• Author
  • Publications
  • Reviews
  • Series
  • Poetry
  • Essays
  • PT Forsyth

Per∙Crucem∙ad∙Lucem

~ ... blogging sub specie crucis

Per∙Crucem∙ad∙Lucem

Category Archives: Justice

Janet Sim Elder: Doing justice honourably

05 Saturday Nov 2011

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Justice, New Zealand, News

≈ Leave a Comment

The focus of the next meeting of the NZ Presbyterian Research Network will be a lecture by my dear friend Janet Sim Elder on ‘The Challenge of Changing the Justice Landscape: How do we do justice honourably with victims, reduce recidivism and change public attitudes?’

Join us at the Knox Centre Seminar Room (Hewitson Wing, Knox College, Arden Street, off Opoho Road) on Thursday 10 November, 2011. We kick off with wine and nibbles at 5pm, and then Janet jumps into the hot seat from 5.30 until around 7.00. All are welcome.

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Doing justice honourably

03 Sunday Jul 2011

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Justice, New Zealand, Restorative Justice

≈ Leave a Comment

A guest post by Janet Sim Elder.

A crucial question in this election year is how do we do justice honourably with both victims and offenders? How can recidivism continue downwards and how do public attitudes change to being solidly evidence-based? How do we face the challenge of changing the justice landscape? Can we provide the moral courage to help our society take steps towards a more just and merciful society?

Biblical pillars of doing justice and loving mercy [Micah 6:8b] are heavily strained in NZ. We rush to apportion blame rather than ask who has been hurt by crime. We mete out a retributive ‘justice’ which perpetuates further injustices. We legislate for three strikes and there is no more mercy. Have we the moral courage to do the harder task? To ask the restorative questions ‘Together, how can we put this right? Are forgiveness and reconciliation possible?’.

Voices which have shaped increasingly punitive justice policies recently with both major political parties have come from a minority. Populist politicians listen to these voices above others. Shameful stripping of citizenship for all prisoners is the latest in punitive legislation in the news as I write.

Voices we might listen to more attentively as we prepare to vote include the Chief Justice, the Rt Hon Dame Sian Elias, Judge Sir David Carruthers Chair of the Parole Board[1], and Chief Family Court Judge Andrew Becroft – all with intimate knowledge of our justice system.

They all firmly support evidence-based change, and a better informed wider society, alongside the Silverstream Declaration soon to be released by the organisations which wrote the Declaration at the “Breaking down the Barriers” Conference in October 2010. Sponsors of this landmark gathering in Upper Hutt were Prison Fellowship New Zealand [PFNZ], Prison Chaplaincy Service of Aotearoa NZ, Pathway Trust, Pillars Inc. and the Salvation Army. National and international research was shared by experts in their fields, showing conclusively there are alternatives that do work to get prison numbers down.

The conference confirmed we need together to do more about the impact of crime on victims, that Restorative Justice works positively for both victims and offenders alike. When prisons treat people with more dignity and compassion, reoffending goes down. We could benefit from having open prisons like Norway where dislocated families have visiting rights over a weekend with their parent. Children see their dads on the weekend. Imagine that!

With an incarceration rate soaring over most other OECD countries[2], the most painful question is – could we become a less punitive society? There’s been a 35% increase in population in 187 NZ prison sites in the last five years! Corrections is now the largest government department. Fiscal sense? The Silverstream Declaration suggests it’s ‘fiscally irresponsible’ to be building more prisons.[3] Reputable international evidence is mounting that incarceration does not work for most offenders.

Working in Restorative Justice, I gain the growing conviction that victims’ stories of crimes (from burglary to rape and brutal murder) are stories to be told to offenders. To stand in their victims’ shoes is the darkest place to be, but easily avoided. Courageously telling stories, in a safe place, face to face, is what can turn both the lives of victims and offenders around towards life no longer dominated by painful pasts. The best apology victims say they want is when they know the offender will never commit the crime against anyone, ever again.

Offenders, male and female, find it very difficult to rehabilitate. Creative, hopeful ways forward were outlined at the conference: projects bringing church and community group resources together to address reintegration issues facing people as they return to life in the complex world outside the prison.[4]

What does the Gospel story teach about God’s ‘justice and mercy’ and how we act towards other human beings? The supreme example comes from Jesus on the cross.

‘Revealed in his dying prayer, “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do,” is the conviction that justice in itself is not enough, that the humanity of the perpetrators of injustice must be upheld alongside the humanity of the victims, and that justice must serve still higher goals of reconciliation, healing and rehabilitation…’[5].

If we want to change the justice landscape, say ‘no more’ to quick-fix legislation, knee-jerk, non-evidence-based reactions embodied in flaky legislation, we must seriously become better informed. In the light of God’s generous giving to us in Christ, we cannot do less.

Janet Sim Elder is an elder of Knox Presbyterian Church, Dunedin, and convenor of their Social Justice Workgroups.

[1] A recent survey by the Board over the last ten years on serious criminals released on parole showed the number re-offending in any one month over that time was reduced from 100 incidents per month ten years ago to the most recent  average of 45 incidents per month.

[2] NZ has the fourth highest rate of any OECD country except  the USA (1), Mexico (2) and the Czech republic (3). Communication from Barry Matthews, CE Corrections [07/10/10].

[3] The average cost p.a. to keep one prisoner incarcerated is $90,000. It costs an average $3,600 for a year’s community service sentence.

[4] See www.pfnz.org.nz.

[5] Graham Redding: Crime and Justice: a Biblical and Theological Perspective, from Crime & Justice (pub. PCANZ  October 2010)

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Nota Bene

07 Tuesday Jun 2011

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Art, Justice, Kevin Hart, Poetry, RS Thomas, Theology

≈ 4 Comments

  • John Cleary interviews He Qi.
  • David Congdon reflects on analytic theology.
  • David Anderson on R.S. Thomas: Poet of the Cross.
  • Dateline airs a program on the Restorative Justice Project.
  • An Encounter program on the poetry and prayers of Kevin Hart.

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Revenge, justice and pleasure

02 Monday May 2011

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Barack Obama, Justice, Revenge

≈ 2 Comments

While watching President Obama’s re-election speech this afternoon on the death on Osama bin Laden – and particularly while seeing the video footage of celebrating crowds – I was reminded of a few paragraphs from Don Carson’s Love in Hard Places:

‘Not that long ago on television we heard a soldier protest, “You must understand . . . it was our revenge!” The soldier was a Serb captured by the Kosovo Liberation Army. His words were broadcast in a television interview, nicely translated for the benefit of English-speaking peoples. He admitted that his unit had been involved in brutal acts of ethnic cleansing. Certainly he was frightened to be in the hands of his enemies, but he did not appear to be ashamed: “You must understand . . . it was our revenge!”

That is the trouble with revenge, of course: it does not feel like a sin. It feels like justice. Many of us have become inured to the distinction because we have watched so many movies or read so many books in which revenge, especially revenge that is adamantly pursued when the proper authorities either cannot or will not pursue justice, is itself just. It matters little if the hero is Clint Eastwood in a spaghetti western or a Dirty Harry film, or Bruce Lee in a martial arts flick, or Rambo getting even in Vietnam. In every case, we enjoy a cathartic release because we are made to feel the violence is just and therefore that the revenge is justified. When the right is on your side, revenge, no matter how violent, is a pleasure. It is just‘.

– Don A. Carson, Love in Hard Places (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 2002), 72–3.

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Auckland’s 1960s to Cairo’s 2011

22 Tuesday Feb 2011

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Conference, Justice, New Zealand, Peace

≈ Leave a Comment

Otago University’s National Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies is hosting a public seminar by theologian and activist George Armstrong on the theme Auckland’s 1960s to Cairo’s 2011: A Half Century in the Struggle of Peoples for Peace with Justice.

When: Wednesday 23 February 2011, 12.00-1.30pm

Where: Commerce 2.20

According to the blurb, the Rev Dr George Armstrong (PhD, Princeton) came from Dunedin to Auckland in the 1960s and found himself shuttled between the Anglican Church and the New Zealand State, between Christianity and secularity. He came as lecturer in Systematic Theology to St John’s College and has been there – off and on – ever since. He has worked as a controversial and occasionally high-profile theologian in Maori, Pakeha, and Pacific sectors of Church and Society from the parochial to the global. He became briefly a public figure through the 1970s as a founder of the Auckland and New Zealand “Peace Squadrons”, flotillas of small boats who eventually made nuclear warship visits to New Zealand impossible. (The government – and eventually politicians of all stripes – outlawed them.)

