Do Christians and Muslims Worship the Same God? Part Two

 

(In late 2003 President Bush said, in response to a reporter’s question, that he believed Muslims and Christians "worship the same God." The remark sparked criticism from some Christians, who thought Bush was being politically correct but theologically inaccurate. For example, Ted Haggard, head of the National Association of Evangelicals, said, "The Christian God encourages freedom, love, forgiveness, prosperity and health. The Muslim god appears to value the opposite."

Do Muslims and Christians worship the same God? The question raises a fundamental issue in interfaith discussion, especially for monotheists. We asked several scholars to consider the question. Lamin Sanneh’s article is the second in a series)

If you accept, as Muslims and Christians do, that there is only one God, then it seems theologically imperative to say the God of one religion is none other than the God of the other. Was not the name "Allah" of Arabian Islam the same as the "Allah" of pre-Islamic Arab Christianity? Accordingly, it makes no sense on linguistic or historical grounds to make exclusionary claims for the name "God."

If, on the other hand, Muslims and Christians worship essentially the same God, why do they not call themselves by one common name? Are Muslims and Christians misguided in the nominal distinctions they maintain between themselves with reference to the one God of their faith?

Such tough questions defy a simple dismissal or acceptance of the claim that Muslims and Christians worship the same God. It would seem that President Bush’s claim is adequate insofar as there is only one God, but inadequate with respect to God’s character, on which hang matters of commitment and identity, the denial of which would sever our ties to God.

The Five Pillars of Islam, for example, lay down the boundaries of Muslim practice and identity, with the suggestion that conflicting or different things said about God cannot be equally valid. The Qur’an proclaims: "The true religion with God is Islam" (3:17), and "Today I have perfected your religion for you, and I have completed My blessing upon you, and I have approved Islam for your religion" (5:5).

Jesus made a corresponding exclusionary statement: "I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father, but by me" (John 14:6). Islam and Christianity both agree (and are similar here) that truth cannot coexist with its opposite, and is embodied in obedience.

It can be argued that what Christians and Muslims have in common theologically is more important than what divides them. This is Kenneth Cragg’s view, as in his remarks on the prayer tradition in Islam and Christianity (Alive to God: Muslim and Christian Prayers, 1970). Cragg also observes that Muslims and Christians no longer live in an isolated world. People of faith do not have the option of shutting themselves in. Can religious loyalties, he asks. "not be opened in their sympathies and fulfilled, outside their inner shape, in some exterior relationships?" Population, migration, production, development, health and medicine, family life, education -- are not all these in the Muslim and Christian traditions common invitations to worship and prayer rather than secular sanctuaries from which the divine is excluded?

The theological conversation about interfaith relations is important, Cragg accepts, but he thinks there is an equally urgent need to move beyond theological propositions and to be informed by what he calls "a community of reverence," "a converse of soul" in joint prayer and worship. The real test of dialogue is whether people in one faith community can make their own the prayers of another faith tradition, without making faith traditions predatory or obsolescent.

Cragg sees, for example, a bond between Lancelot Andrewes and Shah ‘Abd al-Latif, between Francis of Assisi and al-Ghazali, and between S0ren Kierkegaard and ‘Abd alQadir al-Jilani. Turbaned or not, Muslims are not exempt from a similar challenge. Religion today is all about crossing borders, physical as well as spiritual.

The desire for unity among religions, Cragg thinks, is a holy one. Yet that desire should not make us impatient with what sets us apart. Muslims and Christians agree on the great subject that God exists and that God is one. They disagree, however, about the predicates they use of God. Much of the Christian language about God affirms Jesus as God in self-revelation, and much of the Muslim language about God seeks exception to that Christian claim.

The question, then, is whether their differences condemn Muslims and Christians to estrangement before God as subject. If predicates divide, the subject unites, or should unite. In the things they do and say about God, religious people diverge quite sharply. Yet Muslims and Christians both agree that it is the one God about whom they differ so strongly.

They would not have differences without having in common this one God who inspires them and who lays a fundamental claim on their separate loyalty.

Christians pray "Hallowed be thy name," and Muslims declare "Thee only do we worship." Both ask for God’s guidance, but use different terms for this guidance even though finally it is God who does the guiding. "Guide us in the straight path," the Muslim says in the fatihah, and "Deliver us from evil," the Christian pleads in the Lord’s Prayer. In form and intention there is little to separate the two sides. Their disagreements are family feuds; their mutual jealousies, because of common ancestry; their sibling rivalry, on account of a common parentage.

People fight not just because they are different, but often because they are similar. Monotheist traditions are too close to ignore each other, with the effect that even their mutual compliments raise hackles, as the president’s remark demonstrates.

The bridge for interfaith understanding and peace grows from the principle of respect for the other. This respect offers an approach other than that of simplistic condemnation or approbation. It does not deny truth claims. On the contrary, affirmation of the other is based on truth claims: love of God and of neighbor, for example, is not just a polite suggestion, but the exacting absolute injunction of God who created us "in the image and resemblance of God." It is when God and the neighbor become relative values as matters of individual preference or personal convenience that red flags should start to go up.

This respect for the other, accordingly, is not the preserving of the status quo, which one interpretation of President Bush’s remark might suggest. A Muslim as Muslim cannot be content with mere comparative curiosity about and postponement of Muhammad and his achievements. He or she would commend public commitment to Islam’s truth claims. By the same token, a Christian as Christian may not he content with the view of Jesus as only an ethical example. She would plead personal faith in him as divine truth.

To commend faith in that fashion is to concede that Muslims and Christians are within range of each other, rather than being mutually inaccessible. Their separate or exclusive commendation of faith elicits their proximity to each other, at least enough so that they may engage in mutual scrutiny.

That very process of scrutiny and commendation will likely change previous understandings and attitudes, and will most likely produce commensurate alterations in their faith traditions: conversion causes not just numerical change but mental shifts as well. No faith tradition stands still or alone, except as a relic. Such are the implications of distinction in religious pluralism.

Rushdie’s Moral Hegira

Book Review:

The Satanic Verses, by Salman Rushdie. Viking, 547 pp., $19.95.

The story begins aboard flight Al-420 bound for London from Bombay. Over the skies of London the plane is blown apart by the bomb of a Sikh terrorist, and Gibreel and Saladin tumble out of the skies. As they fall they believe they are dead, but find that they are very much alive. They land, first as despised Asian immigrants in Britain, and then as extraterrestrial beings: Gibreel as the archangel himself, and Saladin as the devil. Gibreel roams the streets of London bent on saving lost souls, but he suffers strange dreams. One dream concerns Mahound, a businessman turned prophet (styled after the Prophet Muhammad, who was formerly in the caravan trade) , and another features Ayesha, beloved spouse of the Prophet, leading her people on a hazard-strewn pilgrimage. Saladin, having sprouted hair, horns and hoofs, finds himself an unwelcome immigrant and is arrested. He receives support from the immigrant community he had sought to avoid when he embarked for London, wishing to conquer the heights of British culture. He becomes the symbol of a double dilemma: of cultural alienation and of rejection by his adopted land.

