Postings to listserv@home.ease.lsoft.com hosted by The
Crossings Community, Inc. (www.crossings.org) by Ed Schroeder. Used
with permission of the author. Unless otherwise noted, the brackets
are the author's.
I. "The Promise of Lutheran Ethics - The First Part of a
Review" (October 22, 1998)
[1] There could be more promise in The Promise of Lutheran
Ethics. By that I mean the Biblical term "promise," the term chosen
by the Lutheran reformers to pinpoint what the reformation was all
about. Melanchthon put it simply in his Loci, the first "systematic
theology" to come out of Wittenberg: "Evangelium est
promissio. The gospel is a promise." If there were more of
THAT promise in this volume, it would be even more promising for
its intended audience, today's USA Lutherans in the mish-mash world
we live in as the millennium turns. More of that promise, I'd be
audacious enough to say, would also make the ethics proposed here
more Lutheran.
[2] It wasn't just Melanchthon's one-liner that put promise at
the center. It's the lynch-pin for the whole discussion of
Justification by Faith in the confessional texts of 1530-31. It's
fundamental to the difference between law and Gospel. No matter how
you calibrate the law, its basic verb still comes out "require,"
say the confessors. Au contraire, the promissory Gospel where the
fundamental verb is "offer." Promises are offered. They are gifts,
freebies. "Thou shalts" are requirements. Their grammar is
reciprocity. Rewards for doing what thou shalt and sanctions for
doing the opposite.
[3] In this volume on Lutheran ethics more than one of the ten
contributors makes a plea for the restoration of the commandments
into Lutheran ethical consciousness. Say they, it's the place to go
after justification by faith has taken place. And in the
fascinating final chapter, a 25-page "Table Talk on Lutheran
Ethics," a bull-session among the authors, no one challenges that
claim.
[4] Return to the decalogue is most forcefully promoted by
Reinhard Hütter in his chapter "The Twofold Center of Lutheran
Ethics," namely, "Christian Freedom and God's Commandments." None
of the other nine challenges Hütter's reading of Lutheranism:
"Christian ethics in the tradition of the Reformation serves the
remembrance of God's commandments and the interpretation of the
innumerable challenges, complexities, and perplexities that we
encounter in our world in the critical and wholesome light of God's
commandments. Christian ethics, in the Reformation tradition
should, of course, end with praise of God's commandments." What
ever happened to the "Promise" of Lutheran Ethics? Except for one
of the essays, the term doesn't even surface as an item for
consideration. O tempora, O mores!
[5] And in that essay where promise does surface, "Ethics and
the Promise of God," by James Childs, it is not the "Gospel is a
promise" of the Reformation era. Childs understands promise as one
of the gifts of "the recovery of the Bible's
historical-eschatological character, [which] placed new emphasis on
the promise of God's coming future reign as the fulfillment rather
than the antithesis of history." Promise and God's reign, God's
dominion, God's future are his constant corollaries. So trusting
the promise is trusting that God will indeed win when it's all
over. It is trusting that "[the] coming reign of God is not
dependent on our achievements, but on the faithful promises of
God."
[6] Now if the "reign of God" were understood as Luther does it
in his catechism's explanation of the Lord's Prayer's second
petition, that still might pass for Lutheran. "The kingdom of God
comes indeed without our prayer, of itself; but we pray in this
petition that it may come unto us also. How is this done? When our
heavenly Father gives us his Holy Spirit, so that by His grace we
believe His holy Word and lead a godly life, here in time and
hereafter in eternity."
[7] Childs implies that newer eschatological readings of the NT
have expanded the "kingdom of God," as he too expands the
"promise," to cosmic dimensions. Thus he can say: "The promise and
hope of eschatology is for the transformation and fulfillment of
the world in the kingdom of God." Now that too might not be too bad
if some distinctions [There's that Lutheran word again!] were
noticed. Every reference to "kingdom of God" in the synoptic
Gospels is linked to what God is up to in Jesus. And the narrative
context for all(?) of them is Jesus' "mercy-management" with
sinners.