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Preaching on God’s justice as free grace

01 Thursday Jul 2010

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Grace, Justice, Preaching

≈ Leave a Comment

‘Preaching on justice means speaking about God in the indicative. Faced with the demand which God’s commandment places on us, our task is to deliver “the message of the free grace of God to all people” (Barmen VI). Because, in the Bible, justice is first and foremost a summarized rephrasing of God’s own good works. The Psalms declare: “How wonderful are the things the Lord does … his righteousness endures forever” (Ps 111:2f.). Hence, “the heavens proclaim his righteousness” (Ps 97:6) “and from one generation to the next … shall sing aloud of [his] righteousness” (Ps 145:7).

God’s justice (i.e., righteousness) – that is, his active caring for his creation – is his attentive accompaniment of his people; that is, his saving deeds and his good guidance. Justice – that is, his constant listening to the cries of the suffering – is his strong arm that liberates the captives; and in all this is God’s passionate love for his people, which can rage terribly about their wickedness and stupidity, but which can do nothing else except be “merciful and gracious, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love” (Ps 103:8). Where the justitia is blind, indeed inevitably must be blind to avoid being dazzled by the specific case at hand, it is said of the God of Israel: he watches, he listens and he yields – he applies the freedom of his love by doing justice to each of his creatures in a way that is conducive to his or her life in his or her particular situation. Justice: that is the way of our God through the time and space of his creation, the way on which he keeps his covenant and faithfulness to Israel unto eternity, and through Israel to the whole world, and never abandons the work of his hands. And hence: In the path of righteousness there is life (Prov 12:28a).

Also in the [Accra Confession], this prae of God’s justice takes precedence before all human endeavour. That is why the statements of faith always start with confessions of belief in God before going on to the rejections of economic injustice and ecological destruction.

In this context, I believe it is important to explicitly praise the confessional character of the Accra Declaration. For, in a very specific way, it corresponds to the fact that for us Christians standing up for justice is not a matter of political belief, but the response to God’s own words and deeds, through which we live and to which we, in faith, bear witness.

In order to make this clear, the sermon will, however, have to make the praise for God’s justice resound more clearly and comprehensively than the Accra Confession did or was able to do. I draw attention again to what was said at the beginning regarding the distinction between confession and sermon. Whereas the Accra Confession recalls God’s action in rather dry theological sentences, the sermon, guided by Bible stories, tells of the salvation work of God in such a way that it becomes clear: what happened at that time is also true today; the (hi)story of God with his people also embraces my world and my (hi)story. God is able to change my world and my life, and he will do so!

Hence, the sermon should avoid speaking “gesetzlich” (which means mixing gospel and the law) about the gospel (Manfred Josuttis). This always happens when the impression is given that human deeds could/should take the place of God’s action, as in: “Easter occurs when we rise up against death…” This kind of sermon does not offer much comfort, for it leaves those hearing it on their own, when they would in actual fact be in urgent need of God’s healing action …

After Accra, our basic task in preaching, and simultaneously our unmistakable Christian contribution is to keep making new attempts to tell about the justice of God and to offer it to our listeners as free grace so that despite all their fears and hardship they will become aware of their wealth; despite all their weaknesses they will become aware of their God-given power (cf. 2 Cor 6:3ff.; 12:9) and so become willing and able to stand up to injustice’.

– Peter Bukowski, ‘Preaching on Justice: The Question of the Homiletic Implementation of the Accra Confession’, Reformed World 55, no. 3 (2005), 236–7, 238.

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

‘What I see in Egoli’, Anonymous

20 Thursday May 2010

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Justice, Poetry

≈ 1 Comment

What I see in Egoli
are tall buildings
smart cars
well dressed people
a whole scene
that has no place for me
no place for my wife
no place for my children.

Lord Jesus, where are you?
Are you in those smart white offices
those smart white houses
those smart white churches?

They think you are.
They talk about you the whole time
Just as if you were right there with them.
They are so sure
that you are guiding them,
that they are doing your will.
I like to think
that you are actually here with us
that you are one of the left out ones.

If that is how it is
if you are really here
with us, for us,
I think I could bear it
because I’d know
this wasn’t the end,
that you still come
to get prisoners out of gaol
and blind people out of darkness,
to get hungry people into the place
where they can feed their little ones
instead of helplessly hopelessly
listening to them cry.

But my son does not call you Lord,
Jesus,
let alone call on you,
Lord Jesus,
He uses your name as a swearword.
Jesus! he says,
Bloody white man’s Jesus!

I fear for him,
for us,
for those whites.

O Jesus, Jesus,
come soon,
clear up the barriers
open it all up, because if you don’t
something awful is going to happen.
Do you hear me,
one of those ‘homeland’ blacks
on the outside looking in?
RSVP
soon.

– Anonymous, cited in Margaret Nash, Black Uprooting from ‘White’ South Africa: The Fourth and Final Stage of Apartheid (Johannesburg: South African Council of Churches, 1980), 84–5.

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Who said it?

26 Monday Apr 2010

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Hell, Judgement, Justice, Punishment

≈ 5 Comments

It’s been around six weeks since our last ‘Who said it?’ competition, so probably time for another round (not that we need an excuse or anything). Here’s one from the archives:

‘Can it be just that God should bring beings into the world unprotected by an infinite armour of foresight against the infinite chances and temptations to wrong, and yet hold them liable to infinite punishment when they had gone wrong? … Punish a man for his sin, that is just; punish him for ages (if in that other world you can reckon time), that may be just; but make no end of punishing him for that sin, reduce him from a man to a devil and keep him there, let him become for ever vile, mainly because he was ignorant to start with, that is not just … Preach the eternal, unappeasable wrath of God upon lost souls and you offer men a devil to worship’.

So, who said it?

We’ll wrap it all up on Friday.

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Australia, the Aborigines, and restitution

14 Friday Aug 2009

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Australia, Indigenous Australia, Justice

≈ 1 Comment

Yesterday I posted Barney Zwartz’s piece on Peter Adams’ weighing in on a national discussion on the relationship between indigenous and non-indigenous Australians. [The full text of Peter's talk is available here]. Adams’ word to non-indigenous Aussies is essentially, ‘Get out or pay up’. Zwartz (who blogs here) has now followed this up with another piece titled ‘Australia, the Aborigines, and restitution’:

Anglican theologian Peter Adam thinks that unless Australia’s indigenous people give us belated permission, everybody whose forebears came after 1788 should decamp and return the land to its first inhabitants.

In a public lecture on Monday, he said that if the non-indigenous stayed they should have to provide whatever recompense the indigenous thought appropriate for the genocide and theft they have suffered.

Impossible! Absurd! Surely this is mere posturing? Neil Mitchell on radio station 3AW certainly thought so. He gave a 60-second tirade against Adam, apparently based on just the short Age report, saying it was the reason why no one should ever step inside a church again. And he thought Adam was melodramatic.

But there’s method in Adam’s madness. First, the Reverend Dr Peter Adam, principal of Ridley College, is a sober and sensible man, a conservative evangelical Christian, who thinks carefully about what he says. He knows very well how impractical and impossible it is for 21 million people to uproot themselves.

Probably Aborigines would not want us to – it’s hardly realistic for them to revert to a pre-colonial hunter-gatherer life. And how far back do you go? For the English would it be ”go home Normans”? Or Vikings? Or Saxons?

And who qualifies as an Aborigine? A Maori leader in New Zealand once said being Maori was a state of mind. ”Beethoven was a Maori,” she said. If being Aboriginal was a state of mind that brought instant reward, large numbers of Australians might self-identify.

But Adam wants to make two points. First is the gravity of what the indigenous people suffered. However impractical, mass emigration would be the moral response because ”what was done was so vile, so immense, so universal, so pervasive, so destructive, so devastating and so irreparable”.

The Christian concepts of repentance and restitution or recompense are profoundly radical. Adam’s idea is in keeping with the biblical concepts, even if these are honoured more in the breach than the observance now that Christianity is so institutionalised.

So it’s not merely rhetorical, however impractical. After all, the colonial powers returned India, Africa and Indonesia to their inhabitants.

The second point, the one that should gain traction, is that Australians need to grapple seriously with the idea of recompense – real recompense – perhaps for the first time. He wants to dispel the convenient fancy articulated by a former prime minister that we are not responsible for our forebears’ actions and owe no apology. Adam said: ”It is right to say ‘sorry’. For they were serious crimes and sins. They included the theft of land, which was not only the theft of livelihood but also the theft of home, identity and religion. They included murder and manslaughter, the destruction of social structures and culture, the breaking up of families, the desecration of the dead and genocide, with no legitimate justification.”

