We have lost our moral compass... The ethical consensus of
our society has been steadily eroding... The church urgently needs
to speak clearly and forthrightly to this situation of growing
moral anarchy....
[1] Such concerns and convictions are common today. Moreover
they have been a perennial complaint in virtually all societies.
Within the church, however, there is more to this moral malaise
than the widespread perception that our society is in an ethical
tailspin. Some persons of faith also fear that the church might too
closely resemble society. They are convinced that the church has
lost its grip on its own moral authority and with that its moral
courage. They fear the church is a trumpet that blows an uncertain
sound.
[2] Yet even if the church summoned the moral courage for a
powerful witness in our ethically foundering world, it would first
face a number of stubborn uncertainties. In matters of both
personal choice and public policy, we are constantly mired in the
ambiguity of life in a fallen world. How do the theological
resources of the Lutheran tradition help us to cope with that
reality? Secondly Christians often struggle with one another in
profound disagreement over the complicated issues of contemporary
life. Does a Lutheran approach to ethics and authority in ethics
speak helpfully to this state of affairs? Thirdly there is
continuing debate and attendant uncertainty over how far and in
what ways it is appropriate for the church to engage in social
concerns and public policy. Can Lutherans resolve their historical
and theological tensions in this regard? Finally having dealt with
our own internal diversity, how do we witness effectively in a
world of increasing diversity? Does the Lutheran heritage have
something to contribute in this twenty-first century situation?
[3] Let me combine these concerns into one question to focus the
discussion: "How do we as Christian people and as a Lutheran church
speak with courage and confidence to ethical issues even in the
most complex and disputed of circumstances?" In addressing this
question, I will consider some key themes of Lutheran ethics in
order to gain a better understanding of moral authority and ethical
deliberation in the Lutheran tradition and to encourage our witness
as a church.
Ethical Witness and the Vocation of the
Church
[4] Lutherans have not always been clear or consistent about their
mandate for ethical witness, though we have usually been somewhat
more comfortable and confident in the personal sphere than in the
realm of public policy. The seeds of this ambivalence are in the
thinking of Luther himself and most especially in subsequent
interpretations of Luther.
Ethical Witness in the Two Realms
Tradition
[5] Although the term "doctrine of the two kingdoms" was not coined
until the 1930s, Luther's teaching of God's two modes of governance
has certainly been a prominent feature of the Lutheran heritage
since the publication of his "Temporal Authority: To What Extent It
Should Be Obeyed" in 1522. In this and subsequent writings, such as
the "Commentary on the Sermon on the Mount," Luther set forth his
well-known distinction between God's two governments, the spiritual
and the temporal, and with that the twofold ethical response
demanded of Christians. A great deal of scholarship and debate has
gone into what Luther really intended and taught.[1] I will first track how his
twofold formula became dualistic.
[6] In an influential nineteenth century essay on Luther's
ethics, Christian Ernst Luthardt wrote in connection with Luther's
doctrine of two kingdoms that:
To begin with, the Gospel
has absolutely nothing to do with outward existence but only with
eternal life, not with external orders and institutions which could
come into conflict with the secular orders but only with the heart
and its relationship to God, with the grace of God, the forgiveness
of sins, etc. . . . Thus Christ's servants, the preachers, likewise
have no reason to espouse these secular matters but are only to
preach grace and forgiveness of sins in the name of Christ. As for
secular concerns, "the jurists may advise and help here on how this
should function."[2]
[7] Ulrich Duchrow has written that Luthardt's essay typifies
the very dualistic conception of the nineteenth century that still
continues to obscure our view of Luther's doctrine. In this
understanding of "two spheres of life," "Christianity is restricted
to the personal, inner sphere; the preacher is forbidden to comment
on political matters."[3]
[8] The extreme consequences of this nineteenth century mindset
were observable in the United States. In a statement that seems
unimaginable today, the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod theologian
Wilhelm Sihler wrote that the gospel had nothing to say to the
issue of slavery. The gospel's message is one of spiritual
liberation from the slavery of sin, not external liberation from
the bonds of servitude. Thus he concluded, "Nor can the gospel
stipulate it to be a matter of faith and of love, that is, a matter
of conscience, that the slaveholder grant his slaves their physical
freedom on the grounds that they too are his brothers in
Christ."[4]
[9] James Echols, while attempting to show points of conceptual
convergence between Lutheran two kingdoms thinking and African
American Christianity, nonetheless sees the behavior of the two
traditions standing in stark contrast. African American Christians
have been activists for liberation from oppression from slavery to
the present. Lutherans have tended toward quietism and the status
quo under the influence of dualistic interpretations of God's
twofold governance.[5]
[10] Helmut Thielicke has spoken of three potential dangers in
Luther's doctrine of the two realms: bifurcation, secularization,
and harmonization. These seem to be three variations of dualism.
Bifurcation is the separation of the two realms into the personal
versus the official, leading to a "double morality." Secularization
dualistically separates the gospel from the world; the world is
divided into autonomous spheres of activity under the sway of
totally secular authorities. The final danger of harmonization
refers to the impression Luther sometimes gives that the two
kingdoms stand side by side in mutual harmony, each having
different laws from the other.[6] In all
three variations there is a dual morality-personal versus
social-and quietism in the church's relation to the world.
[11] Most of us who are the "senior citizens" of Lutheranism in
America, or nearly so, can testify to some form of this dualistic
thinking as a staple of our theological formation. Citing a 1970
study in the United States, Karl Hertz noted:
Among the laity and many of
the clergy we find an approach that strongly emphasizes the
distinction between the secular and spiritual spheres of life.
Christians must indeed live in the world, but the church
nevertheless-apart from the demand for individual piety-has no
ethical advice to direct the conduct of believers in society. . . .