[8] Au contraire the "kingdom talk" throughout this entire
volume. Its cardinal term is "justice"- oppressed peoples getting a
fair shake, getting equity instead of a raw deal - as articulated
in the liberation theologies of our generation. Which is not
exactly what Jesus gives sinners when he offers them forgiveness.
Fairness for sinners is the opposite of forgiveness. Now linking
justice to this kingdom that Jesus inaugurates could be kosher -
but again only if you make distinctions. To wit, the distinction
between law-justice (= people receiving what they deserve, sinners
too) and mercy-justice (the kind of justice the Suffering Servant
"executes" in Isaiah 41). It is this sort of justice, say the
gospel writers, that Jesus fulfills when he forgives sinners.
[9] Childs' and Hütter's essays articulate a different
Lutheranism from the one proposed in these ThTh [Thursday Theology,
the title of the ListServ - ed.] weekly essays, although both
authors acclaim primordial Lutheran building-blocks: justification
by faith, the distinction between law and gospel, God's
ambidextrous - left hand, right hand - works in creation, and more.
I propose to address all the essays in this important volume, d.v.,
in future issues of ThTh, including a more detailed look at the two
mentioned above. It has been widely distributed (free!) throughout
the ELCA, as a prize product of its Division for Church in
Society.
[10] A dozen years ago, a doctoral thesis presented at Lutheran
School of Theology in Chicago by Tom Strieter found several
different types of Lutheran ethics on the scene in U.S.
Lutheranism. All but one of them, I think, are represented in the
essays in this volume. Missing is the one that Tom calls "a
struggle-resistance model within the church." He mentions the
theological ethics of the Seminex tradition as a sample of this
genre. The next issues of ThTh will seek to show the promise of
that perspective for Lutheran Ethics as we look at the writers in
the volume that has that name.
II. "The Promise of Lutheran Ethics - Forgiveness,
Faith, Freedom" (October 29, 1998)
[11] The three Bible readings appointed in the lectionary for
Reformation Day (Oct. 31) are Jeremiah 31:31-34, Romans 3:19-28,
and John 8:31-36. No surprise, there is a key Reformation message
in each one. Curiously the key terms in those three texts all begin
with the letter F in English: God's new covenant of FORGIVENESS
(Jeremiah), justification by FAITH (Romans) and FREEDOM - "If the
Son makes you free, you are free indeed" (John).
[12] These three "F-words" pop up all over in the essays
presented in The Promise of Lutheran Ethics. But they are not used
for all the goodies that the Reformers found in them. To illustrate
that I propose to take these three terms and link them to the
essays in this volume, beginning here with ThTh #24 and then, d.v.,
on some of the Thursdays that follow. So we begin with Bob Benne's
opening chapter: "Lutheran Ethics - Perennial Themes and
Contemporary Challenges."
[13] Benne's essay is the most "classically" Lutheran one in the
book, and may strike some readers as the book's most conservative.
His aim is twofold: to "identify the basic themes of Lutheran
ethics," first personal ethics, then social ethics, to examine "the
points at which the modern world challenges" Lutheran ethics. These
modern challenges are theological (exposing Lutherans'
over-reliance on justification by faith); ecclesiastical (little
sense of the church as a "community of character"); and
epistemological (post-modernism's various forms of the
"hermeneutics of suspicion"). Animating his essay is a "sense of
urgency [that] Lutheranism as a living tradition is at risk." In
another generation or two it may be gone.
[14] Benne's "basic themes" are classical Lutheranism. For
"personal ethics" he lists justification by grace through faith,
Christian morality as response to that justifying grace, twofold
use of God's law, orders of creation [or Benne's preferred
rendering of the term, which I like: "places of responsibility"],
realism about human sin, theology of the cross, the "happy
exchange," and more. For the "Lutheran ethical tradition as it
applies to public life" Benne has four themes: a sharp distinction
between salvation offered by God in Christ and all human efforts, a
focused and austere doctrine of the church and its mission that
follows from the first theme, the twofold rule of God through law
and gospel, and a paradoxical view of human nature and history." So
far, so good. Now enters a non-Lutheran theologoumenon that is dear
to Benne: covenant. It's not that this Biblical term was unknown to
the Lutheran Reformers. But it was not a primal term of their
vocabulary, and when invoked always was read with the hermeneutics
of the distinction between law and gospel. Benne himself wants to
hang on to law/gospel lingo, but he lets his covenant theology slip
through the cracks without pushing it through the law and gospel
sieve. He doesn't let on - though surely he must know - that there
is a law covenant with God and a gospel one. Therefore you can't
simply talk about "covenantal existence" as he does frequently, and
still be talking Lutheran. I imagine that he also knows about
"covenant theology"- a.k.a. federal theology (from Latin for
covenant, "foedus") - that arose in post-Reformation times as a
conscious alternative to confessional Lutheranism. But if you want
to do covenant theology and try to be Lutheran, how do you
proceed?