When Saladin and Gibreel meet, Saladin succeeds in convincing Gibreel that the latter had been dreaming, and Gibreel wakes to madness. Then Saladin goads him into fits of jealous rage by hoax phone calls using different voices. The theme of "satanic verses," which Rushdie first develops with Gibreel insinuating his own ideas into the mind of prophet Mahound, now blossoms as poisoned ivy under Gibreel’s feet: "Violets are blue, roses are red/ I’ll get her right in my bed," the reference being to Allie Cone, Gibreel’s English paramour. Gibreel turns into a raging devil and thunders ruin and destruction on London. Out of the ashes Rushdie devises a saving moment: Saladin offers his life to save the immigrant community he had been loathe to identify with -- but Gibreel intervenes to stay his hand. So on the night of death and destruction, reconciliation triumphs in one corner of the city.

The violent eruptions occasioned by The Satanic Verses stem in part from Rushdie’s powers of evocation, which are considerable, and in part from the nature of Muslim religious sensibilities, which are also considerably profound, When Rushdie allows his characters to lapse into dream states, he creates the space to erect great structures of fancy and imagination -- though the structures connect most tangibly with, the real world. It would be easy to identify the passages in the book that have caused the most offense: the section dealing with Mahound, which also deals with the whole question of the "satanic verses," with reference to the well-known verses in the Qur’an (in surahs 53 and 21) that many commentators see as indicating a questionable Islamic monotheist compromise with Meccan polytheism. We then have a major section on Ayesha, who is later impersonated by one of the prostitutes, the whores of "The Curtain," and from that impersonation the reader is given full details of Ayesha’s strong-willed character, and the scandal involving her and an apparently innocent young man, Safwan, who rescues her on a desert trail only for idle tongues to wag about their alleged secret conduct. "The two young people had been alone in the desert for many hours, and it was hinted, more and more loudly, that Safwan was a dashingly handsome fellow, and the Prophet was much older than the young woman, after all, and might she therefore have been attracted to someone closer to her age? ‘Quite a scandal,’ Salman commented, happily. ‘What will Mahound do?’ Baal wanted to know. ‘O, he’s done it,’ Salman replied. ‘Same as ever. He saw his pet, the archangel, and then informed one and all that Gibreel had exonerated Ayesha.’" And so the dishonoring of Ayesha is remedied by an equal dishonoring of the revelation.

The issue of the Prophet himself receiving the revelation attracts considerable attention. As the Prophet receives the divine message, he has the archangel Gibreel, transformed into a character, first lurking in the shadows and then occupying the center stage with his elaborate dream concerning the city of Jahilia (jahiliyya = the pre-Islamic era of darkness and ignorance). In this section the blasphemous suggestion is made that the Qur’an has been tampered with by the archangel Gibreel who deliberately altered and falsified the message since he thought he was dealing with a gullible Prophet Mahound.

"Little things at first. If Mahound recited a verse in which God was described as all-hearing, all-knowing, I would write, all-knowing, all-wise. Here’s the point: Mahound did not notice the alterations. So there I was, actually writing the Book, or re-writing, anyway, polluting the word of God with my own profane language. But, good heavens, if my poor words could not be distinguished from the Revelation by God’s own Messenger, then what did that mean?" That assault on the integrity of the Qur’an ("Your blasphemy, Salman, can’t be forgiven. Do you think I wouldn’t work it out? To set your words against the Word of God," the reference being this time to Salman as Mahound’s official scribe) is spiced with gossip about Mahound’s womanizing and moral turpitude. By the time Gibreel’s dream ends, the denouement is still to come. But most Muslims would not wait for that.

Europeans and North Americans find it hard to appreciate the depth of outrage and anguish The Satanic Verses has caused in the Muslim world, and I am afraid that the issue of the death threat against the author has served merely to deepen confusion in the West. It has been easy for Westerners to sidestep the questions the book has raised and to take refuge in matters of freedom of speech, the limits of citizenship and state jurisdiction, due process and the rule of law -- a response that involves little cross-cultural awareness. As long as the West is reluctant to face the fact that for Muslims religion is not a matter for private, individual decision, it misunderstands what actuates the hopes and conduct of a significant part of the world and also conceals from itself the depth of its own religious roots.

Two aspects of the Islamic context of the novel call for comment. One is the status Muslims assign to the Qur’an and, by implication, to the Prophet Muhammad, its chosen bearer. One irate Muslim illustrated this issue in a personal letter to Rushdie in the New York Times. "The Muslim view is that even incorrectly reading the Koran is a cardinal sin. The Koran is neither read nor recited in translation for the very reason that translation might introduce alteration. This matter is deadly serious and to make it a subject of insensitive fantasy is equally serious" (S: Nomanul Haq, "Salman Rushdie, Blame Yourself," February 23, 1989)

That is a point ordinary Muslims around the world understand, but, alas, not so even sophisticated Westerners. When I have tried to introduce the idea of the nontranslatable Qur’an to my Harvard students and Western friends, one of their typical reactions is to think that, like Roman Catholics and the Latin Mass before the Second Vatican Council, Muslims will also soon come to realize the necessity for translation, which will then open them up to higher criticism. Consequently, many Westerners find, it difficult to recognize Islam on its own terms, and they mask that failure by a form of self-flattery and a unilateralism in which Islam is reduced to a sub-category of Christianity. The notion that Muslims would wish to follow in the footsteps of Christianity strikes many of us as self-evident, and so we have been slow to concede the full claims of Muslims for the special status of the Qur’an. Even the helpful suggestion by some Western scholars that the Qur’an should properly be compared to Jesus Christ in Christianity has failed to instruct or deter. After all, we recall, what fancy academic footwork have we not done in the name of "the quest for the historical Jesus"? So "the quest for the historical Qur’an" would be a logical complement, bringing Islam into line with Christianity.

The fact that Islam is a missionary religion with converts in numerous parts of the world, including the U.S., confirms people in their conviction that some process of translation must be taking place -- and it is. But our reluctance to concede the primacy of a non-translatable Qur’an in the central rites of Islam renders us tone deaf to Muslims’ attitudes toward it. Unfortunately, that reluctance extends to the obligatory nature of Muslim practice itself: we think it is not as important, for example, that Muslims are required to perform the prayers as that they pray. In that way we impose upon voluntary individualism o the

religion one professes than that one is free to profess it.

The second matter relates to the novel’s central device of employing the dream technique to develop and explore character. In an open letter to Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi of India, published in the New York Times (February 17) , Rushdie defended his use of dreams as an imaginative instrument. He said the portion of the book most offensive to Muslims "happens in a dream, the fictional dream of a fictional character, an Indian movie star, and one who is losing his mind, at that. How much further," he queried, "from history could one get?" Nevertheless, Rushdie goes on to say that he also uses the dream technique to offer his view of the phenomenon of revelation and "the birth of a great world religion," a paragraph unfortunately mangled by a printing flaw. In that comment Rushdie reveals that he is much closer to gut-level Islam than the fictive distance of a dream might indicate.

Much of the defense of Rushdie comes from writers who have argued that it is only religious naïveté that prevents Muslims from being able to distinguish between fact and fantasy. The religious zealots who have hounded Rushdie, we are told, have only literal minds and are thus a danger to liberal society and its cultivation of the ironic mind. To such zealots, the argument goes, we cannot entrust the crucial distinction between disagreement and suppression, nor expect "a relaxed child of the Enlightenment" to find congenial room in that frenzied company of bookburners. All of this talk, animated by mistrust of religion, evades a central responsibility of the West toward itself and the rest of the world.

