What connection does George Bush's approach to terrorism have with the current struggle in the Anglican Communion over human sexuality? There is not any direct connection, of course, but both President Bush and the leadership of the Episcopal Church are making similar mistakes in how they understand the struggle. Both see it primarily as a struggle over ideology grounded in a theology about the nature and destiny of humankind. Both need to rethink their understanding of the struggle. It is not about ideology (or theology), but rather about culture. As long as both continue to approach the struggle ideologically, then there can be no peaceful or just solution. Let me explain further what I mean.
Robert W. Merry, in his thought-provoking new book, Sands of Empire: Missionary Zeal, American Foreign Policy, and the Hazards of Global Ambition, offers a cogent, historical analysis of American foreign policy. His particular analysis of the 20th century American empire is especially interesting. Merry argues that America fought the Cold War with an accurate knowledge of what the West faced. It was a war to find out which ideology, liberal democracy or totalitarian communism, would win the day. Liberal democracy triumphed because it presented a more just way to organize human community. Totalitarian communism crumbled under the weight of its own inability to deliver on its utopian promises.
It is not about ideology (or theology), but rather about culture. As long as both continue to approach the struggle ideologically, then there can be no peaceful or just solution. |
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If Merry is right, then military force will not end the struggle, nor will it allow Western democracies to "win." Struggles over culture are never decided by military force because they are grounded in the deep identity of a people. In fact, such a struggle is winless by any direct action or political strategy. Culture must be allowed to be. In time, it will change, but from the inside out, not from the imposition of any outside force or ideology. By listening to their demands, we can learn something. They want us to leave them alone. They do not want us to impose on them what they see as our Western decadence. They do not want to be forced to accept our cultural presuppositions about what constitutes "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." President Bush, however, is approaching the struggle with missionary zeal; seeing it as the West's obligation to bring democracy and free-market capitalism to a culture devoid of their benefits.
Struggles over culture are never decided by military force because they are grounded in the deep identity of a people. In fact, such a struggle is winless by any direct action or political strategy. Culture must be allowed to be. |
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So, it seems America will continue to pursue a misguided strategy to struggle against culturally-fueled terrorism. I am convinced that the terrorism would virtually come to an end if American troops and our political influence withdrew from Iraq and from the other parts of the Islamic world. This would no doubt lead to a period of prolonged, and sometimes deadly, struggle within Islamic culture that would be hard to witness. But the current path the West is on will only make things worse. And the West's military withdrawal would result in a better life and a quicker peace for the people in traditional Islamic culture. If the West continues its present strategy of fighting an ideological war, then there will be no end to the violence in both the West and the Islamic world.
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Progressive Anglicans in the West will not win this struggle over human sexuality. It cannot be won from the outside in. Indeed, I would contend that it not even be seen as a struggle that can be won. | |
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When we approach our sister churches this way, we are engaging them with the same missionary zeal of George Bush trying to bring liberal democracy to Islamic culture. We are simply acting like Bush; believing that if we are just persistent enough, they will come around to our way of thinking and believing. We are acting like the American Empire. If, for example, we place ourselves in the shoes of an African bishop, we might see things differently. We might see the Episcopal Church's behavior as yet another case of American imperialism telling the uneducated and unenlightened African Anglicans what they ought to believe and how they ought to think and act, simply continuing the self-righteous thinking that the West has always held towards that part of the world.
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I can no more take leave of my sisters and brothers in Christ than I can take leave of my own body. Still, I think it would benefit all the constituent members of the Anglican Communion if there were a temporal resolution to the current struggle. | ||
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If what I am describing is reasonably accurate, then what may be the consequences for the Episcopal Church? It may well mean that our sister churches will want us to leave the Anglican Communion. How that might happen is a thorny problem based on the Communion's complex relational polity. It is also theologically problematic for those of us who hold a catholic understanding of the church. For me, any leave-taking would be only in terms of polity. I can no more take leave of my sisters and brothers in Christ than I can take leave of my own body. Still, I think it would benefit all the constituent members of the Anglican Communion if there were a temporal resolution to the current struggle. We should simply ask them to decide by their particular polity whether or not they want the Episcopal Church in or out of the Anglican Communion. And then we should honor their wishes. If they desire us to leave, then we should in a spirit of humility voluntarily withdraw our formal relationship with Canterbury.
This would not be a permanent withdrawal. It may last as long as fifty or more years. Or, it may last until Jesus returns. I do not know. My hunch is that this struggle over human sexuality in our Communion will not be solved through force of argument, by claims to correct scriptural interpretation, or in the machinations of polity. We may not be reunited with our sister churches in this life. That possibility saddens me greatly. And I do desire reconciliation some day, in God's time. Nevertheless, what I propose may be the only godly way to achieve such reconciliation.
The Rev. Scott A. Benhase is rector of St. Philip's Episcopal Church in Durham, N.C. He may be reached by email at scott_benhase@juno.com.
NC Author Ping!
Bullshit.
The differences is that the churches cannot kill everyone who disagrees with them any more.
So9