The sharp distinction between the two realms (which are often
falsely identified as church and state) serves to justify this
ethical position.[7]
[12] Certainly the impulses toward dualistic and quietistic
interpretations of the two realms are there in Luther himself. In
"Temporal Authority" Luther made the provocative comment, "You have
the kingdom of heaven; therefore, you should leave the kingdom of
earth to anyone who wants to take it."[8] Then again in commenting on
Matt. 5:38-42, Luther explained the distinction between seeking
justice and turning the other cheek:
"Each should move in its own
sphere, and yet both should be effective. A Christian may carry on
all sorts of secular business with impunity-not as a Christian but
as a secular person-while his heart remains pure in his
Christianity, as Christ demands. . . .Thus when a Christian goes to
war or when he sits on a judge's bench, punishing his neighbor, or
when he register's an official complaint, he is not doing this as a
Christian, but as a soldier or a judge or a lawyer."[9]
[13] While it is not difficult to see how these and similar
statements by Luther could lead to a double morality of personal
versus social and a retreat from the social witness of the church,
the larger context of Luther's writings suggests a more balanced
perspective. Consequently Thielicke can speak of an objective and
subjective link holding the two realms together. The objective link
is forged by God ruling in both spheres: God's love is operative in
both modes of divine governance. The subjective link is the love
with which the people of God respond in both their immediate
relationships with their neighbors and in service to their
neighbors in fulfilling their vocation in the orders of earthly
authority. Love does not belong solely to the personal sphere nor
law to the social and political sphere. Love is the determinative
principle in all spheres.[10]
[14] Earlier in this century, the great Luther scholar Karl Holl
made a similar point regarding love: "By interpreting the orders of
secular life as means for the exercise of love, and by charging
Christians to keep improving them in this sense, [Luther]
demonstrated the possibility of retaining love as the ruling motive
in every situation and every moment[11]."
Holl's insight is echoed in the splendid essay on the two kingdoms
doctrine by Heinrich Bornkamm. Bornkamm rejects the notion offered
by some interpreters that the love involved in seeking justice is
different from the love of sacrifice for the neighbor. Love is
indivisible even though it takes on different forms for different
tasks.[12] Finally Gustaf Wingren
says: "It is the neighbor who stands at the center of Luther's
ethics. . . . Vocation and the law benefit the neighbor, as does
love born of faith. . . . Love born of faith and the Spirit effects
a complete breakthrough of the boundary between the two kingdoms,
the wall of partition between heaven and earth, as did God's
incarnation in Christ.[13]"
[15] More recent interpretations of Luther echo Wingren's
judgment. José Miguez Bonino, while critical of the more
quietistic versions of Luther's thought, follows Wingren on
vocation. "At the ethical level gospel and law, power and love,
come together in the life of individual Christians, in whatever
'Stand' (social or vocational location) they may find themselves in
society."[14] In a similar vein
David Steinmetz wrote, "For Luther, the vertical relationship to
God and the horizontal relationship to the neighbor are so
inseparably joined in the act of faith that one is unthinkable
without the other. . . . Freedom in faith and freedom to love can
only be isolated from each other with disastrous results for
both."[15]
[16] The common emphasis of these Luther scholars on the
indivisibility of love and the linkage of the two realms in terms
of God's comprehensive love and our response in all venues of life
mitigates the influence of dualistic thinking. It opens the door to
a renewal of the church's social conscience and involvement. It
helps us to avoid the danger of double morality by showing the
intimate connection between personal and social ethics in the
concept and dynamic of Christian neighbor love. "Faith active in
love" is simultaneously "faith active in love seeking justice."
[17] The quest for justice driven by love is also shaped by the
realism that is so much a part of Luther's two realms thought.
There would not be a "left hand" rule of law if true Christian love
really prevailed. Yet it does not, and therefore in providential
love God has provided for government and other forms of authority.
As Miguez Bonino has pointed out, Luther had a positive view of the
purpose of government and could therefore call it to be true to its
God-given mission of keeping justice.[16] Indeed Dietrich
Bonhoeffer in his resistance to the Nazi regime took this very
tack. While recognizing the proper and distinct roles of church and
government, he nonetheless claims it is the duty of the church to
confront the state and even become involved in direct political
action when it is apparent that the state has failed in its
function.[17] While the distinction
between Luther's two kingdoms remains among the thinkers we have
sampled, their separation in the ethical witness of the Christian
community is precluded.
[18] Reappraising Luther's thought and the force of courageous
witnesses like Bonhoeffer have helped Lutherans find their way into
the church's social witness in our time. The social statements that
multiplied in the churches of American Lutheranism since the
socially turbulent sixties display a new sense that both Luther and
the Augsburg Confession provide encouragement for taking up the
cause of justice and peace. The distinction between the two realms
remains, and with it a distinction between the church's ethical
witness and its gospel witness. Nonetheless there is a clear
statement that the church and the secular order operate in
"functional interaction" and that the church has the authority and
vocation to speak to ethical issues in the secular sphere even
while respecting its integrity.[18]
William Lazareth's essay, "Luther's 'Two Kingdoms' Ethic
Reconsidered," written for the World Council of Churches, is
reflective of the new consciousness of the sixties. Lazareth
concludes his reconsideration this way:
In short, what Lutherans
need desperately today is a prophetic counterpart to the priesthood
of all believers. Evangelical Christians will be reverent to God's
Word as well as relevant to God's world by expressing both their
priestly Yes, through faith active in love, and their prophetic No,
through love seeking justice.[19]
[19] Significantly Lazareth unites the concerns of the two
realms in the vocation of the church and defines the activities of
the church in both realms as activities of love. At the same time
he distinguishes between the church's priestly vocation as
belonging to one realm and its prophetic vocation as appropriate to
the other. For many this is probably a satisfactory solution. It
overcomes the social quietism of the past and avoids what many fear
could be a confusion of law and gospel if the cause of justice were
linked too closely with the message of justification. For others
the ethical witness of the church-including the cause of
justice-and the gospel witness of the church are more closely
linked. They see faith active in love seeking justice as a single,
unified vocation of the church. Within this vocation distinctions
of law and gospel and of the ultimate and penultimate can be
maintained.
The Eschatological Perspective
[20] Hertz recognized an attitude of negativity toward the world
that is hard to escape in much of the two kingdoms tradition. He
picked up the insight of Paul Tillich that a truly transforming or
revolutionary social ethic was not possible as long as the realm of
creation and that of redemption did not share the same
eschatological future. Identifying salvation with the individual
apart from any expressed hope for the human community and the
universe frustrates efforts to mount an ethical witness that takes
the future of worldly matters with utmost seriousness. Hertz
believed that necessary distinctions between the ultimate and
penultimate in the two realms tradition can be sustained within the
framework of an eschatological ethic that unites the ethical
vocation of the church with its evangelical calling.[20]
[21] Lutheran theologians during the past several decades have
been prominent among those systematically appropriating the
importance of biblical eschatology. The recovery of the Bible's
historical-eschatological character placed new emphasis on the
promise of God's coming future reign as the fulfillment rather than
the antithesis of history. As the whole of God's historical
creation comes under the promise of God's future, ethical striving
within the world becomes more than a holding operation; it is
suffused with hope. In short these theological developments move us
toward Hertz's hope for a closer relationship of the church's
ethical vocation to its evangelical calling.
