[1] I am delighted and honored to respond to these four reviews
of my Paradoxical Vision. Beyond that I am grateful to the
four authors-Perry, Kruse, Kennedy, and Lagerquist-for their
willingness to write reviews of a book that is ten years old. I am
particularly grateful to Michael Shahan, the book review editor of
the online Journal of Lutheran Ethics, for dreaming the project up
and in some measure resuscitating the book. I assure the reader
that I had no complicity in this plot.
[2] Reading the reviews prompted me to re-read the book,
especially the first two parts. A Lutheran colleague had told me
years ago that he wished I had not made it so hard to assign the
book for classroom purposes. DeAne Lagerquist more or less seconds
that thought when she laments that the generosity of spirit
allegedly exhibited by yours truly in person evaporates in the
polemics of the first parts of the book.
[3] In those first two parts I tried to account for two things:
the marginalization of theological arguments in public life
generally; and the eclipse of mainline Protestant public theology,
which had once held sway in our country. In accounting for those
phenomena, I did engage in some polemical fireworks, which were
probably not necessary if I wanted to push the agenda of the
"Lutheran difference" in public theology. Such polemics did make it
more difficult to use the book in seminaries, and it certainly
affected the marketing of the book by Fortress, which by and large
prefers to market the "adversarial perspectives" against which I
polemicized.
[4] Upon re-reading those parts, however, I think they represent
a persuasive account of those phenomena, imprudent as it was to
take the subjects up. I do believe that mainstream
Protestantism-especially at its top levels-has become more
interested in the ideologies of the secular elite than in the core
religious and moral meanings of the Christian Gospel. Therefore,
their public witness has been read by the public as one more
intervention of a left-wing political interest group, and one that
has very little support among its own constituencies at that.
[5] This has grown worse since the election of George Bush in
2000 and the invasion of Iraq. There was good reason for the
President refusing to meet with mainstream Protestant leaders,
including our ELCA bishop. What's more, I believe the ELCA has
accelerated its headlong rush toward becoming more like mainstream
Protestantism, with the attendant danger that one of its own
treasures-the paradoxical vision-will be jettisoned along with
other elements of its heritage. So, standing more than ten years
after the book was written, I'm afraid my current assessment would
lead to even more polemics than were in the original book.
[6] However, I am also more aware in recent years of the danger
that conservatives run in fusing their political convictions with
the Gospel, especially since the ascendant religious groups tend to
be conservative politically. DeAne Lagerquist suggests that I have
engaged in some of that conflation myself, but I sincerely hope
not. I hope both liberals and conservatives can share the inner
core of religious and moral meanings of the Gospel and yet disagree
sharply on political judgments. In general, the four reviewers seem
to agree that my interpretation of the paradoxical vision strikes
cords that resonate with Lutherans in general.
[7] Peter Kruse's review includes a helpful summary, which is,
for the most part, accurate. In the book I contend that when
Christians argue from their common core outward toward applications
to new issues and finally to specific public policies, Christians
of good will and intelligence often part company with each step
outward. That is because so many other judgments and considerations
enter into each step of their moral deliberation. Even if they
agree on the core, they often disagree on the perimeter. Pastor
Kruse has taken me to mean that the issues on the periphery, about
which we often disagree, are "less important." That is not what I
meant. Christians disagree vehemently about the Iraq war because so
many judgments come into play when they make up their minds, not
because it is an unimportant issue. Many other public issues of
high importance reflect the same diversity of opinion among
Christians. Indeed, perhaps the most important issues elicit such
diversity.
[8] Kruse makes the helpful suggestion that I should have
wrestled more with the neo-sectariansim of Stanley Hauerwas and his
disciples, as well as with the proponents of "radical orthodoxy."
Maybe that is a task for the next edition, if there ever is one.
Radical orthodoxy had not yet emerged when I wrote the book in the
early '90s and Hauerwas' positive contributions had not yet been
overshadowed by his more dubious ones. Perhaps I can take up the
latter topic independently, just as I took up the former topic in
an essay entitled "The Neo-Augustinian Temptation," which appeared
in First Things.
[9] Richard Perry deserves a "bravo" for continuing to assign
the book in one of his courses at LSTC, even though he disagrees
sharply with some of my assertions. I appreciate his lengthy and
careful reflection on the book. He dislikes my criticism of the
"adversarial culture," often expressed in the race-consciousness
inherent in interest group liberalism (even in the church), and
offers the civil rights movement as an example of the benefits of
such adversarialism. The problem is the civil rights movement took
place before the great reversal of the late '60s. Perry certainly
knows that by the time Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated, he
had been outflanked by the far more radical "black power" leaders
who were thoroughly alienated from the American and Christian
traditions to which King so powerfully appealed. That alienation
has continued among many black leaders and organizations, making
them far less effective in public argument and action than they
might have been. Indeed, I believe that the civil rights
"establishment"-the NAACP, the SCLC, and Congressional Black
Caucus-have lost credibility precisely because they did not follow
the lead of King. Following King would mean a focusing on the
"content of character" rather than the identity politics that have
become so ingrained in our church and society.
[10] Tom Kennedy, in his usual clear and winsome prose, agrees
that my interpretation of the paradoxical vision rightly cautions
against too much ecclesial activism in public affairs.
[11] But he suggests that the framework for social and political
ethics provided by the paradoxical vision needs to be held in
relationship to the more robust traditions of public theology it
seeks to correct. I thoroughly agree, as I thought I said in the
preface: "without that larger conversation Lutheranism would be far
less interesting and persuasive than it is now." However, on second
thought I probably did not demonstrate that conversation concretely
in the body of the book. But that may have taken another book.
[12] He also tweaks Lutherans as "under-achievers," suggesting
that Lutheranism lacks a robust and confident doctrine of
sanctification. Kennedy draws on Reformed themes, including more
appreciation for "common grace," to make his point. I have tried to
interject those themes more clearly in the second edition of
Ordinary Saints, with some success, I believe. Before I
wrote a new edition, I complemented my Ordinary Saints
with a text by Hook and Reno entitled Heroism and the Christian
Life in my college class in Christian ethics. I did not find
that book particularly helpful but would invite any suggestion
about an introduction to Christian ethics that persuasively takes
up a more heroic approach. My current estimation is that heroic
Christian actions are elicited in the midst of very unusual
historical circumstances (the emergence of a great evil like Nazism
or Communism) on the part of persons of great gifts and courage.
I'm not sure you can build a Christian ethic for such circumstances
or persons, but I am open to persuasion.
[13] Finally, DeAne Lagerquist pays my book the compliment of
saying that she would have changed her own fine book a bit had she
read mine before she wrote hers. She then suggests that other
Lutheran themes could, and perhaps should, have been added to the
framework I elaborated. She suggests one: "the finite is capable of
conveying the infinite." That is a good suggestion and probably
could fit well into the paradoxical vision. It may even give
Lutheran social ethics a different twist. My only defense is that
every author works with themes that have shaped his or her writing
for a long time. I worked with what I had been working with. But
perhaps now it is time to incorporate new themes into my
thinking.
[14] Thanks again to the reviewers for taking the time and
effort to assess The Paradoxical Vision. That book,
combined with Ordinary Saints, constitute my effort to
address both social and personal ethics from a Lutheran point of
view. Every tradition needs a continuing conversation about its
main themes to keep it and them alive over time. I hope my books
have contributed to that conversation as well as the reviewers
have.
See the
reviews of Benne's book.
© March 2005
Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE)
Volume 5, Issue 3