[1] Fifty years ago, the United Lutheran church commissioned
some theologians, including Joseph Sittler, William Lazareth, and
George Forell, to contribute to a three volume set entitled
Christian Social Responsibility. Like them, the authors of this new
collection of essays have been commissioned by the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America - through its Church Council and
Division for Church in Society - to help its members "think
through the nature of Christian ethics today" (p. 1). Any reader
familiar with the work of Sittler, Lazareth, or Forell will see
that these essays are not only responding to a radically different
context but, indeed, are defining Lutheranism in very different
ways.
For the most part, these essays criticize a specific distortion in
much Lutheranism: the reduction of the Christian life to the
"motivation touched off by justification" (p. 27). They are
especially critical of the way Protestant ethics has been aligned
with the "punctual self" of modernity, a self "unencumbered" by its
ties to nature or even to the rest of the human community. This
criticism, in my view, is the chief strength of these essays, along
with their concrete proposal for how ethics and the law might be
conceived in more substantive and positive terms. What remains a
question - a question that is especially salient when we compare
these essays to the work of their predecessors - is whether they
have captured the comprehensiveness and, more importantly, the
distinctiveness of Lutheranism's theological contribution to the
ethical problems of our day.
[2] This volume consists of seven essays sandwiched between two
short introductions (one by each editor) and a concluding
transcript of a "table talk" conversation among the authors. John
Stumme's introduction stresses the "tradition's" focus on the gift
of faith; Karen Bloomquist's stresses how "today's context" is
largely defined by a range of reactions to the Enlightenment's
focus on freedom, a focus that has influenced much of the
contemporary "culture wars" debate (e.g., with regard to
homosexuality and abortion). Although the concluding "table-talk"
reveals sharp differences among these authors, it does conclude
that the church has a mandate to define itself in concrete and
substantive terms as a "community of moral deliberation." But these
authors present very different proposals for what that community
might look like. Four different positions can be identified in this
volume. James Childs' essay works out of an "eschatological"
perspective The other six propose some form of a"contextualized"
ethic. Three of these present an argument for an "ecclesial" ethics
(Robert Benne, Martha Stortz, and Reinhard Hutter); two argue for a
form of "liberation" ethics (Richard Perry and Larry Rasmussen with
Cynthia Moe-Lobeda); and the final essay (David Fredrickson's)
offers a reading of Pauline ethics that mediates between these two
positions even as it articulates a distinctive proposal of its
own.
[3] With the exception, then, of Childs' essay, all the others
offer some concrete proposal for enacting the substance of the
Christian life. Childs, by contrast, focuses on the "ambiguity" and
"complexity" of moral choices, and how the reign of God offers a
"horizon" against which to make these choices. Given the
distinctive character of his voice in this volume, it is
unfortunate that Childs is so tentative in developing his proposal,
focusing more on the ambiguity and complexity of what the church
might say rather than on the courageous and substantive stands it
could take for justice and mercy. Indeed, the vision of the reign
of God he presents has much potential and could serve as a norm
that offers precisely the kind of substantive yet critical
criterion needed to mediate between the more ecclesial and more
liberationist essays in this volume. Also, as Jurgen Moltmann and
Wolfhart Pannenberg have shown, the symbol of the kingdom of God is
highly relevant to our understanding of trinitarian doctrine, a
doctrine central to any theological formulation of Christian
ethics.
[4] Among the essays stressing an ecclesial ethics, Benne's
offers a bridge between the emphases of a previous generation -
say, as stressed in a volume like Christian Social Responsibility -
and those of this volume. He begins by outlining classical themes
in Lutheran ethics: justification, the church's distinctive work of
proclaiming the gospel, the twofold rule of God, and a paradoxical
view of human nature and history. He then names a contemporary
challenge: Lutheranism's tendency to reduce "the whole of ethical
life to the motivation touched off by justification" and its
corresponding failure to develop the church as a "community of
character." Instead, he argues, it offers only a vague "realism"
that, because of its lack of substance, leaves the church
vulnerable to various hermeneutics of suspicion (from Freud, Marx,
and Nietzsche to feminists and multiculturalists). His concluding
constructive proposal centers not around the themes he began with
(justification, paradox, etc.) but around correctives to these
challenges)themes like "covenantal existence" and "divinization."