[15] Enter Jeremiah 31:31-34, the first reading for the Festival
of the Reformation. The big news, says the prophet to the Jewish
exiles, is that God is working on a "new covenant." Main point of
the new one is that "it will not be like the covenant" at Sinai.
Chief "unlikeness" in this new one is that God pledges to "forgive
their iniquity, and remember their sin no more." Sinai was never
like that. Just read the specs of that old covenant in Exodus 20
& Deut. 5. Sinai's covenant had no place for forgiveness. Sinai
is bad news for sinners, good news only for non-sinners. You got
what you had coming. God "shows steadfast love to those who love me
and keep my commandments," and "visits" iniquity all the way down
to the 3rd and 4th generation (yes, here God does indeed
"remember") of those doing the opposite.
[16] So when Benne says that "we are meant for covenantal
existence," that is true as Biblical anthropology, but is not ipso
facto good news for sinners. Only one kind of covenantal existence
is good news for the offspring of Eve and Adam. The other was the
sort that when first announced brought no hallelujahs, but only
cries of terror from the audience (Ex. 20:18f).
[17] In pursuing his own "classic" presentation of law and
promise in Galatians, St. Paul too (chapter 4) reaches for
two-covenant theology to hype justification by faith. These two
covenants are not identical with the two parts of the Bible, which
we (erroneously) call Old and New Testament. Since "testament" is
just another term for covenant, God has two of them, says Jeremiah,
already on the scene in dealing with Israel. Paul joins Jeremiah in
Galatians 4 to use this two-covenant theology as his hermeneutic
for interpreting the Galatians to themselves, as well as his lens
for reading the scriptures. For a scholarly treatment on this, see
Del Hillers' masterful work, "Covenant. The History of a Biblical
Idea." He traces 2 covenant paradigms in the Hebrew scriptures, the
"old" one operating at Sinai and Shechem, with the "new" one - new
because it offers forgiveness to sinners - on the scene in God's
transactions with David, Noah and Abraham.
[18] Well, what then comes "new" with Jesus? Answer: He is the
fulfillment of both of God's ancient covenants. He fulfills the old
one (Sinai's law) as he dies our sinner's death on the cross, &
he simultaneously fulfills the new one (new, that is, all the way
back to Abraham) as he interprets his death on Maundy Thursday as
the "blood of the new covenant shed for you for the forgiveness of
sins." All of that, both covenants fulfilled, then gets ratified
when God vindicates Jesus at Easter.
[19] This bi-covenantal perspective has resources for ethics
which would help Benne make an even stronger case for Lutheran
ethics in our day. He could do worse than learn from Paul and his
"grace imperatives," his replacing Moses as "ethical coach" with
Christ as Lord and the Spirit as Leader, his insistence that
Christians are not "free FOR the law," but "free FROM the law."
[20] But Benne takes a different route. In order to get more
concrete ethical action he urges Lutherans to "say more about the
Christian life, whether shaped by the Decalogue and/or the Spirit."
He surely knows that he's here "joining together" what St. Paul
urges kept "asunder." Decalogue and Spirit are opposites in Paul's
ethics throughout his letters. Nowhere is the antithesis sharper
than in Galatians (5:18 & 22). "If you are led by the Spirit,
you are not subject to the law." Concerning the "fruits of the
Spirit, there is no law touching such things." If however Decalogue
and Spirit can be merged, then the Galatian Judaizers had it right,
and Paul had it wrong.
