How do we resist evil and not lose our souls in the
process? What sustains movements for
social justice and peace over the long haul?
What particular resources can we offer to this work as people of faith?
These questions are not far removed from Jesus’ life and
ministry. Jesus was engaged in building
a reform movement to renew the Jewish Covenant.
It was a movement rooted in the Torah as mediated through the prophetic
tradition of Israel. Concern for social
justice is central to this tradition, which included the principle of the
Jubilee Year that called for periodic debt relief, manumission of slaves, and
redistribution of ancestral land to the poor.[1] God’s righteousness and justice is to be the
foundation of the social order.
One of the unique contributions of the Covenant, which the
prophets emphasize, is the way in which the perspective of victims informs the
Torah. The Jewish people had themselves
been slaves. They knew what it is like to
be outsiders, a persecuted minority forcibly impressed into hard labor, treated
as a unit of production rather than as a human being. Hence the Torah’s remarkable emphasis on
Sabbath rest as work stoppage that extends not only to citizens, but also to slaves
and immigrants, and even to domestic animals and the land itself.
This concern for those on the margins goes far beyond loving
the neighbor as oneself: “When an alien resides with you in your land, you
shall not oppress the alien. The alien
who resides with you shall be to you as the citizen among you; you shall love
the alien as yourself; for you were aliens in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.”[2] Remember what God is like. Remember your own history of oppression and
suffering. Imitate God; not Pharaoh.
Imitating God’s justice and mercy in our social relations is
at the heart of Jesus’ own teaching and practice. This isn’t always easy to do. We will encounter opposition. Recall that Jesus’ description of the
attributes of those who live in the kingdom of heaven culminates in blessings
upon those who persevere in working for justice even in the face of
persecution.[3] How do
we respond to the resistance we experience, both in our own hearts and in the
world?
Jesus addresses this question directly. He begins by affirming the Torah: “You have
heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’”[4] This refers to the lex talionis or law of retaliation.
It served to bring vicious cycles of vengeance under the rule
of law. By the time of Jesus, it was not
taken literally, but rather expressed the principle of proportionality in
determining appropriate reparation for harms, applied equally to aliens as well
as citizens.
It is worth noting that Jesus begins by
affirming the rule of law and seeking justice by means of legal redress. Institutions such as courts are a significant
advance over vigilante “justice” and endless cycles of violence. This
is not an anachronistic interpretation of Jesus as being a “law and order” guy
in the polemical sense in which this is used in current political
rhetoric. It simply affirms that civic
institutions such as an independent judiciary, the rule of law, and, in our
day, a free press, are the first line of defense in resisting evil.
But there is a caveat here, which Jesus
notes. Sometimes, the judges are corrupt
and our institutions are broken.
Sometimes, the law itself is unjust, an instrument of evil rather than a
resource against injustice. Thus, Jesus says,
“Do not resist by evil means.”[5] This is a notoriously difficult verse to
translate and interpret, but the usual “Do not resist an evildoer” is
inadequate and misleading. “Do not resist by evil means” is echoed in St.
Paul’s Letter to the Romans, when he
writes, no doubt recalling Jesus’ teaching, “Do not repay anyone evil for evil
. . . Beloved, never avenge yourselves . . . Do not overcome evil by evil, but
overcome evil with good.”[6] Jesus clearly resisted evil. This is not a call to passivity. It is a cautionary note to make sure that our
resistance to evil does not itself take the form of evil.
That Jesus has something like this in
mind is evident from the examples of creative forms of resistance that he
offers. The first deals with the
insulting slap of a master against his slave, the second with greedy creditors,
the third with forced labor, and the last with the structural violence of
endemic poverty. In the first three
examples, victims take the initiative to assert their dignity in such a way as
to turn the tables on those who have caused them harm; in the last example, we
are encouraged to offer solidarity with such victims.[7]
Understand that slapping your slave,
confiscating land and putting people into debt slavery, as well as impressing civilians
into forced labor were all perfectly legal, even as they were instruments of
oppression. Yet, in none of these
examples does Jesus counsel passivity, or the renunciation of claims to
justice. They are attempts to question
the normalcy of injustice, disrupt the system, and create spaces for resistance. Sometimes, resisting evil requires us to make
what is invisible, visible, and raise the consciousness of our fellows, opening
up new paths to the possibility of justice and reconciliation when our
institutions fail us.
The difficulty is in not becoming the
evil we claim to oppose. “Do not resist
by evil means.” Do not dehumanize your
enemy in the way he dehumanizes you. Do
not escalate the cycle of retaliatory violence. Imitate God; not Pharaoh. Here we must attend to the enemy within as
well as the external enemy, purifying our motives and intentions. Evil is not just out there; it is in us as
well.
