Thursday, February 27, 2014

Beastly Violence (Micah 4:1-4; Matthew 26:47-56; Epiphany 7 (series); February 23, 2014)



Beastly Violence

Micah 4:1-4
Matthew 26:47-56
Epiphany 7 (series)
February 23, 2014

Rev. John M. Caldwell, PhD
First United Methodist Church
Decorah, IA

In Scotland in the early eighteen hundreds the woolen mills were producing wool thread and cloth at such a rate that shortages drove the price of raw wool up.  Sheep did well in the Highlands of Scotland, so many of the lairds, the hereditary masters of the Highland territories, decided to “improve” their lands by converting them to the production of wool.

These “improvements” would come at a cost, however.  The Highlands of Scotland were populated by communities of Gaelic-speaking clansfolk who farmed small plots that were rotated among the families of the community and who raised cattle and a few sheep on common grazing lands.  These were lands that, while the title belonged to the laird, were used by the whole community under arrangements that were hundreds of years old. 

Laird and clansfolk had lived in a mutually supportive relationship.  The laird provided grazing land, farm plots, houses, and protection from the cattle-thieving lads in the next glen.  The clansfolk provided beef, wool and support for the laird in his (or sometimes her) dealings with his greedy neighbors.

In the far north of the Highlands was the territory of clan Sutherland, so-called because to the Norse who came to control this land seven or eight centuries before, it was the “Southern Land.”  Lord and Lady Sutherland began their “improvements” in 1807 by evicting ninety families from their houses and lands.  They were provided with alternative land some fifteen miles away but had to tear down their houses and carry the timbers to the new sites and live exposed to the elements until they could build new houses. 

But as the clearances continued, they became more and more brutal.  In the spring of 1820 three hundred families were removed from their homes by the simple method of burning their homes down.  With no place to go, turned out by the lairds who were supposed to protect them, the clansfolk suffered terribly, the aged, the sick and the children most of all.  Many died hunger and exposure.  Some made their way to the cities to try to find work in the mills.  Others emigrated to Nova Scotia and other parts of Canada and still others by their thousands to the Carolinas in the United States.

I tell this story, not because it is unique, but precisely because it is not.  The system that I have been calling the beast is always ravenously hungry.  It must grow or it will die.  So, it is perfectly willing to use violence to get what it wants.  This violence appears whenever the commons are enclosed for private profit. 

This was true in late 1700s and early 1800s when the commons in the Scottish Highlands were enclosed for the profit of the lairds.  It is still true today in Chiapas, Mexico, as ethnic Mayans resist the military aggression of the Mexican federal government as it attempts to break up the common land holdings of the people for the profit of a few.  And let’s not forget that the very land on which we meet this day has its own bloody history of the confiscation of common land from its original inhabitants so that it could be turned into private property for the profit of individuals and their families. 

It is a rare property deed that does not come with blood on it.  Almost always the acts that made it into private property were perfectly legal.  The papers had been drawn up and were all in order.  But behind the legal language and the signatures, as the folk of clan Sutherland knew full well, loomed the violence of the firebrands, clubs, muskets and bayonets.

The beast has a long history of hiding its violence behind the law when it can, but when it cannot do that, it justifies its violence by using a myth that Walter Wink has called “The Myth of Redemptive Violence.”[1]  The Myth of Redemptive Violence tells the story of violence in such a way that violence becomes normal and, indeed, the foundation for what is good and true.  The basic form of the myth is:

  1. The order of the world has been disturbed and chaos threatens. 
  2.  
  3. Violence is applied to whoever has brought this disorder. 
  4.  
  5. The order of the world is restored.
  6.  
This basic myth comes in thousands of variations, but it lies at the heart of many of our stories.  The myth is the basic plot of most episodes of NCIS and Law and Order, every episode of 24 Hours, and most of the Saturday morning cartoons I watched as a kid.  The Myth of Redemptive Violence drives our foreign policy.  It makes violence appear so necessary, so natural, that we would rather let our children go hungry, we would rather let the unemployed be evicted from their homes, we would rather sink our children into decades of debt servitude, than imagine that we could cut our military spending. 

Like all really effective myths, the Myth of Redemptive Violence filters our perception of the world and shapes our thinking, so that we are unable to imagine non-violent responses to the threats we face.  If we raise objections to violent responses, people look at us in disbelief and say, “So we should do nothing?” as if there were no alternatives to violence.