Although he presents a number of tantalizing suggestions, Benne
does not offer an integrated picture of how the latter two themes,
especially the Calvinist theme of "covenant," cohere with the
"classic" Lutheran emphases he outlines at the beginning of the
paper. He is in a unique position to offer such an integration
because he appreciates the distinctive contribution of
Lutheranism's classic emphases even as he is cognizant of their
potential for misappropriation. I hope he will articulate the
theological center of his argument more fully in future work.
[5] A similar comment can be made of Stortz's essay. She offers
an intriguing depiction of Martin Luther's understanding of the
practice of private prayer - a depiction that, she states, is
intentionally empirical, concrete, and inductive (as opposed to
being theoretical, abstract, and deductive). Appropriating the
Ignatian focus on "formation" as a lens for her analysis, she
outlines Luther's instructions for daily prayer. In turn, she
establishes a connection between the daily practice of prayer and a
way of life shaped by responsiveness, gratitude, modesty, and joy.
Given her recognition of the reflexive connection between doctrine
and practice, Stortz could bring to the fore even more explicitly
what is meant by Luther's understanding of tentatio
(prayer and meditation), which he uses coterminously with
Anfechtung (suffering or"tempting attack").
Tentatio is a key moment that links Luther's practice of
prayer to his theology of the cross and understanding of
justification. As Ignatian prayer has at its heart our tangible
participation in Christ's death and resurrection, so Luther's
understanding of prayer is deeply shaped by the tentatio
that brings us face us to face with the crucified Christ and his
resurrection life. Indeed, we might say that the activity of
tentatio is precisely the "inductive" way by which a
theology of the cross is enacted in our lives. And further, such
tentatio not only "forms" the lives of Christians but
offers a radical critique of all sinful distortions that keep us
from union with God. I hope Stortz also will pursue the theological
import of her argument more fully in future work.
[6] Hütter's is the one essay in the volume that does not
shy away from rigorous and thorough theological argument. His
footnotes are a veritable survey of relevant literature in theology
and ethics. Presenting the most explicit critique of the modern
theological impoverishment of Protestant ethics, he analyses two
dimensions of what he calls the "Protestant fallacy." The first is
its reduction of all theology and ethics to the single article of
"justification by grace through faith alone," and the second is its
strictly negative understanding of freedom as freedom from the law
rather than for it. Aligning these "Protestant" emphases with
modern ethics, he situates his own proposal in relation to three
twentieth century movements that serve as correctives to the
restriction of all ethics to the "unencumbered" self: (I) the
Christocentrism of dialectical theology; (2) the Protestant
discovery of Aristotle's and Thomas' character and virtue ethics;
and (3) the stress on embodiment and location in liberation
theologies (including feminist and eco-ethics). The heart of his
proposal centers around a reading of Luther's "The Freedom of a
Christian." By way of a reading of Phil 2:4-11 and Luther's
commentary on Genesis, he argues that, for Luther, law gives
concrete form to the life of the human creature "deified by grace."
Drawing on David Yeago's interpretation of Luther, he contends that
although sinful humanity may receive the law as an external code,
for the subject "deified by grace" there is no difference between
"God's gospel" and "God's commandments."
[7] Hutter's critique of Protestant ethics and its alignment
with the excesses of modem ethics is a brilliant one, as is his
strong argument for a retrieval of the commandments in ethical
teaching. His argument is one that demands attention, and I concur
with much of its thrust. The question I have about his essay is
whether he fuses law and gospel in the lives of believers. For
example, does he maintain the distinctions Lutheran orthodoxy has
held among the three uses of the law (first or "civil" use, second
or "theological" use, and third or "exhortatory" use)? Or, are they
subsumed under a kind of "third use" unique to the Christian
community? In other words, does he do justice to what Lutherans
have called the first two uses of the law? The first use of the law
pertains to the presupposition (based on the first use of the law)
that all human beings, by way of their being created in the image
of God, have the capacity to perceive some understanding of law or
the "orders of creation" (the traditional name given for the
requisite conditions for human life in community). To affirm this
capacity is not to affirm an Enlightenment conception of
"autonomous" ethics but rather to affirm that God's power and
goodness encompass the totality of life and our creaturely - and
this includes nonbelievers'- participation in it. The second point
is its recognition (based on the second use of the law) that even
believers live in the tension between being made in God's image and
yet being fallen members of a humanity in bondage to sin. To affirm
that the law also functions as an "alien" demand in the believer's
life (which criticizes all the demonic distortions that keep us
from worshiping God and treating our neighbors justly, both
individual and corporate) does not entail negating its very
positive capacity to guide and give substance to that life. And
finally, and many would say, most importantly, we can ask whether
he does justice to the Lutheran distinction between law and
gospel)that the gospel truly is a free gift from God not contingent
on human works. That distinction, many would argue, is what
distinguishes Lutheran from other forms of ethics. A stronger
recognition of what is distinctive about a Lutheran understanding
of the gospel and the first two functions of the law would greatly
enhance his argument and bring to the fore what Lutheran ethics has
to offer other forms of ecclesial ethics (e.g., Calvinist,
Wesleyan, or Roman Catholic).