[21] You wonder if Benne is desperate when he concludes:
"Lutherans need a more specific notion of the Christian life if
they are to respond to this chaotic world. They cannot do that by
relying solely on justification." Granted, he wrote this essay
before the Lutheran Brotherhood survey appeared documenting that
over half of U.S. Lutherans say that they do NOT rely on
justification by faith at all. So much for over-reliance. As an
astute observer of the Lutheran scene Benne doubtless had a hunch
that this was so. So over-reliance on justification can hardly be
afflicting Lutheran ethics.
[22] More serious, I'd say, is that too many Lutherans (Benne
too?) view justification by faith alone [JBFA] as a doctrine, and
not as a hermeneutic, the gospel's own criterion, for both
proclamation and ethics. We discussed that in ThTh essays earlier
this summer, where Edward Kennedy, chief respondent of the Vatican
to the "Joint [= Lutheran and Roman Catholic] Declaration on the
Doctrine of Justification," just couldn't see how JBFA could be the
criterion for all doctrine that claims to be Christian. One
important doctrine, yes, but surely not criterion for the whole
ball of wax, he opined. But if JBFA is indeed the gospel's own
criterion for doctrine, isn't it also the criterion for what counts
as Christian in ethics? I think that the Lutheran reformers thought
so.
[23] More on that next time as we hook up the pericopes for
Reformation Day with other essays in The Promise of Lutheran
Ethics.
III. "The Promise of Lutheran Ethics - Back to the
Decalogue?" (November 12, 1998)
[24] Three weeks ago (ThTh 23) I noted how frequently the essays
in this volume claim the Ten Commandments as foundational for
Lutheran ethics. For authors claiming to show the "promise" of
Lutheran ethics, it comes as a surprise, I said, that God's law
gets so much hype. God's promise doesn't even come close to getting
equal time. It figures in only one of the nine essays - and even
there it's emaciated.
[25] "Back to the decalogue" is the drumbeat of Reinhard
Hütter's chapter on "The Twofold Center of Lutheran Ethics."
The two centers he finds are "Christian Freedom and God's
Commandments," he says. And even with these two, the second one
finally steamrollers over the first in Hütter's conclusion
(curiously labeled "The End"): "Christian ethics in the tradition
of the Reformation serves the remembrance of God's commandments and
the interpretation of . . . our world in the critical and wholesome
light of God's commandments. Christian ethics in the Reformation
tradition should, of course, end with praise of God's
commandments." What ever happened to "Christian Freedom" here at
the end? What ever happened to the "Promise" of Lutheran Ethics? It
sounds harsh to say so, but Hütter's conclusion really is "the
end" of the promise of Lutheran ethics.
[26] Wouldn't it be more Lutheran to say something like this to
sum it up? "Christian ethics in the Reformation tradition calls us
to remember God's promise and our freedom generated by faith in
that promise. It calls us to interpret our world in the wholesome
light of God's promise, and to live our lives in promissory freedom
dedicating ourselves to the care and redemption of all that God has
made. Christian ethics in the Reformation tradition ends with
doxology to God the Promisor, his Son the Promise in Person, and
the Spirit who preserves us in union with both in the one true
faith." But that would be a completely different essay from the one
we have here.
[27] In the 25-page "table talk," an appendix to the book, the
authors react to each other's chapters. But nobody challenges
Hütter's doxology to the decalogue as the heart of Lutheran
ethics. Makes you wonder who's taking care of the store these days
in Lutheran ethics in the USA.
[28] Now it could be - though I don't believe it - that they
didn't catch what Hütter was saying, for his chapter is the
"heaviest" essay in the entire volume. One respondent told me that
it fried his brains. His chapter is not an easy read. Although he
has been teaching in the US for a good long while, his English
prose is still a tad too Teutonic, even for serious American
readers. That half of his text is in the footnotes, and that his
footnotes constitute 40% of all the footnotes in this entire
nine-chapter book, signals his formative years in German university
theology. I should know. I did my doctorate there umpteen years
ago. Not only did I have to learn German to do it. That was a piece
of cake compared to the tough task of doing Theologia Deutsch,
viz., theologizing as Germans do.