[22] Wolfhart Pannenberg has developed this eschatological
perspective most powerfully in Lutheran theology. Reflecting on the
two kingdoms doctrine, Pannenberg has observed: "Like Augustine
before him, Luther did not do justice to the positive relationship
between the hope for the Kingdom of God and the themes of political
life, but instead regarded the latter as only an emergency measure
against sin."[21] Pannenberg recognizes the
validity of Luther's distinctions in defining and respecting the
different roles of church and government. Luther's realism is
important because secular force is needed as a hedge against
fanaticism and unrealistic enthusiasm for social transformation.
Yet Pannenberg laments that "nowhere in Luther can we find any
inspiration to transform political conditions by the powerful
vision of the eschatological vision of the Lordship of Christ which
already illumines the present world."[22]
[23] In an earlier essay on Augustine's influence, Pannenberg
observes that Augustinian ethics are marked by a dualism and
pessimism regarding the world. This seems to correlate with
Augustine's eschatology that Pannenberg describes as suffering from
an "otherworldly distortion." Eschatological hope is understood to
be with God in God's transcendent otherness and separateness from
the world. Yet if consistent with biblical eschatology we
understand God to be the future of the world, then the promise and
hope of eschatology is for the transformation and fulfillment of
the world in the kingdom of God. Pious striving for God is no
longer a matter of leaving the world behind for God's sake. Rather
our striving in love is converted into concern for the world: "The
most constructive consequence of this conversion to the world is
the Christian idea of love that affirms the present world in
transforming it."[23]
[24] Carl Braaten has also recognized a critical point made by
Pannenberg. The idea of the transforming activity of love in
Christian "conversion to the world" is not to be construed as a
retread of liberal Christianity's overly optimistic hope that the
kingdom of God can be the product of our ethical
striving.[24] Rather:
The clue to the relationship of eschatology to ethics may be
discovered by establishing the nature of the presence of the
eschatological future in the person and activity of the historical
Jesus. The key term is proleptic; there is a proleptic presence of
the eschatological kingdom in the activity of the historical Jesus.
The kingdom of God which is really future retains its futurity in
the very historical events which anticipate it in the present.
Christian ethics is not to be understood as the means of producing
the future kingdom of God, but only as annunciation, anticipation,
and approximation, let us say as "signs of the coming
kingdom."[25]
[25] I have picked up these themes in my writings by speaking of
the church as the community of promise called to live out an ethic
of anticipation. When our hope for God's final reign is recast in
biblical terms as a hope for the fulfillment of God's intention for
the whole creation, then the gospel promise by which the church is
established becomes a promise for the whole person and the whole
world. The worldly ethical concerns for both the spiritual and
physical well-being of individuals, the common good of society, and
the care of the earth point to or anticipate dimensions of the
gospel promise for God's reign. The kingdom of God provides a
vision, a horizon within which we can see the purpose and
trajectory of our ethical endeavors. At the same time this promise
gives birth to the faith, hope, and love that strains toward that
future. Thus the church's ethical vocation is one of anticipation.
As such its ethical vocation works in tandem with its evangelical
vocation.[26]
[26] The various trends sampled here lead from dualistic
thinking to a more unitive vision of the relationship of love and
justice, personal and social ethics, and ethical and evangelical
witness. This vision seems evident at various key points in the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America's social statement, "The
Church in Society: A Lutheran Perspective." The statement sees the
witness of the church in society as flowing from the community's
life in the gospel. "Faith is active in love; love calls for
justice in the relationships and structures of society. . . . The
Gospel does not take the Church out of the world but instead calls
it to affirm and enter more deeply into the world. Although in
bondage to sin and death, the world is God's good creation, where,
because of love, God in Jesus Christ became flesh. The Church and
the world have a common destiny in the reign of
God."[27]
By What Authority and By What Criteria?
[27] The ethical witness of the church in society regarding issues
of both personal choice and corporate life is an integral part of
the church's vocation to witness to the gospel of God's coming
reign. Understanding the vocation of the church as the community of
anticipation is fundamental to what we can and cannot say about the
church's moral authority and ethical voice.
Authority and Certitude
[28] In an eschatological perspective, the realism of Luther's two
realms doctrine is preserved in the tension between the future
revealed and present in Christ's victory and the present of
brokenness and sin. The existential tension of the individual as
simul iustus et peccator projected on the large screen of human
history shows the very pattern of our world's eschatological
existence.[28] Again the ELCA social
statement on "Church in Society": "Through faith in the Gospel the
Church already takes part in the reign of God announced by and
embodied in Jesus. Yet, it still awaits the resurrection of the
dead and the fulfillment of the whole creation in God's promise
future. In this time of "now . . . not yet," the Church lives in
two ages-the present age and the age to come."[29]
[29] Within this perspective Luther's ethic is reframed in
temporal rather than spatial terms. The horizon is a holistic
vision of God's promise for the future of history, revealed
definitively in the person and work of Jesus the Christ. This
reframing serves to mitigate the dualistic tendencies traced above.
Yet two key theological insights at the heart of Luther's formula
remain intact: its realism (already noted) and the distinction but
constant interaction between the two realms. The distinction and
interaction are sustained in the dynamic of the "now . . . not yet"
structure of reality. The "not yet" character of our sinful world
requires the structures of God's "left hand" rule and marks them
off from any confusion with the ultimate reign of God announced in
the gospel. At the same time the "now" reality of that promise
creates and sustains Christian love in its zeal for transforming
the conditions of our world as a witness to its hope and in
obedience to God's Word. Embedded in this tension and distinction
is a realism concerning the fragmentary and anticipatory character
of our fallen, not-yet world. The interplay of law and gospel, the
pulsebeat of both corporate and individual life, remains in the
interplay of the "now . . . not yet."[30]
[30] The coincidence of the simul of our personal existence and
the simul of the world's eschatological existence corresponds to
the unity of personal and social ethics in a Lutheran understanding
of the ethics of the kingdom of God. Both personal and social
ethics are an integral part of the church's witness to both God's
judgment and promise. Both personal and social ethics participate
in the ambiguous character of our "not yet" reality and must deal
with the uncertainty that often comes with it.
