What is happening to us? I mean the U.S. (Yes, the U.S. is us! I couldn't have said that five weeks ago..) 
It seems we are morphing into the domestic population of a 21st  century Super-Rome, kept happy and stupid by a dole of bread and  circuses, while the elite live on secluded estates and our armies  trample across the world, fighting off barbarian hordes? 
Sound vaguely right? The only major difference in the terms of  comparison--a weird but totally crucial difference--is that in ancient  Rome there was something called Christianity. It was a small subversive  movement, frequently despised and persecuted, which did not believe in  killing... 
Huh?
Yes, that's right, there's a huge disconnect, because now we also have  Christianity, and it not only not small and subversive, it has become  imperial Western society's dominant religious institution and its traditional worldview. How can that make any sense?   
How can this thing called Christianity have effectively allied itself  with its own great symbolic opposite? And not just allied, but over time  produced its own unique and mighty hybrid? 
Responding to this disconnect demands some kind of framework of  understanding. And my hope is to present that, to provide a handle on  this most extraordinary contradiction and conundrum for believers. What  follows, therefore, is a somewhat longer blog, an attempt to gain  traction in what feels like a vertical free-fall of two related  identities: Christianity and America, America and Christianity.   
I want to say ultimately there are three different "anthropologies" at  work in Christianity and America. I think anthropology is a better core  concept than theology, because an anthropology is about how you relate  at a primary level to other humans, whereas theology is so often what  you think about God. Thought about God is so easy to lose track of, and  quickly become meaningless. Whereas how we relate to others is always  concrete. Anthropology, therefore, determines theology, and is more  primary than theology. Good theology grounds itself in anthropology as,  I believe, Jesus taught, showed and lived. 
                                             x   x   x 
This is an over-achieving blog for sure, but worth it if you consider  what's at stake and you follow it through to the end! It continues in two main parts; the first is context, the  second response. I admit I will be hugely summarizing and condensing.  But the benefit of summarizing is concentration. And concerted reflection is so badly needed today in  contrast to the mind-emptying blur of information we normally live  within. 
First then, the contemporary context which will help set up the framework. I want to talk about the WWW.
No, I'm not referring to the World Wide Web, but rather Weather, War  and Wealth. 
To begin then with Weather...it's impossible to deny climate change.  The only real question posed is whether the change is critical and  whether humans are the cause. As regards the first half of the question  the sheet ice in Greenland and Antarctica is visibly decreasing. As a  result of these and other factors the International Panel on Climate  Change estimates that the global average sea level will rise between 0.6  and 2 feet (0.18 to 0.59 meters) in the next century (IPCC, 2007).   
  The tiny mid-Pacific nation of Tuvalu can serve as the canary in the  mine. As the sea level has risen, Tuvalu has experienced lowland  flooding, saltwater intrusion affecting its drinking water and food  production, coastal erosion and increasingly destructive storms eating  away at its land mass. Its leaders are now asking Australia and New  Zealand to accept their whole population as environmental refugees--so  far to no avail. What is happening to Tuvalu today can happen to the  U.S. barrier islands tomorrow, including Long  Island...(http://www.earth-policy.org/plan_b_updates/2001/update2) And  its landlocked mirror inverse--ferocious wildfires from California to  Arizona--is already happening. 
As regards the human causation here is the verdict of the United  States National Research Council. "There is a strong, credible body of  evidence, based on multiple lines of research, documenting that climate  is changing and that these changes are in large part caused by human  activities. While much remains to be learned, the core phenomenon,  scientific questions, and hypotheses have been examined thoroughly and  have stood firm in the face of serious scientific debate and careful  evaluation of alternative explanations.” (United States National Research Council, Advancing the Science of Climate Change.) 
But then expressly at this point other voices will be heard, questioning  the figures of studies like this, or citing other studies, loudly  claiming that anthropogenetic climate change is a hoax. In other words  what is happening to the people of Tuvalu is just part of standard  cycles of geological and meteorological shift. To attempt to take on a  sense of human responsibility, and thus a regime of good environmental  practice, is a plot to restrict freedom and to deny the inevitable tough  truths of earthly nature and suffering. 
Exactly! In this response we are dealing with ideology and theology,  modes of thinking which shape the world in advance for us before we even  open our eyes on particular situations. In this case they assert that  we are each of us free in a supremely isolated legal sense while we all  live in a physically fallen world. And any attempt to think and act  otherwise is to deny the true message of individual salvation in another  world, and corollary supreme rights of the individual! 
Next up, War.
The U.S. is now engaged in three, four or five wars, depending on how  you keep count. The conflict in Iraq has cost $3 trillion plus  (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/09/03/AR2010090302200.html),  a mind-boggling sum which I fully believe: the hidden costs of war are  exponential and always exceed any audit. As of the end of May this year  4457 US soldiers have been killed and over 32,000 seriously wounded.  Iraqi "extra deaths" are not reliably recorded but are conservatively in  the region of half a million (the famous Lancet report put them 654,  965 in 2006, and the Opinion Research Business in London put them at 1.2  million plus in 2007). Refugees are in the region of 2 million plus. As  we all know the initial justification for these terrible events-- the  presence of WMD (weapons of mass destruction)--has proven perniciously  and perfidiously false. But this was the bill of goods that was sold us,  and once again individuals and websites can be found still arguing the  case. And that is to say nothing of the popular association of Sadam  with 9/11, which was fully denied by none less than G.W. Bush, but for  many remains fixed as dogma.
Which again strongly suggests there is some kind of ideology or  theology shaping these assessments and the actions that flow from them.
The motive for the war in Afghanistan involved toppling the Taliban and  yet now it seems the U.S. is in dialogue with yes, the Taliban! Don't  get me wrong. I support this wholeheartedly, but then what was it all  for in the first place? Is there such a thing as a good Taliban,  different from a bad one, and how do we tell them apart? Moreover, a lot  of this war has been prosecuted via aerial drones and rockets unleashed  on people and territory with which we are not legally at war, i.e. in  the Tribal Territories in the north of Pakistan. Once again it is a  question of the extremely fluid facts related to our chosen war-making  and the way an overall ideology or state of mind persuades us to  continue to engage heedlessly in these murky, murderous undertakings.
Yemen/Somalia/Libya take your pick, we have some sort of armed  engagement going on in these places. The CIA, an organization founded in  1945, has taken on a largely unaccountable role where it can engage in  lethal actions at the behest of the president. It begs into play yet  again a comparison to Rome: the Praetorian Guard loyal to the Emperor  alone!
The overall conclusion here is that war for the U.S. has taken on a  life of its own. It is not only justified ideologically but becomes its  own self-justification, reinforcing in turn the violence in our spirit  and theology. As Heny Giroux says, "War, violence and death have become  the organizing principle of governance and culture in the United States  as we move into the second decade of the 21st century."
Finally, Wealth. The facts here are pretty straightforward. Since 1980  the U.S. economy has doubled in size but the average person's wages,  adjusting for inflation, have remained more or less flat. Before 1980  the top 1% of U.S. earners took home 10% of total income. Now they take  home over 20% and own over 40% of the nation's entire wealth. Before  1980 the top tax rate for the wealthy was 70%. It's now 35%. And if you  add in capital gains they end up paying only 17%. (Watch  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTzMqm2TwgE&feature=player_embedded).  It means that the present generation has witnessed an unprecedented  transfer of wealth to a very small minority.
This can only have happened if the population was in some way prepared  to accept the transfer. And they could only be so willing--who gives up  wealth for no reason?--if ideology and theology had told them it was  necessary. There was an episode of the Colbert Report in which Stephen  Colbert was interviewing Michael Moore who had just presented these  facts. Colbert in his faux right-wing manner retorted that the money  belonged to the wealthy as a matter of right, because they had earned  it. There was nothing faux about the automatic credibility of the  argument he echoed. It "rang true" because so many people have  accepted it as true, that wealth, even vastly increased wealth as a  share of the national pie, belongs to the individual as a simple matter  of personal right.
The point of this example, as in all the others, is not so much to  argue the particular case--although it is obvious where my own  sympathies lie. What is essential is the way a set of preconceived  notions or attitudes bends critical thought in a certain direction.
                                            x x x
This leads to the second and crucial part: the response.
I have used ideology and theology almost interchangeably. One of the  established meanings of the first is a political way of thinking  resistant to factual contradiction. Theology is not so often seen in  these terms. It can certainly be understood as resistant to factual  contradiction, but because of the device by which it is conceived as  separate from politics, i.e. it belongs to a supposed internal,  spiritual, private area of human existence, it is not so often blamed.  But Christian theology because it is as much to do with the world as it  with God can in fact easily create and feel like an ideological  position. It is in fact the major ideological undergirding of the  present power structure in the U.S.
Immediately you say this, however, you create all sorts of roadblocks  in people's minds. If Christian theology is a matter of private faith  how can it be public ideology? If Christian theology is about a  transcendent God how can it be tied to a given political structure?
The way through is to turn to anthropology. Any theology carries with  it an anthropology and to think of it as somehow pure of one effectively  masks the anthropology and makes it that much more inevitable. Indeed  it turns theology into ideology. Unmasking its hidden anthropology will  demonstrate theology as ideology. Revising the anthropology in light of  the gospel can make it authentic theology.
We may therefore say there are three major brands of anthropology today competing for the voice of Christian theology.
The first is the one at work in all the examples above and that I have  in many ways already described. It may be summarized as follows. Every  human is individual both in his/her own eyes and in God's eyes. As  individuals in collectives they are also rule-bound, but this impinges  on freedom.. So we must always remain free to reject the  rules and to settle our affairs with violence. The single rule for  Christianity is to accept Jesus as your Savior and then his blood  cleanses you in the sight of God. You can refuse, but if you do you will  be sent to hell. If disputes arise between individuals we have lawyers  or guns which can sort things out. If disputes arise between nations we  have war, lots of it. Finally God as the supreme individual settles  everything with supreme violence.
The second anthropology is very different. It can be illustrated in  terms of the parable of the Good Samaritan. Jesus led his hearer to the  question "Who was a neighbor to that man?", i.e. to a moment of  disclosure where there is no given limit to being a neighbor. And this  is possible not because there is a rule, but because there is disclosure  of compassion as the core human relation. "Love your neighbor as  yourself" is not a rule but a disclosure of the truth that the neighbor  is the self, and vice versa. We are free but our freedom is poised  between two radical alternatives. If we do not link to others through  love we will link necessarily through violence and it will always get  worse. Thus, in respect of the first anthropology, its invocation of  violence as sanction brings about the very crisis Jesus is warning us  against.
This is also authentic evangelical anthropology because it is grace not  works. The first anthropology is works because it invokes law and  violence which are supremely human products. (See summary at Romans  4:15, "The law works wrath!") It is only this anthropology that  introduces something radically new into the human equation: the  possibility of relating to the other in self-abandoning love.
The third anthropology can contain elements of both the first two and  is hard to pin down. What is distinctive about it is the way it  idealizes things, removes them to the level of mind, essence, idea. It  loves the "Cosmic Christ" because that provides the sense that  everything is already perfect and the perfection can be accessed by our  minds. It idealizes "the church" as the symbolic space of salvation  already achieved. Because essence and symbol are at its core it can  easily slip into a facile universalism where "all paths are equal" and  there is no recognition of the generative violence at work in human  culture. Because of this it is also prepared at certain moments to  concede the case to violence as regrettably necessary--it has no  radically alternative anthropology. At the same it idealizes love and  peace so long as they come in more-or-less-achieved symbolic form. I  will say at once that many "progressives", including myself, generally  inhabit this twilight anthropology and migrate back and forth to the  second as they feel able.
To conclude, therefore, the first anthropology is fundamentalism, the  third is liberalism, and the second is something new. It should not have  a name beyond that because it has to be created each time anew. It is  not law or ideal. It is love. And it is generative. Anything lively and  good in the third lives by virtue of it. And even in the first those who  accept the law of love can and will discover it for themselves. It is  this generativity that puts it at the heart of anything truly emerging  and which promises, even and especially at a moment of crisis, to bring  something radically new to U.S. identity.
Plainly also this new thing stands in profound contrast with the first anthropology of violence, the one that has haunted the soul of Christianity beginning from the 4th century and has continued to invite ever more demons in through the  course of the Middle Ages, the Reformation, and up to the present. The three W's of Weather, War and Wealth are simply the latest marching orders of this ancient Legion. It is high time, and past time, to speak in the liberating voice of Jesus, "Come Out!"
Tony Bartlett
 
 
 
I like your three Ws very much. Of course, they all boil down to mimetic rivalry, but these are probably the three most important expressions of it to challenge the species today. Your descriptions of them are compelling. The three anthropologies are good, too, but I would articulate them differently; especially the second one, which reads more like an ethic or a teleology than a description. My favorite take-away of all, however, is your statement that anthropology is prior to theology. My way of saying this is to say that we need a non-metaphysical theology. But your way of stating it is more concise. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteBritt, why don't you write your own basic (200 +/- words) description of the 2nd anthropology? I'm serious... Any articulation that gets this new thing out there is urgently necessary. Write on! Tony
ReplyDeleteAfter reading the second anthropology again, I find even less to criticize. It was unfair of me to say that it's more of an ethic than a description. Still, I would suggest that to suppose that "the neighbor is the self" runs the risk of mimetic doubling and violence. The only way to see the identity of self and neighbor without violence is to view both from a transcendent viewpoint, that is, from the standpoint of a loving external observer/mediator. Each of us is therefore trinitarian: I do not exist except as self, neighbor, and God in loving relation. One cannot "love one's neighbor as oneself" without loving self and neighbor through the desires of a third, loving presence.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely right, Britt, and a wonderful paradox. A genuine anthropology can only happen through divine intervention, but it remains radically an anthropology. The truly human. And the divine can only be known in and through it, remembering that anthropology is prior to theology. The doctrine of Jesus the man-who-was-god in a nutshell! What a guy! (And a gal!)
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