Nor are the churches exempt: their prosperity, he charged, ”has come from the proceeds of crime”.

He wants to rekindle the debate, move it beyond the relatively restricted arguments about apologies and native title. Of course, the broader Australian community has a vested interest in averting our eyes and wringing our hands over Aboriginal suffering. After all, we mean well but it’s so intractable. Adam’s point is, that won’t do – we must go much deeper and it starts with the indigenous telling us what they need. We need fresh eyes and an honest appreciation before we can grasp the gravity and really make amends.

And if Adam’s words are confrontational, that is thoroughly consonant with the ancient Hebrew device of hyperbole, found throughout the Bible. For example, when Jesus said ”And if thy right eye offend thee, pluck it out, and cast it from thee”, what he meant was take the notion of sin seriously; it matters what you do.

And that, surely, is Adam’s point: it matters what we do. It matters to indigenous Australians, it matters to the rest of us, and – for the religious among us – it matters to God.

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

All non-Aboriginal Australians should be prepared to leave the country

13 Thursday Aug 2009

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Australia, Indigenous Australia, Justice

≈ 4 Comments

stolen-generationOn Tuesday, The Age ran a piece which picked up on some comments made in a recent lecture by Aussie theologian Peter Adam. [The full text of Peter's talk is available here]. I’ve learnt much from Peter over many years, particularly about pastoral ministry (see his Speaking God’s Words: A Practical Theology of Preaching and Hearing God’s Words: Exploring Biblical Spirituality), and believe that he is always worth listening to, and no less in this case so germane to what it means to be human community (I have posted on issues relating to indigenous Australians elsewhere). Here’s the report from Barney Zwartz:

All non-Aboriginal Australians should be prepared to leave the country if the indigenous people want that, making restitution for the vile sin of genocide, an Anglican leader suggested last night.

If they stayed, they would have to provide whatever recompense indigenous peoples thought appropriate, the Reverend Peter Adam told a Sydney audience.

”It would in fact be possible, even if very difficult and complicated, for Europeans and others to leave Australia. I am not sure where we would go, but that would be our problem,” he said.

Dr Adam, principal of Ridley College – the main Anglican theological college in Victoria – was giving the NSW Baptist Union’s annual John Saunders Lecture.

Dr Adam said Christian teaching required either restitution – returning what was stolen, the land – or recompense. If those who arrived after 1788 did not leave, they would need to ask each of the indigenous peoples what kind of recompense would be appropriate. This would be complicated and extensive but must be done or the genocide would be trivialised.

”No recompense could ever be satisfactory because what was done was so vile, so immense, so universal, so pervasive, so destructive, so devastating and so irreparable.”

Dr Adam acknowledged that some people had done their best to remedy wrongs, including some government actions, but something ”more drastic” was required.

Dr Adam said churches shared responsibility because the land and wealth of churches came from land stolen from indigenous people. ”The prosperity of our churches has come from the proceeds of crime. Our houses, our churches, our colleges, our shops, our sport grounds, our parks, our courts, our parliaments, our prisons, our hospitals, our roads, our reservoirs are stolen property.”

He called for a co-ordinated recompense by churches that included supporting indigenous Christian ministry and training.

”We European Australians often claim that one of the strengths of the Australian character is ‘caring for the underdog’. That claim is hypocrisy – we do not act with justice, let alone care.”

He said his proposal would be difficult, complicated and costly. ”The alternative is to fail in our moral duty, to admit that for Australia, in Martin Luther King jnr’s words, ‘the bank of justice is bankrupt’.”

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Growing up under militarisation

12 Monday May 2008

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Burma, Children, Human Rights, Justice, Karen

≈ Leave a Comment

The Karen Human Rights Group has just released a 174-page report on the effects on children growing up in the context of violence – because of both ongoing armed conflict in Burma and Karen State (Kawthoolei; lit. ‘the land without evil’) and because of other more serious structural violence committed by the State. The report makes for sombre reading even while its very existence is a voice of hopeful protest; or, as Moltmann puts it, ‘There is already true life in the midst of the life that is false’. Here’s a blurb:

As the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), the military junta currently ruling Burma, works to extend and consolidate its control over all areas of Karen State, local children, their families and communities confront regular, often violent, abuses at the hands of the regime’s officers, soldiers and civilian officials. While the increasing international media attention on the human rights situation in Burma has occasionally addressed the plight of children, such reporting has been almost entirely incident-based, and focused on specific, particularly emotive issues, such as child soldiers. Although incident-based reporting is relevant, it misses the far greater problems of structural violence, caused by the oppressive social, economic and political systems commensurate with militarisation, and the combined effects of a variety of abuses, which negatively affect a far larger number of children in Karen State. Furthermore, focusing on specific, emotive issues sensationalises the abuses committed against children and masks the complexities of the situation. In reports on children and armed conflict in Karen State and elsewhere, individual children’s agency, efforts to resist abuse and capacity to deal with the situations they live in, as well as the efforts made by their families and communities to provide for and protect them, tend to be marginalised and ignored. Drawing on over 160 interviews with local children, their families and communities, this report seeks to provide a forum for these people to explain in their own words the wider context of abuse and their own responses to attempts at denying children their rights. With additional background provided by official SPDC press statements and order documents, international media sources, reports by international aid agencies, as well as academic studies, this report argues that only by listening to local voices regarding the situation of abuse in which they live and taking as a starting point for advocacy and action local conceptions of rights and violations can external actors avoid the further marginalisation of children living in these areas and begin to build on villagers’ own strategies for resisting abuse and claiming their rights.

The full report can be downloaded here as a pdf.

As for Burma’s ruling junta, that trinity of evil – Maung Aye, Than Shwe and Shwe Mann – convert or kill them Lord. How long, O Lord? How long?

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Theodicy: The Justification Of God – 2

15 Tuesday Apr 2008

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Judgement, Justice, Justification, PT Forsyth, Theodicy, War

≈ 2 Comments

UNREALISTIC EXPECTATIONS

AND THEIR OUTCOME

Study 2

A guest post by Trevor Faggotter

WHY THEODICY IS AN ISSUE

Analysis and commentary upon the major problems in the world, nation, city, family or environment, can be heard daily on radio talkback segments across the globe. The blame, for our current or impending woes almost always rests with someone else. Cynicism abounds. Theology within the Christian church can all too easily become more a reflection of the popular, or dominant culture of the day, than a proclamation of the mind, and action of God – as revealed in Scripture. Only a thoroughly biblical theodicy can meet the world with the Word of grace, amidst dire judgments, as the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and wickedness (Romans 1:18).

From Genesis 3 we hear that ever since the entrance of sin into the world, human beings have sought to place the blame for their circumstances upon someone else – mostly God, but also other people and other creatures. Guilt is deeply at work in every human heart, provoking a skewed view of the truth, globally. This is especially so, as God draws near:

They heard the sound of the LORD God walking in the garden at the time of the evening breeze, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the LORD God among the trees of the garden. But the LORD God called to the man, and said to him, “Where are you?” He said, “I heard the sound of you in the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked; and I hid myself.” He said, “Who told you that you were naked? Have you eaten from the tree of which I commanded you not to eat?” (Genesis 3:8-11)

The reflex response to God’s simple, but probing, existential question ‘Where are you?’ finds expression in the deflecting the blame onto another. The man quickly pointed to the woman as the leading cause of his present fear. He also blamed God – who gave the woman to be with him. The woman in turn, blamed the ancient serpent, the devil:

The man said, “The woman whom you gave to be with me, she gave me fruit from the tree, and I ate.” Then the LORD God said to the woman, “What is this that you have done?” The woman said, “The serpent tricked me, and I ate.” (Genesis 3:12-13)[1]

Human beings will view God very differently, depending upon whether they have a pure or an impure heart. Where a person has a pure heart, or cleansed heart, God reveals himself to be pure. Where genuine faith is not present, God’s wrath acts against the conscience of the guilty person, so that God appears to be unjust, unkind and wrong.

…with the pure you show yourself pure; and with the crooked you show yourself perverse (Psalm 18:26).

Sinful human beings frequently view the world by placing God in the Dock[2] in order that he may give account of himself. In our humanly devised, God-blaming kangaroo court, we human beings exercise the self-appointed role of prosecutor, and judge. If God is creator, we reason, then he must answer for the state of the world he has created! However, the Lord sits in the heavens and laughs (Psalm 2:4).

