Listen Up (Genesis 2:1-9)

Maybe it was time for Abram to move on. After all, he and his wife Sarai had been living in Ur for many years. Abram’s father had died, and Abram had lost his brother Haran to an untimely death. Moving on might do both him and Sarai some good. Yet we all know that in the wake of crises like these, moving on is sometimes difficult. Nostalgia can be paralyzing.

What was Abram thinking when he heard "Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house to the land I will show you. . ."? He was living in his father’s country among his extended family. But his life was devoid of purpose or passion until he heard this word from the Lord. He needed this call to help him separate from his past and embrace God’s future for his life.

The issue at stake for Abram and for us is the issue of "calling." Often we are encouraged to make choices that result in the highest financial return or the most personal gain. Dennis Campbell, former dean of Duke University Divinity School, suggests that we must examine the vocation of ordained ministry more closely. The dominant concern of many young people today is finding a job that provides high pay, security and "no risk." The ministry doesn’t fit these critieria.

In Who Will Go for Us?, Campbell tells of an undergraduate who talked with Campbell about problems he was having with his father. The father had a very specific plan for his son -- college, a corporate training program, an MBA, and finally a career in corporate finance. But the son was not interested. He had recently worked with children at risk as part of a church-sponsored summer program. Mature and socially adept, he learned that he was effective in public speaking, community organizing and human relations. He wanted to spend his life addressing society’s urban problems. The result was serious conflict. As the son said to Campbell, "My father has one definition of success: making a ton of money and being totally independent."

A college chaplain told Campbell that she rarely gets calls from parents upset about how their children are doing in school, either academically or socially. But parents will call about a child’s religious commitments, especially commitments that may involve mission opportunities. Parents can accept their child’s religious involvement -- as long as that child is not allowing his or her life to be influenced by a sense of calling.

In order to live out the truth of our calling, God challenges us to listen to one voice -- a voice that brings challenge and comfort. Sometimes the voice says "leave" and at other times the same voice says, "I will never leave you nor forsake you." What was Abram thinking when he heard the voice? Go to a land he had never seen and follow a voice that seemed to know him better than he knew himself? Or stay in Ur and put down roots?

If we are to live out our lives with authenticity and sincerity, we should examine the calling of Abram. As heirs of this Chaldean pilgrim, we must know that our lives are not so much about choosing as they are about being called. But this kind of thinking runs contrary to cultural norms. We are so accustomed to charting our own course and making our own way that yielding our lives to God brings genuine struggle. Yet the consequences of not engaging the struggle can also be devastating. Ask the young woman who married the "right man." Or the man who pursued the "perfect career." In many cases you will find that although they made all the right choices (the lucrative career, the dashing or beautiful spouse, etc.), their lives are still empty because they have no purpose and no guide greater than themselves.

Abram left Ur because he was called by God. His life, like our lives, was devoid of purpose or passion until he heard the voice of the Lord. The New Testament praises Abram’s faith because Abram accepted the challenge of living in obedience to God. For 21st-century Christians, there are so many voices competing for our loyalty and obedience that we must retune our ears daily to the One who is calling our name. Oprah’s voice reaches 20 million viewers daily. When she speaks, people buy books. Magazines in the check-out line at the grocery store clamor for our attention with the cacophonous voices of "experts" who will fix our relationships, mend our brokenness and supercharge our self-images. Politicians promise legal panaceas for society’s problème de jour. But we, members of the body of Christ, are not to take our cues from them.

Instead, we must listen and respond to the only voice that can redeem us. God will visit us where we are. This is both exciting and terrifying. It reminds me of the roller coasters I enjoyed in my adolescence. I would eagerly wait in line, but once I sat down in the car and felt the pressure of the lap bars being lowered over my shoulders, an uneasiness in the pit of my stomach reminded me that I was in for the ride of my life.

Abram heard the voice of the Lord and followed that voice to a place he had never seen before. He accepted God’s gracious call even though he did not have all the details in the beginning of the journey. When he packed up his family and departed from Ur he took his first steps on the journey of redemption. Whether he knew it or not, he was in for the ride of his life.

Thirst Quencher (Jn. 7: 37-39, Acts 2:1-21, Ps, 104:24-34,35b)

Never in my life has the violence in the Gospel of John seemed so recognizable. Now it corresponds to the daily news: a man fears going out in public in Jerusalem, as Jesus did on that festival of booths. This simple act can result in either glory or destruction, depending on whether "the street" murmurs disapproval or approbation. In a part of the world where religious and political identities are matters of life or death, the world of the gospel, so familiar and yet so distant, has never seemed more immediate. When Jesus cries out about water and belief, it is as though he stands caught in Jerusalem’s crosscurrents, his life at risk. Some of his listeners plot to get him and eventually they do, at least for a time. Nevertheless, there he stands, pure of heart and brave, prophetically teaching. "Let anyone who is thirsty come to me, and let the one who believes in me drink. . . .‘Out of the believer’s heart shall flow rivers of living water.’"

At this writing, people are thirsty inside the Palestinian Authority compound in Ramallah. They’re thirsty, too, in Bethlehem, where monks and nuns and men with guns are barricaded together in the Church of the Nativity. Thirsty too in the cities and towns of Israel, where people long to drink a cup of security instead of the bitter dregs of terror. If only, as in the post-resurrection appearances, Jesus would pass through the walls dividing the Palestinians and the Israelis and speak again the resurrection greeting: Peace be with you.

Anything is possible, I believe, including a sudden appearance of the risen Lord. But since the first Christian Pentecost -- or at least since the Enlightenment -- that is not how Jesus has generally been manifest in the world. At Pentecost the Holy Spirit was given to the women and men and children empowered to carry on his ministry in the world. If there is to be peace in the Middle East, in Afghanistan or in the United States, it will Come about through peacemakers whose grace and power flow from some explicit or implicit anointing by the Holy Spirit. For out of the believers heart shall flow rivers of living water.

The believer’s heart? Some say that is the last place from which to expect any resolution of the terror wars, for it is the true believers, fundamentalists and hard-liners who are unable to compromise, preferring to die for their beliefs.

But notice what Jesus cries out. His invitation is particular and specific: Come to me; believe in me. Does that mean that we Christians should build higher walls around our faith and repair to some version of creedal orthodoxy to set us apart, and presumably above, our beleaguered and impassioned kin in the greater household of Abraham? I think not.

This is no invitation to harden our creedal boundaries or our hearts, but rather a call to repair ourselves to the sacred heart of Jesus, there to drink from the springs of reconciliation. There to learn again effective nonviolent responses to the warfare that flows from the hearts of men and women.

Jesus faced the tumult of the Holy Land undefended. He did not take up a sword, nor join the Zealots, nor even resist arrest. He did not call down the wrath of God on those who seized him, nor summon legions of angels to defend him from the soldiers. His response was nonviolent. Father, forgive them, he prayed. The triumph of the resurrection, then, is the triumph of nonviolent love over against war.

Pentecost follows, extending the promise of resurrection ever more widely. In Pentecost, the Spirit of the risen Lord rests on his followers. In the Acts of the Apostles, they discover in themselves something of Jesus courageous generosity of heart. Their concern expands beyond the personal and the local, reaching out to residents of all the world. They speak to them in their own languages, with cultural barriers down, differences transcended. In the original Christian Pentecost are seeds of a universalist impulse, a catholic principle, that in these times drives us to engage the world in the spirit of nonviolent love.

