[1] Robert Benne, Professor of Religion and Director of the
Center for Religion and Society at Roanoke College, is our leading
interpreter of the practical theology of the Lutheran tradition as
he has shown over the years in such works as The Ethic of
Democratic Capitalism: A Moral Reassessment (1981) and what
remains essential reading for anyone interested in Lutheranism and
politics, The Paradoxical Vision: A Public Theology for the
Twenty-first Century (1995). In this new edition of
Ordinary Saints: An Introduction to the Christian Life,
first published in 1988, Benne clarifies and updates his earlier
attempt to sketch the shape and the content of the Christian
life.
[2] It is important to note that this is not an
introduction to Lutheran theological ethics, even though,
inevitably, much of the book deals with moral issues. The scope of
the book is broader, the moral life being an aspect, but only one
aspect, of the Christian life. Benne correctly insists that the
life of the Christian is of one piece and that it is important not
to sever the moral identity and response of Christians from
Christian identity and response to God.
[3] The book, first, presents an analysis of our cultural and
social context. Part one introduces God's work in the life of the
Christian-God's call to us and the Spirit's work in our responding
appropriately to that call. Part two introduces the social
institutions and settings in which the Christian response to God
occurs. The final section of the book develops a general Christian
understanding of moral issues of marriage and family, work, public
life, and the church.
[4] One of the most valuable contributions of this new edition
comes in Benne's assessment of our cultural context. Here the key
term is fragmentation. Following Robert Bellah's analysis
in Habits of the Heart, he exposes the ills of American
individualism, the cost to us in terms of our understandings of
ourselves and what our lives are about, and contrasts this
fragmentation of identity with identities formed by traditions. As
in his important, Quality with Soul, Benne unpacks the
Christian tradition in Paul J. Griffith's language of
comprehensiveness, centrality, and unsurpassability.
The Christian tradition offers a full account of the purpose and
meaning of our lives, addressing all we need to know in order to
live well. The Christian account is central insofar as it presents
an understanding of and orientation to living in which we recognize
appropriate guidance for our life decisions. The Christian account
is unsurpassable insofar as Christians believe that the Christian
account, however flawed our understanding of it, cannot be replaced
or subsumed under some better account of the purpose and meaning of
our lives. Ordinary Saints is an exploration of the
implications of this understanding of Christian truth for our life
projects and activities.
[5] Benne presents the Christian account of God's merciful and
unmerited call to us clearly and winsomely, weaving the biblical
story with the church's story and his own personal story. Following
this explication, he discusses the Spirit's work in nurturing us
through the Christian practices of worship and church-life,
personal devotion, Christian friendship, and re-creation. Benne is
typically Lutheran-perhaps too Lutheran-in his reluctance to
embrace this nurture as having a goal that matters. Instead,
"Christian nurture is practice at being a trusting son or daughter
of our God who already loves us unconditionally as sons and
daughters…. As a response to that love, however, we must
practice what it means to be beloved of God. We are summoned to
live up to our destinies." (47) One can say this, I believe, and,
without diluting the impact of the insistence that God has done
what really matters for us, add that God is even now at work
re-creating us, forming us into beings who can stand his presence.
The Christian life is a journey towards holiness, and we are making
more or less progress towards fitness for the presence of God.
Benne is aware of this concern and takes it up again in chapter
six, though still not to my satisfaction.
[6] God calls, we respond to the gracious call. In part two,
Benne examines the "spilling over of the cup" of God's grace in our
service to God and others. Importantly, Benne discusses what he
calls "places of responsibility," or, in earlier generations, the
"orders of creation." To be human is to live with an identity
formed, in part, by one's involvement with family, state, economy,
church, and education. These institutions were created by God to
preserve and form orderly human existence. They are empowered by
God to reward and punish behavior that runs counter to their roles.