In his Foreword to our text, The Justification of God, Dean Carter exposes the heart of sinful humanity in asking erroneous questions. Dean writes – in brackets:

(after all, theodicy is only an issue where there is a rejection of the light).[3]

This comment reflects the teaching of Jesus, in John’s gospel, who said:

And this is the judgment, that the light has come into the world, and people loved darkness rather than light because their deeds were evil. For all who do evil hate the light and do not come to the light, so that their deeds may not be exposed (John 3:19-20).

Facing the plain truth concerning God, humanity and the world is terribly confronting, if ultimately gloriously liberating. In the day that you eat of it [the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall die. Yet, everyone who lives and believes in Jesus will never die.

MAN-CENTRED CULTURE INSTEAD OF GOD-CENTRED FAITH

Man-centred cultures and religions, rather than God-centred faith in Christ, seeking his Coming Kingdom, are at the heart of all human evil and mayhem. A world that ignores the redemptive gift and gracious will of the Living Father soon becomes addicted to the narcotic agendas of progress, technology, escalating wealth, cultural mysticism, religious escapism, substance and environmental abuse and a yearning desire for more power.

Everything has come to turn on man's welfare instead of God's worship, on man with God to help him and not on God with man to wait upon Him. The fundamental heresy of the day, now deep in Christian belief itself, is humanist.[4]

Humanism had a bitter outcome for those who had embraced it, in the years prior to and during World War 1, as Forsyth points out:

I say it is inevitable that world calamities should encourage the denials of those who denied before. Their shock also makes sceptics of many, whose belief had arisen and gone on only under conditions of fine weather, happy piety, humming progress…[5]

Elated by our modern mastery of nature and cult of genius, and ridden by the superstition of progress (now unseated), we came to start with that excellent creature, man, his wonderful resources, his broadening freedom, his widening heart, his conquest of creation, and his expanding career. And, as with man we begin, with man we really end. God is there but to promote and crown this development of man, if there be a God at all…. The Father is the banker of a spendthrift race. He is there to draw upon, to save man’s career at the points where it is most threatened.

He is Father in a sense that leaves no room for love’s severity, its searching judgment … He is Father only so long as He meets the instincts and aspirations of man’s heart.[6]

GOD ENTERS THE PULPIT AND CASTS US

UPON A GOD OF CRISIS

It takes enormous discomfort in order for humanity to come to grips with the necessity of the cross of Christ, and with the seriousness of the evil in our own human hearts, and the evil endemic among every nation. The sheer kindness and mercy of God, we so badly underestimate. Forsyth recounts something of the type of public conversation that took place prior to World War One. It sounds all too familiar. He says:

World calamity bears home to us the light way in which, through a long peace and insulation, we were coming to take the problem of the world, and especially its moral problem. ‘We do not now bother about sin’ was said with some satisfaction. The preachers protested in vain against that terrible statement – those of them that had not lost their Gospel in their culture. But they were damned with the charge of theology.[7]

He then goes on to include the war itself, as God’s way of dealing with the human race; it is the disaster that ends dainty and dreamy religion:

And now God enters the pulpit, and preaches in His own way by deeds. And His sermons are long and taxing, and they spoil dinner. Clearly God’s problem with the world is much more serious than we dreamed. We are having a revelation of the awful and desperate nature of evil.[8]

The task which the Cross has to meet is something much greater than a pacific, domestic, fraternal type of religion allows us to face. Disaster should end dainty and dreamy religion, and give some rest to the winsome Christ and the wooing note…. It is a much wickeder world than our good nature had come to imagine, or our prompt piety to fathom.[9]

We, who have known much of the grace of God in our personal lives, know that God has both spoken and enacted a great word of hope, for the nations of the world in the death and resurrection of Jesus. It is a great victory. It is a very great victory. It is The Victory. A godless world needs yet to hear this word, and respond. The church needs to rediscover not only the God of order, which Christendom has enjoyed, but also the God of crisis, who is God most chiefly in the chief tragedy of things.[10] He alone is the One who from the nettle of perdition plucks the flower of salvation.[11]

THE GLOBAL DIMENSIONS OF THE GOSPEL

It was World War One, which drew from Forsyth the rich insights he imparts. We too are faced with many a crisis, on a global scale. We are equipped with the same cross, and the same Christ, and the same gospel, to which we must make recourse. The gospel has always been of global proportions. We need a theodicy, which is adequate to the task. Let’s take Forsyth words slowly, again and tease out each of these important points:

We begin and end with a faith, not in Jesus simply but in His world work…[12]

We begin with the faith in which our own soul calls Him its Saviour from what seems an infinite and hopeless evil. He delivers us from a sin whose guilt lies on our small soul with a pressure from the reservoir of all the high wickedness of the world.[13]

It is not from our moral lapses nor from our individual taint that we are delivered, but from world sin, sin in dominion, sin solidary if not hereditary, yea, from sin which integrates us into a Satanic Kingdom … An event like war at least aids God’s purpose in this, that it shocks and rouses us into some due sense of what evil is, and what a Saviour’s task with it is.

While the Church cannot begin to measure the problem of evil, we need the assurance of its defeat in the cross. For evil affects and invades every area of human life, and the theology of the cross always applies as God’s Victory, and the only true victory:

Is the principle of the war very different from that of a general strike, which would bring society to its knees by sheer impatient force, and which so many avoid only as impolitic and not as immoral?[14] … It is impossible even to discuss the theodicy all pine for without the theology so many deride.[15]


[1] Rev. 12:9 … that ancient serpent, who is called the Devil and Satan, the deceiver of the whole world…

[2] C.S. Lewis, God in the Dock, Eerdmans, 1970, is a book, which contains a series of short articles.

[3] P. T. Forsyth, The Justification of God, NCPI, 1988, p. 4.

[4] P. T. Forsyth, The Justification of God, p. 24.

[5] P. T. Forsyth, The Justification of God, p. 24.

[6] P. T. Forsyth, The Justification of God, p. 25.

[7] P. T. Forsyth, The Justification of God, p. 28.

[8] P. T. Forsyth, The Justification of God, p. 28.

[9] P. T. Forsyth, The Justification of God, p. 28-29.

[10] Ibid. p. 30.

[11] Ibid.

[12] Ibid.

[13] Ibid. p. 30-31.

[14] Ibid. p. 34.

[15] Ibid. p. 37.

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

On Bastard Philosophies, Stolen Generations, and the Forgiveness of Sins

31 Thursday Jan 2008

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Australia, Confession, Ethics, Forgiveness, Geoffrey Bingham, Guilt, Hope, Indigenous Australia, Jesus Christ, Justice, Life, Memory, Miroslav Volf, Penal substitution, Philosophy, Reconciliation

≈ 4 Comments

Writing of Bacon, Locke and Scottish common sense philosophy (uncritically lumped together), Nevin writes: ‘The general character of this bastard philosophy is, that it affects to measure all things, both on earth and in heaven, by the categories of the common abstract understanding, as it stands related to simply to the world of time and sense’. – John W. Nevin, Human Freedom and a Plea for Philosophy: Two Essays (Mercersburg: P. A. Rice, 1850), 42. Cited in Alan P. F. Sell, Testimony and Tradition: Studies in Reformed and Dissenting Thought (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005), 173.

This leads me to draw attention to a recent reflection by Aussie theologian, Frank Rees, on what it means for the new democratically-elected Australian government to say sorry for past and not-so-past sins, and why ‘sorry is not the hardest word: indeed, it will be a word of life’. Frank’s post is a timely reminder of how ‘bastard philosophies’ don’t bring life, but only death; in this case that death bred of fear, misunderstanding (of the issues, of people, and of the gospel itself) and mistrust, the wounds of which will probably take decades, if not centuries, to heal.

In a related post, Rory suggests that the apology to Australia’s stolen generation should be made on our behalf by the Governor General rather than by the Prime Minister. He writes: ‘He is the head of government in Australia, and he holds a position that is above party politics. Whatever you think about the virtues or otherwise of the current government, surely addressing this part of our history is bigger than who won the last election. I can only think that an apology coming from the GG would better speak for the nation, and it would allow the apology to loose itself from any particular party’.

I think I like this (Are there any good reasons – constitutional or otherwise – for why this cannot, or should not, happen?). But regardless of from whose vicarious lips the apology comes, one hopes that it may also model and encourage the way of life and a softening of heart (and a less bastardly-informed philosophy) for other people, governments and organisations. One hopes … [I confess to having no such confidence in human nature of itself to bring about such a change of heart. This too must be a work of the Spirit].