[29] Not that that is necessarily bad - when you're in Germany.
But to transpose German theological rhetoric into American
vocables, even doing so with flawless grammar (as far as I could
tell), is not yet to do Theologia Americana. Hütter is having
as tough a time communicating to American ears as I did (and still
do) when I try to talk shop with Germans. But be that as it may,
here's what I think he says: The 2-fold center of Lutheran ethics
is Christian freedom and God's commandments. Hütter wants to
correct the "deeply problematic [that's German for "just plain
wrong"] opposition that many allege exists between freedom and
law." His thesis is that "Christian ethics in the Augsburg
Confession's catholic tradition" links the freedom arising from
justification by faith to God's commandments. His thesis is:
"Christian freedom is the embodiment of practicing God's
commandments as a way of life."
[30] One reason Lutherans have seen freedom and law as
antithetical is the "decisive core fallacy of modern
Protestantism," namely, a shared assumption about justification,
that justification by faith alone [JBFA] is "a ceiling that has to
cover everything instead of the very floor on which we stand." So
Hütter wants to rehabilitate God's law, God's commandments,
for use in the justified Christian's ethical life, and do so
without losing the "floor" of JBFA. And while doing so he will show
that this is what Luther and the Augsburg Confession wanted all the
time.
[31] One reason Lutheran ethics got led astray, seeing freedom
and law as antithetical, comes from the Luther renaissance of the
last century, a Luther research tradition that unwittingly read
Luther with Kantian presuppositions, and thus read him wrong. It
was wrong-headed to accept Kant's notion of human freedom as a
person being "free from" all outside regulators ( agents of
heteronomy), who then drew on moral reason to became a "moral
agent" possessing freedom within. From that freedom within arose
"moral maxims" (autonomy) that shaped ethical life. When scholars
blended Kant with Luther, the Gospel was understood as that
liberating power which creates this autonomously free moral agent.
All the while external law, even God's law, is viewed as the
antithesis to the entire ethical venture. Its only "good" function
is the "negative" one of accusing sinners and thus driving them to
Christ, where freedom, law-free freedom, is born.
[32] Hütter sees three 20th century movements that have
been at work to reverse the "fallacy" that freedom and law are
antithetical. First is Karl Barth's theology which "de-centered the
moral subject," thus counteracting the Kantian infection of ethical
autonomy. The end of the line for Barth was the unification, not
the opposition, of Gospel and Law. Second is a recent movement
within Protestant ethics accentuating "virtue" and "character."
These accents show that "moral agents are much more complex
realities than the mathematical points to which they had shrunk in
the wake of Kantian ethics." Third is a "broad movement" that
locates "moral agents" in human communities and creation-linked
contexts, thus undermining the rational abstraction of the Kantian
heritage. To this Hütter adds a fourth corrective for the
fallacy: his own reading of Luther that combats today's ethical
antinomianism [=no place for law whatsoever] whereby the Reformer
is shown linking Christian freedom to God's commandments in his own
theological ethics.
[33] Allying himself to David Yeago's work on Luther,
Hütter unfolds his fundamentally Barthian view of Lutheran
ethics. But it's finally more Barth than Luther, and not
"promising" enough to commend the "promise of Lutheran ethics." And
I say that not to tar him with a Barthian epithet, but to say it
like it is, since my own doctoral work referred to above was on
Barth. When Hütter concludes his Luther section (p. 45) by
saying: "in fulfilling God's commandments [sc. love God, love
neighbor], the freedom of the Christian finds its concrete
fulfillment," he has stepped onto another floor than the JBFA
"floor" he early on had claimed as "the very floor on which we
stand." How so?
[34] Though wanting to counteract the Kantian fallacy that he
says has infected Lutheran ethics, Hütter sticks with Kant at
a most fundamental point, namely, when he links freedom to the law.
To describe Christian freedom as "freedom FOR the law" is Kant pure
and simple. Au contraire Luther, and the NT where he saw it first -
and not only in Paul - Christian freedom, the promissory kind, is
"freedom FROM the law." In the Gospel for Reformation Day (John 8)
Jesus claims that "If the Son makes you free, you are really free."
