Garry Wills on separation of church and state
I’ve always enjoyed reading Garry Wills. I still do. From his NY Times Op-ed piece Christ Among the Partisans (read the whole thing; it’s short).
THERE is no such thing as a "Christian politics." If it is a politics, it cannot be Christian. Jesus told Pilate: "My reign is not of this present order. If my reign were of this present order, my supporters would have fought against my being turned over to the Jews. But my reign is not here" (John 18:36). Jesus brought no political message or program.
This is a truth that needs emphasis at a time when some Democrats, fearing that the Republicans have advanced over them by the use of religion, want to respond with a claim that Jesus is really on their side. He is not. He avoided those who would trap him into taking sides for or against the Roman occupation of Judea. He paid his taxes to the occupying power but said only, "Let Caesar have what belongs to him, and God have what belongs to him" (Matthew 22:21). He was the original proponent of a separation of church and state.
Those who want the state to engage in public worship, or even to have prayer in schools, are defying his injunction: "When you pray, be not like the pretenders, who prefer to pray in the synagogues and in the public square, in the sight of others. In truth I tell you, that is all the profit they will have. But you, when you pray, go into your inner chamber and, locking the door, pray there in hiding to your Father, and your Father who sees you in hiding will reward you" (Matthew 6:5-6). He shocked people by his repeated violation of the external holiness code of his time, emphasizing that his religion was an internal matter of the heart.
[. . .]
Some people want to display and honor the Ten Commandments as a political commitment enjoined by the religion of Jesus. That very act is a violation of the First and Second Commandments. By erecting a false religion — imposing a reign of Jesus in this order — they are worshiping a false god. They commit idolatry. They also take the Lord's name in vain.
[. . . ]
The Jesus of the Gospels is not a great ethical teacher like Socrates, our leading humanitarian. He is an apocalyptic figure who steps outside the boundaries of normal morality to signal that the Father's judgment is breaking into history. His miracles were not acts of charity but eschatological signs — accepting the unclean, promising heavenly rewards, making last things first.
He is more a higher Nietzsche, beyond good and evil, than a higher Socrates. No politician is going to tell the lustful that they must pluck out their right eye. We cannot do what Jesus would do because we are not divine.
It was blasphemous to say, as the deputy under secretary of defense, Lt. Gen. William Boykin, repeatedly did, that God made George Bush president in 2000, when a majority of Americans did not vote for him. It would not remove the blasphemy for Democrats to imply that God wants Bush not to be president. Jesus should not be recruited as a campaign aide. To trivialize the mystery of Jesus is not to serve the Gospels.
4 Comments:
If a religion teaches that they should impose their religious beliefs on other through the state, then that religion is incompatible with a democratic republic.
Likewise a democratic republic, which allows for freedom of conscience and the freedom to practice (or not practice) a particular religion, then it is incompatible with the notion of a sectarian state. Thus the term "Christian nation" is antithetical to the establishment of "a free country."
epm,
It seems as though, additionally, Wills is arguing that introducing religion into the politics is against the teachings of Jesus. Citing Matthew 22:21 brings to the fore and something that often is glossed over in debates. This takes it beyond secular discussions of the role of religion in politics. Wills's piont applies to the whole history of Christianity from its earliest times.
Wills's identification of the incompatibility of the teachings of Jesus with certain strains of Christian politics is what I found interesting.
Wills's identification of the incompatibility of the teachings of Jesus with certain strains of Christian politics is what I found interesting.
Yes, but it's not original. (While I mostly agree with this, I didn't make that clear in my previous reply.) Many Christian churches have historically separated their religious convictions from overt politicking. Indeed some sects even shun the political process entirely.
Still, I won't argue that a thread of militant Christianity hasn't woven itself through the fabric of our history, as often to suppress as to liberate.
I do differ from Wills' assertion that The Jesus of the Gospels is not a great ethical teacher like Socrates, our leading humanitarian. Though perhaps not like Socrates -- for as far as we know Jesus wrote not a word -- the recorded parables and lessons of forgiveness, humility and service do serve as a model for humanitarianism. Of course his message was in the context of the Divine, but that doesn't lessen the lesson, in a manner of speaking.
I think the bar of religion crossing too far into politics is set at the point were the only argument -- or the countervailing argument -- for a particular political viewpoint or government regulation is one of religious piety or dogmatic dictate. If an argument has no merit without invoking Divine will, then the argument has no place in the political arena. This is my problem with all gender politics -- including and especially gay and lesbian issues -- and most arguments opposing reproductive rights, including abortion.
So what should a person of faith do to affect the political debate? Certainly they're free to express their opinions, but rather than bludgeon their detractors with emotional and verbal tirades , they should "...shake the dust off your feet when you leave that home or town." (Matt 10:14, Mark 6:11, Luke 9:5). In support of Wills, Christians are called to spread the gospel, not impose it.
"If an argument has no merit without invoking Diven will, then the argument has no place in the public arena."
I like that because it also gets to the heart of teaching religion in science classrooms.
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