For Muslims the dream is not a neutral category, or even, as Rushdie claims, a pathological state, which is also how the modern West views the subject. On the contrary, the dream has an exalted place in the Muslim tradition. The most authoritative Islamic writer on the subject, ‘Abd al-Ghani al-Nabulsi (1641-1731) , makes an explicit claim for dreams in his two-volume encyclopedic work. He says, "One who does not believe in dreams does not believe in God and the Last Day." He continues, "The knowledge of dreams is the first science from the beginning of creation and has never ceased to be bestowed on Prophets . . . who were instructed regarding the science until their Prophethood was demonstrated by means of it." Muslims believe that prophecy has 46 parts, and that the dream is one of them.

Thus it is not the literal mind of the religious zealot that prevents Muslims from seeing the difference between fact and fantasy or between dream and sanity, and we flatter ourselves if we think it is refined sensibility rather than cultural limitation that makes us strip dreams of any real significance. In this area, too, Western readers of The Satanic Verses may have missed a chance at self-understanding

Before pronouncing on Rushdie’s accomplishments in The Satanic Verses, it is necessary to examine some major themes that have emerged in the West in response to the novel.

The first theme is the most predictable, and it relates to what I described above as Western cultural self-flattery. This view says in effect that thanks to the Enlightenment the West has outgrown those obscurantist medieval habits that allowed religion to thrive, which were accompanied by repression, heresy trials and witch-hunts. The Enlightenment put up a steel barrier against that archaic age by giving us institutions and ideas that enshrine the liberty of the individual and freedom of conscience. As one Roman Catholic writer was at pains to point out for the benefit of the pope in view of Khomeini’s approach, the church does not live in the Middle Ages, and Muslims ought to be told so.

It does not require support for the late ayatollah to say that it demands a particularly agile imagination to collapse his Iran and its sophisticated technological accouterments into a past stage of Europe’s development. Such a conflation flatters (and misleads) only the West. It is a way of viewing Islam as in a telescope, encountering there in enlarged detail something of our Manichaean past now rendered obsolete by human evolution. However, this is a peculiarly partial evolutionary view, in which religion evolves but not the Enlightenment or the French Revolution. Islam is not a sub- category of the West, and seeing it in those terms merely perpetuates an image that is familiar, but also negative.

Another response has been to call for self-criticism. In the Times Literary Supplement, L. A. Siedentop writes:

The most poignant aspect of the debate unleashed by the Islamic response to Salman Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses is the confusion it has revealed in the West. The Christian or post-Christian nations are confused about their own identity to an astonishing extent. That confusion has two important consequences. It makes the West a less effective defender of certain values than it ought to be. And, second, it prevents the West from understanding what is happening throughout the world at the most important level, the level of belief. We have become rather unused to considering belief as the source of change ["Liberalism: The Christian Connection," March 24-39].

The crux of the problem, then, for us in North America is our inability or reluctance to see how religion, rather than market forces, can be a basis of social identity and personal motivation and be the fundamental source of value. Whereas in the West "truth" exists as a function of organized will and its eventuality in success, for Muslims the social, economic, political and military orders are all expressions of a fundamental religious truth. Whereas we put religion in the sphere of private life and promote economic pursuits -- such as transnational corporate trade and dealings on the stock market -- to the level of universal norms, Muslims accord that status to matters religious. Islam is the religious counterpart to the transnational corporate enterprise; the Qur’an the imperishable stock, so to speak, in which all believers have a joint share; and pilgrimage to Mecca the goal and reward for personal and collective endeavor. All this has implications for our practice of separating private and public, church and state, the public order and civil society, state jurisdiction and individual rights, criminal law and civil justice, and so on.

Rather than taking at face value Western rhetoric about itself as individualistic, secular and materialistic, and thus as an avowedly non-religious mode of civilization, we should recognize the deep religious roots from which these so-called secular values stem. Western liberalism, as Siedentop has cogently argued, is itself the offshoot of the Christian religious heritage, especially in its Protestant variety: liberalism is Protestant Christianity purged of its ritual and sacramental content. The rise of the modern West is at heart the rise of the free individual, the free individual conceived as a moral agent imbued with an inviolable conscience, and thus the linchpin of the religious project of personal autonomy in a redeemed world.

One facet of the West’s religious legacy is the sense of the sanctity of life; that idea has both ontological roots and an incarnational metaphysic. The apparent reckless abandon with which a Muslim leader could call for the death of a writer offends not just our notions of due process or even the boundaries of state jurisdiction but our view of this life as our hallowed destiny. We think to die for religious truth is an act of blind zeal, whereas Muslims think to die just for national honor is an act of infidelity. Both sides justify death, but the West places national interest before religion, and Muslims do the reverse. There are, of course, many areas of complexity, with national honor sometimes taking on a religious guise on both sides. However, with the doctrine of the separation of church and state, the West found itself having to deal with death, but unable completely to do so within the limited discourse of military force and the public will.

In the novel, Rushdie has embarked on a peculiarly distinctive journey for which the book may be seen as both transcript and affidavit. The grand theme of The Satanic Verses is the transition from the individual as the representative of a collective heritage to the individual as an autonomous, psychic entity. One may speak of it as a transition from the social solidarity so characteristic of the non-Western world to the spirit of personal responsibility of the West provided, of course, one also realizes that such transitions are taking place among persons who have not journed to the West. In one place in the novel a dialogue articulates this theme. "Tell your son," Changez booms at Nasreen, "that if he went abroad to learn contempt for his own kind, then his own kind can feel nothing but scorn for him." The isolation of a foreign country makes those words ring several decibels above the tolerable limit. Thus the novelist speaks of his adopted England as "a peculiar-tasting smoked fish full of spikes and bones, and nobody would ever tell you how to eat it."

Among the writers who have explored that theme in the West we find the same wrestling with the norms of inherited tradition, the same anguished questioning, as if to know oneself one has to test, and even exceed, the bounds of propriety. And as we know from the great writers of every age, the revolt against convention can be a sort of faith, a conviction as deep as what it tries to overthrow. In a mature resolution of this tension we may get a reflection of the positive elements of tradition outside its dogmatic straitjacket.

Rushdie himself is well aware of where he is aiming his blows. In a passage of prophetic significance, he writes: "A man who sets out to make himself up is taking on the Creator’s role, according to one way of seeing things; he’s unnatural, a blasphemer, an abomination of abominations. From another angle, you could see pathos in him, heroism in his struggle, in his willingness to risk . . ." That project, of exploring the spirit and limits of being human, is, of course, a deeply characteristic quality of Western literature and philosophy, from St. Augustine to Thomas Merton, from Meister Eckhart to William James and Albert Camus. For its sake people are prepared to undergo singular privations and take enormous risks. And it cannot, seemingly, be done without unscrambling tradition, at least without measuring oneself against its ultimate sanctions.

In Rushdie’s case those ultimate sanctions happen to be Islamic. Whatever his personal attitude toward the Islamic heritage, he cannot unglue himself from it. On the contrary, his own project of personal freedom is bound up with what risks he is prepared to take with that aspect of his past, a past that also shapes and forms his present. He would not dispute that we cannot divest ourselves completely of our cultural formation. And so he experiments with Islamic culture, turns it inside out and upside down, flirts with it, chucks it aside, and performs endless dissections and experimentations to see whether truth can withstand the cut and thrust of human manipulation. For if it cannot, then it is not worth having.

