Wednesday, October 04, 2006

spiritual and political- a moral quandary

I have a moral quandary- I know these problems don’t get us anywhere but this one is being played out before our eyes. America and Britain invade Iraq, Christians oppose this action, not because we don’t believe that invading Iraq as part of war on terrorism could reduce the threat of terrorism (although it seems clear now that it hasn’t) but because we believe we are called to suffer (and even die) for divine purposes. I can see how the decision not to go to war was obvious but what happens when you have gone to war, do you pull out when your casualties start mounting leaving a vacuum that results in a bloody civil war or do you stay knowing you made the wrong decision in the first place and suffering and dying because of that decision?

I am struck by something Hauerwas wrote in Resident Aliens, referring to the issue of abortion he pointed out that the good news of the gospel was not ‘you’re not allowed an abortion so deal with it’ the good news of the gospel is ‘you don’t have to live that way we can show you a different way to live’. Our nations have made a terrible mistake by going into Iraq (in a bid to avoid the suffering of another 11th September) they have unleashed terrible blood shed on that land, but if they pull out (in an attempt to avoid more soldiers dying) there will be a bloody civil war. Our countries made a decision and this choice has changed the lives of millions of Iraqi civilians (for better or for worse) now our countries must take responsibility for their actions.
I hear conservatives talking about closing and banning abortion clinics, but if we are going to force pregnant women to carry through with their child birth then we must take responsibility for caring for them (for bearing them up in the hard times). I think in Iraq if we take the decision to pull our troops out in an effort to reduce our national and personal suffering then we must have a plan for bearing with those who suffer the consequences of our actions. Once again I want to state my support for Christian Peace Teams who are surely leading the way in the effort to solve this quandary.


Perhaps, we may legitimately say that after the decision to go to war was made we have no more to say about this matter? (but is that right- we have be able to live in a fallen world).

1 comment:

James Church said...

You cruel man, to characterise my argument as 'we are here now so we better follow through' is devastating. It is horrible to discover I could be so misunderstood. I simply arguing that although the US and UK governments must renounce violence in an effort to restore peace to Iraq it would be immoral to remove forces without the resources and financial aid required to bring about peace for the Iraqi people. Perhaps, we need to invest in a new type of force that does not rely on the myth of redemptive violence.

In other words- I am concerned that public support for ending the war in Iraq be not based on the selfish motive to avoid more loss of our lives but on a principled reasoning that the passive-resistance is the only way to bring about true and lasting peace. Hence, I hail the work of CPT in leading the way and doing what the church is meant to do in holding up the icon of Christ in a world of domination.