Is Jesus talking about freedom from, or freedom for, the law? The
context of his words makes it perfectly clear. The Judeans who
challenge him are claiming "freedom for." Jesus has the chutzpah to
call that freedom slavery. To be "really free" is something else.
It's liberation from the slavery of "freedom for."
[35] But won't that lead to antinomianism and libertinism, doing
whatever you damn well please? That is the spectre, I sense, that
haunts Hütter. That's why he cannot abide Christian freedom
simply under the over-arching "ceiling" of JBFA. Remember that the
A here = alone. That is too scary. So Hütter adds something to
the "alone." He pays his respects, he thinks, to the Reformation
core by granting that JBFA is the "floor" for the house of ethics.
Yet faith's freedom needs a "Gestalt," he says, some concrete specs
to give it substance. Otherwise, as "mere" faith, faith alone, it
lacks concrete substance. [Tell that to those who heard Jesus say:
"Your faith has healed you."] The commandments supply the "Gestalt
. . . the shape and form of believers' lives with God." But, say
the Reformers, when you add anything to the "alone" of JBF, you're
constructing a different building. So the commandment-house
Hütter builds on what he claims is the JBFA floor really rests
on an other foundation.
[36] That gets exposed when you use JBFA not simply as a
doctrine, even a fundamental one, but as a criterion, a yardstick
for assessing any proposal that claims to be Christian. Here JBFA
sizes up such a commandment-house and detects some other flooring,
some other foundation. New Testament ethical admonition summarizes
the substance, the Gestalt, of Christian freedom as having Christ
as master and being led by the Spirit. These Twin Managers are the
ones who constitute "the shape and form of believers' lives with
God," not the commandments at all. It is finally Christ and the
Spirit that will not abide any add-on, even one so noble as the
divine decalogue. To insist on "finishing" the house that began
with JBFA flooring by using "Mosaic" materials is nothing less than
laying another foundation. Is it even as bad as that house Jesus
once described, the one built on sand? Could be.
[37] But what about all those imperative ethical statements,
especially in the epistles of the NT, all those commands and
commandments, even the "new" commandment coming from Jesus himself?
Thought you'd never ask. Here too we need to bring in the Lutheran
dipstick, this time formulated as the distinction between God's law
and God's gospel. Are these admonitions "law imperatives" or
"Gospel imperatives?" Especially when citing Luther as an ally for
his commandment-house Hütter (and Yeago too) bypass this
primal Lutheran distinction.
[38] The Gestalt of law imperatives and the Gestalt of gospel
imperatives are as different as day and night - even though the
verbs in both cases are all imperatives - do this, don't do that.
There are several elements to these differing Gestalts. Here's just
one for starters: The Gestalt of law commands is that they are
inescapably marked by recompense. There are always consequences for
the person who is commanded, good ones for obedience, bad ones for
disobeying. The Gestalt of Gospel imperatives is that there are no
consequences at all for the doer. It is always someone else -
sometimes even God - who is the beneficiary when the command is
obeyed, and someone else the loser when it isn't.
[39] When Jesus gives his "new" commandment, it is really new.
It is not Moses repeated. Christ's new commandment has a brand new
Gestalt, most significantly that he himself is both its fabric and
its form, wine and wineskin. That was never the case with Moses'
commandments. Even if he didn't exist, his commandments still
could. Not so with the new commandment and its author. That's
another reason why the old commandments cannot be glued to the
author and finisher of our faith. Faith's freedom is so radically
new, such theological Teflon, that Moses' commandments simply
cannot stick onto it.
[40] Next time more about grace-imperatives and promissory
freedom.
IV. "The Promise of Lutheran Ethics - Law/Gospel
Grammar" (November 19, 1998)
[41] [To continue the topic of Grace-imperatives
(Gospel-imperatives) and Promissory Freedom, I may be borrowing
some paragraphs once sent out as Sabbath Theology #18 back in
1996.]
[42] From my last couple of issues reviewing The Promise of
Lutheran Ethics, it might appear to some of you that I'm on a
vendetta against the law, even against the 10 commandments. Not so.