Jesus
teaches that our relationships with our friends and with our enemies, with
everybody, should be animated by the energy of love.[8] He urges us to imitate God, noting that God
makes the sun to rise and the rain to fall on both the evil and the good, the
unjust and the just, without discrimination.[9] God is love, the creative energy that creates
and sustains all things. St. Julian of
Norwich wrote that “The love wherein He made us was in Him from without
beginning: in which love we have our beginning.
And all this we shall see in God, without end.”[10]
Love
just is. It is the root-energy of the
universe, so to speak, and it suffuses all things. The question is how we humans respond to and
work with this energy, how we metabolize it and give it expression in our
lives. Unfortunately, our experience of
this root energy is not always informed by God’s loving intention. It is, in fact, shaped to a large extent by
our coming to internalize and imitate the response and desires of others – our
parents, caregivers, families, and the larger culture. We learn how to work with this energy –
expressing or repressing it, turning it to creative or destructive ends – from
the social other.
As we
come to mimic their responses, this inevitably leads to conflict and rivalry to
secure the objects of shared desire, rupturing the fabric of our relationships
with even neighbors, much less enemies.
This rupture is sin, and it is expressed in the manifold consequences of
distorted energy shaped by desires that are contrary to God’s loving
intention.
Jesus understood the
challenge of working with this root-energy in such a way as to give it creative
expression as love; compassionate, forgiving, and life-giving. This is why he urges
us to cultivate love for our enemies and pray for those who persecute us. It isn’t so that they will change, but so
that we will be changed: so that we will
become willing and able to transmit the energy of love rather than imitating
the vicious cycle of vengeance we internalize from the dominant culture.
The imperative to “be perfect as your
heavenly Father is perfect”[11]
is not an impossible ideal of moralistic rigor, but rather an invitation to be
wholly inclusive in our love toward others, just as God’s love is
inclusive. Imitate God, not your
enemies. Creative strategies for resisting
evil are the fruit of cultivating a capacity to work with the energy of love in
imitation of God. Our hope for genuine peace, a just wholeness
that is more than simply the absence of conflict, depends on our willingness to
persevere in resisting evil with open hearts.
But it is contemplative practice that
supports our capacity to resist evil in this way. We have to do our own inner work as
well. We can learn to become transparent
to the energy of love. This is what it
means to become children of our Father in heaven. It is not just about acting in a loving way,
much less being “nice.” It is about
exercising love as a powerful force for healing, reconciliation, and
justice. Divine love in its pure,
undifferentiated form, can come directly from the Source through us –
individually and collectively as the Body of Christ.[12]
St. Teresa of Avila described this
process of becoming transparent to love through contemplative practice using
the beautiful analogy of watering a garden.
She described four ways in which this watering take place. First one pulls the water from a well with a bucket. Second, the water comes more easily from a
waterwheel. Third, one brings it still
more easily from a nearby spring or stream.
And finally it comes without our effort at all, through the rain. She spoke of the decreasing amount of human
labor necessary for the first three ways and of the great wonder of the fourth,
in which the Lord “waters it Himself.”
In wondering how the soul was occupied during the watering-by-rain,
Teresa felt God say to her, “It dissolves utterly, my daughter, to rest more
and more in Me. It is no longer itself
that lives; it is I.”[13]
The secret to sustainable action for
justice is letting God do the work, channeling this inexhaustible energy
source. Contemplative practice is not only about personal union with the
divine. It is also and, more
importantly, a way of discovering how to become transparent to love for the
sake of others, exercising its power for the sake of justice.[14] When we do so, we begin to realize the
meaning of Jesus’ prayer, “thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it
is in heaven.”
Let us pray.
O Lord, you have taught us that without love whatever we do is
worth nothing: Send your Holy Spirit and pour into our hearts your greatest
gift, which is love, the true bond of peace and of all virtue, without which
whoever lives is accounted dead before you. Grant this for the sake of your
only Son Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one
God, now and for ever. Amen.[15]
[1]
Leviticus 25.
[2]
Leviticus 19:33-34.
[3]
Matthew 5:10-12.
[4]
Leviticus 24:17-22.
[5]
Matthew 5:39a. For a discussion of the
translation, see Glen H. Stassen, “The Fourteen Triads Of The Sermon On The
Mount,” Journal of Biblical Literature 12/2
(2003), pp. 279-282.
[6]
Romans 12:17, 19, 21.
[7]
Stassen, op cit. Walter Wink brilliantly interprets these
creative initiatives in his Engaging the
Powers.
[8]
Matthew 5:43-44.
[9]
Matthew 5:45.
[10]
Quoted in Gerald May, Will and Spirit
(New York: HarperCollins, 1982), p. 202.
[11]
Matthew 5:48.
[12]
See May, pp. 202-209.
[13]
Quoted in May, p. 202.
[14]
See May, p. 208.
[15]
Collect for the Seventh Sunday after the Epiphany, The Book of Common Prayer, p. 216.
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