[8] The two "liberationist" essays make very different types of
arguments, but they share the "ecclesial" ethicists' emphasis on
particularity, embodiment, and community. Perry presents his case
from the vantage point of the experience of African American
Lutherans. Like Hutter, he is concerned that traditional Lutheran
preoccupations have tended to sever the connection between "who we
are before God" and "what we are doing among God's people." His
concern is not with appropriating Lutheranism for an African
American situation but with examining what the rich and diverse
traditions of African American Christianity have to offer
Lutheranism. In this appropriation, he makes an important
contribution to Lutheran ethics by tracing the actual history
whereby African Americans offered a corrective not only to racism
in this country but to the tendency in much of Lutheran ethics to
separate"right doctrine" from "right practice." What would make his
argument even more potent is if he concentrated more fully on how
African American conceptions of "who we are before God"
theologically inform "what we do among God's people." This would
establish even more firmly the rich theological resources African
American Christianity has to offer - and criticize - Lutheranism,
especially in its predominantly European American forms.
[9] A similar point can be made about the essay by Rasmussen and
Moe-Lobeda, which identifies the environment as the essay's concern
and the question of whether life as we know it is able to meet the
needs of "the expanding world and the rest of nature for present
and future generations" as its contextual problem (p. 132). But
unlike either Perry, who describes specific practices of advocacy,
or even the "ecclesial" essayists, who describe practices that form
Christian community, Rasmussen and Moe-Lobeda focus on a "reforming
dynamic," which, they argue, is the "proper dynamic of a Lutheran
ethic for our time" (p. 134). This dynamic does not negate the role
tradition plays as a "deposit" carried over time. Rather, it is
essentially a "dynamic" that moves within a "dialectic of
continuity and discontinuity" that interprets itself in light of
the "signs of the times" as these are read in and by the believing
community. I hope Rasmussen and Mee-Lobeda will develop even more
fully the theological import of their argument: specifically, how
this "reforming dynamic" (as a formal construct) is intrinsically
shaped by the material themes of "creation," "cross," and the
"response of faith"- themes they also discuss in the essay. They do
establish this connection in the essay, but it could be developed.
Doing so would make even more explicit how this reforming dynamic
is not merely a function of tradition and change but a function of
God's justice and mercy in the world and how we, as creatures might
speak, think, and enact it.
[10] So far we have identified two major poles in this volume: a
pole emphasizing the substantive ethos of Christian community life
and a pole emphasizing its critical prophetic dynamism. Fredrickson
presupposes both poles in a "political" reading of Paul's ethics,
which draws a parallel between the way Paul conceptualizes the
local church and the "assembly" (ekklesia) of Greek city-states and
their democratic procedures for decision making. But what is
distinctive about Fredrickson's reading of Paul is its theological
thrust. The political process of the church's discernment as an
assembly is not simply a baptizing of Greek political procedures
but an actual and tangible participation in Christ's death and
resurrection by the power of the Spirit. The free speech of the
"political" assembly of the congregation is granted by the Spirit.