That wide embrace of the universe as a sacrament of God is nourished by the pentecostal poetry of Psalm 104. When we are in danger of losing heart, we can remember:

O Lord, how manifold are your works I

In wisdom you have made them all;

The earth is full of your creatures.

These all look to you

To give them their food in due season;.

When you send forth your spirit, they are created;

and you renew the face of the ground.

How are we to be loyal patriots of our beloved country and realistic in its defense, and yet faithful to the peace of Christ? The question and the challenge come around again. And once again, the answer is near. In Pentecost we find the energy, clarity and generosity of heart that are the wellsprings of living water. We are fundamentally and forever changed by the dying and rising of Christ, who entrusts his Holy Spirit to us. Because of Jesus’ purity of heart and his courage, because he is the Prophet of the Most High sent to us, we will seek to find the way to do what in the world he would do.

Repeat Offenders (Romans 1:16-17)

Justification by grace through faith has been a perennial theme throughout the history of the people of God. St. Paul’s Letter to the Romans gives it classical articulation in the Christian Bible: "For all alike have sinned, and are deprived of the divine glory, and all are justified by God’s free grace alone, through God’s act of liberation in the person of Christ Jesus" (Rom. 3:23).

St. Paul should know. In my small parish church, aptly named for that obstreperous saint, a large painting of his conversion on the road to Damascus is prominently displayed. When you see it you can’t help remember that before he was struck down in a blinding flash of insight, Paul was one arrogant man. Certain of his righteousness, he did terrible harm to others in the name of God. Paradoxically, when he thought he was most righteous, he was most wrong. Left to his own thinking and instincts, and imbued with years of study of religion that failed to free his heart, he was a destructive man. Only his encounter with Christ brought him out of his closed world and liberated him.

Justification by grace is a perennial theme because we forget about it again and again. As religious people, we build buildings for the glory of Cod that dazzle us with pride, not in God, but in ourselves and what we’ve achieved. We develop administrative structures to channel grace into the world and are surprised when they become self-referential bureaucracies. We generate ritual and discursive Cultures that become ends in themselves, vehicles of our status an insecurity, constructs that distract us from the grace still moving among us. The church we build to convert the world becomes mired in sinfulness. Then we remember that the church is always in need of reform. All alike have sinned, Paul wrote, and all are justified by God’s free grace alone, we know this but we forget it, and we forget it often.

The theme is relevant to the Roman Catholic sex-abuse scandal. One does not need to be Roman Catholic to feel implicated in what is going on. Every denomination and faith community has known something of this sort of violation of trust. The values at stake, moreover, affect the entire community regardless

of church membership. Because values such as the well-being of children, truth-telling and moral openness are always at risk, the community as a whole has a stake in them. One way or another, we are all in this together.

Paul speaks to us in this situation. Where we have set church leaders apart from the rest of humanity, and projected onto them the moral rectitude we wish somebody would embody, we have a set-up for a crisis of trust. But that trust was never realistic to begin with because we human beings are morally and spiritually frail. If that realization leaves us disillusioned, remember -- it is only illusion that we have shed. Once we do, the crisis becomes an opportunity for conversion to reality.

Once again we can discern the wisdom of this part of Paul’s gospel, as if we were hearing it for the first time:

All alike -- all of us -- are justified by Cod’s free grace alone.

Wendell Berry’s novel ]ayber Crow illustrates Jesus’ words: "Not everyone who the kingdom of heaven, but only those who do the will of my Father." The narrator tells the story of his life as a barber living in the mid-2Oth century in a tiny Kentucky town called Port William.

For 30 years the men of the town come to sit in his chair, talk to him and visit with neighbors who are waiting. Because the mothers bring in their children, he comes to know them too.

In time, Jayber Crow becomes something like a confessor or a parson. He knows the characters and values of Port William people well. He goes to church and contemplates the truths of the Gospels, which he’s read all the way through, and he does his best to live them out.

He is faithful and honorable in love. He is honest in his dealings, loves his friends and, with considerable struggle, learns to love his few enemies. In this season of crisis in American religion, Jayber Crow is a consoling reminder of that faithful pragmatist in Jesus’ sermon who builds his house on the rock so that it can withstand the storm and the flood. He is among the meek who inherit the earth.

Berry’s hero leads us back to reconsider readings that speak to the church with tender and true words. All are sinners -- how did we forget this? And all are made right with God and others only by grace. It is not what we build or what we make of ourselves that matters in the end. It is not the offices we occupy or the structures of power that govern our common life that save us. It is God who saves, and God will save. God in Christ invites us to live our faith -- to walk our talk -- by doing the will of the Father in heaven. It is as simple and difficult as that.

Macro-Mystery (Matthew 28: 16-20)

Some time ago the New York Times ran this headline in its science section: "Before the Big Bang, There Was . . . What?" The article surveyed cosmologists, those who study the whole physical universe, or, as some of them believe, universes. Cosmologists generate a plethora of theories about how the world came to be, what keeps it going, and what’s going to happen to it in the future.

Their mega-questions, and their cosmologic language, boggle the minds of the rest of us. Quantum gravity, for ample, is one of several current theories about how the world began. Imagine: this theory claims that the tiniest, quantum-scale particles exist only as clouds of probability until they are actually observed. So until an observer looks and perceives them, the basic particles of matter have no definite identity or reality, only "possible" reality. The same theory suggests that particles can flit in and out of existence in a kind of formless matter, even in empty space. So a tiny universe could appear seemingly out of nothing. Some cosmologists theorize that the Big Bang was a kind of quantum leap from some formless era of imaginary time, or from nothing at all.

To get to the big picture of the whole universe, these theories have to consider what is known about particles on the tiniest scale. They need to account for "everything." Microcosm to macrocosm, the cosmologists come up with a theory of the whole and how it all fits together. Even though the rest of us may not be able to get our minds around the science, we find the theories exhilarating because they stretch our thinking and engage our imagination.

We are also struck by how these. scientists speculate about how the world came to be, what keeps the world going and where it’s headed. Such speculations come tantalizingly close to being religious; in fact, the cosmologists’ language echoes the Book of Genesis, where God made the world out of nothing at all.

Like contemporary cosmologists, Christian spiritual teachers and theologians have explored the boundaries of such questions from earliest time. But theologians have the advantage -- and disadvantage -- of revelation. This is an advantage because it provides the transcendent reference for the questions about what there was before the world was made. Revelation is a disadvantage, however, if we let it shut down our wonder. When we take scripture too literally or one-dimensionally, we reduce God to the images we’ve constructed in our own minds. The images become "mental idols" that distract us from the mystery of the Living God.

Trinity Sunday is a great feast in which to honor that Holy Mystery that Christians call God the Holy Trinity. In the Gospel according to Matthew, Jesus commands his followers to baptize all nations in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.

We already knew that the Lord our God is one, beside whom there is no other. With the Jews we affirm belief in one holy God. But as Christians we have known the one God in three ways, or three persons: the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. In Christian faith, God is revealed as triune.