Frank’s and Rory’s posts reminded me of Stevan Weine’s book, When History Is a Nightmare: Lives and Memories of Ethnic Cleansing in Bosnia-Herzegovina, a volume which includes some powerful documentary of those closely affected by the tragedies attending the recent conflict in the Balkans. One such testimony witnesses:

I remember Bosnia as a beautiful and peaceful country. We all lived together. Before the war, it was unnecessary to know if your neighbor was Serb, Croat, Muslim or Jew. We looked only at what kind of person you were. We were all friends. But now I think it is like a kind of earthquake. A huge catastrophe. After this war nothing will be the same. People will live, but I think they will not live together. they will not share the same bread like before. Maybe they will be neighbors, but I think the close relationship will not exist any more. Because the Bosnian people, especially the Muslim people, had a bad experience, partly as a result of our attitude. (p. 13)

In his brilliant treatment on forgiveness, The Cleansing of the Memories, Geoffrey Bingham reminds us that ‘memory has always been a problem with mankind. It may seem a curious thing that man can be troubled by his past, as also delighted by it. Some memories bring a renewal of shock and trauma when they come unbidden’. Bingham proceeds to speak of ‘God’s holy amnesia’, of ‘the Divine forgetfulness’ or ‘the Divine non–remembering’. ‘God refuses to remember our sins! If then God refuses to remember our sins, why should we choose remember them?’ While our consciences never let anyone off the hook, Bingham writes, ‘God–through Christ–has so purged our sins, that they have been worked out to exhaustion and extinction, and all their power of guilt, penalty and pollution has been erased. In other words there are–effectively –no sins to remember! God has not simply ignored our sins. He has destroyed them, forever! … Of course–from time to time–we will remember the sins we once did, but we must not make them back into substantial things. God has denuded them of substance, of guilt, power and pollution. If they come to us in memory, then in faith in the Cross we should say, ‘Whilst you represent the sins I committed, you have no substance. God has emptied you, purified you, and taken away the guilt which accompanied you. You are wraiths, ghosts of the past come back to haunt me via the accusations of Satan and his hosts, but you have no substance’. [See The End of Memory: Remembering Rightly in a Violent World by Miroslav Volf, and my post here on Redeeming Bitterness - An Interview with Miroslav Volf].

I have just finished reading Wilhelm Herrmann’s Systematic Theology (Dogmatik), which I recommend. At one point, he notes that ‘It is the realization of the impossibility of friendship with God that creates in us the religious consciousness of guilt. Obviously we cannot be quit of this burden of guilt by any effort for our own betterment; for the sense of guilt before God will paralyse our courage to start a new life’. To all who have tried to be quit of the burden of guilt by their own efforts, Herrmann’s words sound out as a prophetic rebuke and caution against the futility and arrogance of such resolve. This is one of the reasons why in the final chapter of his The Wondrous Cross (reviewed here), Steve Holmes suggests that the message of penal substitution remains an important one to teach us about God’s love, about forgiveness and about justice – for both victims and perpetrators. He writes:

Penal substitution will, of course, teach us something about justice and guilt. It will teach us first that justice cannot and will not ever be set aside. Not that there can never be forgiveness – of course not – the point of the story is precisely that there can be, and is: while crimes cannot be forgotten, yet at the same time they must also be forgiven. Cases of child abuse, where the abuser has used shaming mechanisms so successfully that none of his victims ever speak; cases of corruption, where the politician has cynically sold favours and hidden her misdeeds well enough never to be discovered; cases of war crimes, where the military officer has callously committed certain deeds, feeling secure in the knowledge that they will not come to light: these are the types of cases and situations where penal substitution becomes an important story to tell.

For the victims in such situations, the story of penal substitution holds the promise that there is justice in this world, even for the worst crimes, or the best-hidden atrocities …

For the perpetrators in these situations, the story of penal substitution holds out the invitation to stop trying to escape their crimes by their own efforts, and to find, if they dare to face up with honesty and repentance to what they have done, full and free forgiveness in Christ.

In a recent paper I heard, Alan Torrance bore witness to the truth that it is only by virtue of Christ’s vicarious humanity that we discover the two forms of liberation that are intrinsic to atonement: first, liberation as victimisers for our sin of victimisation; and second, liberation as victims from the bitterness and hatred that attend the sense of irreversible injustice, the hurt of damaged lives, irretrievably lost opportunities, and all the other evils that result from sin. There is liberation here, he said, because precisely at the point where we cannot forgive our enemies the Gospel suggests that our sole representative, the sole priest of our confession, does what we cannot do – he stands in and forgives our victimisers for us and in our place as the One on behalf of the many – and then invites us to participate in the very forgiveness he has realised vicariously on our behalf. On these grounds we are not only permitted to forgive but obliged and indeed commanded to forgive others. Alan said, ‘Where we are not entitled to forgive, the crucified Rabbi is. And where we are unable to forgive, we are given to participate in his once-and-for-all forgiveness and to live our lives in that light and from that centre – not least in the political realm’. He cited his dad (JB Torrance), who defined worship as ‘the gift of participating by the Spirit in the Son’s communion with the Father’. The consequence of any ethic, therefore, that warrants the name ‘Christian’ must be conceived in parallel terms, namely as the gift of participating by the Spirit in the incarnate Son’s communion with the Father. ‘Forgiveness’, Alan stressed, ‘is the gift of participating in a triune event of forgiveness. In an act of forgiveness, the Father sends the Son, who, by the Spirit, forgives as God but also, by the Spirit, as the eschatos Adam on behalf of humanity. The mandate to forgive must be understood in this light.’

The ‘apology’ that will be made when the federal government next sits is ultimately possible because in Christ, God has already confessed humanity’s sins and forgiven all parties. To say ‘sorry’ is to take up Christ’s invitation to us to ‘participate in that forgiveness that he has realised vicariously on our behalf’. It is, as Alan presses, to participate in a triune event of forgiveness in which the Father sends the Son, who, by the Spirit, forgives. And, it is to participate by the Spirit, in the action of the last Adam on behalf of humanity, to the joy of the Father. Whether or not the Australian Government (or Governor-General), those of the Stolen Generation (and their families/nations), and all Aussies (even Faris QC) know that this is what it means to say ‘Sorry’ and ‘Receive the forgiveness of sins’ does not undermine the reality that the very human actions of confession and forgiveness are at the heart of what it means to be imago dei, and to participate in the ministry of the Triune God in our maimed and besmirched world.

‘For he himself is our peace, who has made us both one and has broken down in his flesh the dividing wall of hostility’ (Eph 2:14).

‘See to it’, therefore, ‘that no one takes you captive by philosophy and empty deceit, according to human tradition, according to the elemental spirits of the world, and not according to Christ. For in him the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily, and you have been filled in him, who is the head of all rule and authority. In him also you were circumcised with a circumcision made without hands, by putting off the body of the flesh, by the circumcision of Christ, having been buried with him in baptism, in which you were also raised with him through faith in the powerful working of God, who raised him from the dead. And you, who were dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, God made alive together with him, having forgiven us all our trespasses, by canceling the record of debt that stood against us with its legal demands. This he set aside, nailing it to the cross. He disarmed the rulers and authorities and put them to open shame, by triumphing over them in him’. (Col 2:8-15)

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

‘We Own the World’: a Chomsky lecture

02 Sunday Dec 2007

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Human Rights, Iraq, Justice, Noam Chomsky, Politics, Servanthood

≈ Leave a Comment

We Own the World is the name of a new DVD out by Noam Chomsky in which he looks (surprise, surprise) at the US government and corporate elite policies over the years. These policies, he argues, ‘violate international and domestic laws, and involve imperialist designs that depend on targeted assassinations and the killing of innocent civilians on a mass scale. Yet, US elites still lay claim to being just, democratic, and humane. How can they do this? As Chomsky refrains over and over … they can do it only if we accept the basic assumption that “We own the world” – and therefore have the right to do whatever we want.’ More information here.

A dispute also arose among them, as to which of them was to be regarded as the greatest. And [he who really owns the world] said to them, “The kings of the Gentiles exercise lordship over them, and those in authority over them are called benefactors. But not so with you. Rather, let the greatest among you become as the youngest, and the leader as one who serves. For who is the greater, one who reclines at table or one who serves? Is it not the one who reclines at table? But I am among you as the one who serves. (Luke 22:24–27)

It seems to me that those who find any encouragement from being associated with the One who really owns the world, any comfort from his love, any participation in his Spirit, any affection and sympathy, ought to be at one with him in mind, having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind. Surely they are those who do nothing from rivalry or conceit, but in humility count others more significant than themselves. Surely they are those who look not to their own interests, but to the interests of others.