But after we have dealt with ourselves as severely and as mercilessly as we are capable and still find at the center of being an insistent voice of truth, then where is left to hide? Wherever that leaves us, whether with an awakened sense of cosmic harmony or the frightful feeling of confronting an indifferent or hostile Power, we can never understand ourselves completely without reference to that existential struggle. So what defines us, then, is not our capacity to submit blindly to authority, or to carry out its extreme orders, but to face ourselves without the crutches of secondhand faith, or secondhand doubt. In that sense the novel sees the new conditions of exile as a fresh hegira, "emigration," a new moral condition demanding a response somewhat analogous to the response of religious people to a revelation. Thus constituted as a universal religious analogy, secular England assumes a moral imperative for all muhajirin, "emigrants," and is thus an apt analogue to the Medina of the first Muslim emigrants. The exiled Rushdie in the secular West, then, must, like the candle, provide illumination by consuming his own heritage.

Concerning the issue of immigration as a process of creative cross-cultural encounter and not simply as unthinking conformism to received dogma, Fuentes says the mission of all great literature is to be "a harbinger of a multipolar and multicultural world, where no single philosophy, no single belief, no single solution, can shunt aside the extreme wealth of mankind’s cultural heritage. Our future depends on the enlarged freedom for the multiracial and the polycultural to express itself in a world of shifting, decaying and emerging power centers." I find in The Satanic Verses a recollection of that great theme.

A New Moon Sensitivity (Amos 8:4-7, I timothy 2:1-8, Luke 16:1-3)

The scripture readings for the 18th Sunday after Pentecost contain an extraordinary consistency. Amos 8:4-7 describes God pressing a serious charge against his people for oppressing the poor and seeing religion as an annoying "new moon" inconvenience. The Epistle reading in I Timothy 2:1-8 speaks of the cessation of anger and quarreling as marks of the godly life. The Gospel reading in Luke 16:1-13 speaks of a labor dispute in which a dishonest worker faces dismissal and shrewdly maneuvers in a final gambit to win himself friends among his employer’s debtors. Some form of quarrel or controversy appears in all the readings. The resolution offered in all three passages is also remarkably similar: God recruits the prophet to plead on behalf of the poor and needy; Timothy recruits the community for a vocation of holiness; and the crafty worker fiddles with the books to recruit sympathy for himself.

Amos describes how religious people find it irksome to wait for the new moon before they resume oppressing the poor. The reference to the moon ironically may be lost on modern suburbanites. Except for Christianity, which made the momentous change, most major religious traditions have adopted the lunar calendar, even though it conflicts with the agricultural cycle and its solar system. The lunar calendar, based on a much shorter month, does not coincide with the seasons, and is thus more suited to an urban lifestyle of purchase, profit and power.

Amos stood at the critical juncture between two cultures. He saw the forces of a lunar-based culture colliding with those of the solar, agricultural culture. The commercial instincts acquired from selling and from juggling accounts and weights and measures intrude violently on "the poor of the land" who cultivate a different sort of goods. The habit of selling and juggling, evident also in the Gospel story, encourages people to develop an instrumental view of religion, a view that allows us to use people, or God, for our ends. Producers and cultivators appeal to a different set of attitudes, to cooperation, fortitude and community.

The profit motive that drives the wheels of the acquisitive society also "tramples upon the needy," and upon the prophet’s exposed nerves. And so Amos reacts by threatening natural convulsions. He calls for justice to freak in with solar power and banish the shadows of oppression. True religion for Amos is a matter of high ethical seriousness, of dealing scrupulously with oneself and others, rather than disinheriting the poor of the land.

Or, as it may happen, the poor of the city. A few years ago a classy new doll made its appearance in the elegant Copley Place Mall in Boston prior to its going on sale nationally for anywhere between $49 and $500. This pricey bit of merchandise, which its owners described as a work of art and a piece of America, was the "bag lady" doll, made by Donald Gourley of California. The doll is the alchemical apotheosis of the starving street man and woman, adorned with gilded trivia and the rag-tag litter that a consumer society throws up. When the National Coalition for the Homeless protested about businesses "paying more attention to a homeless doll than the homeless themselves," the manufacturer responded that "bag ladies are part of America," and, furthermore, said that "the doll is clean, the doll is cute." Amos would have fired back with laser-packed accuracy, "The Lord has sworn by the pride of Jacob: ‘Surely I will never forget any of their deeds."’

Amos’s protest cuts into the situation and exposes its contradictions. Similarly, when the National Coalition for the Homeless speaks to the issue of the ‘bag lady’ doll, it draws attention to the contradiction that allows institutions, whether commercial or academic, to profit in the name of the poor. It questions the widely accepted idea of enterprise as its own standard and reward, an idea that fosters a ruthless, instrumental notion of people as items in a game of purchase and profit.

I recall a conversation with a friend who had been an architect of the ill-fated Investor’s Overseas Services and Dreyfus Fund, a financial management company of Robert Vesco and Bernie Cornfeld fame. At the end of a long car journey in Europe I asked what would happen if the IOS bubble burst: would he think its principle worth defending? He replied with some satisfaction that he would defend the enterprise as having brought hope to ordinary workers. This was 1966. In 1973 I met him again in Cambridge, Massachusetts, a broken man, living, he said, on social security, and bitter about what he called the greed and duplicity of men who had brought down his life’s work and that of thousands of ordinary people. In 1983 on a visit to Lagos, Nigeria, a prominent local businessman told me that IOS agents were selling portfolios there long after the collapse had set in -- a piece of callous cynicism, he thought. In the words of Amos, these agents are people who make "the ephah small and the shekel great, and deal deceitfully with false balances," who buy "the poor for silver and the needy for a pair of sandals, and sell the refuse of the wheat."

I was once overheard by somebody connected with Harvard Business School describing one of my courses at Harvard Divinity School as "Prophet Movements." My friend, obviously mishearing, commented about being surprised that religious scholars had anything to say on "profits" in the marketplace. For Amos the connection between "profits" and "prophets" was more than a matter of literary elision. His words crackle with a telling contemporary ring.

In the prophet’s scheme, then, "bag ladies," and the exploited masses they represent, are not just a functional warrant for justifiable anger and protest, but occasions for stern judgment on an acquisitive society whose greed knows no season of truce. The prophet intercedes with an appeal for a "new moon" sensitivity, for a break in the unrelenting calendar of grinding oppression, to observe God’s higher law. The prophet thus evokes the poet’s exultant cry, "Gloria in profundis Deo," "Glory to God in the lowest."

Lamin Sanneh

Naming and the Act of Faith (II Tim. 1:5)

The Apostle Paul understands that there is no inherent conflict between the personal and communal aspects of faith. No human being is born an orphan. We are all born into a family. The Bantus of South Africa say, Umuntu, ngamuntu, ngabantu -- a person is a person because of other persons. We are born into relationship, we grow and live in relationship and we die in relationship. Our modern Western notion of personal independence and psychic autonomy distorts the truth about us. Transposed into African, the sophisticated Cartesian formulation Cogito ergo sum, "I think, therefore I am," would read Cognatus ergo sum, "I am related, therefore I am." To the question "Who are you?" the African would answer, "I am my mother’s and father’s child, of the lineage of so-and-so, of the house of X and Y, of the tribe of Z." By which time the impatient European or American has moved on to other matters. Yet the Bible is replete with such genealogical material, and even Jesus is situated in its repetitive detail.