This allows our faith to expand beyond the confinement of commonsense everyday notions of what is real, Faith in the Holy Trinity compels us to open our imaginations and consider what is beyond what we already know or think we know about the mystery we call "God." On this feast of the Trinity, let us pray God to expand our imaginations, to tantalize us with wonder, to urge us to contemplate who and how God was before "the Big Bang." Fathers and Mothers in the Christian tradition wrote long ago about this God: "God was being. But, not being a creature, God was no-thing."

God, in other words, was/is the cosmologists’ generative "nothing." So, before the Big Bang, what was Nothing doing? Our faith tradition tells us that before the world was made, God was being Father, Son and Spirit, three persons in one being, all equal, all the same, yet distinct and in relation to one another. The Latin church teachers called the relation of the three to each other circumincession, a circle in which each dwells in the others continuously, a relation of love. The triune God is no dispassionate unmoved mover, no rugged individualist. Rather, God the Holy Trinity is active love, always outgoing, always receiving.

This love spills over to create heaven and earth, then continues to create and shape the world. When creatures who are gifted as the image and likeness of God misuse love, corrupting what God made good, then the love of God goes to them to heal them. God became human in order to redeem the confusion and destructiveness of human beings. God does this "in time," in human history, because we live and we die in time. And now that the historical Christ has reentered eternity, ascended into heaven, he sends the holy Spirit to live within us and among us to sustain the work of redemption and healing until that time -- out of time -- when God will be all in all.

Father, Son, Holy Spirit: Though we cannot fully get our minds around such incomprehensibles, we know by our faith that the triune God is how the world came to be, the energy that keeps it going, and the future toward which it -- and we -- move. Let us reach up to God in our prayers, and open our imagination to contemplate God the Holy Trinity, the mystery beyond all telling, the mystery that brings us to our knees.

Suicide Bombers: The ‘Just War’ Debate, Islamic Style

Tucked away in an account of the Jewish resistance to Antiochus Epiphanes is the story of a hero’s sacrifice. The Book of I Maccabees describes the prebattle scene, Jewish forces are encamped at Bethzechariah with the enemy directly opposite them, fully armed and ready to fight. As the Jewish soldiers watch, their counterparts prepare elephants -- the heavy artillery of ancient warfare. Wooden towers are fastened onto elephants, with each tower bearing four armed men who will fight from this raised position. The army is a fearsome spectacle: "The sun shone on the shields of gold and brass, the hills were ablaze with them and gleamed like flaming torches. . . . All who heard the noise made by their multitude, by the marching of the multitude and the clanking of their arms, trembled, for the army was very large and strong."

Fighting ensues, and then a member of the Jewish resistance makes a move:

Eleazar, called Avaran, saw that one of the animals was equipped with royal armor. It was taller than all the others, and he supposed that the king was on it. So he gave his life to save his people and to win for himself an everlasting name. He courageously ran into the midst of the phalanx to reach it; he killed men right and left, and they parted before him on both sides. He got under the elephant, stabbed it from beneath, and killed it; . . . it fell to the ground upon him and he died. (1 Macc. 6:43-46)

Eleazar’s action offers one of the enduring images of war. In giving his life for a cause, he also provides a context for discussing the suicide bombings that are now a feature of the conflict between Palestinians and Israelis. If we are to understand why Palestinians engage in such acts, we must begin with their categories. For many Palestinians, the bombers are not "suicides" but like Eleazar, "martyrs." And their actions are "martyrdom operations.

In this context, the important issues have less to do with the social-psychological dynamics of suicide and more to do with the concerns of military ethics. Martyrdom operations are tactics by which Palestinians attempt to engage an enemy militarily. As such, they must be evaluated in terms of the criteria of the just war tradition, or in Muslim terms, of the Shari’a provisions governing armed conflict.

On March 27, 2001, a Palestinian detonated explosives next to a bus in the French Hill sector of Jerusalem, killing himself and injuring 30 Israelis. The next day, another Palestinian did the same in Neve Yamin, killing himself and two Israeli teenagers. These incidents occurred in connection with the al-Aqsa intifada, which began in the fall of 2000. But they fit a pattern that began after the 1993 signing of the Oslo Accords and has become ever more familiar. In these, as in most such attacks, responsibility was claimed by Hamas, which calls itself the specifically Islamic party within the larger Palestinian movement.

A month later, the highest-ranking official of the Saudi religious establishment questioned the legitimacy of such attacks. Fighting must be governed by the Shari‘a, said Shaykh Abd al-Aziz bin Abdallah al-Shaykh, and he warned that the deaths of those who kill themselves "in the heart of the enemy’s ranks" are "merely" suicides, and thus contravene God’s command.

By appealing to the Shari‘a, the Saudi scholar invoked well-established practices by which Muslims debate the rights and wrongs of particular acts. The term stands for the ideal way of living. Scholars like the shaykh are responsible for interpreting the Qur’an, the example of the Prophet, and precedents from prior generations in order to establish analogies between these sources and the questions of contemporary Muslims. The shaykh considered the practice of suicide bombings without precedent in Islam, and thus illegitimate.

Responding to this argument, Yusuf al-Qaradhawi, a prominent leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, emphasized the importance of intention and argued that the "mentality of those who carry out [martyrdom operations] has nothing to do with the mentality of one who commits suicide." Suicide involves taking one’s life for selfish reasons; those who die in the course of suicide attacks aimed at Israeli targets are anything but selfish, he argued. They sacrifice their lives for the sake of others. As Shaykh Qaradhawi put it, to speak of these acts as "suicide attacks" is misleading because they are really "heroic acts of martyrdom [that] have nothing to do with suicide." Instead of sinful contraventions, they are "the supreme form of struggle in the path of God."

Up to this point, Qaradhawi spoke for the majority of Muslim scholars. But the Shaykh al-Azhar responded by noting that "the suicide operations are classified as self-defense and are a kind of martyrdom, so long as the intention behind them is to kill the enemy’s soldiers, and not women or children." The intention of a martyr, in other words, is understood in relation to the target that he (or more recently, she) attacks. Here, the highest authority in Egyptian Islam had in mind the saying of Muhammad:

"When you fight, do not cheat or commit treachery. Do not kill or mutilate women, children or old men." To put it another way: a just warrior never directly and intentionally targets civilians. In’ this matter, the Shari‘a parallels the just war tradition and its concern for discrimination or noncombatant immunity.

How then do devout Muslims justify martyrdom operations? Civilians have died or been injured in attacks on buses, in restaurants and grocery stores, at discotheques and even during a Passover seder. Despite this apparent contravention of the Shari‘a, the consensus of most of those participating in the discussion was summarized by Qaradhawi: "Israeli society is militaristic in nature. Both men and women serve in the army and can be drafted at any moment." In other words, there are no civilians in Israel.

What about children or elderly people? Qaradhawi says, "If a child or an elderly person is killed in this type of operation, he or she is not killed on purpose, but by mistake, and as a result of military necessity. Necessity makes the forbidden things permitted." In other words, if the bomber does not intend or plan for children or elderly people to be the target of attack, the operation does not violate Shari‘a norms. All Israeli men and women who are eligible by age to serve in the military are legitimate targets for direct attack, whether they are currently on active duty, members of reserve forces on vacation, or not yet drafted.

As to children or elderly people killed as collateral damage, the martyr is excused from culpability. Those who participate in these attacks are fulfilling an obligation to defend the territory and values of Islam. The superior military capacity of the enemy justifies the unusual tactics. As two groups of scholars from al-Azhar put it: "When the Muslims are attacked in their homes and their land is robbed, the struggle in the path of God turns into an individual duty. In this case, martyrdom operations become a primary obligation and Islam’s highest form of struggle."