 

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Conference on Bible and Justice

29 Thursday Nov 2007

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Bible, Compassion, Conference, Human Rights, Justice

≈ Leave a Comment

The University of Sheffield is organizing a Conference on Bible and Justice for 29 May – 1 June, 2008. The Conference promises to bring together scholars from around the world to explore how the ancient texts of the Bible can play an active role in addressing twenty-first century social concerns.  The purpose of the conference is to foster discussion about the relevance of the Bible to modern social issues, and promote bridges between the academic field of biblical studies and the various endeavours for a just world.
Areas of focus include Human Rights, Economic Justice and Environmental Justice.

Keynote Speakers are Stanley Hauerwas (Duke University), Timothy Gorringe (University of Exeter) and John Rogerson (University of Sheffield, Emeritus). Other speakers include James Crossley, Philip Davies, Daid Horrell, Louise Lawrence, Mary Mills, Hugh Pyper, Christpher Rowland, Gerald West, and Keith Whitelam.

Faculty members and research students are invited to submit abstracts, which will be accepted until 24 January 2008, and participate in this conference. For more information visit the website or contact conference organizer, Matthew Coomber.

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Who is Christ for us today?

10 Saturday Nov 2007

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Jürgen Moltmann, Justice

≈ Leave a Comment

‘Der gefolterte Christus
ist der Bruder der Gefolterten.
Der auferstandene Christus
ist der Richter der Folterer’.

Jürgen Moltmann (HT: Mark)

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Once upon a time …

21 Sunday Oct 2007

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Justice, Politics

≈ 1 Comment

In this wee essay, On Torture and American Values, David Peterson reminds us: ‘Once upon a time, it was the United States that urged all nations to obey the letter and the spirit of international treaties and protect human rights and liberties. American leaders denounced secret prisons where people were held without charges, tortured and killed. And the people in much of the world, if not their governments, respected the United States for its values’.

But that was once upon a time …

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Slavery and Human Trafficking

12 Friday Oct 2007

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Evil, Human Rights, Justice, Rowan Willams, Slavery, Videos

≈ Leave a Comment

‘Twenty-seven million slaves exist in our world today. Girls and boys, women and men of all ages are forced to toil in the rug looms of Nepal, sell their bodies in the brothels of Rome, break rocks in the quarries of Pakistan, and fight wars in the jungles of Africa. Go behind the façade in any major town or city in the world today and you are likely to find a thriving commerce in human beings’. So begins the recent title, NOT for Sale: The Return of the Global Slave Trade – and How We Can Fight It by David Batstone. [Reviewed here]

In today’s TimesOnline, Ruth Gledhill draws our attention to a video shot in Zanzibar during the Primates’ Meeting earlier this year in Tanzania. The film was made to promote the Church of England’s Walk of Witness which took place to mark the bicentenary of the Abolition of the Slave Trade Act. Today it won the IPTV award, a £2,000 award for internet television, at the Jerusalem Awards ceremony in London. I’ve embedded it here:

Watching this film, I was reminded of some words from Theissen’s investigator regarding the Essene community:

‘The first thing that I heard about the Essenes was that they reject slavery. They reject it because it is an offence against human equality: they argue that it goes against the law of nature, which bore and brought up all men. All are children of nature. All men are brothers. Riches led them astray, turned trust into mistrust, friendship into enmity. I was fascinated. Where else is there a community which rejects slavery? Nowhere’. – Gerd Theissen, The Shadow of the Galilean: The Quest of the Historical Jesus in Narrative Form (trans. J. Bowden; London: SCM Press, 2001), 47.

While I do not believe that the Church – as the Church – should ever identify itself wholly which any social programme (individual believers are free to so do), the Church is impelled – by the Gospel itself – to be at the forefront of practicing, equipping and celebrating all acts of liberation, compassion, sanity, hope, and justice, of naming all that demeans and devalues life, and to lead the way in repentance when it fails to do so. I think here of such statements made not only by official bodies such as the WCC that ‘all forms of slavery … constitute crimes against humanity’, but also of those made by individual believers, such as PT Forsyth’s 3 moving letters to the Editor of The Times in January 1906 protesting against the British Government’s trafficking of Chinese human beings in South Africa. Another example, he suggests, of the ethical giving way to an economic rationalism gone mad.

Following the UN Protocol on Trafficking, countries have been enacting their own legislation and policies to prevent human trafficking. But at what cost? A new report commissioned by the Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women, has found that many of the strategies to eradicate trafficking are having an adverse affect on the human rights of the very people they are trying to protect. For more, listen to this recent podcast.

“Here is my servant, whom I uphold, my chosen one in whom I delight; I will put my Spirit on him and he will bring justice to the nations. He will not shout or cry out, or raise his voice in the streets; A bruised reed he will not break, and a smoldering wick he will not snuff out. In faithfulness he will bring forth justice; he will not falter or be discouraged till he establishes justice on earth. In his law the islands will put their hope.” This is what God the LORD says – he who created the heavens and stretched them out, who spread out the earth and all that comes out of it, who gives breath to its people, and life to those who walk on it: “I, the LORD, have called you in righteousness; I will take hold of your hand. I will keep you and will make you to be a covenant for the people and a light for the Gentiles, to open eyes that are blind, to free captives from prison and to release from the dungeon those who sit in darkness’. (Isaiah 42:1-7)

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Recent meanderings from around the traps

30 Sunday Sep 2007

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Atheism, Humour, Justice

≈ Leave a Comment

 

 

Firstly, I loved this quote: ‘The old pagans had to choose between a brilliant, jangling, irresponsible universe, alive with lawless powers, and the serene and ordered universe of God and law. We modern pagans have to choose between that divine order, and the grey, dead, irresponsible, chaotic universe of atheism. And the tragedy is that we may make that choice without knowing it – not by clear conviction but by vague drifting, by losing interest in Him. A nominal deist will say: “Yes, of course there must be some sort of Force that created the galaxy. But it’s childish to imagine that it has any personal relation to me!” In that belief atheism exists as an undiagnosed disease. The man who says, “One God,” and does not care, is an atheist in his heart. The man who speaks of God and will not recognize him in the burning bush – that man is an atheist, though he speak with the tongues of men or angels, and appear in his pew every Sunday, and make large contributions to the church’. –– Joy Davidman (Smoke on the Mountain). (HT: Linus)

Jim has been posting some great reflections here, here, here, here and here on Van Balthasar and Karl Barth; and Halden from Inhabitatio Dei has been posting on NT Wright’s Jesus and the Victory of God here.

I was disappointed to read here that the Vatican had banned its priests and nuns from taking part in demonstrations in Burma.

For those who have not yet heard, on 5 October Fixed Point Foundation will sponsor a debate on the existence of God between Prof Richard Dawkins and Dr John Lennox. The debate will center on Dawkins’ views as expressed in The God Delusion. The debate is currently sold out, but it will be broadcast live by Moody Broadcasting, Salem Radio Network, and their affiliates. For live online streaming of the debate, click here. More information here.

Found this video on ‘Ebay’ by Weird Al Yankovic clever! And George Bush outlines his plan to provide health insurance for sickly kids here.

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Feeling sick … coffee anyone?

01 Wednesday Nov 2006

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Justice

≈ Leave a Comment

I’m feeling sick, embarrassed, angry, frustrated, ashamed, etc. etc. this week. No it’s not jetlag. It’s because the University of St Andrews (where I am a student) has just awarded an honorary degree to Mohammad Khatami … in law of all things! I condemn the university for this gutless decision.

On another note, Tim Fullerton from Oxfam America has just sent out an email about the injustices in the coffee-drinking industry. Here it is:

Each year, coffee companies make billions of dollars. Starbucks alone earned almost $5.8 billion in net revenues during the first three quarters of 2006.

Yet, for every cup of coffee Starbucks sells, poor farmers in coffee-growing countries like Ethiopia earn only about $.03. Even worse, while Ethiopian farmers grow some of the finest name-brand coffees in the world – think Harar, Yirgacheffe, and Sidamo – they don’t see the premium profits those names command among consumers.

Tell Starbucks to give Ethiopia control over its coffee names.