[31] Also central to a Lutheran understanding is that Christians
have the freedom in the gospel to face this reality in the
confidence of God's favor. We thus take the responsibility to make
our ethical witness to the world even when that means "bold
sinning." According to Luther's "Treatise on Christian Liberty," we
are perfectly free in the gospel from the judgment of the law and
therefore free to bind ourselves in love to the needs of our
neighbor.[31] The gospel promise, the
faith it engenders, and the love that springs from faith is the
beginning and sustaining ground of the Christian ethic. We are free
in the gospel to embrace the commands of God with appreciation and
expectation, not fear and trepidation, even though they continue to
accuse us and the world in which we live continues to drive us into
circumstances fraught with terrible and uncertain choices.
[32] Bonhoeffer was particularly insightful in discussing
Luther's famous statement, "Sin boldly, yet more boldly still
believe." If we take the statement as a premise, he wrote, it
becomes a license for "cheap grace." If, however, we see the
statement as Luther did, as a sum, it looks very different. As a
sum it indicates that, being sinners, even our best efforts in
life's tangled circumstances will add up to sin, but at the same
time God's gracious promise attends us and calls us to live boldly
and with courage and trust in that assurance.[32]
[33] Paul Althaus's comment punctuates this line of thought:
Just as God-paradoxically-accepts me as righteous and looks upon
me with favor even though I am and remain a sinner, so God also
accepts and approves my works. Empirically, what the Christian does
is never so good as to be right and acceptable in the sight of God,
for man's sinful nature continues to contaminate everything he
does. Nevertheless, the deeds are right in the sight of God because
in his grace he approves them-even as he approves the man who in
faith lays hold of his wondrous grace and favor.[33]
[34] The point is not that there are no reliable ethical
standards. God's Word is a rich resource for that. Nor is it that
Christians are inherently incapable of moral discernment. We are
called and empowered to speak to the issues of our world, as I have
already made clear. The point is rather that our confidence in the
moral life is rooted not in the certainty of our judgments but in
the assurance of God's promise. Authority is not established by
certitude, especially in a world where our theological realism
suggests that certitude is a scarce commodity.[34]
Authority and Authorization, and the Good
[35] By what authority do we speak, then? The authority by which we
speak resides in the vocation we are graciously given as a people
of God to witness to God's eschatological promise. This is our
authorization to speak. The message with which we are entrusted
gives foundation and substance to our ethical voice.
[36] The revelation of the reign of God, centered in the person
and work of the Christ, is a word that confronts us and our world
as both law and gospel. It evokes prophetic judgment and guides and
inspires the positive efforts of love. It judges our present
existence and conduct in its resistance to God's coming future,
God's righteous rule in our world and lives. At the same time the
revelation of God's dominion is the promise of its fulfillment.
This promise is sealed in the blood of the cross and assured in the
triumph of the resurrection. Our brokenness is disclosed both in
the suffering of our Savior and in the contrast of our world to the
wholeness of God's future dominion. At the same time, however, the
assurance of the future in the victory of Easter is a promise
generative of faith, hope, and love.
[37] Furthermore the promise and vision of God's future sets the
course for faith active in love striving in hope and seeking
justice. As the Bible develops its portrait of God's promised
future, we discover a variety of values that are integral to that
ultimate good. These values become the focus of Christian love as
it battles all that negates these values and strives for those
things that contribute to their realization. Any ethic must
identify what is right, good, and virtuous. The good is that toward
which we strive in our efforts to do the right. The virtues are
those traits of character that incline us toward the right and the
good. The Bible provides content and guidance in all three
components of an ethic. I look first at how it speaks to the
good.
[38] For the prophet Isaiah the reign of God will be one of
unbroken peace (2:2-4) and justice (11:3-5). When Christians become
active agents of reconciliation at every level of life, from the
nuclear to the international family, they anticipate the promise of
peace in the dominion of God. When in love they concern themselves
with issues such as economic justice and equal treatment under the
law, they anticipate the perfect justice of God's kingdom that will
be beyond the need for coercive law. In Christ God has made peace
with the world and promised a world of peace in which hostility and
estrangement are supplanted by community and unity. God has called
the eschatological community, the church, to work at this now (2
Cor. 5:19). We do so in the expectation of its coming, even as we
eat the meal of the future in the Eucharist of the present.
[39] In the reign of God there is equality beyond any
distinctions (Gal. 3:28). When Christians work to break down
barriers of race, gender, and ethnicity, attacking all the "isms"
that exclude and denigrate people because of who they are, they
anticipate this promised equality in the hope of its final
realization.
[40] At key points in his ministry, Jesus identified his person
and work with prophetic expectations for the reign of God. These
expectations include the triumph of life over death, healing of
infirmities, good news for the poor, and the end of oppression
(Matt. 11:4-5; Luke 4:17-21). When Christians stand for the value
of life by opposing the wanton use of abortion or by supporting the
acceptance, rights, and opportunities of the disabled, they
anticipate the triumph of life in the reign of God. When Christians
visit the sick, comfort the suffering, and actively pursue health
care for all, they bear witness to the health and wholeness of the
kingdom foreshadowed in Jesus' healing works. When in the face of
exploitation and predation Christians promote a sexual ethic that
celebrates the unity and integrity of our spiritual-physical
creation in God's image, they anticipate in yet another way that
wholeness that is the promise of our eschatological perfection in
the imago Dei.[35] Finally when Christians,
like their Lord, identify with the poor and their needs and oppose
all forms of oppression, they anticipate the shalom of God's
kingdom where our final freedom from sin dissolves all oppression
in perfect freedom with God. These and other diverse activities are
evidences of the Christian ethic of love reaching out for the
values that express God's will and promise.
[41] Beyond the hope of life and wholeness in the human
community is the promise that all creation will find healing and
new life (Rom. 8:21), as the prophet Isaiah foresaw in his
proleptic vision of the peaceable kingdom. The fulfillment of all
creation as eschatologically promised is the final grounding for
the intrinsic value of all historical, created reality. Thus when
Christians speak out on behalf of the whole creation and extend
Christian love to include love for nature, they anticipate the
truth that God's future is the future of the whole
world.[36]
[42] The values I discern then are life, the wholeness of all
creation, peace, equality, community, unity in reconciliation, and
freedom. The Bible itself and the issues of our day associated with
these values give them concreteness.
[43] The promise of God for the future energizes our present
ethical resolve even in the face of disappointment and adversity.
The ELCA study on economic life picks this up nicely:
The purposes of God will not be thwarted. The disappointed
promises of economic life can be faced and addressed. Hope emerges
out of despair, life out of death. The coming of God's reign is not
dependent on our achievements, but on the faithful promises of God.