Do extreme conditions justify indiscriminate tactics? This is a question not only for Muslims in Palestine; those who carried out the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon gave similar justifications for their actions. Ayman al-Zawahiri, an Egyptian known as "bin Laden’s physician," argues that martyrdom operations should be the preferred tactic of a worldwide struggle for Muslim rights, since they inflict the most damage at the least cost to the Muslim community. Zawahiri and others consider distinctions between civilian and military targets irrelevant. Like Qaradhawi, they speak of an armed struggle imposed upon Muslims by anti-Muslim forces that have invaded historic Islamic territory.

Qaradhawi and representatives of al-Azhar unanimously condemned the attacks of September 11 and the al-Qaeda network’s indiscriminate tactics. For example, in speaking of the 1998 attacks against U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, the Shaykh al-Azhar said: "Any explosion that leads to the death of innocent women and children is a criminal act, carried out only by people who are base cowards and traitors. A rational person with only a small portion of respect and virtue refrains from such operations." No fine points here about the "intention" or "mentality" of the one carrying out such attacks.

Yet the Shaykh al-Azhar supports Palestinian martyrdom operations. Is the Palestinian case different because it is "homeland defense"? Do those who justify martyrdom operations in Palestine simply disagree with bin Laden, al-Zawahiri and others regarding the scope of the legitimate struggle? Some advocates of Palestinian martyrdom operations draw a line between operations inside Israel’s pre-1967 borders and operations in the rest of Palestine/Israel. Apparently only a clear incursion of enemy forces into Muslim territory justifies extreme measures. Otherwise, the extraordinary measures involved in martyrdom operations are either not justified, or those carrying out such operations must exercise greater care in distinguishing between civilian and military targets.

Judging from the response of Hamas and others, this argument was unconvincing. On June 30, 150 people signed a communique opposing Nusseibeh and his colleagues: "What is required today from the Arab Palestinian people of all factions is to resist the occupation and remove from our land by all ways and all means, primarily armed struggle with all weapons that can be found, in response to the Zionist military machine armed with American weapons and its overt bias against our people, our cause and all the causes of the Arab world" (emphasis added).

In response to suicide bombings, many commentators focus on the despair fostered by political and economic hopelessness. It is hopelessness, they say, that leads people to suicide. Other commentators connect the motivation for bombings with promises of rewards, either heavenly (enjoying the pleasures of Paradise) or earthly (monetary rewards to families of martyrs). Still others worry about the countries and organizations that exploit young and desperate men and women. These concerns are a valid part of any inquiry into the phenomenon.

But if we take Palestinian, and especially Muslim accounts seriously, we are not talking about suicide bombings but about operations in which someone carries out an attack and sacrifices his or her life for a larger cause. Such martyrdom operations awaken feelings like those that accompany readings of the story of Eleazar, or of Muslim martyrs like Anas ibn Nadr, whose sacrifice during the battle of Uhud in 625 led his companions to exclaim to Muhammad: "O messenger of God, I could not fight as he fought." The annals of Islam are full of Eleazars who have given their lives to save their people and to win for themselves an everlasting name.

Like the acts of martyrs in these ancient stories, the suicide bombings take place in military contexts, involve military tactics, and should be evaluated accordingly. In Muslim discussion, the critical issue is the distinction between civilian and military targets. Despite disagreement among Muslim leaders, Shari‘a precedents do not support a contravention of the rule "never directly and intentionally target civilians." Nor do they support the judgment that "there are no civilians in Israel." No society is so militarized as to have no distinction between civilian and military targets. Nor does an appeal to "intention" or "mental reservation" work. Targeting a bus that picks up and drops off passengers along a route designated for public transportation is a violation of Shari‘a rules. The idea of an emergency in which each and every Muslim has a duty to fight makes sense in terms of Shari’a reasoning. But doing away with the need to distinguish between targets does not.

Many Palestinians will ask, "What about our civilians, killed or wounded by Israelis? Are the lives of all civilians of equal worth?" The answer must be yes. If the challenge for Muslims is to find ways to seek justice while honoring the distinctions between civilian and military targets, the challenge for Israel (and for the U.S. and its allies as they seek to limit the capacity of terrorists to inflict harm) is to honor the notion of proportionate means.

From the standpoint of both the just war tradition and the canons of Shari‘a, the conduct of war must be governed by two concerns: discrimination between civilian and military targets, and proportionality in means. Both present new challenges as the conditions and technology of warfare change. Both must be honored if those who carry out military activity are to stand in the legacy of Eleazar.

Speaking of Islam: Muslims and Militants – Three Views

Book Review:

What Went Wrong? Western Impact and Middle Eastern Response.

By Bernard Lewis. Oxford University Press, 161 pp.

Unholy War: Terror in the Name of Islam.

By John Esposito. Oxford University Press, 208 pp.

Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam.

By Gilles Kepel. Harvard University Press, 416 pp.

How shall we speak about Islam in the aftermath of September11? Three recent books by scholars with long track records in interpreting the Islamic world present us with three highly distinctive answers. If none gets it quite right, their volumes help us to examine the views dominating public discussion.

Bernard Lewis’s account of Islam might be summarized as follows: "Islam" is the religion of people who are alienated from the religious, moral and political values of Europe and North America. The events of September 11 grew out of the historic tensions between the civilizations we speak of as "Islam" and "the West." Lewis’s thesis is similar to the view advocated by numerous conservative commentators, talk-show hosts and evangelical Christians. However, his book displays historical knowledge these more popular presenters lack. Sometimes described as the leading historian of Islam working in Europe or North America, Lewis has during his long career published landmark studies of the history of modern Turkey, served as one of the editors of the much-acclaimed Encyclopedia of Islam and won numerous honors and awards for his scholarship.

In dealing with current affairs, Lewis takes the long view. Elites functioning as the guardians of Muslim culture made significant choices at various points in history, choices they understood to be consistent with the basic symbols of Islam. The Prophet Muhammad and those who followed him saw the world as a heedless place in which human beings ignored their duty to God. From the start, Muslims were at war with this milieu. Called to live as idol breakers, they carved out a political and geographic space in which human beings could live as "submitters" (Muslims), obedient to the will of God. They believed it was their destiny to enlarge this space so as to make the entire world conform to the divine will. For much of the first millennium of Islamic history the progress of Islamic culture and the success of Islamic armies seemed to confirm this destiny.

When their fortunes began to turn, Muslims began to ask, "What went wrong? In the 1680s, Ottoman Turkish armies suffered a number of setbacks which forced the guardians of Islam to cede territory to various European powers. As Europe’s strength grew over the next centuries, the question Why? became the preoccupation of Muslim elites, who in Lewis’s view answered the question in ways that protected Islam from reform.

Through a series of historical vignettes, Lewis presents the argument that Muslim elites saw the success of the West primarily as a matter of technological prowess. The solution to Islam’s loss of power was to purchase and learn to use the products of this prowess. Other aspects of Western culture -- for example, the political institutions associated with democracy -- were considered either irrelevant or as something to be grafted onto the basic forms of Islamic civilization. Thus traditional interpretations of Islam were never deeply affected. The most persistent and, for Lewis, the most authentic of these interpretations pointed not toward reform but to the recovery of old forms -- return to the ways of the Prophet, recovery of the practices of his early companions, and restoration of the glory of the Caliphate and the Islamic empire.