They are dynamic, changing to meet the needs of historical and
technological developments. They are ambiguous, in that these
structures created by God for good purposes can become agents of
evil. The final chapter of this part looks at faith, hope, and love
expressing themselves in these places of responsibility. Christian
faith enables us to see divine intentionality in these structures,
to see them as a means God uses to bless human existence. Christian
faith also enables us to discern what our distinctive individual
work may be in light of these structures. Christian love gives
moral content to our callings to live and serve in and through
these structures. Here Benne's discussion of distorted readings of
Lutheran "two kingdoms" theology is extremely salutary. Lutherans
recognize the temptations to abandon the tension between the agape
love to which we are called and the places of responsibility in
which that love cannot always be expressed. Our calling is to live
in that tension, recognizing in the here and now what is possible
and what the world requires, but also hearing the call and
stretching ourselves to what agape demands. Christian hope in the
redemptive and preservative activity of God equips us to act
confidently, despite the odds.
[7] One may wonder just how much work is actually being done by
Benne's "places of responsibility," especially given their dynamic
and ambiguous natures. It is important to acknowledge, as Benne
does, that creation has a structure, that to confess God as Creator
and Sustainer is to admit that the world has a form. The Anglican
moral theologian Michael Banner notes that Karl Barth in discussing
'special ethics' begins his discussion with a reflection upon the
sabbath. Banner unpacks this in language that should be welcome to
Lutheran ears:
[8]
Barth begins here [with the
Sabbath] for the simple reason that the Christian moral life is to
be understood, in virtue of the facts of creation, reconciliation
and redemption, as first of all a life of freedom, signified by the
rest of the sabbath day. The freedom of this day comes, in part,
from knowing that nature, our own and nature as such, confronts us
not as a raw material on which we must impose our purposes or which
we must submit to our projects if it is to have form or meaning,
but that it is, in contrast, a nature which, in virtue of its being
created, possesses a form and meaning.
(Christian Ethics and Contemporary Moral Problems,
Cambridge University Press, 1999, 223)
[9] Talk of the 'orders of creation' reminds us-a reminder much
needed in a day when Lutheran theologians and ethicists are tempted
to think of everything as "socially constructed"-that creation has
been in-formed by God. It has a nature and purpose and we are
better off for the acknowledgment of that nature and purpose.
[10] It is at this point that one may have second thoughts about
the adequacy of "places of responsibility" as a replacement for
"orders of creation," true as it may be to Luther's own language.
Talk of "places of responsibility," and "orders of creation" while
serving to affirm the goodness of ordinary life, may also distract
us from more important and telling reflections upon nature and the
creation in which these places are grounded. To see this, one need
only reflect upon an issue Benne discusses in several
places-homosexual relations. The common cultural assumption, an
assumption that church-folk seem, by and large, to have adopted, is
that nature forms some folks for a same-sex orientation and forms
others for an other-sex orientation. Now if we were to discover
this to be the case-and my own view is that the cards are not yet
completely in-what difference would it make? Would it have
different implications for bisexual or trans-gendered individuals?
And, of course, this is an important matter not only for Christian
morality, but for the Christian life broadly considered.
Some may be genetically predisposed towards surliness, or sadness.
Is nature there for whatever re-making we at the moment may think
desirable? If human institutions like the family, the church, and
the state are themselves formed out of nature, then the emphasis
upon roles or "places or responsibility" may distract us from this
more foundational concern.
[11] Benne's discussion closes with a closer look at issues of
marriage and the family, including homosexual relations, work,
justice and public life, and the church. In each case his writing
is clear, judicious, and compassionate. Benne is irenic, but he is
not unwilling to take a stand. And the gospel promise of
forgiveness is never far from his sight. If we fail in our
marriages and families, we have missed the mark, but God forgives
and offers new life.
[12] One may wonder whether, in this final section, Benne should
have been a little less irenic and a little more prophetic (though
that wonder will no doubt dissipate as soon as I hear the next
prophetic utterance from a theologian) and more responsive to the
cultural context of American Lutheranism. Given his reading of
American culture in his introduction and his understanding of
American individualism, why not a discussion of acquisitiveness and
greed, perhaps the besetting sins of American Christianity? Given
the mixed messages of our church and culture on war and violence,
why not a chapter on Lutheran understandings of the legitimate
involvement in force? Given the comparative coherence and clarity
of Catholic moral teaching, why not a discussion of Lutheran moral
diffidence?
[13] But these concerns are, admittedly, social concerns, and
Benne's book is for individuals, ordinary saints. And when it comes
to guidance in thinking about ordinary sainthood and understanding
and appreciating one's call to ordinary sainthood, one is
hard-pressed to think of a better starting point than this fine
introduction.