language
of peace, security, and the divine will (as it was also in Rome) for the
good of the world. Indeed, I have often said that most Western Christians
cannot really understand the NT because we have never been the opponents
of, and thus the suffering victims of, the status quo. Now, however, we are
in a position to identify with the NT communities as never before, as those
who live under an empire but, because of the gospel, cannot support many
of its core values or policies. We may finally understand what Paul and Matthew
and John the Seer clearly perceived: that the confession of Jesus as the
crucified Messiah and Lord means that all other claims to lordship are false
and idolatrous.
The Permanent Presence of the Crucified Lord
Many Christians mistakenly treat the resurrection of Jesus simply as a transition
in his life from suffering to glory. To do so has all kinds of serious theological
and spiritual implications, for it does something the NT never does: separate
the exalted Christ from the crucified Jesus. The continuity is found across
the canon: from the symbolism of the risen Jesus’ having scars that Thomas
can touch (John 20:24-29), to the experience of the crucified Christ living
in believers (Gal 2:19-21), to the image of the exalted “lamb that was slain”
(Rev 5). The words of E. Käsemann, cited above, are among the most profound
and concise summations of this truth ever written: the cross is the signature
of the one who is risen.
This claim has implications for both for our christology and our theology,
as well as for our discipleship and our politics (our life in the world).
If Jesus is still the crucified Christ, then his power is still the power
of the cross, the paradoxical power of weakness, and the current attempts
to make him into a powerful, conquering figure are false. Whether uttered
by self-proclaimed Christian military officers or by eschatological fanatics
who write “novels” about the coming war of the Lamb, claims that Christ is
working in the world to punish “evildoers” or “unbelievers” are blasphemous.
Christ conquers only by the sword of his mouth, the word of the cross. Furthermore,
since Jesus is the revelation of God, claims that “almighty God” (rather
than Christ) is such a powerful, conquering, violent figure are also wrong.
The God revealed in Jesus Christ is shaped like a cross, not a sword.
To believe in this God is to follow his Son in the way of the cross. To be
sure, it is to experience a resurrection to new life, as Paul makes clear
in Rom 6. But that “resurrection life” is, paradoxically, a life of daily
death to self, to sin, and, yes, to the will to power, as Paul makes clear
in every letter he writes. This life of death is a life of self-giving service
to others. It is the cruciform life, the only life that is truly life-giving.
A Chance to Alter History
Many Christians, perhaps especially (though not only) evangelicals, believe
that the cross is the source, but not the shape, of their salvation.
Their supposed focus on the cross (“Lift High the Cross,” “In the Cross of
Christ I Glory,” etc.) is really quite limited in scope. They find Jesus
to be a powerful ruler, and discipleship a kind of victory parade. It is
no accident therefore that many American Christians sometimes practice and
justify domination in the name of biblical faithfulness. But there can be
no peaceful coexistence of domination, no matter how it is masked, with Christian
discipleship. The cruciform life must take shape, therefore, in every dimension
of our lives: in how we relate within our families, our workplaces, our churches,
and our communities: local, national, and international. If it does, history
will be positively affected as the saving reach of the exalted crucified
One is extended. And if the opposite occurs, or continues to occur, history
will also be impacted, and dangerously so.
I am haunted by the words of the great theologian E. Brunner at the head
of this essay. There can be little doubt about the kind of crossroads at
which we find ourselves. Imperialism and terrorism go hand-in-glove, as Rome
and Palestine knew all too well 2,000 years ago. Our world will not be more
peaceful, just, secure, or free if self-righteous imperialism, supported
by Christians and (allegedly) their God, is the hallmark of the 21st century.
Moreover, if the church continues to be co-opted by those in power, its ability
to stand with God, with fellow Christians around the globe, and with the
poor and oppressed will be seriously, if not completely, compromised.
Conclusion
This essay may sound like something of a jeremiad. I am nonetheless hopeful,
for I believe that the word of the cross can generate reformation and life,
even in the midst of empire. E. Käsemann once said that the word of
the cross is always a polemical word. That is, it has an edge, an
agenda. It did in the 16th century, and it does still today. In our context,
the cross must create for us a hermeneutic of suspicion vis-à-vis
all forms of power and violence, especially imperial power and violence.
This will demand a major conversion on the part of many Christians, who are
inclined to view American power as a divine blessing and support for it a
divine mandate. In light of the power of the cross, both perspectives are
false.
Our calling as the cruciform church today, however, is not simply to be critical.
Our positive task as those who preach and live this word is relatively clear
and simple, if demanding: 1) to proclaim the antithesis between empire
and cross, in contrast to those who unite them, and thus to announce the
true power of Christ’s cross and of our conformity to it, 2) to pray
for the coming of God’s kingdom and with it the end of all domination, and
3) to perform the story of the cross in our individual and corporate
lives through deeds of generous compassion, love, hospitality, and forgiveness.
We should have no delusions about the possible costs of this simple but demanding
way of life, or about the challenges of convincing American Christians that
this, rather than the false gospel of righteous imperialism, is the way of
God in the world. But I have no doubt that the NT is about to come to life
among those who cling to the old rugged cross. As the ancient church said,
crux est mundi medicina: the cross is the medicine of the world—and
of the church.
By Michael J. Gorman, a United Methodist, Professor of New Testament
and Dean of the Ecumenical Institute of Theology at St. Mary’s Seminary and
University in Baltimore, and author of Cruciformity: Paul’s Narrative
Spirituality of the Cross (Wm.B. Eerdmans, 2003).
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