From Lewis’s perspective, the September 11 attacks were an expression of the anger of people who see history passing them by. Rather than follow the path of reform, radical Muslims are choosing the path of destruction. Lewis’s argument is plain enough. More difficult to understand is how he thinks Islam might reform itself. He presents those who call for reform -- for example, those who argue that Islam mandates democratic institutions – as outside authentic Islam. Since Lewis seems to identify authentic Islam entirely with the Islam of the 16th- and 17th-century elites, how is Islam to change?

Like Lewis, Esposito has been arguing his case for years. His many books and articles are clearly the work of’ an empathetic scholar, highly sensitive to the difficult social and political realities of many countries in which Muslims are a majority. Even more, Esposito is keenly aware of the growing Muslim presence in Europe and North America. To stress affinities between Islam and other Western traditions is important for the future of Muslims in the West, most of whom share the fears and hopes characteristic of immigrant populations striving for acceptance. Moreover, these affinities are plainly a part of the Islamic approach to salvation history, in which Judaism and Christianity occupy a special place as scriptural religions.

About militant or radical Islam, Esposito’s best-known statement prior to September 11 was The Islamic Threats Myth or Reality? (Oxford University Press, 1992). His answer was "myth," or largely so. Responding to those who characterized the "Islamic movement" as a "green wave that would replace communism as a challenge to democratic, capitalist values, Esposito argued that such ideologically driven interpretations were unfounded and would support counterproductive policies. As an alternative, he counseled patience. In countries where Muslims constitute the majority, religious and political leaders would eventually move in the direction of democracy and respect for human rights. Even hardline anti-American rhetoric, he maintained, is often simply a way of appealing to a diverse and troubled set of domestic constituencies, rather than an indication of real-world foreign policy.

Esposito’s approach was controversial even before September 11. Though his viewpoint was much appreciated by Muslims living in the West, his assessment of the threat posed by radical groups was considered overly optimistic by a number of policy analysts. And after September 11, Esposito and those who agree with him came in for vigorous criticism by those in Lewis’s camp.

Unholy War may be read as Esposito’s answer to these critics. He places Usama bin Laden and others like him on the margins of Islamic tradition. Such people are radicals frustrated by the failure of existing governments to deliver on promises of economic and political development, he argues. Driven to despair by the failure of the international community to protect Muslims in Chechnya and Palestine, they find in Islam a convenient vocabulary for the articulation of grievances and the justification of acts of defiance. Those wishing to deal with the terror advocated by radical groups should thus focus on its "root causes" poverty and lack of political freedom. To affirm the values Muslims share with Jews, Christians and others is a positive response to the disintegration of world community advocated by radicals.

Esposito’s approach has much to commend it. If I had to choose between Lewis and Esposito, I would side with the latter. Still, Esposito’s treatment of bin Laden and other radicals fails to answer the question, "Why and how does Islam provide a convenient vocabulary for a radical program?" Granted that "bin Laden and others go beyond classical Islam’s criteria for a just jihad," we must still ask, "What makes them believe they can do so and still remain -- as bin Laden has repeatedly asserted -- God’s chosen vanguard for the protection of the true values of Islam and humanity?" Granted that "Islamic scholars and religious leaders across the Muslim world . . . have made strong, authoritative declarations against bin Laden’s initiatives," what are the details of their reasoning?

To understand the relationship between Islamic tradition and September 11, we need more details than Esposito gives. We need a more fine-grained approach to the ways contemporary Muslims negotiate the world using the tools provided by Islamic tradition. As "that which is handed down" from one generation to another, Islamic tradition provides believers with a rich variety of possibilities for contemporary life. Some Muslims are (as per Lewis) alienated from the West; others are (as per Esposito) aligned with Jew’s, Christians and others as advocates of universal human rights. Why? Apparently, the answer is complex. The texts and symbols of Islam play a part in either case, as do factors more directly tied to politics, economics or individual personalities. Given this fact, it becomes difficult if not impossible to characterize Islam and Muslims either as essentially alienated from or as essentially "on board" with the values of Western civilization.

As Kepel shows, the international radicals do not fit neatly with any of the local movements. Since they are committed to a struggle without borders, they tend to minimize the particular issues that animate most militant groups. Instead, the radicals speak of global struggle against an international conspiracy dedicated to the elimination of Muslims. One thinks, for example, of bin Laden’s October 7, 2001, statement indicting the "criminal Kofi Annan" as the leading spokesperson for an international campaign to deny Muslim rights, or more recently of the June 7, 2002, statement by Sulayman abu Ghayth depicting the U.S. as the "head of disbelief" throughout the world.

Nevertheless, it is important for international radicals to connect with local movements. And here, according to Kepel, is an important source of radical weakness. Local Islamic movements tend to forge coalitions involving three sets of constituents: members of a devout middle class, impoverished (especially young) people living in urban centers, and intellectuals. Each group has its own reasons for crafting an Islamic alternative to an existing political regime. Each has its own sense of what would constitute a legitimately Islamic political order.

The devout middle class wants a government devoted to keeping the minds of the young focused on stories of Muhammad and the early Muslims rather than on the latest import from Hollywood. Impoverished urban youths, by contrast, want a more equal distribution of social goods. They want the jobs that will give them a chance to marry and have families. Finally, intellectuals want freedom of expression, a commodity sorely lacking in most Muslim-majority societies.

What happens when international radicals come into this mix? According to Kepel, wherever the commitment of the radicals to indiscriminate violence comes to the fore, the devout middle class withdraws its support. Algeria presents a good example. The slaughter of seven Trappist monks in May 1996 was one of the most visible examples of the terrifying violence to which members of the Islamic movement turned in their campaign against the military regime that came to power in 1992. Because that regime had seized power by nullifying democratic elections in which Islamic parties won a clear victory, many Algerians originally sympathized with the radicals. But radical leaders turned increasingly to indiscriminate violence. Indeed, leaders of the Groupe Islamique Armé eventually declared war on the entire society, blaming the continuing power of the military regime on the general population’s lack of commitment. According to Kepel, the radicals’ failure to discriminate between civilian and military targets brought about a massive defection of the devout middle class from the campaign. And in fact, the CIA ceased to be an organized presence in 1997. An associated group, the Armé Islamique du Salut, eventually declared a unilateral truce.

This pattern is characteristic of events in the Middle East and South and Central Asia. Radical Islam is best understood as a set of movements created by loose coalitions of people working with a variety of religious and political interests. Whenever the interests of a part of these coalitions are threatened, the movements tend to weaken and even disintegrate, with some participants finding their way back to more established modes of political activity. Voting and running for office become more attractive -- if those opportunities exist. Thus, the presence of democratic alternatives to militancy is a critical factor.

Kepel does not spend enough time detailing the specifics of Muslim debates about the radicals’ appropriation of Islamic texts and symbols. In the particular case of Usama bin Laden and his colleagues, published statements appear to demonstrate a good-faith effort to connect contemporary political life with the longstanding tradition of Shari‘a reasoning (Islamic "jurisprudence"). Kepel does not do enough to show readers how such reasoning works. Further, Jihad presents little analysis of the debate among Muslims over the validity of bin Laden’s practice of Shari‘a reasoning. Understanding this debate is critical for understanding Islam as a living tradition, and it is necessary for answering the questions about Islam that have dominated public debate since September 11.