The heart of this vision provides substance and direction for
actions and policies that can bear witness to God's righteousness
and justice in economic life today.[37]
[44] The criteria by which the church must select those ethical
issues that it will address are the values revealed for God's
promised future in the person and work of Jesus Christ. From
matters of personal conduct to those of public policy, the church
is in constant dialogue with the world around it and within its own
community, discerning prophetically where these values are being
compromised and discerning constructively how they may be better
anticipated. The ethical authority of the church is further
consolidated when, faithful to its vocation, it is faithful to the
values of God's reign.
[45] Discerning when these values are at stake and what
responses are right and possible is not always easy for "not yet"
people in a "not yet" world. The opening reflections of this
chapter gave us a glimpse of this challenge. We have a vision, but
in the midst of complexity and conflict how do we move from vision
to decision?
Facing Our Conflicts: Courage and Confidence in Decision
and Action
[46] Scripture, as it permeates the whole life of the Christian
community in Word and Sacrament, is the generative ground and
wellspring of our faith. This faith is the beginning of our ethical
vocation. Scripture is the resource through which we experience
God's self-disclosure and come to know Jesus. God's Word is alive
among us in the community of faith; it nurtures us in this faith,
and it shapes us in the love that Christ displays as the Son of God
and the prototype of true humanity.[38]
Joseph Sittler's words are fitting: "Love and Faith are not, in the
New Testament, alternative or opposing terms. Faith is the name for
the new God-relationship whereby the will of God, who himself
establishes the relationship, is made actual. And that will is
love. Faith active in love is alone faith; and love is the function
of faith horizontally just as prayer is the function of faith
vertically."[39]
[47] The faith-creating, faith-nurturing, love-shaping power of
Scripture points us toward the vital role of the Bible in shaping
Christian character individually and as a community. In many
respects this is the Bible's most important contribution in shaping
the Christian ethic. Since what we do is an expression of who we
are, we must take note of character and the virtues that describe
it before discussing ethical decisions.[40]
[48] The character in which we are shaped as individuals and as
a Christian community is the character of neighbor love embodied in
our Lord (for example, Phil.2: 5-7). Luther makes this point quite
eloquently:
Behold, from faith thus flow forth love and joy in the Lord, and
from love a joyful, willing, and free mind that serves one's
neighbor willingly and takes no account of gratitude or
ingratitude, praise or blame, of gain or loss . . . hence as our
heavenly Father has in Christ freely come to our aid, we also ought
to help freely our neighbor through our body and its works, and
each one should become a Christ to the other that we may be Christ
to one another and Christ may be the same in all, that is, that we
may be truly Christians.[41]
[49] The Beatitudes help to spell out the sorts of virtues that
describe the disposition of love. These blessings or endowments of
grace point to virtues like openness to the neighbor's need and
worth, mercy, peacemaking, solidarity with the suffering, and
honesty. Consistent with the idea that Christian character is
formation in the love of Christ, Gustavo Gutierrez has remarked
that the Beatitudes display the attitude of Christ to whom they all
fundamentally refer.[42] These
beatitudinal virtues are corollaries of the values we have
identified and the norms of love to which we now turn.
[50] The Bible not only provides us with the wellspring for our
formation in faith and love and with a vision of the good as the
goal of love in its portrayal of God's future; it also gives
content to love and definition and direction to the way love
behaves in response to the ethical issues of life.
[51] To be sure, the New Testament idea of Christian neighbor
love has considerable content in itself. No one is excluded from
our caring, not even our enemies ( Matt. 5:43-44). Having ourselves
been affirmed by God, we are free to embrace the way of love as
self-giving in the manner of the Christ (Phil. 2:4ff.). In Christ
we have a self to give! We know that love drives toward unity and
community through reconciliation even as we have been reconciled to
God in Christ (2 Cor 5:19).[43] There
is much here on which to build an ethic. We can extrapolate from
this core disposition of the Christian moral life norms that speak
to life choices. Yet the Bible gives even further guidance for
love.
[52] For much of the life of the church this guidance has been
defined by the Decalogue and the church's catechetical development
of the Decalogue as it correlates with other Scriptural resources.
The Decalogue speaks to love's concerns for the neighbor. I have
attempted to translate the content of the commandments into five
general rules that embody love's concern for the neighbor and the
world: respect for autonomy, commitment to justice, respect for the
sanctity of life, truth-telling, and promise-keeping (including
fidelity in marriage). They require further clarification in the
process of applying them to situations of moral choice. The church
has been doing this for centuries in the development of its
catechesis and in its response to new moral
challenges.[44] For the Christian who
lives the life of agape love in the freedom of the gospel, the
commandments of God provide direction and possibility. They also
continue to accuse us in the reality of our lingering sinfulness
and serve as the foundation of law for a society that does not live
by love.[45]
[53] The Word of God provides rich, clear indications of the
will of God for the life of love. Moreover we have confidence in
the guidance of the Holy Spirit as we reflect on that Word and seek
its direction. In the assurance of the promises of God and the
presence of the Spirit, the church struggles to understand and
apply rightly the ethical mandates of its faith under the ambiguous
conditions of historical existence. We take part in a continual
process of dialogue between the commandments of love and the
situations individuals engage as they face personal choices.
Simultaneously we take part in a continual process of dialogue for
the church as it seeks to refine its ethical understandings in the
crucible of worldly engagement. Both processes require our reason
along with our obedience. Indeed Luther saw reason as essential to
the well-being of society and at its best discerning what is
consistent with love and natural law.[46] In both processes we are
aware of how culture and experience influence and can shed light on
the obligations of Christian love, even when love runs counter to
culture and experience. Both processes are in the service of our
vocation individually and corporately, and both point to decision
and action.
Dialogue and Decision in the Community of
Promise
[54] The dialogical interchange between text and context takes
on a variety of aspects as the church and the dictates of the
Christian ethic face different challenges. Often the application of
norms embodying love is clear and straightforward. The obligations
to be honest, keep promises, or maintain marital fidelity, for
example, are seldom difficult to discern. Any struggles we have
with these obligations are more likely due to our own self-serving
rationalizations than to any ambiguity about the normative
requirements of our ethic.
[55] Yet sometimes the dialogue is one of resolving conflicting
claims or obligations, resulting in painful and sometimes tragic
choices. What do we do toward the end of life when relief of
suffering and preservation of life seem incompatible? How do we
balance the obligations of work and family life? Resolving some of
these dilemmas does not occur without lingering doubt and anxiety.