I remember listening to a conversation on NPR—yes, I listen to NPR—between a program host and a guest “expert” on international terrorism about the situation in Afghanistan.  This was two or three years ago when there was a possibility of isolating the more radical factions in the Taliban by negotiating a settlement with its more moderate elements.  The guest was absolutely dismissive.  “Well,” he said, scornfully (you could hear his lip curl!), “you can try negotiating if you want, but sooner or later you’ll find that negotiation doesn’t work and you’ll have to use military force.”  It was an astounding statement.  Remember, he was talking about Afghanistan, the graveyard of empires, the place where foreign policies go to die.  Everyone from Alexander the Great, to the British Empire, to the Soviet Union, to Barack Obama has discovered the same thing: Afghanistan is relatively easy to take and impossible to hold.  No peace has ever been imposed on it from the outside.  Military force has never worked in Afghanistan.  And yet the Myth of Redemptive Violence won’t let us see any other choice. 

The guest said, “You can try negotiating if you want, but sooner or later you’ll have to use military force,” as if it what he was saying were obvious, when in fact it was clearly, demonstrably false.  It makes far more sense to say, “Well, you can try military force if you want, but sooner or later you’ll find that military violence doesn’t work and you’ll have to negotiate.”  I waited for the interviewer to raise an objection.  I waited in vain.

And here is the power of the Myth of Redemptive Violence: it so naturalizes violence that any other alternative seems impossible and even morally wrong.  When the story of the Sutherland Clearances is told through the Myth of Redemptive Violence, it is the impoverished clansfolk who become villains and the violence of the lairds and their agents becomes the hand of God in bringing order and progress.

The beast must tell this myth not only to justify its own greedy violence, but also because we human beings are not really naturally all that violent.  The military psychologist, LTC Dave Grossman, has studied the act of killing in combat and has concluded that almost all of us are deeply inhibited from killing other people, even in self-defense, especially face-to-face and at close range.[2]  In World War II more than eighty percent of the infantry riflemen who fought on the front lines never fired their weapon at an enemy soldier with the intent of killing them.  They fired high.  They didn’t fire at all.  But they refused to use their rifles to kill another human being. 

In response, military training methods have changed.  Instead of using circular targets for rifle practice, I trained by firing at silhouettes.  When I hit one, it fell down.  I was conditioned to respond to a human silhouette by firing at it and immediately rewarded for hitting it.  The second change is the use of video and laser simulations that make training more realistic, in other words, first-person shooter video games and laser tag. 

Only five percent of today’s soldiers refuse to shoot to kill and enemy.  Score one for military training.  Except that overcoming our inhibitions in this way exacts a terrible psychological cost.  Soldiers come back with wounded souls precisely because they did what they were trained and ordered to do.

My point here is that the combination of a system that must grow to survive, a myth that justifies violence that serves as the basic plot line of much of popular culture, and a culture that is saturated with violence have given us a beastly world.  In this world some of us are victims of violence, some are direct perpetrators, but all of us are implicated in the evil, injustice and oppression of violence itself.

Those of us who are followers of Jesus cannot simply leave it at that.  We may argue about the teachings of Jesus in some areas.  He said hardly anything at all about sex, for example.  He gave us no guidance about the use or abuse of alcohol.  But he clearly and emphatically taught and lived non-violence as a way of life.  To take on baptism is to commit ourselves to following this path.

We live surrounded by a culture that excuses, justifies and even glorifies violence.  We cannot imagine that living non-violently in the belly of the beast will be easy or even that it will make immediate sense.  Jesus’ non-violent teaching is disturbing and unsettling even for us who are his followers.  Let’s admit that.  We are worried about whether it is practical.  We are not sure we can live up to its demands. 

There are some things that give me hope, both for myself and for my world.  For one, we have a book and a story that are fired by a different story than the Myth of Redemptive Violence, a story that is richer and more humane and, frankly, more interesting.  We have each other, for another.  If we will keep our baptismal promises to each other to “surround [each other] with a community of love and forgiveness…that [we] may be true disciples who walk in the way that leads to life,” we will have the support we need for doing the strenuous work of freeing ourselves from the grip of the beast.  That means, of course, that we will need to go beyond the usual, polite conversation that promises not to pry too closely into the condition of my neighbor if my neighbor promises not to pry too closely into mine.  It means that we need and will accept each other’s help in seeing through our own self-deceiving myths and self-justifying excuses.  It means that we will offer this help to each other as well.

None of this sounds easy.  None of it is easy.  Accepting the freedom and power God gives us to resist evil, injustice, and oppression in whatever form they present themselves is not a matter of throwing a switch; it is a hope toward which we strain throughout our lives.  But it is a good hope, for all its being hard.  It is the hope of new life that has been born in us at our baptism and still grows toward its maturity.  It is a hope toward which we move by God’s gracious call to us and God’s power at work within us.  God dreams this for us.  God knows that our world is waiting for this hope to be realized in us so that it, too, might know goodness, justice and sweet, sweet freedom.

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