[1] One need only read the respective introductions by the
editors of this volume to appreciate the instabilities of the task
they have undertaken. John Stumme struggles manfully (as, perhaps,
one may still be allowed to say) to suggest that, while the several
authors whose essays appear in this volume have not "produce[d] a
single harmonious treatise," their essays, nevertheless, make "a
significant contribution to the Lutheran church and the ecumenical
conversation." That may be true enough, but so did the Vatican
response to the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification,
and we would be unlikely to include it in a volume intending to
enunciate shared Lutheran accents in Christian ethics. Stumme's is
a descriptive introduction, acknowledging what seems obvious: that
the authors included are not in agreement on some important
matters.
[2] Karen Bloomquist also recognizes the differences present in
the essays, but she seems more clearly to bend the discussion in
the direction of certain emphases - namely, that we should not seek
moral norms that are universal, since such universals might
threaten to close off conversation. For her the essays convey the
dynamism and vitality of our current Lutheran ethos; they are "part
of a common conversation, or at times argument, in which shared
theological understandings and dynamics make it possible to
converse together, in quest of what is `good and acceptable and
perfect'. . . ." Possibly true. But, again, the same could be said
of Pope John Paul II's Veritatis Splendor, but it would be strange
to look to it for "the promise of Lutheran ethics."
[3] Someone needs to say - as clearly as possible and however
incorrect a thing it may be to say these days - that too many
voices at the table makes not for conversation but for cacophony.
Simply saying that does not, of course, mean that there are too
many voices in this volume to provide any clear direction for
Lutheran ethics, but, if we cannot grant such a possibility at the
outset, we have little to gain from or offer to normative
reflection. More and more diverse voices is not necessarily a good
thing.
[4] What are the voices represented here)chiefly in the essays
but also in the "table talk on Lutheran ethics" with which the
volume concludes? We can group them roughly as follows. (1) Robert
Benne, Reinhard Hütter, and Martha Stortz - in quite different
ways - are concerned that Lutherans need to retain normative
patterns of behavior that obligate them as Christians and that
delineate a way of life into which believers should increasingly be
drawn. (2) David Fredrickson and Larry Rasmussen/Cynthia Moe-Lobeda
- also in quite different ways - draw the sting from biblical norms
by subjecting them to the ongoing critique of communities of
Christians. (3) James Childs hovers a little uncertainly between
(1) and (2); his emphasis on God's future reign tending less often
to emphasize the way divine judgment negates our action and more
often to emphasize the way in which the promise of that reign
fulfills the world in which we live, while still acknowledging
each. (4) Richard Perry, so far as I can tell, is doing something
rather different from any of the other essayists. When he does
venture onto the ground they inhabit, he does so in rather
confusing ways. (Thus, for example, having recounted the formation
of the Franckean Synod by a rump group unalterably opposed to
slavery, and having characterized it as teaching a brand of
Lutheranism that saw opposition to slavery as a duty, he can write:
"The ethical responses of African American Lutherans and the
Franckean Synod challenge the Lutheran church to be flexible in its
response to the world." If his characterization of the Franckean
Synod describes what he regards as a flexible church body, I wish
to be the first to welcome him into our flexible LC-MS
fellowship.)
[5] Beyond doubt, Hütter's essay probes most deeply into
the failings that have plagued Lutheran ethics in this country in
this century. Briefly put, in searching for something that might be
distinctively Lutheran to say about the moral life, we have
obscured or lost the Christian substance. Put in more traditional
language, by playing off the law against Christian freedom, we have
lost the normative shape of Christian discipleship. The gospel
becomes only acceptance, only pardon, and not also power to live as
Christians. And then, much of the moral substance that Luther
himself, for example, would have included in a discussion of the
decalogue is relativized under the rubric of historical dynamism
and change.
[6] Stortz's essay, with its emphasis upon how Christian
practices, and in particular the practice of prayer, shape a way of
life, reinforces the claim that grace gives rise not only to a
disposition of faith but to a distinctive pattern of obedience. (I
say this despite having come to believe that we might all be better
off had Alasdair Maclntyre's language of "practices" never been
drawn into the language of Christian ethics. The concept is used in
so many different ways and to so many different ends that it is
well nigh useless. But Stortz's essay is a clear delineation of one
way to pour some content into it, and Hütter also draws on the
concept.) Benne's essay likewise targets a "persisting tendency in
Lutheran ethics.. .to reduce the whole of ethical life to the
motivation touched off by justification. . . . The ethical weakness
that ensues is one of lack of ethical substance. . . . Without a
richer notion of life in community (covenantal existence) that
comes from our Jewish roots, Lutheran ethics does not really know
what is 'good for the neighbor.'"
[7] Interestingly, the issue here is one that was at the
foreground of debates in the great Missouri Synod smash-up of a
quarter century ago. Two of the principal issues, on which, I would
say, Missouri proved very prescient, were the third use of the law
and what was called at the time "gospel reductionism." (The third,
which Missouri failed to handle with any nuance, had to do with
biblical interpretation.) Neither Hütter, Stortz, nor Benne
puts the matter in quite these terms, but they might well have.
Benne says that "[f]or the mainstream Lutheran ethical
tradition...there is no third use of the Law. . . ." I think,
however, that, wholly apart from any worries he perhaps should have
about Article VI of the Formula of Concord, he really ought to
change his mind. His entire view demands such a use. Hütter
also steers clear of the term (cf. his fn. 16), but he can write
(of the Christian, who in union with Christ is back in paradise):
"God's commandment is nothing else than the concrete guidance, the
concrete social practice that allows us to embody our communion
with God in concrete creaturely ways." Indeed, without some notion
such as this we end with the "Protestantism lite" that Hütter
describes, having lost much of the catholic substance of the faith
and having mistakenly supposed that Christian freedom is allergic
to norms that bind in every time and place.
[8] That allergy is rather evident in Fredrickson's essay,
though it plays itself out in discussion of the Pauline writings to
congregations that are depicted as "communities of moral
deliberation." (In passing, I note that the entire approach is not
without its difficulties. Among them: [1] It's by no means clear
that the understanding of these congregations - as democratic
communities in which the moral life is a matter of listening to
different voices and pursuing consensus rather than obeying divine
command or apostolic authority-can really be reconciled with the
whole of, say, the Corinthian correspondence. [2] The claim that we
best understand the internal moral deliberations of the early
Pauline congregations by analogy with the Greek polis overlooks the
fact - which Fredrickson notes once but fails to reflect upon -
that these congregations were separated by centuries from the world
of the polis and that an age of empire had intervened. [3] Although
the essay talks about ethics, it is really a description - whether
accurate or not - of ethos. As such, it fails to distinguish
between what the canonical writings record and what they teach. We
are not bound to duplicate the life of these early congregations,
as the Pauline letters record them, even if Fredrickson has
accurately described that life.) It is hard to know, to use the
categories to which I referred in mentioning Childs' essay above,
whether any product of this deliberation could, in Fredrickson's
view, finally be negated by divine judgment. Childs notes that any
ethic must identify what is right, good, and virtuous. Fredrickson
depicts what might perhaps be a community of virtuous deliberators,
but he gives us no sense of how they are to determine the good and
the right that guide their deliberations.
[9] At certain moments Rasmussen and Moe-Lobeda seem very much
to be riding the same train as Fredrickson. They want to find in
Lutheranism a "Protestant principle of prophetic criticism and
creative protest" that gives "a reforming dynamic as the way of
living faith itself." Much, perhaps most, of the time, one is hard
pressed to find any of the tradition's substance that is, in
principle, not subject to this dynamic. Nevertheless, one of the
ways in which they seek to reform the tradition sounds itself
rather irreformable - namely, their insistence that there be "no
apartheid segregation of the human from the nonhuman," and that the
ecosystem be included among those "neighbors" to whom we are
obligated. This is, however, more asserted than argued here, and
the evils of anthropocentricity are simply assumed. (In passing, I
note that it is time to stop denigrating Augustine as one who
"fostered human estrangement from earth." Their discussion of
Augustine is all Nygren and no Burnaby. Their claim that
"Augustine's heaven has no ponies" needs to be enriched by a
sensitive reading of City of God, XXII, 24.) More generally, this
"reform dynamic" that is purportedly at the heart of Lutheranism
will, to revert yet once again to the terms drawn from Childs, have
a hard time explaining how the judgment that negates and transforms
is finally God's rather than, just, ours.
[10] In short, a fault line runs through the essays in this
volume. When Lutheranism tries to understand itself as reaffirming
the substance of the teaching of the church catholic, and doing so
with a special concern to uphold the soteriological significance of
faith alone, as it too rarely has in this country in this century,
it will at least be positioned to try to shape lives of Christian
obedience and witness. That I take to be the concern of Benne,
Hütter, Stortz, and, to some degree, Childs. When Lutheranism
tries to find in its tradition some peculiarly Lutheran ethic
(whether, as is likely, a "reform dynamic," or, as is recently
popular, a consensus that includes as many voices as possible), it
will cease to matter much, and it will, for the most part, echo
what academic culture teaches us to say about morality. If the
second of these is the promise of Lutheran ethics, it cannot, I
fear, elicit my fiducia.
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.
© April 2002
Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE)
Volume 2, Issue 4