In the end we have only the assurance of God's love and presence to
sustain us.
[56] The community of the church is a place where such dilemmas
can be shared. Through this sharing, ministry to one another can
occur and the ethical vocation and resolve of the people of God be
strengthened. The section on the church as a community of moral
deliberation in the social statement "The Church in Society" spells
out the kind of dialogue to which I am pointing. It recognizes the
diversity of gifts and experiences among believers that can lead to
difference of opinion on moral matters. It points to the resources
of Scripture and tradition, as I have. It lifts up the necessity of
seeing the Word in the context of the world and vice versa. It
stresses the need for full participation by those affected, those
in positions of leadership, and those with expertise. From these
ingredients come the kind of dialogue or deliberation the church
requires for the guidance of its members and for its witness in the
world. The statement sees clearly that the dialogue engaged in is
not for the negotiation of opinions but for discerning the will of
God (Rom. 12:2).[47] Ethical dialogue in the
church serves as both a form of ministry among members and a
resource for mission in the world.
[57] It is not uncommon that individuals face questions of
public policy and professional practice, leading the church to
develop a social statement. Such a statement relates text and
context in critical interaction and usually produces a number of
"middle axioms." These are somewhat more specific ethical
directions than the most general principles of love on which they
are based. Middle axioms develop those general principles to
interpret concretely their meaning for the dilemmas and decisions
at stake. Because social statements and middle axioms do not
prescribe or anticipate all decisions that may be entailed by a
given issue or set of issues, dialogue among the people of God and
with the world will continue in an effort to clarify our prophetic
and constructive witness.
[58] The problem of abortion illustrates these various forms of
dialogue. Women and couples can face terrible conflictual choices
when considering abortion. The dialogue about personal choice in
these conflicts is likely to be an agonizing one. Christians in the
health care professions must also search their hearts to find the
parameters of their participation in this procedure. Reflecting the
larger social debate, Christians within the church community differ
over the meaning of the scientific data regarding the development
of prenatal life and therefore the moral status of that life.
Christians also remain divided over the clarity with which
Scripture speaks to abortion with respect to the relative status of
prenatal life in the biblical prohibition of killing. Out of this
critical and multifaceted dialogue, the ELCA has produced a social
statement on abortion asserting the strong Christian bias for life,
setting some parameters for when abortion might be a morally
defensible albeit sorrowful choice, and committing the church to
seek legislation more reflective of these values than the current
state of affairs under Roe v. Wade.
Dialogue and Witness in the World
[59] Through the dialogue that led to the social statement, we are
better equipped ethically not only to continue that conversation
within the church, in our individual struggles, and better equipped
to engage the world with a prophetic critique of its wanton use of
abortion and with a constructive effort to seek better laws.
[60] Christian advocacy for better laws and public
policies-pursuing the values love seeks in its God-given vision of
the good-has an ironic dimension. The laws we advocate are a
testimony to the goodness and dignity of humankind and of the whole
creation. Yet the necessity of the coercive use of civil law
reminds us that humanity is also a fallen race that, if
unrestrained, will rob creation and one another of their dignity.
In its quest for more just public policy, the church lives with
that irony and does not confuse any proximate gains with the full
realization of divine will. Yet this realism, though sobering, does
not dampen our resolve to do still better. Nor should it obscure
the recognition that these efforts, however, proximate and
fragmentary, are a genuine expression of love and the hope that is
within us.
[61] Christians in dialogue with the world may also discover in
new ways the proximate character of their own existence and insight
as the world fills the forms of love with its demands for justice.
New ethical insights regarding racism and sexism, stemming from the
voices of those who suffer and further informed by the social and
political sciences, have reversed the prejudicial attitudes and
practices of the church's past and its less than benign neglect of
urgent matters of injustice in our society.[48]
[62] Such occasions are times for repentance, but they are also
times to appreciate once more that we live our ethic and embrace
our vocation in the confidence of the assurance of God's promise
and not in the certainty of our judgments. In the assurance of the
promise, we are open to the Spirit and to the learnings of our
various dialogical encounters. We are open because in the freedom
of the gospel and in obedience to the law of love we can seek the
good of our neighbor rather than feel compelled at every turn to
show how right we are.
[63] This freedom and openness, simultaneously to God's call and
the world's voice, are what equip us well for witness in a
pluralistic world such as ours. In our global society the manifold
diversity of religions and cultures, competing and intersecting,
creates a situation that makes a greater moral consensus seem both
necessary and unlikely. Increasingly theologians and ethicists are
advocating the need for the church to bring its views into a
process of public dialogue both as a witness to its faith and as a
means of facilitating a public moral conversation.
[64] While Luther may not have expected much in the way of
social and political transformation, he did see that the structures
of governance and the economy by God's loving initiative have a
vocation to serve the common good. As B.A. Gerrish pointed out in
his landmark study on grace and reason in Luther, Luther had a
positive evaluation of reason in public affairs and in moral
deliberation, notwithstanding the corruption of sin and the limits
of human finitude. Reason was primarily problematic when allowed to
intrude into matters of salvation in theologically inappropriate
ways.[49] From this vantage point,
those who are involved in the institutions of society and culture
are potentially good dialogue partners. It is well within our
Lutheran tradition to engage in dialogue with them for the common
good. We, of course, enter into this process always attempting to
discern the will of God. We are open to our partners in dialogue
while always cognizant that dialogue may need to be coupled with
prophetic confrontation.[50]
[65] The pluralism of our world and the attendant threat of
ethical relativism make the church's ethical witness an urgent
requirement. The dialogue that pluralism generates provides the
opportunity for that witness. Hans Kung has argued that the
staggering pluralism of our global society requires a dialogue
among the world's religions if there is to be peace and global
moral responsibility. He counsels religious leaders to dialogue
with "steadfastness," sticking to the integrity of their
convictions. Dialogue is not compromise but a quest for mutually
acceptable truths.[51]
Ronald Thiemann has demonstrated that religious participation in
public policy in America is desirable, can be done with integrity,
and is consistent with the liberal tradition of our constitutional
life.[52]
[66] An ethic of openness to new discovery in the assurance of
God's promise and the Spirit's presence in the life of the church
is good equipment for dialogue. Being a "community of moral
deliberation" is good practice. If we are clear about our vocation
and our existential situation in the church and the world, as this
chapter has sought to help us be, then we should be ready to
embrace the responsibility of public dialogue in a diverse world.
We have peculiar theological gifts for this task.
