[1] In his second address to the nation after the World Trade
Center and Pentagon attacks, the United States President, George
Bush, called the military operation scheduled against Afghanistan
"Operation Infinite Justice." The bombing got started days later
and continues today, October 2001. White House and Pentagon
spokesmen insist that American people, as well as the rest of the
world, must understand victory is a long way away in this war,
different from all others because it is waged against international
terrorism. There is no predicted outcome.
[2] Osama Bin Laden's speech, aired on television, pointed out
that with the attack on the twin towers the United States was
having a taste of something Muslims had suffered for many years at
the hands of the United States. As far as Osama Bin Laden was
concerned, the September 11 attacks were revenge, just as Bush's
answer to the attack was revenge. Moreover, Bin Laden threatened
there would be no security in the States as long as there was no
security in the East, too. With these words Bin Laden was also
shouting out loud, infinite justice!
[3] The "Original Sin" of civilizations, the violence unleashed
by infinite vengeance, comes to light at the beginning of the Third
Millennium. This sin can be best appreciated in the story of Cain,
first murderer and founder of a city, and his son Lamech. Lamech
sings his wives Adah and Zillah the following line: "I have killed
a man for wounding me, a young man for striking me. If Cain is
avenged sevenfold, truly Lamech seventy-sevenfold." This myth
apparently reflects the notion that the more advancement and
progress there is in our civilization (Lamech's sons are the
founders of culture and industry) the more vengeance there will be.
Lamech kills because of a wound, regardless of whether the offender
is an old or a young person. Lamech complies neither with the law
of an eye for an eye nor with the law that prohibits killing. But
his actions fit into the inherent logic of vengeance. He assumed
onto himself the sign of vengeance of this forefather Cain, first
murderer in history according to the biblical myth, and transcends
it to infinity. Lamech boasts of having been endlessly revenged,
even more so than his ancestor Cain. Lamech is here a symbol for
power. Lamech has definitely been incarnated in both Bush and Bin
Laden.
[4] In contrast to this reality, it is worthwhile to ask
ourselves as Christians what is the meaning of God's justice
nowadays. Speaking of God's justice is difficult, as words are
being co-opted by the ideology of war. To use terms such as
"enduring freedom" or "infinite justice" in speeches which threaten
war means dragging Christian concepts through the mud. We could say
the same about the concept "holy war," which seems to be inviting
gods to participate in the killings.
[5] As Christians it is important that we consider the biblical
meaning of God's justice and differentiate that meaning from what
we hear in our culture. God's justice opposes the notion of
"infinite justice" whose goal is to exact payment for crimes. God's
justice offers clues to change the self-destructive path of our
globalized civilization.
[6] The key to entering into this concept can be found in the
brief dialogue between Peter and Jesus Christ in Mt. 18.21-22:
"Then Peter came and said to him, 'Lord, if another member of the
church F135 sins against me, how often should I forgive? As many as
seven times?' Jesus said to him, 'Not seven times, but, I tell you,
seventy-seven times.'" Jesus' response refers to the tale of Cain
and his descendant Lamech. In the face of infinite vengeance, the
Christian faith proposes infinite forgiveness. To forgive seven
times seventy means to forgive ad infinitum.
[7] For our globalized civilization, this proposal is quite
difficult to embrace. It means touching the very core of how it
operates. Crimes cannot remain unpunished, as then there would be
no end to injustice and oppression of the peoples in the world. On
the other hand, infinite vengeance unavoidably turns into justified
crimes and in the long run the dividing line between injustice and
justice, truth and untruth, disappears. Truth in facts, not
speeches, should lead to a rethinking of events so that new
attitudes and compromises can be developed. The clear truth before
the eyes of the entire world is the innocent victims; usually the
poorest, unworthy because of their gender or the color of their
skin, the excluded, the weakest, the very young and the very old.
These victims, though they play no active part in those conflicts,
are sacrificed for a goal. Death does not come with a price tag
attached. An American victim is worth the same as an Afghan or a
Latin American one. All analysis of justice should have victims as
its starting point.
[8] One of the wisest statements in recent times was uttered by
a couple who lost their son on September 11, 2001. In the name of
their son, a victim in the attack on the twin towers, they pleaded
not to make war and avoid more victims. The love each of us has for
human life is the white flag that asks for peace, or the scarecrow
that frightens missiles away.
[9] Let us consider the biblical meaning of God's justice. Paul
says in his letter to the Romans that God's justice is revealed in
the Gospel. This dense theological sentence should be carefully
pondered. The Gospel means the good news, and we ask ourselves what
there is in the Gospel that could be good news and reveal God's
justice. Paul says to the early Christian communities that the
entire content of the true Gospel is believing that the crucified
Messiah rose from among the dead. What is God's justice in light of
the crucified Messiah? We must refer to the core of the Gospel:
Jesus Christ's crucifixion and resurrection.
[10] We make a brief stop, then, in the fact of the cross and
Jesus as a victim to Roman justice. God's justice is shown in
Romans in opposition to human justice, particularly that of the
Roman Empire that condemned Jesus Christ.
[11] Crucifixion is the weapon of terror of the Roman state,
used as punishment for those who revolted. Those crucified were
placed on main arteries so everybody could see them, and their
bodies remained exposed as food for scavengers and dogs. Few bodies
were buried after being crucified. Historians of that time tell of
Jews being witnesses to endless crucifixions in various
anti-imperialistic rebellions. When Jerusalem was taken, it is said
the Roman Empire conducted 500 daily crucifixions and that there
was no place left for more crosses. These crucifixions were the
"infinite justice" of the Roman Empire, used to avoid new
rebellions.
[12] Jesus of Nazareth, considered the Messiah by his followers,
was crucified although he was innocent. For the Christian faith it
is significant that God should appear in history through this
crucified one. Jesus is the quintessential innocent victim, or as
it is said in 1 Peter 2.7, the stone discarded by builders. In this
event, central for the faith, two facts are confirmed. As an
innocent man the Crucified is, before the eyes of God and humans
alike, the representative of all innocent victims. On the other
hand he is also God's delegate in these events in the history of
the human kind. In the center of the Christian theology appears a
God who sympathizes with victims. Therefore, a theological reading
appreciates in this divine act God's utmost sympathy for the
excluded and the innocent victims in history. We can now start to
better understand the meaning of God's justice.
[13] Let's continue now with the resurrection. Paul, in a
theological reading into the reality of his age, specifies that
God's justice is revealed to all those who believe that the Messiah
is the one crucified, condemned by the Roman justice but vindicated
and resurrected by God. The focus now, and the good news, is that
the resurrected is the crucified; or that the crucified is the
resurrected.
[14] What is the meaning of those words, so familiar to our
ears, in light of current events? If the Messiah was condemned by
Roman justice and resurrected by God, we should interpret the
resurrection as the product of God's justice, God's judgment, and
then understand what such justice is made of, how it is reached and
why it is the Gospel, that is, the good news.
[15] This justice coming from God, by dictating the resurrection
of the crucified one sides with the victims, contradicts the
imperial and systematic legality which murders innocents and shows
intolerance to opponents. This is clearly seen when claiming that
God's justice is absolutely generous, that it is performed because
of pure love towards God's creatures, that it is due to God's
compassion. We say justice does not demand any previous merit so
that God can show love by revealing justice. God is grace because
God is moved by compassion. It could ultimately be said that God's
compassion is in the center of the crucifixion-resurrection event.
What unmistakably marks Christianity is compassion; God can only be
best imitated in this way. A world without compassion refers
to God's absence and questions our identity as self-proclaimed
Christians.
[16] Paul does not explicitly mention the Roman empire when
contrasting both justices, the Roman justice and God's justice, but
only refers to it via the use he makes of language. The Roman
empire is a specific name in a specific story; there were other
empires before and there will be others in the future. Paul's
analysis transcends the very name of the Roman system because he
applies it to all systems -whether imperial or not- which turn a
blind eye to the institutional apparatus essential for its
functioning. That is why Paul places God's justice in the realm of
faith, independent of the law. Placing justice in the realm of
faith and not of the law means opting for a different way of
living, free and mature with respect to the relationship between
subjects and the logic of any law intrinsic to institutions, the
very laws, customs, traditions, etc. Individuals blindly subjected
to the Law, whether legal, cultural, religious, institutional,
turns from subject to object. Actions are conditioned by norms and,
as Paul says, we turn into slaves of the law. In case of the
Cain-Lamech myth, the law and the logic of the infinite vengeance
will not stop growing until it is interrupted by a new logic: the
logic of forgiveness-compassion.
[17] Now we enter into a fundamental and surprising aspect of
God's justice. Although the starting point is sympathy towards the
victims, they are not the only beneficiaries of this justice. The
claim that God acts solely out of compassion means such a
compassion reaches all humans, victims, accomplices and
victimizers. Even though in several biblical texts you can read,
"Mine is vengeance, says the Lord," in practice there is compassion
for everybody. If the Bible underlines vengeance as a part of God
and not of humans, it is to break the cycle of infinite vengeance
that is represented in the globalized civilization.
[18] God's justice is strange, as it does not condemn the
killer. It is hard to understand that when we come down to earth,
walking among corpses of innocent victims, such as the victims in
New York or Afghanistan. Nevertheless, if you enter into the logic
of those civilizations projected by the Cain-Lamech myth, there is
no better way out than interfering and breaking once and for all
the cycle of sacrifice and infinite vengeance by means of the
infinite forgiveness: "seven times seventy." The specific beings
are victims of that system whose logic demands war or vengeance to
make justice or bring "peace and salvation." This is called
"structural sin," by Paul, and he proposes that God's justice will
save us from the law (its logic), sin and death. God's justice does
not justify crimes but advances another logic which, through
forgiveness, can bring transformation and reconciliation to
humanity. God does all this out of love for the victims, so that in
the book of life in the universe, there appears the heading Never
More.