THE POWERS
In the
middle of the 6th chapter of the Letter to the Ephesians
(6:10-20), the author begins a
description of a Roman soldier putting on his battle armor. He uses this process as a description of the
Christian life, and in a history that is soaked in the blood of people killed
in the name of Jesus, such a description is hard to take. It seems primitive and violent, and coming on
the heels of telling people held as slaves to obey their masters as if they
were obeying Christ, it seems to have been written by slaveholders for
slaveholders. Yet, thanks to people like
Walter Wink and Dorothee Soelle and James Cone and Jacqueline Grant, I have to
come to appreciate this “battle” metaphor in a different way.
The author
(likely not Paul) uses the battle metaphor as a description of the Christian
life, urging us not to be the conquering slaveholder, but rather reminding us that
our journeys, both individually and collectively, will be ones of struggle, if
we seek to live a life of love and justice.
He reminds us that our struggles are not just with an individual like
Donald Trump but with what Trump represents and with the powers that have
captured our hearts to such an extent that we would vote for someone like
Trump. He describes these as the powers,
as the rulers. The Greek words here speak not of particular rulers but rather
of the constellations of power that take over our collective and individual
hearts. Once I began to hear this
passage in this way, I began to understand how good people could support and
could even do terrible things. Male
domination, white supremacy, exploitation of those who are poor, the belief in redemptive
violence, homophobia – all of these and more began to make sense in this
context of “the powers.”
We all have
received these configurations of power from those whom we love and trust, and
thus they are not only external to us in our institutions, but we have also
internalized them. We have believed that
these configurations represent the theological and scientific realities of our
lives, and it will be a difficult struggle to begin to loosen their hold on our
hearts and on our communities. The answer
is not so much a powerful will that enables us to stand against the powers –
the answer is rather a vivid imagination that helps us begin to see ourselves
and others in a whole new way. To use
the metaphor in Ephesians 6, seeing the world in a different way is a powerful
weapon to use to loosen the hold of the powers.
When
Caroline and I visited our daughter Susan in Baltimore at the beginning of
April, we had the privilege of touring the new National Harriet Tubman Center
on the eastern shore of Maryland. As a
short guy, I was amazed to see that she was even shorter than me, and yet she
was such a giant! One of the things that
has always impressed me about her was that she had the imagination to see and
dream a different world than slaves and masters. She imagined a life for herself and for
others as a free woman, not as property of masters or men. She believed that the vision was a gift from
God, and then she acted on that vision.
Her life was one of many struggles, but she was led by her imagination
to a vision of a different configuration of power. Life was not necessarily a hierarchy of
masters and slaves – there was a different vision: sisters and brothers, the self-evident truth
that we are all created with equal dignity in the image of God.
In these
days of the struggle with the powers of domination and money and racism and
patriarchy and homophobia and militarism, let us recall these words from
Ephesians 6, with their acknowledgment that freedom is a constant struggle. We are asked to recognize the depth of our
captivity and to dedicate ourselves to seeing a new vision, a vision that will
enable us to find love and justice at the center of life rather that domination
and injustice. The powers will laugh at
our first attempts to begin to break free, but if we persevere in this part of
the journey, we will find that we may be like Harriet Tubman – our new vision
will drive us back again and again to share the good news that there is a
different way of life for us as individuals and for us as community.
This blog seems especially appropriate after a visit with our families in PA and a frank discussion with Joyce's family in response to my inquiry as to why the good people of Lancaster County supported a man like Trump for president. Some responses surprised even me. I expected the homophobia and opposition to abortion, but support for increased military spending because of fear of ISIS from a conservative Mennonite was quite troubling. I want to be aware of my blind spots, but I really believe many Christians have lost their way and succumbed to fear and the desire for power instead of trying to become more Christlike.
ReplyDeleteAmen, Dave and Joyce - thanks for your witness and ministry!
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