Unlike Hutter, who interprets the Christ hymn in Phil 2:5-l1 in
relation to the role of law in the believers' lives, Fredrickson
focuses on how we are transformed by "the Spirit's free gift of the
mind of Christ to the community" (p. 124). Thus, the Christian
community's "political" process of deliberation cannot be divorced
from the "ethical" way in which we are, through Christ, mutually
enslaved and dedicated to one another's freedom. In turn, a focus
on "ethos" and communal identity cannot be divorced from the
"critical principle" in Paul's ethics, a principle defined
theologically by the freedom granted by the Spirit through Christ's
death for us. Fredrickson makes a truly innovative argument in this
essay, but he restricts his analysis to a close exegesis of the
texts he analyzes (2 Corinthians 3; Philippians 1:27-2:18; and
Romans 12-15). Hopefully, the argument he develops in this essay
will be developed more fully in future projects.
[11] This book makes a timely contribution to the "ethos" of
contemporary American Lutheran congregations. It identifies a
central modern problematic - individualism - and a central
theological problem in much of Lutheranism - the tendency to reduce
ethics to personal motivation. But the question remains whether
some of the resources in Lutheran theology that are either rejected
or neglected in this volume might not be the very ones needed to
help us respond to this situation. For example, a sharp distinction
between law and gospel may especially be needed in an age that
relies even for its "spirituality" on human technique. A strong
theology of the cross, with its critique of all forms of
self-salvation and its focus on Christ's death and resurrection, is
a needed message for our time. All our attempts at securing
ourselves - politically, economically, technologically, even by way
of our religious identities and forms of spirituality - are not
sufficient to save us from the realities of sin, death, and demonic
power. To say this is not to reject the law and the way it offers
substantive guidance for how to live. In other words, a corrective
to either an antinomianism or an interiorized interpretation of
justification need not entail a rejection of the core Reformation
insight - an insight that is essentially theological - that God and
God alone has the power to save.
[12] Furthermore, Lutheran theology has strong warrants for a
wholehearted affirmation of the doctrine of creation and its
implications for our lives as creatures within the very complexity
and nuance of all our interactions - interpersonal, political,
economic, technological - with other human beings and even the
natural and technical worlds of which we are a part. Rasmussen and
MoeLobeda grapple with this question the most (with their focus on
"sustainability"), but Perry deals with it as well (with regard to
institutional racism), as do Benne and Hutter (by way of retrieving
the "orders of creation" or "natural law") and Childs (by way of an
eschatological vision of creation). Yet much more could be said,
especially given the highly complex systems each one of us actually
participates in on a daily basis - from, e.g., the systems of the
mass media to those of a global economy. This task of fully
grappling with what it means to be 'creatures' is not a simple one,
but more guidance is needed if God's power and goodness arc not
merely to be restricted to a Christian ghetto of interpersonal
encounters.
[13] And a focus on creation leads to the need for a
rehabilitation of a concept not discussed in a sustained fashion in
these essays: the doctrine of vocation. At issue here are the
concrete roles and relationships in which our "ethos" as Christians
- as individuals and communities - takes a palpable form as it
serves the neighbor's needs. Given the plethora of popular books,
Christian and otherwise, dealing with spirituality in everyday life
or finding one's purpose in life, it is surprising that these
essays touch on the doctrine of vocation only in a cursory fashion.
If writers like Deepak Chopra are not to corner the market on
spirituality in a capitalistic society, then theologians need to
retrieve those aspects of our tradition such as the doctrine of
vocation - that do speak of God's justice and mercy in relation to
the actual circumstances that constitute most of our waking
hours.
[14] In spite of these concerns, these essays make an important
contribution with their stress on the concrete formation of
individuals and communities, whether or not one defines it
primarily in terms of "retrieval" or "reform." The need to attend
to ethos and community is probably one of the most important tasks
facing congregations in contemporary North America. And, an
individualistic, self-centered piety or spirituality is not
sufficient for facing this task. But this corrective should not
leave us with a truncated vision of the resources in the Lutheran
heritage. Perhaps a return to the themes discussed in that first
three-volume set - with echoes to the work of theological ethicists
of a previous generation like Sittler, Forell, and Lazareth - is
needed as a corrective to this corrective.
Copyright © 1999 dialog. Used with permission.
From dialog, Volume 38, Number 2 (Spring 1999).
See Karen
Bloomquist's response to reviews of The Promise of Lutheran
Ethics.
See John
Stumme's response to reviews of The Promise of Lutheran
Ethics.
© August 2002
Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE)
Volume 2, Issue 8