Nevertheless, Kepel’s book comes closest to the goal I would set for any analysis of Islam: to depict Islam as a livIng tradition engaging and in turn engaged by successive generations of believers. Motivated by the Qur’an and the example of the Prophet as depictions of that which is good, beautiful and true in human experience, such believers seek to increase the range of order and meaning in the world. And like all believers, they are capable of the complete range of behaviors characteristic of human beings: love and hate, joy and sorrow, justice and injustice, creativity and destruction. How shall we speak of Islam after September 11? As a religion practiced by human beings. No more, and no less.

Bin Laden’s Reasons: Interpreting Islamic Tradition

In recent months, a legion of commentators on Islam have emphasized that true Islam has nothing to do with the killing of innocent people. Despite the apparent religious motives of the September 11 suicide bombers, President Bush and others have stressed that "Islam means peace." But other commentators have responded that Islam is a militant faith, which at times requires its adherents to make war on non-Muslims.

Pertinent to this discussion is a 1998 statement called the "Declaration on Jihad Against Jews and Crusaders," produced by Osama bin Laden and several other militant leaders who styled themselves the World Islamic Front. This declaration is worth scrutinizing for anyone wishing to understand the reasoning and motives of those responsible for the September 11 attacks and others influenced by their ideas -- for how it both uses and departs from traditional Islamic teaching.

The World Islamic Front brought together Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda ("the groundwork") and four other organizations, including Islamic Jihad and the Egyptian Islamic Group. The formation of the front is a sign that at least the leaders of these groups see themselves as pursuing a common set of Islamic goals. It is difficult to say how many people these leaders represent, but they aim to address the conscience of "all Muslims."

‘The declaration is a formal statement of the duty of Muslims, written in the style of what I call "Shari‘a reasoning." (To call it "Islamic jurisprudence" or "Islamic religious law" would be slightly misleading.) Shari‘a reasoning presupposes that there is an ideal way for human beings to live. The very term "Shari‘a" means "the Path." The declaration further presupposes that God provides "signs" for those who would discern the contours of this path. These signs are primarily texts: the Qur’an and the hadith, or "reports" relating the exemplary practice of Muhammad. Shari‘a reasoning is, in effect, a kind of transgenerational conversation among Muslims regarding the implications of these signs and about the behaviors that are most consistent with the ideal way and which therefore will lead to happiness in this world and the next.

In Shari‘a reasoning, these signs must be correlated with the facts of the contemporary situation. It is clear that the authors of the declaration consider the "occupation" of the Arabian peninsula by US. forces as the primary, though not the only, indication that the Muslim community faces an emergency. From other statements by bin Laden and his colleagues, we know he also has expressed concern about the situation in Bosnia, Kosovo, Chechnya and Kashmir. The World Islamic Front ties the post-gulf war presence of US. troops in Saudi Arabia to the ongoing suffering of the Iraqis and the Palestinians. The declaration suggests that there is a vast conspiracy in which the US. and its allies seek by various means to negate the influence of Islam, undercut the Muslim community, and control the natural resources of Islamic countries.

It is this crisis that leads to the declaration’s central judgment: that fighting against Americans and their allies -- civilians and soldiers -- is an individual duty for every Muslim who can do so in any country where that is possible. The phrasing of this judgment is most significant, in terms of Shari‘a reasoning. Jihad, or "struggle," is a wide-ranging term in Islamic tradition. Always connected with the qualifying phrase "in the path of God," it is tied to the general duty of Muslims to "command the good and forbid the evil" in a variety of ways -- by doing good works, promoting social justice, voting, teaching in schools and, under certain conditions, by qital ("fighting").

Even here, there are important nuances regarding the duty of Muslims. Under ordinary conditions, for ample, when fighting is justified to secure the borders of an Islamic state, it is described as a "collective duty." This implies that an established ruler or governing authority will make a judgment concerning the necessity of fighting. Such a ruler is authorized to provide for the common defense by raising an army, levying taxes and generally rallying support from the citizenry. Every Muslim should support the effort, although not every Muslim has to fight.

Under emergency conditions, however, the duty to fight is described as an "individual duty." If, for example, an enemy has invaded Islamic territory, compromising the lives, liberty and property of Muslims, and the established authorities are unable or unwilling to mount an effective defense, the duty to fight devolves to every Muslim. Ordinary lines of command and control are suspended. An underage person may leave home to fight without parental approval; a woman may join the fight without the approval of her husband or father.

In a 1996 letter, bin Laden spoke of a collective duty to strike against the U.S. presence in the Arabian peninsula. Muslims, bin Laden wrote, should put aside their differences and join in a communal resistance to oppression. But by 1998, the judgment was that the crisis had reached the level of an emergency.

In support of this judgment, a selection of the opinions of "ulama [learned authorities] throughout Islamic history" is cited. The authors of the declaration argue that the tradition of Shari‘a reasoning, in connection with a faithful rendering of present-day political life, provides precedents relevant to emergency conditions. If one combines the claim that "nations are attacking Muslims like people fighting over a plate of food" with the citation of Qur’an 4:75 -- "And why should you not fight in the cause of God and of those who, being weak, suffer oppression?" -- one has the heart of the declaration.

Three issues are of particular import in the document: the authority of the authors to render Shari‘a judgments, the scope of legitimate fighting in Shari‘a reasoning, and the question of legitimate targets.

With respect to the authority of the authors, the question is one of credentials. Historically, the textual nature of Shari‘a reasoning gave rise to a class of scholars known as al-ulama, or "the learned." One becomes a member of this class by completing a long course of study in grammar, philology, history and logic, as well as in interpretation of the Qur’an and the hadith. Mastery of these fields qualifies one to issue opinions (fatwa) regarding the duty of Muslims in particular circumstances. Even so, these opinions usually echo the great masters of an established school of thought. Only a very few ever attain the status of a mujtahid, who is qualified to issue "independent" opinions.

So far as we know, none of the five signers of the 1998 declaration has the requisite credentials of a member of the learned class. Osama bin Laden, for example, holds a degree in public administration from one of the Saudi universities. The title "shaykh" attached to his name, reflecting his self-image as a valid participant in the discussions of the learned, is misleading, for it implies that he has completed some portions of the standard Shari‘a curriculum. One can only surmise that he and his colleagues believe that, in the emergency situation, they are authorized to override or ignore the ordinary lines of authority.

The notion that Muslims have an obligation to fight Americans and their allies "in any country where that is possible" immediately commands attention. The declaration’s use of crisis language echoes that of other Islamic resistance groups. Still, most of these groups speak only of armed resistance in the service of defending or liberating their homeland. The charter of the Hamas group, for instance, focuses on the duty of each Muslim to participate in fighting to liberate Jerusalem from Israeli control. It does not call on Muslims to carry the fighting abroad.

The reasoning of the declaration seems clear: the crisis facing Muslims has its roots not only in the corruption or inadequacy of the governments of Muslim states, but in the policies of the US. and its allies. Seeing the world as their battlefield, the authors call for Muslim fighters to carry the battle abroad.