If I do have a "cause," it's the ancient one central to the
theology of the cross - and seldom advanced without conflict among
Christians, namely, to keep Moses from usurping the role of Christ
and his Spirit in the area of ethics. No one, above all in the
Lutheran crowd, disputes the role of Christ in justification. But
when sanctification (ethics) comes up, for some Christians Christ
and his Spirit seem to be insufficient for getting the job done. So
Moses and the decalogue in some form are invoked as add-ons to give
substance - "Gestalt," as Hütter says - to our lives under
Christ's Lordship and the Spirit's leading.
[43] To say no to Hütter is not to be an anti-nomian, one
who just says: Toss out the law! My proposal is that of Formula of
Concord VI (1577): Keep the law on hand for that candidate who
needs it, that Old Adam/Old Eve not yet mortified in every one of
the baptized. But...(and that's a big but) keep that law away from
every "new creation" Christian. For the newness of that new
creaturehood is Christ and his Spirit, who have supplanted the law
in every primal relationship that we humans have according to
Biblical anthropology. First of all Christ is in the middle
(mediator) in our relationship to God. Few would dispute that. The
same is true with our relationship to our own selves: Christ is in
the center of my new view of me. Few would dispute that either.
[44] If Christ has undisputed claim in these two turfs, he
cannot be displaced in our third primal relationship either, our
relationship to the world and people, what we call ethics. To move
Moses back in here for ethics inevitably requires Christ and his
Spirit to move out. That's the simple thesis of Paul to the
Galatians: to evict Christ and his Spirit from any one of the three
relationships is to evict them from all three. But if Christ did
not die in vain, to use Paul's language, then he claims the
mediator role in all three. He is the end of the law for
righteousness (our God-connection), and for how we see ourselves
(faith), and for ethics (our relationships with others).
[45] There are some internal factors that diminish the law's
usefulness even if you did want to use it for ethics. To begin with
eight of the ten commandments are negatives, telling you what NOT
to do. So right from the outset they are skimpy resources for
determining what to do. So I'm commanded not to commit adultery.
But what resource is that in giving any positive "Gestalt" for my
sexuality, chastity, celibacy or marriage?
[46] The Lutheran Reformers linked this negativity in the
decalogue to their axiom "lex semper accusat." The law always
accuses. Said they: God's commandment never addresses us as though
we ourselves are in some neutral zone, and then, after having
heard, can decide to follow it or not. Rather when God's
commandment addresses us, we're already over the fence in forbidden
territory, already off limits. So, said the reformers, here's what
the commandments say: "Thou shalt have no other gods before me -
and you already have several." "Thou shalt not kill...and you
already have a murderous heart beating within you." All the "shalt
nots" are accusations of where sinners already are, of what they
already are. The Reformers were not original in this. They heard
Jesus doing it in the Sermon on the Mount when he preached on the
commandments.
[47] The Reformers were serious students of God's law. They
called attention to its operative verb "require," God requires this
or that of the addressee in the "thou shalts." By contrast the
Gospel's operative verb is "offer," gift, freebie, no strings
attached. The require verb always has strings. They show up in the
"grammar" of law and the contrasting "grammar" of the Gospel. The
grammar of law is always: "IF you (human) do such and so, THEN I
(God) will do so and such." Even when the word Jesus appears in
such a sentence, the grammatical structure of "If/then" makes it
law no matter what. That's grammar we understand. It's the normal
grammar of human interactions day in and day out: "IF you will do
that, THEN I will do this." Fulfill this condition and I will
"balance" it off with stuff of equal value.
[48] By contrast the grammar of Gospel is: "SINCE or BECAUSE God
is doing, has done, such and so in Christ , THEREFORE you now do
this or that." "Since/therefore" is the pattern of Gospel-grounded
ethical admonitions in the NT. It is the grammar of
Grace-imperatives. They are all over in the epistles of the NT. Not
only are individual "paranesis passages" (admonition sentences)
framed in this Gospel grammar of "since/therefore." Larger segments
of the epistles are formatted that way. Look at the six chapters of
Ephesians. Its three first chapters are SINCE/BECAUSE
Gospel-indicatives. Then at 4:1 comes a big THEREFORE with three
chapters of Grace-imperatives to follow. Check them out for
yourself.
[49] The code words "since (or because) and therefore" are not
always present in the texts. But the "logic" and "grammar" of the
sentences are clearly grace-imperatives. "[Since] you were bought
with a price, therefore glorify God in your bodies." The clauses
can be reversed, but the grammar does not change: "[Therefore] be
kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another as
[because] God in Christ has forgiven you." Or again, "[Since] God
was in Christ reconciling the world until himself, therefore we
entreat you, be ye reconciled to God (and with each other)." "I
appeal to you THEREFORE [after the Gospel-indicatives of the prior
chapters], siblings, by the mercies of God to present your bodies
as a living sacrifice...."
[50] The Law always has the specific grammar of requirements -
if/then - which renders it inescapably contrary to the Gospel's
grammar. So it becomes downright contradictory to use Law as
resource for living the Gospel-life. In the very vocabulary of the
Grace-imperatives, it is Christ and the Holy Spirit who so dominate
that when I checked recently I couldn't find even one reference to
a decalog commandment as I re-read the admonition sections of the
NT epistles. There may well be some that I missed. But even when it
comes to stuff for which there is a clear "thou shalt not"
commandment - murderous hatred, sexual immorality, theft, slander,
coveting - the commandment is not invoked. Instead Christ is, and
the ethical imperative, even when it is sharp as it often is, comes
in the grammar of the Gospel. E.g., on the matter of prostitution
in 1 Corinthians 6, there is no mention of the 6th commandment.
Instead the apostle's ethical speech is: "Since you are one-flesh
with Christ, since your body is the Holy Spirit's temple, therefore
stop fornicating."
[51] One significant place where Paul does speak of the "covet"
commandment, he does not use it for ethics, but with its accusatory
function in his own biography. "I would not have known sin," he
says, "if the law had not said 'Don't covet.'" What Paul must mean,
I think, is that his big coveting was coveting righteousness. When
Christ's offer of righteousness finally came through to him
(Damascus ff.) his coveting of righteousness, the law's kind, was
uncovered as the essence of sin. He'd been coveting required
righteousness all along, when one day it came to him as an offered
gift.
[52] There may be ethical passages in the NT that show up as
"if/then" in English translation, and possibly even in the original
language. Even so, what's needed is to check the theological
grammar, the logic of the parts, and the operational verbs to see
if it's require or offer.
[53] What's new about Christ's "new " commandment for ethics,
"Love one another, as [because, since] I have loved you" is that
it's different from Moses, even the summary of Moses with the word
"love" at the center: "Love your neighbor as yourself."
[54] The word "you" and the verb "love" in the new commandment
is always in the plural. You can't see that in the English
translations where "you" and the verb "love" can be both singular
and plural. But in every instance in the NT the "one another"
imperatives are such plurals. That signals that they are
inner-community imperatives: "Y'all do love to each other." It's
"ping-pong" back-and-forth loving. Lots of folks are playing the
game at the same time. Not so Moses. His is a singular imperative
just telling each of us to do love to the neighbor. But is that any
big deal? Well, hang on.
[55] The imperative for us to do this loving comes as second in
the sequence. It's framed in Gospel-grammar. Since Christ has loved
us, therefore we are mandated to ping-pong this love with each
other. Not so Moses. His command is a requirement without a prior
indicative about God, or from God. The "Love God" commandment often
paired with Moses' neighbor commandment is equally unilateral and
without a prior "since" on God's part.
[56] The communitarian aspect of ping-pong loving is the
consequence of each of the ping-pong players first having been
receivers of the love of Christ. It is that individual reception of
Christ's "ping" of love, that puts each of us in the community, now
under the imperative to "pong" the same to others also in the game.
We are not isolated players, but ones joined to Christ and
"therefore" joined to each other in the game. There is no such
community factor written into the very fabric of Moses' love
commandment.
[57] Finally the criterion for the loving is brand new. "As I
have loved you," namely, all the way to the cross, is not only new,
it's as different from "as you love yourself" as day is from
night.
[58] 'Nuff for now. D.v., see you in a fortnight.
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