Although faith challenges individuals, heroic individualism does not exhaust faith’s fullness and power. At its heart is the gift of memory, the ability to recall and reappropriate. Faith does not just arouse and satisfy the craving for individual gratification or fill our hunger for self-esteem, important as those things are. Faith connects us with others, grants us a name and an identity by which we can respond to God’s call, and assures us that others know that name. Thus is established the social roots of person-hood. When those roots are touched then the branches of my being stir in response. A baptismal is thus the symbol of our integrity, the cup of sacrament filled with the whole body. When Africans name a child at a dedication ceremony they think of it as giving life, the abundant life of relatedness.

And so the apostle affirms Timothy’s faith by a threefold naming -- the names of his grandmother and mother and his own name. Wherever the faith has spread it has promoted and been promoted by this sense of names. As long as our names exist the church has hope of continuing community.

Our despairing age needs to be reminded of the Christian perspective on names. Naming is a form of theological reasoning, a kind of discourse in divine relatedness. Scripture abounds with examples of naming as invocation, supplication, vocation and answerability. Genesis speaks of the unnamed void as chaos, a profound psychological insight. The secular tendency to see naming either as a diagnostic procedure or a judicial investigation acts like a vacuum, removing the thick layers of human interconnectedness. Religion rests on that interconnectedness. Naming lies at the center of healing and wholeness. With it we remember, recollect, respond, act and celebrate. Without it we invoke the chaos of Genesis, the chaos of modern disenchantment -- diseases are named and individuals unnamed in hospitals and clinics; offenders are deprived of their names in courts and jails; the namelessness in workplaces drives people to despair.

But recall a name, and you impart life; make it a family name, and you bring eternity to earth. We do not have to be Kantian or Dukheimian to understand this. A name is a burning bush that illuminates human centeredness. Timothy, child of Eunice, child of Lois, is not his own. Like Israel, he is united in his parents, scattered in the tribe and gathered under the covenant. His name is fed by blood, nurtured by human milk and inscribed in the soul. When it is called he answers as no one else can, the natural bow of the branch toward the stem.

A well-known parable makes the point in another way. It speaks of a holy man who received a turkey as a gift from one of his devotees who knew it was his favorite meat. Following a large feast, the religious teacher was confronted a week later by some visitors who had heard about the feast. They were fed the leftovers. Thus began a stream of visitors, each expecting to be fed by the teacher’s dwindling larder. Finally the last batch of visitors came, introducing themselves as the friends of the friends of the relatives of the devotee who gave the turkey. To the guests’ chagrin the teacher emerged from the kitchen bearing a bowl of hot water. He emulated their formality by assuring them that in the bowl was the hot water from the soup from the leftovers from the turkey that his disciple brought him. No further visitors disturbed him. The formal character of the story conceals a crucial point with regard to naming. The mere ceremony over a bowl of hot water is not enough to pass for real food. Yet human beings expend vast resources to defend forms that have little content and therefore little capacity to nurture, and religious authorities are among the most culpable. Even a gifted teacher is powerless to nurture people whose sole reason for coming is a remote connection to someone else’s name. Name-dropping is not only socially tedious, it is spiritually empty.

 

Human Folly on a Grand Scale (Amos 6:4; I Tim. 6:9)

The readings for the 19th Sunday after Pentecost confirm the ascetic ideal, the wisdom that says that we should be divested of this world and its pleasures. Clearly, if we curbed our appetite, or otherwise practiced self-control, we would be none the worse for wear. But the texts’ ascetic ideal also applies to the balance between society and the natural world.

Amos declares, "Woe to those who lie upon beds of ivory, and stretch themselves upon their couches, and eat lambs from the flock, and calves from the midst of the stall" (6:4) . The reference to ivory opens a burning ecological issue: the threatened extinction of the elephant. The process began a hundred years ago when virgin forests were invaded and European technology was hitched to the colonial juggernaut to open up east and central Africa. European officials had little understanding of the profound environmental consequences of their actions. Colonial pioneering and blood-sport shared a deep affinity, and Africa offered superabundant opportunities for both. Young men came out to earn their spurs, and glory for the nation. The trails they blazed through the heart of the continent encouraged the reckless destruction of wildlife habitat.

In his deeply evocative book The End of the Game. Peter Beard describes the history of the assault on the majestic game life of east and central Africa. The story includes the saga of a young Cambridge graduate, Ewart Scott Grogan, who vowed to walk from Cape Town to Cairo to convince a reluctant would-be father-in-law to give his daughter in marriage. Setting out in February 1898, Grogan plunged into Africa in Homerian pursuit of his romantic prize, ascending Africa from southern tip and emerging at the other end, to everyone’s consternation. Africa’s mystery had been dispelled, and a whole continent of over 11.7 million square miles lay prostrate, waiting for an avid Europe to subdue it at its spine and limbs.

Europe wasted little time in asserting its authority. Completing the east-west Uganda railroad in December 1901, Europeans laid plans for a south-north line. The Uganda railroad had been built in fiendishly difficult terrain. Although it ran for a fraction of the distance, it paralleled in scale, feat and daring Grogan’s south-north march. The Rift Valley that cuts the continent in two had to be sewn together by tracks, clips and clamps. Workers progressed across the 29-mile Rift through volcanic rock and over steam vents on the valley floor, and then descended from a summit of over 8,000 feet to Lake Victoria in the valley below -- a feat requiring 11,845 running feet of viaducts, some up to 881 feet long and more than 110 feet above the earth. When it was done, the railway consisted of 582 miles of permanent track, weighing 50 pounds per yard, with 162 bridges. The men had dug 326 culverts, laid more than 1,000 drainpipes and erected 41 stations.

Europe used the railroad to penetrate the continent in remorseless pursuit of game: lions, leopards, gazelles, rhinos, hippopotami and especially elephants and their precious tusks. The animals reacted to this intrusion with elemental rage. Beard writes:

Big game and small plagued the workers. Rhinoceros charged. as if out of nowhere, even at trains going at full speed; and even some of Africa’s humblest creatures, the tiny caterpillars, got into the act, riddling bridge timbers and making heavy repairs necessary. The caterpillars also had the habit of crawling over the tracks. Whenever a locomotive hit this sea of ripples, the engine could get no traction and the wheels would spin and whine and splatter gore in every direction.

Carnage ensued on a staggering scale. "The tragic paradox of the white man’s encroachment," Beard comments, was that the "deeper he went into Africa, the faster life flowed out of it, off the plains and out of the bush and into the cities, vanishing in acres of trophies and hides and carcasses."

My native home is at Chajanlot, in the

thana of Domli, which is in the district of Jhelium,

and I have related this story as it actually occurred.

Patterson Sahib has left me, and I shall miss him as long as I live;

And now Roshan must roam about in Africa, sad and regretful.

Nearly 2,500 of the Indians died, and over 6,400 were permanently maimed, a casualty surpassed only by that of wild game.

The apostolic rebuke seems relevant here, too. "But those who desire to be rich fall into temptation, into a snare, into many senseless and hurtful desires that plunge humankind into ruin and destruction" (I Tim. 6:9) . Our natural environment stands to benefit if we can curb our appetite, restricting it to the "food and raiment" (I Tim. 6:8) necessary for life and comfort.

Lamin Sanneh

Tales of Miraculous Healing (Luke 17:19)

"Your faith has made you well" [Luke17:19].

However, in the long history of the fruitful interaction of science and religion, from Pythagoras to Paracelsus and from Newton to Einstein, the role of religion (though not necessarily of religious authorities) in freeing human powers has generally been recognized. Francis Bacon put it memorably: science should not see nature "as a courtesan for pleasure, but a spouse for fruit." "Pleasure" in that context stands for instrumental detachment and exploitation, while "fruit" carries the sense of ethical and social accountability. The notion that physical matter is a neutral raw datum would be foreign to Bacon and the other great 17th-century scientific pioneers. Nature for them was God’s Book, inscribed with holy laws every bit as valid as the laws of the other book. Holy Scripture.

What led these thinkers to include religion in their account of the scientific enterprise was more than habit. An important philosophical principle was at stake: whether the immutable laws of science held human destiny in their iron clasp -- whether, indeed, human destiny was fixed irrevocably in the remote stellar constellations and the laws of physics. leaving us with fatalistic resignation as the only reasonable choice -- or whether. as religion was inclined to see it, human beings were free to participate in the cumulative construction of the universe. In the debate between freedom and necessity, religion was a force for integration: God endowed us with free will without removing us from responsibility for that freedom. The laws of causation are thus distinguished, though not separated, from the faculty (and faith) that apprehends them. The 15th-century Renaissance scientist Pico della Mirandola articulates this view, by putting these words into God’s mouth: "We have made thee ["man"] neither a thing celestial nor a thing terrestrial, neither mortal nor immortal, so that being thine owne fashioner and artificer of thyselfe, thou maist make thyselfe after what likeness thou dost most affecte." His view was that "man containeth in himself the stars and heaven, they lie hidden in his minde . . . if we rightly knew our owne spirite no thing at all would be impossible to us on earth." Only a short step separates this notion from Jesus’ teaching that faith, like a grain of mustard seed, can move the figurative sycamore tree of natural obstacles (Luke 17:5).

When we have thought of healing miracles as divine intervention, we have tended to think of an intrusion that violates the laws of nature, a contradiction that can be resolved either by an unwarranted elasticizing of those laws or by disallowing divine intervention. But the issue may be recast from confrontation on the physical plane to constructive engagement on the social. In most societies outside the West. and including many inside the West, illness is a social phenomenon that calk for social intervention. The quantitative view of illness is regarded by most Third World peoples as woefully inadequate, for in their experience illness evokes a social response: family members, friends and relatives are drawn into a widening circle of caring. The whole group is afflicted, though it is the individual who bears the pain. The time of illness is thus the time of recapitulating natural and acquired bonds, of summing up the connectedness by which personhood springs into being, of renewing human relatedness even while one of its strands is unraveling. The most typical question in illness under these circumstances is, "Why should this particular person fall ill at this particular time?" Only those most connected to the patient can ask that question, whereas perfect strangers may ask the stark clinical question, "What is the illness from which this person suffers?" That question, narrowly considered, reduces the patient to the level of inert matter, "a courtesan for pleasure," not "a spouse for fruit."

Divine intervention may be viewed as a prognostic charter for social intervention. We are roused to action on behalf of sick persons in our community, and we reach for the deepest and most abiding center of personhood in dedicating them by the divine gift of freedom to God’s care and concern. Only with that religious and social sense can we erect a safety barrier, for example, between someone who is terminally ill and the pessimism that would be induced by the laws of natural causation.

One of-the most dreaded diseases in all societies has been leprosy, because of its social stigma. Instead of intervening to help, people turned the other way and cut off all contact. The patient died a social death much sooner and far worse than physical death. It was in such ~a situation that Jesus intervened, as recounted in the Gospel reading (Luke 17:11-19) , commanding the patient to go and appear in the presence of priests, the symbols and upholders of purity. Jesus puts the leprosy patients on the path of breaking out of isolation and individuality. Their willingness to go acts as a solvent on the constrictions of the flesh. They will henceforth be in contact with others. There is no such thing as closet Christianity, or closet healing.

In the new churches that have mushroomed all over postcolonial Africa, congregations are filled with worshipers seeking and finding healing. Conversion testimonies are redolent with accounts of miraculous healing, of God dealing effectively with maladies of every kind, including mending broken relationships. It is from this movement of rehabilitation that we find people once considered strangers to the promises "returning and giving praise to God" whose "mercies e’er endure, ever faithful, ever sure.

The Spirit in Sound Doctrine (II Timothy 1; II Timothy 3:14-4:5)

In II Timothy 1 Paul speaks with confidence about the genealogical roots of faith, and now in II Timothy 3:14-4:5 he returns to the theme with an eye to preparing someone for the Christian vocation. He encourages Timothy to "continue in what you have learned and have firmly believed, knowing from whom you learned it and how from childhood you have been acquainted with the sacred writings."

It is hard to imagine the world of first-century Christians. Our arts of ministry courses are a far cry from those that guided Paul. So different, in fact, that we may say that churches today would rather "accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own likings" (II Tim. 4:3) than hire those with sound doctrine. We call it by many fancy names: ministry of relevance, contextualism or empowerment, finding meaning for ourselves, taking charge of our lives, liberation, and so on. The basic premise in all of it is that what the church teaches is secondary, a distraction from what it does. Our activist natures extol the material and social at the expense of theology and orthodox doctrine.

But if the church is wrong in what it teaches, then it cannot instruct in what it does. And if its actions contradict its words, then the church has failed in both heaven and earth. Christianity may be easier said than done, but it is not done unless it is said. In our age of conflicts, the church may be the one institution where two extremes join. We may speak of the church as "Mens sana in corpore sano," "a sound mind in a sound body." The socially committed branches of Christian outreach must have their roots in sound doctrine. Western philosophy has been bedeviled by the controversy of whether being precedes thought, or vice versa, leading often to arid speculations about, for example, whether God created the world or thought it. The apostles, however, speak confidently of Christ’s visible body as the focus and expression of the creative word in sound doctrine.

This vital connection between word and life is evident in the story of a man suffering from a fatal motor neurone disease, called amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. He had read an article by a secular journalist, Michael Ignatieff, who criticized those who suffer from terminal illness and refuse to accept death without a struggle.

According to Ignatieff, such patients are proof that modern people "lack a category of fate and a language for accepting it." They are victims of "the unrelenting language of American uplift" in contrast to the "European virtues of irony and stoicism." Ignatieff and the hospitalized man who read his article met at the care center in British Columbia, and conversed by means of a computer terminal and a printer and tube next to the patient’s mouth. The patient blew a Morse code signal into the tube which then generated letters on the computer screen.

The patient’s strong religious faith irked the journalist, who rebuked him for not throwing in the towel. The patient explained that he knew the difference between "giving up and letting go," and that even people in his apparently hopeless situation could make that choice. Stoicism, he said, catching something of Zeno’s original despair, is not much of a motivator. As a stoic, he said, he would have caved in long before. Instead, he said, "I face each day with a prayer." The journalist protested: "I can’t pray, won’t pray, to someone who makes [you] suffer like this."

Ignatieff departed, less impressed with the spirit that sustained the patient than by the precious words he flashed on the computer screen. Ignatieff later wrote, "He has become the word man, the one who taps out messages from deep inside the dark well of illness. I think: we are the word" (the Observer, June 18, 1989) Ignatieff did not understand that it is because the "dark well of illness" is ablaze with the word that was with God at the beginning that words in general are of great account. For it is "in thy light that we are bathed with light" (Ps. 36:9)

Ignatieff correctly points out that most people have exchanged Christian hope and encouragement for an austere and disenchanted stoicism. However, stoicism has a knock-out boomerang effect: it elevates matter only to despair of it. It is, more than Ignatieff suspects, just as true that "the spirit lives by the word" as that the spirit lives in the word and the word dwells with us. The church transmits the word of life and hope in doing as in teaching.

Christian teaching, as Paul admonishes, is passionate and consistent, fearless and compassionate, truthful and patient, challenging and encouraging, embracing and discriminating, affirming and critical. If we lose confidence in that, nothing else will compensate. Sound doctrine, of course, is not the same as doctrinaire stubbornness, nor a facade for secondhand faith. Like a sound pillar, sound doctrine can uphold a house of many mansions, more spacious than our triumphant modem "little boxes" sitting on top of featureless, impersonal elevators.

Sound doctrine has deep social roots, not merely the ephemeral ones in wealth, strength, prestige and power -- though, thank goodness, the church has its share of those -- but also in humanity’s awesome diversity. Doctrine is the timeless beam that skirts like steel girdles this mansion of our earthly life. Our enemy is not fear or anxiety, though they perturb and distract, but doubt and despair, for they deny and enslave. And so we must heed the apostle’s words and in everything give thanks to God. The church must "preach the word, be urgent in season [when it is relatively easy] and out of season [when it is unfashionable], convince, rebuke, and exhort, be unfailing in patience and teaching" (II Tim. 4:2) and "always be steady, endure suffering," anchored in sound doctrine and nurtured from Scripture, to the end "that the people of God may be complete. equipped for every good work" (II Tim. 3:14)

Waiting on God (Isa. 35:1f)

The book of Isaiah juxtaposes desperate need with glorious abundance and speaks to people who know the first condition so well they find it hard even to dream about the second. Isaiah writes of the wilderness and dry land being glad, of the desert swarming with healthy blossoms, of people once wracked by "fearful hearts, weak hands and feeble knees" -- including the blind, the deaf, the lame and the dumb -- now forming the first ranks of those who shall possess the new bounty (Isa. 35:lf.) According to the prophet, the marginal and the excluded will be featured in God’s kingdom. Their voice shall be heard with resounding power on earth and in heaven and streams shall rise from the wilderness and the celestial anthem fill our ears.

The prophet speaks with such conviction that we assume he shares the plight of those he describes. It is, therefore, an act of astonishing courage scarcely short of divine command that the prophet offers a reason and purpose for waiting: God will bring the reward of superabundant blessing. How can he be so sure, we ask, and what makes him able to put his honor on the line?

Western culture is adverse to waiting. Waiting seems like a cop -- out, a refusal to face the facts. No doubt often when we "leave it all in God’s hands," God intends to leave it in ours. Such moments are ambiguous -- like the motto I saw on a West African taxi (called a "Mammy wagon") Usually overloaded with passengers, these vehicles careen down roads in dreadful disrepair, sometimes causing fatal accidents. One vehicle had the words: "Give all to God" painted on it, meaning: "I the proprietor give all praise to God for this vehicle and for the lucrative business it has given me." Considering the travel hazards, the motto might also imply that the vehicle carries blood offerings!

Despite the ambiguities of the moment, the Western attitude toward waiting is too extreme when it rejects the idea of a future that transcends finite boundaries. Material determinism is one philosophy people use to dismiss such transcendence, although there are numerous other monistic systems that compete for the honor. The fact is that the religious life involves far more than killing time, far more, for example, than sticking out one’s hand in a gesture of otherworldly defiance and running down the clock, though heaven knows we need gestures of religious defiance in today’s world. At the heart of the religious claim is the notion that "there and then" as well as "here and now" are radically relativized.

Religious people have an obligation to deabsolutize and destigmatize the tempo-ml order in order to consecrate it for service and witness. Such a process is consummated by imposing on the temporal order the idea of "waiting on God." This notion is not an excuse from engaging in service, but the bridle and rule of service. Waiting on God is "work" in the religious sense of being actively mindful of God’s presence and of our accountability.

The religious calendar helps us wait by punctuating the year with certain observances, dissolving the secular routine’s corrosive effects. Religious norms often reverse, and thereby rehabilitate, worldly standards. Periodically invoking those norms generates fresh awareness and understanding, much as hot and cold air combine to produce a shower. The religious calendar is a tool for spiritual training and also for social change, for the obedience and commitment we learn result in a qualitatively different way of assessing the world. Through its rules of observance, including those of Advent, the religious calendar inserts something fresh into a blandly secular worldview, and provides an example that secular reformers may emulate. That religious people may be in the minority, or that only a minority of such people may observe the calendar, only heightens the significance of the observance. And the small number of those participating is more than counterbalanced by the rites’ symbolic inclusiveness.

The theological element in Advent waiting is the promise that God’s word shall do God’s bidding. Some theologians see this notion as polydaemonistic or idolatrous. Do religious words, especially God’s names, contain a special power or force that is activated by the uttering of them? Such a view usually either offends our monotheistic sympathies or raises our rational hackles, so we classify it as primitive. However, theology need not submit to the nemesis of historical relativism or of a linear anthropology for its work to be valid. God has staked the divine honor on the project to redeem and sanctify, thereby giving authority to prophetic work. In that sense especially, perhaps only, is God’s word powerful; it places God at the center of our ventures, as the first and final surety. The distance between this kind of God and that implied in dynamic magic is the distance between the sublime and the ludicrous. God’s word is not a remote transmitter that poses no risk to God; rather it is field contact fraught with unconditional self-giving. The other side of that coin is self-denial, the divine abatement of a gulf that human striving cannot bridge but only widen.

Christians, therefore, wait for the feast to come with grateful hearts even though in the interim their minds are set on unresolved troubles and unreachable horizons. Advent is quality time, not because of its loquacious and crowded demands, but because it provides a time for us to receive God’s word and to collaborate in its fulfillment by being the connecting rod between vision and action.

The Letter to the Hebrews catches the season’s mood with words that should be on our minds:

Let us then go to him outside the camp, bearing the stigma that he bore. For here we have no permanent home, but we are seekers after the city which is to come. Through Jesus, then, let us continually offer up to God the sacrifice of praise, that is, the tribute of lips which acknowledge his name, and never forget to show kindness and to share what you have with others: for such are the sacrifices which God approves 113:13-16].