With as many as 15 million Ethiopians dependent on coffee, Ethiopia has decided to get its farmers more of what they deserve. The country’s government has asked Starbucks to sign a licensing agreement that will allow Ethiopia to control the names of its coffees. That way, Ethiopia can help determine an export price that makes sure farmers see a larger share of the profits enabling them to feed their children, send them to school and get them better healthcare.

Oxfam and a coalition of allies are asking Starbucks to sign this agreement. According to one coalition member, control of the name brands could increase Ethiopia’s coffee export income by more than 25 percent – or $88 million annually. This money could go a lot way to help lift millions of Ethiopians out of poverty.

So please, help us convince Starbucks to sign this agreement with Ethiopia. Poor farmers deserve a fair share of the profits.

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

The shameful silence of Christian leaders

25 Tuesday Jul 2006

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Justice, Leadership

≈ Leave a Comment

Why is Pope Benedict virtually alone among Christian leaders to have spoken out against what is being done to Lebanese Christians and Muslims? I know that the issues are complex (and I am not a pacifist), but it seems to me that Israel’s policy of imposing deliberate suffering on the Lebanese population to force them to do something they are powerless to do (disarm the gunmen among them) violates not only international law and common sense, but is, more importantly, at odds with the gospel itself. Any thoughts?

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

On the margins

20 Tuesday Jun 2006

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Justice, Theology

≈ Leave a Comment

I just came across this great little devotional piece by my old theology professor in Australia. Read on…

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

Jesus Christ and Torture

08 Wednesday Mar 2006

Posted by Jason Goroncy in Jesus Christ, Justice, Theology

≈ Leave a Comment

For a praiseworthy piece on what Jesus Christ means for the inmates of Guantanamo Bay, check out the essay on Jesus Christ and torture at http://worldofsven.co.uk/theology/index.php

Share this:

Like this:

Like
Be the first to like this post.

♣

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 397 other followers

♣ Latest Posts

  • May stations
  • Afraid of roots and depths …
  • It doesn’t matter that I lost my shoes
  • The Westminster Confession of Faith
  • Felicem diem natalem, Martin
  • ‘Otago Peninsula’, by Brian Turner
  • Music and Theology in the European Reformations
  • ‘Jesus Summons Forth’
  • Bad sermons
  • April Stations

♣ Latest Comments

Jenny Pettersen on Afraid of roots and depths…
mart the rev on It doesn’t matter that I lost …
dbhamill on It doesn’t matter that I lost …
Pam on It doesn’t matter that I lost …
Jedidiah on The Westminster Confession of…
dbhamill on The Westminster Confession of…
intheologus on Felicem diem natalem, Mar…
plainsmann on John [Updike] on Paul [Ti…
scougal124 on ‘Otago Peninsula’, by Brian…
Pam on ‘Otago Peninsula’, by Brian…

♣ RSS Book of Common Prayer Daily Office Lectionary

  • May 31:

♣ Current Reading

♣ Current Listening

♣ Twitter

  • Picked up a collection of poems yesterday by #NZ #poet John Paisley. Trying to find out more about him. Can anyone help? 4 hours ago
  • Enjoying this new find - poems by John Paisley instagr.am/p/LShEGZlGx9/ 5 hours ago
  • May stations wp.me/p5RJc-3hb 17 hours ago
  • The First Church of Marilynne Robinson nyr.kr/KZLNJz 21 hours ago
  • Urbanscreen take on, and take down, the Sydney Opera House: youtu.be/o5ZvCv7yUKk 1 day ago
  • Michael Jinkins on The Joyful Ministry of the Cross bit.ly/LCvwtL 1 day ago
Follow @jasongoroncy

♣ Fellow Wayfarers

  • ABC Religion & Ethics
  • Alastair Roberts
  • Andrew Errington
  • Andrew Root
  • Andy Goodliff
  • Ben Myers
  • Bobby Grow
  • Brad East
  • Bruce Hamill
  • Byron Smith
  • Chris TerryNelson
  • Chris Tilling
  • Cynthia R. Nielsen
  • Dan Oudshoorn
  • Daniel Hartley
  • Davey Henreckson
  • David W. Congdon
  • Debra Dean Murphy
  • Die Evangelischen Theologen
  • Evan Kuehn
  • Frank Rees
  • Garry Deverell
  • Halden Doerge
  • James Alison
  • Jim Gordon
  • Joshua Woo Sze Zeng
  • Kait Dugan
  • Kelvin Wright
  • Kent Eilers & Kyle Strobel
  • Kevin Davis
  • Makoto Fujimura
  • Mary Beard
  • Matthew Frost
  • Matthew J. Milliner
  • Melanie Kampen
  • Michael Gibson
  • Michael Gorman
  • Michael Jensen
  • Michael Jinkins
  • Mike Crowl
  • Paul Fromont
  • Peter J. Leithart
  • Phil Sumpter
  • Ralph McMichael
  • Richard Hall
  • Richard L. Floyd
  • Robin Parry
  • Rose Marie Berger
  • Rowan Williams
  • Scott Hamilton
  • Sean Winter
  • Stephen Garner
  • Steve Holmes
  • Terry J. Wright
  • Transpositions

♣ History Journals

  • 19th Century UK Periodicals Online
  • Australasian Victorian Studies Journal
  • Church History
  • ELT: English Literature in Transition, 1880-1920
  • Historical Journal
  • Journal of British Studies
  • Journal of Ecclesiastical History
  • Journal of Pre-Raphaelite Studies
  • Journal of Religious History
  • Journal of the Historical Society
  • Journal of Victorian Culture
  • New Zealand Religious History Newsletter
  • Nineteenth Century Studies
  • Nineteenth Century Theatre and Film
  • Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide
  • Nineteenth-Century Contexts
  • Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies
  • Reformation and Renaissance Review
  • Review of English Studies
  • Romanticism on the Net
  • Studies in English Literature
  • Victorian Literature and Culture
  • Victorian Review
  • Victorian Studies
  • Victorian Studies Bulletin
  • Victorians Institute Journal
  • Waterloo Directory of English Newspapers and Periodicals, 1800-1900
  • Wellesley Index to Victorian Periodicals, 1824-1900

♣ Libraries

  • Bible College of New Zealand Library
  • Bodleian Library
  • British Library
  • Carey Baptist College Library
  • Christian Classics Ethereal Library
  • Congregational Library
  • Dr Williams Centre for Dissenting Studies
  • Evangelical Library
  • Geoffrey Blackburn Library, Whitley College
  • Hekman Library
  • Hewitson Library
  • Howard V. and Edna H. Hong Kierkegaard Library
  • John Kinder Theological Library
  • LibriVox
  • MacFarland Library, Ormond College
  • Moore Theological College Library
  • National Archives of Scotland
  • National Library of Australia
  • National Library of New Zealand
  • National Library of Scotland
  • Open Library
  • Perseus Digital Library
  • Philosophical Libraries
  • Project Gutenberg
  • The Evangelical Library
  • The John Rylands University Library
  • The Post-Reformation Digital Library
  • University of Leicester Library
  • University of Otago Library

♣ Pastoralia

  • Alban Institute
  • Covered Dish
  • Deep and Wide
  • Faith and Leadership
  • Fresh Expressions
  • Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America Ministry Resources
  • John Mark Ministries
  • Lewis Center for Church Leadership
  • New Creation Teaching Ministry
  • New Way
  • Presbyterian Youth Ministry
  • Priscilla's Friends
  • ReSource
  • Rural & Migrant Ministry
  • Rural Ministry
  • SpouseConnect
  • The Connection
  • Youth Worker