On this point, Muslims might raise a question of prudence, among other things. What will be the consequences of fighting on such a scope? Will it bring about more harm than good to ordinary Muslims? This question of impact is one that established Shari‘a authorities have asked of every resistance or radical movement over the last 20 years. Bin Laden and others have alleged that coalition bombing resulted in the deaths of Muslim civilians. But who is responsible for these deaths? Do not those who issue imprudent calls for fighting Americans anywhere and everywhere bear some, perhaps even primary, responsibility?

Finally, with respect to legitimate targets, the declaration says that Muslims should fight against civilians as well as soldiers. But just as clearly, the precedents in the tradition of Shari‘a reasoning reflect the teaching of the Prophet: "Struggle in the path of God. Do not cheat or commit treachery. Do not mutilate or kill women, children, or old men." In the tradition, this and other texts become the basis for a general rule: Never directly and intentionally target noncombatants.

It would seem, therefore, that the authors of the declaration are calling for an egregious violation of Shari‘a tradition. So far as I know, crisis situations facing Muslims have I never been considered sufficient reason to override the provision against direct targeting of noncombatants. The logic of the provision is that direct and intentional targeting of noncombatants constitutes murder. Those who commit murder, even in the context of war, are classified in Shari‘a reasoning as war criminals. It is therefore difficult to understand how the authors of the declaration reason as they do.

The authors are engaged with one of the most important traditions in Islamic intellectual life, Shari‘a reasoning. A similar engagement is key to a response. The canons of Shari‘a reasoning are public. To commit oneself to speaking in Shari‘a terms is to commit oneself to certain rules of the game. At various points, the authors of the declaration violate or stretch those rules. They can and should be called to account for this.

Christians, Jews, Muslims and all other people have in interest in engaging traditions of reasoning that speak of the obligation to seek justice -- including, perhaps especially, justice in the conduct of armed struggle. What is the connection between Islam and the events of September 11? The only connection that ever exists between a religious tradition and the actions of believers is the one those believers create, as they seek to justify their actions. In turn, it is the responsibility of others to answer back, and to show that these connections are well or ill founded, sound or weak -- or as in the case of Osama bin Laden and his colleagues, the result of a combination of impudence and a lack of grounding in the tradition.

The Show-Me Disciple (John 20:19-31)

So where was Thomas anyway that first Easter evening? In my childhood Sunday school classes, Thomas was a "bad guy." When the other ten disciples told him that Jesus was alive after his crucifixion, Thomas refused to believe it. He separated himself from the others and demanded to see Christ for himself. In short, we learned that he was a dull, doubting follower of Christ whom we should not imitate. The moral of the story was clear -- Don’t be like Thomas! Believe! Don’t doubt!

But I confess to a sneaking attraction to the rogues of scripture -- Jacob the con artist, Jeremiah the complaining prophet, Peter the impulsive disciple. Perhaps because I’ve often found myself in Christian communities where no one voices doubt or struggle, I am reluctant to dismiss Thomas. At my evangelical college, we didn’t talk about our fears or failures because we thought others would judge us as unspiritual. And in churches that display only facades of niceness, I’ve discovered all sorts of anxieties and resentments festering underneath. I’ve watched people struggling alone with deep questions because they were afraid of how others might react to their doubts. Doubts and uncertainty frighten us. That’s why we reject Thomas -- he dares to bring doubt into our lives of faith.

When I take a close look, I realize that Thomas is a practical, concrete sort of guy. Earlier in John’s Gospel, Thomas insists that the disciples accompany Jesus when he goes to Bethany, a place he’d had to leave under threat of being stoned. Thomas supports Jesus’ apparently suicidal plan with, "Let us also go that we may die with him." Even better, in the midst of Jesus’ long farewell discourse, Thomas speaks up, cutting through Jesus’ mystical, poetic and downright baffling language. Jesus assures his followers, "In my Father’s house there are many dwelling places . . . . where I am, there you may be also. And you know the way to the place where I am going," to which Thomas replies, "Lord, we do not know where you are going. How can we know the way?" Thomas is plainspoken and gutsy. He wants to understand what’s going on, and be able to face the situation at hand.

So where is Thomas that first Easter evening when the other disciples are hiding in the upper room? Is he faithless, separating himself from the community? Remember, Mary Magdalene has told the group that she has seen Jesus. Maybe Thomas can’t imagine hiding when someone has just reported seeing Jesus alive. Perhaps he is trying to find out the truth. Or maybe he is the only disciple with enough sense to recognize that this hiding thing could take along time, and that he’d better go out and get milk and bread for the group.

When the disciples tell Thomas they have seen Jesus, he answers, "Unless I see the mark of the nails -- in fact, until I touch those marks and put my hand in the wound in his side, I’m not going to believe," responding out of his practical, concrete nature. What if this is some mistake, a delusion born of desperate hope, an apparition? Mary’s experience of meeting Jesus in the garden cannot keep the disciples from hiding themselves in a room. Thomas is no more of a doubter than the other disciples, than most of us. But he has to find out.

In his Easter evening appearance, Jesus shows his hands and sides to the gathered disciples. Thomas is asking for the same assurance that the others have had. But he goes a step beyond, demanding to touch Jesus’ wounds. He insists upon verifying that this is the crucified Jesus and not an illusion or a ghost.

Thomas wants proof. And he wants Jesus. When Jesus again appears to his disciples in the closed room, Thomas is there. And far from rebuking Thomas, Jesus offers to meet his conditions. "Put your fingers in my hands, touch my side." The Gospel story gives no report of Thomas following through with these gruesome actions, and I don’t believe he felt any need to do so. But the personal encounter makes Jesus’ resurrection real to this follower.

In fact, Thomas’s answer, "My Lord and my God!" is the high point of John’s Gospel. When Thomas gets it, he gets it. No one else has offered such devotion or named Jesus as God. Thomas holds out for an experience of Jesus on his own terms until he finds his terms made foolish by the reality of seeing Jesus. Only then does he make his statement of faith.

Thomas has to make this personal connection with Jesus for himself. Mary can’t experience the resurrected Jesus for the disciples, and the disciples can’t experience Jesus for Thomas. It is faith, not doubt, that holds out for one’s own experience of Jesus.

Five years ago I had emergency surgery. My sister, a professor with final exams to give, was getting married in less than a week. Yet she drove from New York City to Massachusetts in a snowstorm to see me in the hospital. No phone call would reassure her that I was alive. She had to see me with her own eyes.

Sometimes the demand to see is not doubt. Sometimes it is even love.

Road Trip (Luke 24: 13-35)

The storyteller weaves it all together -- an unknown traveler named Cleopas and his companion; the resurrected Jesus, who is present but in an unrecognized, mysterious fashion; the travelers’ sudden recognition of Jesus; and his sudden disappearance. I have always loved the story but have never understood why this particular resurrection appearance is so much richer in detail than those in other accounts.

This story seems to be a particular favorite of clergy. For ten years I served as a consultant for the pastoral search process in the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts. Nearly every ministerial candidate identified Emmaus as a favorite scripture passage. They spoke of the two travelers who are blind to the presence and person of Jesus until he sets their hearts burning and opens their eyes with the breaking of the bread. Jesus here is a "faithful minister of God’s word and sacraments," in the words of an Anglican prayer for ordained ministers.