The Owl in the Daylight (Rom. 13:11; Mark 4:22; Luke 8:17; 11:33)

But in the readings for the First Sunday in Advent, Paul instructs the believers "to wake from sleep" because "the night is far gone, the day is at hand" (Rom. 13:11) For Paul, as for the more mystical religions, the day-night division is a symbol of spiritual transformation. But for Paul the inversion is not so simple. The Christian must maintain the owllike perspective throughout the day. While the average person is numbed by relentless daily pressure, the owl retreats from clamorous pursuit. The owl represents refuge from the day’s flare. The mature Christian utilizes the mystical ability to be "awake" to things kept in the dark and thus has a new perspective and an alertness to the passing day)

This "daytime" orientation stems from Christianity’s fateful encounter with gnosticism. Ever since, Christians have had an ambivalent attitude toward secrecy and mystical religion, although Pauline (and especially Johannine) language is steeped in the idiom. That ambivalence came to a head in the 16th-century Western church and conditioned the atmosphere that produced the Enlightenment. After the secret laws of nature were unmasked, educated opinion swung decisively to the side of "daylight" empiricism.

Christianity survived the corresponding abrogation of all things mystical. The gospel had confirmed for primitive Christians that God’s word was completely compatible with everyday language and that the most profound truths about God could be expressed in common speech. The church itself was characterized by a relentless pursuit of common human vessels as fitting channels for the received word. Consequently, historical records such as the anonymous Epistle to Diognetus speak confidently of Christianity’s public, open and accessible nature. (Hence the tension between the church and the great mystery religions that flourished in the empire and the still unresolved tension with Freemasonry.)

When the question of Christianity’s public nature dominated discussion in the 16th century, Erasmus, among others, spoke eloquently of the Scriptures being as much the property of simple, uneducated people as that of educated elites.

The point is that Christianity brought cumulative pressure to bear on the need for religion to take its place in open society, and for Christians to eschew secrecy without repudiating the rule of confidence. Jesus himself speaks of the gospel as a lamp that does not hide and is not hidden (Mark 4:22; Luke 8:17; 11:33) To his critics Jesus replies: "I have spoken openly to all the world . . . I have said nothing in secret" (John 18:20) When he enjoined secrecy, Jesus often had in mind that his followers practice good works in secret, without show or trumpetry. Those who insist that people have a right to understand, that communication must enlighten and not confound, that esoteric jargon and technical verbiage are the enemies of truth, are inheritors of the Christian religious revolution. We are children of the day, though we may not be home when the church comes knocking.

But although Christianity dispensed with secrecy, the command to conduct "ourselves becomingly as in the day" is qualified by the rule that, like the more mystical religions, we must renounce the works of the day and strengthen the inner person. From that juxtaposition arises the impulse to faith, hope and love, the springs of a decent, responsible society.

Dreams and Letting God Be God (Isa. 7:10-17)

In the lectionary reading for the fourth Sunday of Advent, Ahaz declines to ask God for a sign lest he put God to the test and thus be guilty of what Scripture elsewhere denounces as spiritual presumption. God answers by saying that if Ahaz will not ask for a sign then God will give him one (Isa. 7:10-17) , which must have knocked the wind out of Ahaz’s sails. It turns out that Ahaz’s modesty is a pretext for avoiding responsibility.

When does our own sound religious conviction become a denial of religious responsibility? This is not the same problem T. S. Eliot describes in Murder in the Cathedral whereby a religious person arranges circumstances so as to obtain personal vindication, thus using the greater cause to serve the lesser. Rather, it has to do with a piety that plays on the proper theme of creaturely subordination to God in order to escape deeper forms of obedience. Keeping to God’s side may thus require our contravening a faithful norm.

Ahaz needed to return to the barracks, as it were, and continue to place himself under superior command. If he will not ask for a sign, then God will give him one. Ahaz learns that Scripture’s injunction not to press God for a sign (e.g., Deut. 6:16; Ps. 78:18, 41; Mal. 3:15; Mark 8:11; Acts 5:9, 15:10) is itself subject to the One whose word it is. Ultimately only God can answer to God, and Ahaz cannot deny that without committing a grave act of disobedience.

Whereas in Isaiah, Ahaz is merely told about the extraordinary sign by which God would redeem the people, in Matthew 1:18-25 the sign comes as a lucid dream of instruction to Joseph, who had not asked or been prepared for one. The difference between the auditory command in Isaiah and the dream experience in Matthew is significant. Many prophets received their oracles during dreams: God came to Abimelech (Gen. 20:3) and to Laban the Syrian in a dream (Gen. 31:24) ; Joseph is the prince of dreams (Gen. 37:5,41:1 if.) ; God appeared to Solomon in a dream (I Kings 3:5) ; Nebuchadnezzar was instructed in a dream (Dan. 2:1) ; Jeremiah asks prophets to testify if they have been given a dream (Jer. 23:28) Dreams and prophecy were intertwined; it was impossible to do the work of a prophet without doing dream-work, and true dreams established the prophet in the office of prophecy. When a dream is particularly intense it becomes a vision. Thus was Abraham chosen for his vocation (Gen. 15:1) and thus also did God’s word come to Samuel (I Sam. 3:lff.) Job describes graphically how when he flees to his bed for relief, God pursues him with tormenting dreams and visions:

When I think that my bed will comfort

me,

that sleep will relieve my complaining,

thou dost terrify me with dreams

and afright me with visions.

I would rather be choked outright...

[Job 7:13-15, NEB].

Dreams and visions deny Job escape rather than, as we moderns like to think, offer him one. For Job, to dream is to hear a voice other than his own; for us, to dream is to set a personal agenda. The day was still far off when dreams would be seen as the psyche’s projection. In a passage close to the sentiment of Proverbs 29:18 ("Where there is no vision the people perish") , Job says:

In dreams, in visions of the night,

when deepest sleep falls upon men,

while they sleep on their beds, God makes

them listen,

and his correction strikes them with terror.

To turn a man from reckless conduct. . .

and [stop] him from crossing the river of

death. . .

[33:15-18, NEB].

This sentiment finds numerous parallels in African Christian literature. A standard prayer addressed to dead ancestors reads: "We who are here, whatever we commit, please reveal the same to us in a dream. May God give you power to send a message in a dream to warn us against anything whatsoever we may be doing so that we do not miss our way. The Greek historian Herodotus speaks of similar practices among the Nasamonians, who kept vigil at the graves of their ancestors to incubate dreams of guidance and instruction.

These beliefs are reinforced by parallel texts in the New Testament, including the Advent lectionary readings. The Gospel account, for example, stresses how the spirit of God intervened twice in the events leading to the birth of Jesus, first to invest Mary with the child, and then, in what must have been an extraordinarily delicate mission, to persuade Joseph to play faithful husband and rescind his divorce proceedings. That dream saved the church from having to choke on a prickly stigma. Without it Christianity might have become nothing better or worse than a scandal-ridden movement, but with it we receive word from an unimpeachable source. "When Joseph woke from sleep, he did as the angel of the Lord commanded him" (Matt. 1:24)

Job speaks of retiring to bed to look for rest and instead, in dreams and visions, finding a God who will not let go and let us be. Through the turmoil of tussling with this God, Job learns in dreams and visions to let God be God. That message belongs with dreams, channels of God’s power. Through the Christ child, God gave us proof of God’s self-anointing. We are, by extension, an anointed people, called to abide the dream of Immanuel ‘s coming.