♣ Research Tools

  • ABC Religion & Ethics
  • Alexander Turnbull Library
  • Arts & Letters Daily
  • Australiasian Digital Theses Program
  • BibleGateway
  • Bibleworks
  • British Online Archives
  • Center for Barth Studies
  • Charles Darwin Online
  • Christian Classics Ethereal Library
  • Creeds of Christendom
  • D. Anthony Storm’s Commentary on Kierkegaard
  • Dictionary of New Zealand Biography
  • Dictionary of the Scots Language
  • Dooyeweerd Pages
  • Dr Williams Centre for Dissenting Studies
  • Early New Zealand Books Project
  • Etymology Dictionary
  • Find Articles
  • FirstSearch
  • Great Books & Classics
  • Hauerwas Online
  • Humanities Research Network
  • Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • Jonathan Edwards Online
  • JournalSeek
  • Kant on the Web – 1
  • Kant on the Web – 2
  • Karl Barth Archive
  • Kierkegaard Articles
  • Letters of Note
  • Monachos
  • Māori Dictionary
  • National Museums Scotland
  • New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge
  • New Zealand Electronic Text Centre
  • New Zealand History Online
  • New Zealand Religious History Newsletter
  • Nietzsche
  • Online Books
  • OpenDOAR
  • Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  • Papers Past – National Library of New Zealand
  • Perichoresis
  • Philosophical Libraries
  • Philosophy Professor
  • Presbyterian Church of Aotearoa New Zealand Archives Research Centre
  • Presbyterian Research
  • Project Gutenberg
  • Reformation and Renaissance Studies
  • Religion Online
  • Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • Royal Historical Society
  • Søren Kierkegaard Research Center
  • Scottish Archive Network
  • Scottish Reformation Society
  • Te Aka Māori-English – English-Māori Dictionary
  • The H. Henry Meeter Center for Calvin Studies
  • The Post-Reformation Digital Library
  • The R.S. Thomas Study Centre
  • Theological Research Exchange Network
  • Theological Studies UK
  • Theses
  • Trinity Study Centre
  • Tyndale House
  • UMI Dissertation Publishing
  • Victorian Web
  • William Blake Archive
  • Worldcat
  • Yale Research Guide

♣ Societies

  • American Academy of Religion
  • American Society of Church History
  • Anabaptist Association of Australia & New Zealand
  • Aotearoa New Zealand Association for Mission Studies
  • Association of Practical Theology in Oceania
  • Australasian Theological Forum
  • Australian and New Zealand Association of Theological Schools
  • Australian Association for the Study of Religions
  • Center for Barth Studies
  • Christian Theological Research Fellowship
  • Churches Theological Research Trust
  • CS Lewis Society of California
  • Dietrich Bonhoeffer Society
  • Hegel Society
  • Institute for Reformed Theology
  • Institute for Theology, Imagination and the Arts
  • Jürgen Moltmann Group
  • Kierkegaard Society of the UK
  • Mercersburg Research Fellowship
  • New Creation Teaching Ministry
  • New Zealand Association of Theological Schools
  • New Zealand Historical Association
  • Nineteenth-Century Theology Group
  • Presbyterian Historical Society
  • Reformation Scotland
  • Religious History Association of Aotearoa New Zealand
  • Royal Historical Society
  • Søren Kierkegaard Society (USA)
  • Scottish Evangelical Theology Society
  • Scottish Reformation Society
  • Societas Liturgica
  • Society for Reformation Studies
  • Society for the Study of Theology
  • Society of Biblical Literature
  • TF Torrance Theological Fellowship
  • The International Reformed Theology Institute
  • The Jonathan Edwards Society
  • The Mercersburg Society
  • Vatican – The Holy See
  • World Communion of Reformed Churches
  • World Reformed Fellowship

♣ Theology Journals

  • American Theological Inquiry
  • Anvil
  • Ars Disputandi
  • Australian Religion Studies Review
  • Case Magazine
  • Christian Century
  • Colloquium
  • Communio
  • Credenda Agenda
  • Crucible
  • CT – Books & Culture
  • CT – Christian History & Biography
  • Cultural Encounters
  • Ecclesia Reformanda
  • Ecclesiology
  • First Things
  • Harvard Ichthus
  • Harvard Theological Review
  • Heythrop Journal
  • International Bulletin of Missionary Research
  • International Journal of Practical Theology
  • International Journal of Public Theology
  • International Journal of Systematic Theology
  • Irish Theological Quarterly
  • Journal for Christian Theological Research
  • Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory
  • Journal for Scripture & Theology
  • Journal of Pastoral Care & Counseling
  • Journal of Pastoral Theology
  • Journal of Psychology & Theology
  • Journal of Reformed Theology
  • Journal of Religion and Popular Culture
  • Journal of Theological Interpretation
  • Journal of Theological Studies
  • Lectionary Homiletics
  • Literature and Theology
  • Logia
  • Modern Reformation
  • Modern Theology
  • Neue Zeitschrift für Systematische Theologie und Religionsphilosophie
  • New Blackfriars
  • Open Theology
  • Pacifica
  • Participatio
  • Perspectives Journal
  • Practical Theology
  • Princeton Theological Review
  • Pro Ecclesia
  • Public Theology
  • Quodlibet
  • Reformed World
  • Religious Studies
  • Religious Studies Review
  • Review of Biblical Literature
  • Reviews in Religion & Theology
  • Revue d'Histoire et de Philosophie Religieuses
  • Scottish Bulletin of Evangelical Theology
  • Scottish Journal of Theology
  • St Mark's Review
  • Stimulus
  • Studies in Christian Ethics
  • Testamentum Imperium
  • The Other Journal
  • Themelios
  • Theological Librarianship
  • Theology in Scotland
  • Wesleyan Theological Journal
  • Zeitschrift für Neuere Theologiegeschichte

♣ Worship Resources

  • Book of Common Prayer
  • Bruce Prewer
  • Calvin Hymnary Project
  • CCEL Hymn Tune Archive
  • Center for Worship Resourcing
  • Cyber Hymnal
  • Disclosing New Worlds
  • Emu Music
  • Genevan Psalter
  • Girardian Reflections on the Lectionary
  • Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America Ministry Resources
  • Ignatian Spirituality
  • Laughing Bird
  • Liturgies Online
  • Liturgy
  • Lutheran Hymnals
  • New Creation Music
  • Oremus
  • PC(USA) Worship Resources
  • Proost
  • Psalter.org
  • Reformed Liturgical Institute
  • Reformed Praise
  • RUF Hymnbook
  • Sacred Space
  • Taize
  • The Billabong
  • The Preachers Institute
  • The Text This Week
  • The Work of the People
  • Torch – The English Province of the Order of Preachers
  • Transforming Worship
  • Wild Goose Resources
  • Worship in Scots

♣ Books I’ve Written/Contributed To

♣ Topics

Advent Advice Alexander Solzhenitsyn Alfonse Borysewicz Anglicanism Anthropology Apologetics Art Atheism Atonement Aung San Suu Kyi Australia Authority Baptism Barack Obama Beer Bible Biblical criticism Biblical theology Biography Blasphemy Blogging Book Review Books Brian Turner Bruce McCormack Burma Children Christology Church Church and State Church History Church unity Compassion Conference Confession Conscience Creation Creeds Cross CS Lewis Culture David Bentley Hart Death Democracy Dietrich Bonhoeffer Discipleship Dunedin Easter Eberhard Jüngel Ecclesiology Ecumenism Education Election Emerging Church Emil Brunner Eschatology Ethics Eucharist Evil Faith Fatherhood Film Forgiveness Freedom Friedrich Nietzsche Friedrich Schleiermacher Fyodor Dostoevsky Geoffrey Bingham Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel GK Chesterton God God's name Gospel Grace Hans Küng Hans Urs von Balthasar Healing Hell Helmut Thielicke Hermeneutics History Holiness Holy Communion Holy Spirit Homosexuality Hope Humanity Human Rights Humour Hymn Idolatry Imagination Imago Dei Incarnation Indigenous Australia Iraq James Denney James K. Baxter Jesus Christ John Calvin John McLeod Campbell John Pilger John Webster Joseph Ratzinger Journals JRR Tolkein Judgement Justice Justification Jürgen Moltmann Karen Karl Barth Kenosis Kingdom of God Knowledge of God Leadership Lent Les Murray Life Love Love of God Marilynne Robinson Marriage Martin Luther Michael Leunig Miroslav Volf Missiology Mission Music Names News New Testament Studies New Zealand Noam Chomsky NT Wright Parenting parenting style Pastoral Ministry Penal substitution Philosophy Podcasts Poetry Politics Power Prayer Preaching Presbyterianism PT Forsyth R.S. Thomas Ray Anderson Reading Reconciliation Redemption Reformed Religion Research Resurrection Revelation Review Richard Bauckham Richard Dawkins Richard Lischer Robert Cording Robert Jenson Roman Catholicism Rowan Willams RS Thomas Rudolph Otto Sacraments Salvation Sanctification Science Scripture Sermons Sex Sin Slavoj Žižek Stanley Fish Stanley Hauerwas Suffering Søren Kierkegaard TF Torrance Theodicy Theological education Theology Theology and the Arts Trevor Hart Trinity Universalism Victorians Videos Violence Walter Brueggemann War War Crimes William Stringfellow Wine Worship Writing

♣ Archives

♣ Other places I loiter

ccblogs-badge

 

June 2012
S M T W T F S
« May    
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

Feeds et al

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.com
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

Blog at WordPress.com. Theme: Chateau by Ignacio Ricci.

loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.