One Sunday I heard a preacher claim that the point of the Emmaus story is that we can recognize Jesus only in the broken bread. I hadn’t become an Episcopalian until I was in my 20s, so my inner Presbyterian child began to mutter, "And what about their hearts burning when they heard the word?" I was certain that I was missing some deep Anglican truth, so I sought out a fellow parishioner with a strong Anglo-Catholic bent, knowing that she would set me straight. I found her in the kitchen opening and slamming the cabinet doors. I ignored her frustration and asked her to explain how we find Jesus only in the Eucharist. She answered me between gritted teeth: "That’s just baloney! It’s all about power. If Jesus is only in the bread, then the priest is the only one who can dole him out, as it were.

So how do we walk the road to Emmaus? There is no doubt that the story directs us to the church, where we may encounter Jesus in the word and the sacraments. But not to "the church" that’s equated with the institution and Sunday worship. We are directed instead to the church that meets a very ordinary world, a world marked by human loss and human hospitality.

We never hear of Cleopas again after this passage, and we never learn the name of his companion. They are not important people. They are "ordinary" people who have had the grand adventure of following Jesus and his disciples. But now that is over, and they are walking back home.

With Jesus’ death they have lost their faith and their hope. They are not looking for him; in fact, they don’t even recognize him when he joins them. Yet he chooses this place of loss to meet them. When he asks about their sorrow, they are so absorbed in that grief that they cannot believe that this person doesn’t know about their experience. They tell Jesus the story of his own ministry and death, and add the dubious news of his resurrection.

For them the story is over. Their hopes have proven empty, and they are defeated. But then Jesus tells the story back to them, this time through the lens of their own faith tradition and scriptures. "Oh, how foolish you are, and how slow of heart to believe. . ." The story is not about them and their disappointment, he says. It is about life, the universe and everything in it.

They respond to Jesus with hospitality, engaging him in conversation and expressing concern for him when he appears to be traveling beyond their stopping point. "The day is over," they insist. "It’s getting dark. Come eat with us and rest and be safe." At supper when Jesus takes, blesses, breaks and gives them the bread, they recognize him, then almost immediately lose him again as he vanishes. But the experience on the road and at table has transformed them, and they immediately return to Jerusalem to find the disciples and the rest of their group.

What makes the story remarkable is how unremarkable it is. I can understand Jesus appearing to the remaining 11 disciples, to the faithful women who followed him, and even to Paul all very practical appearances in terms of establishing the church and its mission. But Cleopas and his companion are nobodies who have no idea what God might be doing. They could be any one of us. Their road to Emmaus is an ordinary road, the road each of us is on every day. This is what sets this story apart from other accounts of Jesus’ Easter appearances.

Yes, the story resonates with a sense of the church and its mission and of the tremendous power of the word and the sacraments to connect us with the presence of God. But its image is of God and a church that walk alongside human confusion, human pain and a human loss of faith and hope. Emmaus invites us to expect God to find us. Emmaus challenges us to see that it isn’t our unshakable faith and deep spirituality that connect us with the risen Christ, but our smallest gestures of hospitality and friendship.

"Lord Jesus, stay with us, for evening is at hand and the day is past; be our companion in the way, kindle our hearts and awaken hope, that we may know you as you are revealed in scripture and the breaking of bread. Grant this for the sake of your love" (The Book of Common Prayer).

Enter Here (Acts 2:42-47,1 Peter 2:19-25, John 10:1-10)

I had already attended two colleges when one day I wandered into a third. The sign above the door of an old mansion in Fort Vancouver, Washington, read "Evergreen State College."

"What seminars are you offering this fall?" I asked a woman behind the desk. "Reality," she responded. "Sign me up!" I replied.

Fifteen years later I was attending an Evergreen State alumni meeting when the president of the college asked our group, "Was Evergreen your first college?" A few hands went up. "Your second?" A few more hands went up. "For how many of you was Evergreen your third college?" Most hands, including mine, went up. The president studied us a moment and said, "We did a bad job of finding you."

Yes, perhaps I could have used a better shepherd, but I had also needed to try different college "gates" before I entered the right one.

The two non-Gospel readings speak of shepherds and flocks, of the world on the other side of the gate. Acts paints a picture of the Christian community behaving as if it were the beginning of a love affair. In terms of the human they expressed the highest forms of togetherness and generosity, and in terms of the divine they experienced wondrous signs. That image reminds me of that moment in front of that desk at Evergreen State, when I was ready to sign on.

But then there’s I Peter. Here, the flock isn’t experiencing devotion and wonders and signs, but pain and injustice. I’m willing to see it as a good dose of reality. After all, I’m not still in that comfortable college setting discussing "reality" as portrayed by philosophers and the media. And the Christian church is no longer living in communal bliss in Jerusalem. There’s a world beyond the intimacy and the intensity of first ardor, cautions the New Testament writer, a world that is not always easy or kind. The temptation in the rapture of finding one’s own flock is to forget other obligations or dismiss them as less worthy. But being an Evergreen student doesn’t allow me to skip paying my taxes. Being a writer doesn’t exempt me from responsibilities to my husband and our sons (though it does permit frequent ordering of takeout). Belonging to the flock named Christian doesn’t exempt us from the requirement of living in the wider world.

Before I get too cozy with the responsibility in these verses, however, I note verse 18 (conveniently omitted). "Slaves, accept the authority of your masters with all deference, not only those who are kind and gentle but also those who are harsh." I hear the writer telling the readers a hard truth. Their Christian faith isn’t an escape hatch. They are still citizens, spouses or (alas) slaves, and the claims of those roles are still upon them.

Yet this message angers me too. I think of the various oppressions of the vulnerable and the powerless in our world. And I believe that my resisting the directive to accept one’s lot (no matter how oppressed) and strive for goodness (no matter how poorly treated) has merit. Just as the rapture of beginning doesn’t carry us through, neither does suffering for its own sake. After September 11 my first response was to gather my flock. I phoned or emailed family and friends, taking inventory of those I love. I took refuge in my parish. We gathered to recite an ancient liturgy that implores God for deliverance from all kinds of calamities. One woman said the words reminded her that we are part of a long history of people who have suffered war and famine and pestilence, and still call upon God. Our flock became larger as we communed with all of those saints.

But now church attendance has dipped. The flags on car antennae are rags, the "God Bless America" signs have lost letters and the camaraderie has faded. Enter by the right gate. Nothing else will sustain our endeavors, not even good things like patriotism or naming evil as evil or even suffering in the face of unjust persecution. The rapturous beginnings and the sufferings mean nothing if we haven’t entered by the right door. And for Christians the door is the person of Jesus Christ.

I can’t answer what that charge means for every Christian, but these readings offer a good place to start. Acts tells us to devote ourselves "to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers." We gather not for bliss or for escape, but to grow in faith with others. I Peter doesn’t leave us to suffer injustice passively but points us to Jesus, whose suffering and death were transformed into resurrection. When he "was abused, he did not return abuse; when he suffered, he did not threaten; but he entrusted himself to the one who judges justly."

I want the Good Shepherd, someone who sees it as his responsibility to find me when I’m lost and clueless. But instead I get the Good Gate, the invitation to see beyond my beginnings and my sufferings to Jesus who promises, "Whoever enters by me will be saved, and will come in and go out and find pasture. I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly."