Monday, April 12, 2010

Tell the truth on Easter


I spoke at a retirement center on Easter evening. For some reason, they start their vespers service with a sermonette by one of the residents. It is always carefully prepared. Then they sing, then the preacher preaches.
While the resident is talking, it occured to me that what he was saying was really not good for Easter. It was some patriotic piece about honoring veterans.
Jacques Ellul cautions the church against being to friendly to popular culture. The Church has been subverted by culture according to Ellul (Subversion of Christianity).
It seems to me on this great day of God's victory, that all things are shown to be subject to Christ. The Roman seal on the grave of Jesus is broken. The resurrection is against the law. Caesar's power is subject to Christ. Our higher allegience is to another kingdom.
How is it that Christians have sanctified modern warfare? All "just war" theories are bankrupt in these modern days, when by a simple push of a button, non-combantants can be gruesomely wiped out. The revelations of the past week show in graphic detail how inhumane and unjust is modern warfare. From the Los Angeles Times:
"This is real war, and it inevitably reveals more than any government or military would like to have posted on the Internet for millions of citizens and anyone else to view. It is horrible. Not in the way that suicide bombs in marketplaces are horrible, with severed limbs and entrails, with parents wailing over their lifeless children, but in the way that it reduces killing to a banality. The U.S. Army pilot and gunner are disembodied voices chattering about a day's work as they fire and then circle over the bodies that we know -- but they do not know -- include two Iraqi journalists with the Reuters news agency:

"Oh yeah, look at those dead bastards."

"Nice."
"Good shooting."
"Thank you."

Why is it so shocking to watch through the gun sight and listen to soldiers do the job they were sent to do? Because governments normally shield us from such graphic views of the human cost of war. But really, what did we think they were doing there? Now we see. Here on the screens of our laptops and cellphones, we have a real-time view of death, a close-up look at what is generally called by the grotesquely scrubbed term "collateral damage," in this case a handful of the tens of thousands of civilians who have been killed in the Iraq war."

1 comment:

  1. Ellul is (as usual) right. I think the U.S. church needs to worry more about the kingdom of God and less about the U.S.A.....

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