[67] A final word on authority seems in order. While the
authorization in our vocation as a church is the keystone of our
authority, and the Word of God gives us guidance and voice, the
final piece in the authority puzzle is the integrity of our
witness. Integrity requires faithfulness to the truth of our faith,
that is, an unremitting devotion to an ethic grounded in the
promise and the love that follows. Integrity means that we eschew a
false certitude that would belie the theological truth of our
radical dependence on grace in a fallen world. At the same time it
means refusing to yield to the world's comfort with relativism,
moral drift, and systemic injustice, not to mention cruelty and
perversity wherever they are found.
In Conclusion
[68] I have looked at the way in which the ambiguity of human
existence, the complexities of moral choice in this ambiguous life,
and the developments of our own ethical tradition create the demand
for a renewed understanding of our ethical vocation and nurture our
moral courage and authority. The vision and the promise of the
reign of God revealed in the Christ is the focal point. Standing
over against our historical existence, God's future gives birth to
faith, hope, and love, the energy of the Christian ethic. The form
and texture of this future vision portray an array of values that
set the agenda for love. Our pursuit of these values as a community
of faith is an integral part of our vocation to witness to the hope
within us. In the contrast between that future and our present, we
recognize that the dominion of God also stands in judgment on even
our best efforts. The realism that follows from that realization
delivers us from false assumptions about our own moral certainty
and naive notions about making social progress. Yet in the
encouragement and freedom of the gospel, we are open to the
neighbor and the world for dialogue and discovery. It is an ethic
whose courage and confidence reside in the assurance of divine
promise and whose authority resides in the call to serve that
promise and in the faithfulness of our response.
© January 2003
Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE)
Volume 3, Issue 1
[1] In an article by Brent Sockness
entitled, "Luther's Two Kingdoms Revisited: A Response to Reinhold
Niebuhr's Criticism of Luther," The Journal of Religious Ethics 20,
1(Spring 1992): 93-110, the author tracks the fluidity of Luther's
thought from the first part of "Temporal Authority" to the later
work on the Sermon on the Mount as a way of demonstrating how
difficult it is to interpret Luther's doctrine. Although his
concern is to engage Niebuhr's criticism, his discussion helps to
explain the extensive debates about what Luther really thought.
[2] Quoted in Two Kingdoms and One
World, ed. Karl H. Hertz (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1976), 83-84.
[3] Lutheran Churches-Salt or Mirror of
Society?, ed. Ulrich Duchrow (Geneva: Lutheran World
Federation,1977), 12.
[4] Quoted in Hertz, ed., Two Kingdoms,
128.
[5] James Kenneth Echols, "The Two
Kingdoms: A Black American Perspective," in Theology and the Black
Experience, ed. Albert Pero and Ambrose Moyo (Minneapolis:
Augsburg, 1988): 110-132. See in Richard Perry's chapter his
helpful and more extensive discussion of James Echols's work on the
two realms doctrine and the African American tradition.
[6] Helmut Thielicke, Theological
Ethics, I, ed. William H. Lazareth (Philadelphia: Fortress Press,
1966), 364-373.
[7] See Duchrow, ed., Lutheran
Churches, 244. For Paul Tillich the two realms vision of orthodox
Lutheranism represents an inadequate view of history in which
history has become no more than the scene of the saving of God in
Christ. That having been done, nothing new can be expected from it;
individual salvation is all that is really significant in God's
activity. Systematic Theology, 3 (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1963), 355.
[8] Martin Luther, "Temporal Authority:
To What Extent It Should Be Obeyed," in LW, 45, 102.
[9] Martin Luther, "The Sermon on the
Mount," in LW, 21, 113.
[10] Martin Luther, "The Sermon on the
Mount," in LW, 21, 113.
[11] Karl Holl, The Reconstruction of
Morality, eds. James Luther Adams and Walter F. Bense, trans. Fred
W. Meuser and Walter R. Wietzke (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1979),
133.
[12] Heinrich Bornkamm, Luther's
Doctrine of the Two Kingdoms in the Context of His Faith, trans.
Karl H.Hertz (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1964), 34.
[13] Gustaf Wingren, Lutheran
Vocation, trans. Carl C. Rasmussen (Philadelphia: Muhlenberg Press,
1957), 46.
[14] José Miguez Bonino, Toward
a Christian Political Ethics (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1983),
25.
[15] David C, Steinmetz, Luther in
Context (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1986),124. Quoted
in Sockness, "Luther's Two Kingdoms Revisited," 107.
[16] Bonino, Toward a Christian,
23.
[17] See the discussion of Bonhoeffer
in Charles E. Ford, "Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the Resistance, and the
Two Kingdoms," Lutheran Forum 27,3 (August 1993), 28-34.
[18] See James M. Childs, Jr., "The
Confession's Impact on Recent Social Ethics," Lutheran Forum 14, 2
(Pentecost 1980),16-22. This article was a review of the social
statements of American Lutheran churches in light of the two
kingdoms dimensions of the Augsburg Confession.
[19] William H. Lazareth, "Luther's
'Two Kingdoms' Ethic Reconsidered," in Christian Social Ethics in a
Changing World, ed. John C. Bennett (New York: Association Press,
1966), 131.
[20] Hertz, Two Kingdoms, 342-346;
Paul Tillich, Systematic Theology, 3, 354-361.
[21] Wolfhart Pannenberg, Ethics,
trans. Keith Crim (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1981), 129.
[22] Ibid., 130.
[23] Wolfhart Pannenberg, "The Kingdom
of God and the Foundation of Ethics," in Theology and the Kingdom
of God (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1969), 110-112.
[24] James M Childs, Jr., Faith,
Formation, and Decision (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1992), 22-23.
This is a crucial point on which I have tried to be very clear in
my own writing.
[25] Carl E. Braaten, Eschatology and
Ethics (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1974), 110.
[26] Childs, Faith, Formation,
especially chs. 2 and 3.
[27] "The Church and Society: A
Lutheran Perspective," A Social Statement of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America, adopted at the Churchwide Assembly,
August 28- September 4, 1991, 2.
[28] Braaten, Eschatology and Ethics,
117.
[29] "Church and Society," 2.
[30] Thielicke is a forerunner of this
understanding in his description of our time as living between the
ages or within the overlapping of the ages: the old age of our
perduring fallen world and the new age of God's rule that Christ
has brought into our history. Thielicke wants to recast Luther's
two realms in terms of these two ages. Theological Ethics, 1,
379-382.
[31] Martin Luther, A Treatise on
Christian Liberty, trans. W. A. Lambert; Rev. Harold J. Grimm
(Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1957), 7. I find myself very much in
accord with Reinhard Hütter's critique of much of modern,
mainstream Protestant ethics and with his account of freedom and
the law. I would simply add, as I have tried to do in this chapter,
that the freedom of the Christian is a basis not for setting aside
the law but for dealing with the terrors of interpreting and acting
in love in accordance with the law in an ambiguous and conflicted
world. Robert Benne's discussion of the "theological challenge" in
his chapter corresponds to Hütter's critique of Protestantism
and would also seem to lead us into affirming the law in the life
of Christian freedom.
[32] Dietrich Bonhoeffer, The Cost of
Discipleship, rev. ed., trans. R.H. Fuller (New York: Macmillan
Co., 1967), 55ff.
[33] Paul Althaus, The Ethics of
Martin Luther, trans. Robert C. Schultz (Philadelphia: Fortress
Press, 1972), 5-6.
[34] Benne, whose account of Lutheran
ethics in the two kingdoms tradition in this book exemplifies the
best of contemporary Lutheran faithfulness to that tradition, is
certainly correct in emphasizing Luther's realism as well as the
fact that Lutheran ethics does not lead to specific public policy
resolution. These are correlated with his further observation that
public policy pronouncements are on the outermost concentric circle
of the church's purposes and have less authority, since they are
further away from the religious and moral core. I do not contest
this analysis; it is consistent with my own comments on decision in
an ambiguous world. Nonetheless I have tried to suggest an
alternative model of authority to that of certitude that I believe
draws the church's moral struggles with ambiguous but important
ethical issues more directly into its authoritative witness in the
world. Indeed Benne himself suggests that there are Christian
perspectives that bear upon public policy debates even if there are
no Christian public policies per se. Presumably these perspectives
are drawn from the "core" and are witnessed to as the church
engages the issues.
[35] For a discussion of our
fulfillment in the image of God as a hope for the resurrection in
the kingdom of God, see my book, Christian Anthropology and Ethics
(Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1978), 98-100; 116-117.
[36] In Ethics in Business: Faith at
Work (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1995), ch. 8, I have a lengthier
discussion of the theological foundations of environmental ethics
in the context of the responsibilities of business. In this book
the chapter by Larry Rasmussen and Cynthia Moe-Lobeda eloquently
takes up the challenge of an earthly ethic, adding the critical
dimension of the theology of the cross. In n. 51 of Hütter's
chapter, in response to Rasmussen and Moe-Lobeda, he expresses
reluctance to entertain the notion of a "moral obligation" toward
non-human creation, since morality "is an inherently interhuman
reality." The analysis that follows upon that contention is
certainly cogent. I would ask, however, whether my claim that the
values of God's promised future are normative for our pursuit of
the good in the present does not create a moral obligation to seek
the good of the whole creation as an ecological unity, given the
added point that God's future salvation is for the whole person and
the whole world.
[37] "Give Us his Day Our Daily Bread:
Sufficient, Sustainable Livelihood for All" (Division for Church in
Society, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, October 1996),
19.
[38] Childs, Christian Anthropology,
117-121.
[39] Joseph A. Sittler, The Structure
of Christian Ethics (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University,
1958), 64.
[40] Martha Stortz's chapter serves us
well in this regard and helps us to see the resources within the
Lutheran tradition for character formation.
[41] Luther, A Treatise on Christian
Liberty, 30-31.
[42] Childs, Faith, Formation, chaps.
4-7 deal with character formation and the Beatitudes. Gutierrez is
cited on 41.
[43] I am much indebted in my
understanding of the meaning of agape to Gene Outka, Agape (New
Haven: Yale University Press, 1972) and to Victor Paul Furnish, The
Love Command in the New Testament (Nashville: Abingdon Press,
1972). Outka provides a threefold analysis of love that involves
equal regard, self-sacrifice, and mutuality.
[44] Outka, Agape, Part III. David
Fredrickson's chapter provides a vivid portrait of this sort of
development and deliberation in the Pauline church. His account
also dovetails nicely with the remarks I will presently share on
the dialogical nature of the Christian ethic.
[45] See Jan Milic Lochman, Signposts
to Freedom, trans. David Lewis (Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing
House, 1982), passim; Paul Althaus, The Divine Command
(Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1966); and Walter R. Bouman, "The
Concept of the 'Law' in the Lutheran Tradition," Word and World,
III, 4 (Fall 1983): 413-422 for helpful discussions of the role of
law in the moral life of the redeemed.
[46] Elizabeth Bettenhausen, "The
Concept of Justice and a Feminist Lutheran Social Ethic," in The
Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics, 1986, 173.
[47] "Church and Society," 5-6.
Fredrickson's chapter also makes the point that moral deliberation
or dialogue in the Pauline congregations was for the purpose of
discerning the will of God. Overall Fredrickson's research appears
to provide New Testament underpinnings in the Pauline tradition for
the kind of "dialogue in community" or "community of moral
deliberation" that I have been trying to lay out. It seems also
that the approach to ethics by Paul and his congregations reflects
an understanding of authority commensurate with the idea of
authority that I have been exploring in this chapter. Moreover it
may not only be the Pauline tradition that displays this pattern.
Research by my colleague Mark Allen Powell on the "binding and
loosing" passages in Matthew also supports a program for community-
based ethical discernment in the Matthean church (as yet
unpublished).
[48] In his chapter Perry has called
our attention to the importance of social location. This and his
discussion of the "elements of ethical action" serve to underscore
the particularities in and through which ethical perspectives are
shaped. The dialogue I am urging inside the community of faith and
in public witness is needed both to appreciate the texture that
such influences provide for the ethical fabric of the Christian
community and to discern common and new directions that all can
embrace.
[49] B.A. Gerrish, Grace and Reason: A
Study in the Theology of Luther (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1962),
25-26.
[50] Childs, Ethics in Business, 143
discusses the limits of dialogue. Though this book develops the
concept of dialogue in the pluralistic world of business as an
avenue of Christian witness, I have tried throughout to maintain a
sense of realism and the necessity of faithfulness to the integrity
of the faith. I find the discussion in Hütter's chapter on
recovering the natural law under the conditions of pluralism to be
a helpful adjunct to my discussion of dialogue in public Christian
witness in a world of diversity.
[51] Hans Kung, Global Responsibility:
In Search of a New World Ethic (New York: Cross road, 1991).
[52] Ronald F. Thiemann, Religion in
Public Life (Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press,
1996).