Speaking
the Truth in Love
.
On Waging Peace in the Culture
Wars
by R.R. Reno
This article is
excerpted from an essay written for the
Summer 2015 issue of Plough Quarterly.
Used with permission. Reno's full essay
is available online at Plough
Quarterly.
Christianity is a fighting faith.
We’re called to gird our loins with truth and
to put on the breastplate of righteousness, so
that we can contend against the principalities
and powers that rule in the present darkness
(Ephesians 6:11–14). And rule they do. We are
living in an era of transition. Increasingly
self-confident secular Americans, many very
powerful, are frustrated with the residual
influence of a Bible-formed worldview. They
tire of the limitations Judeo-Christian
morality puts on personal decisions about sex,
family, and marriage. They’re indifferent to
the soul-destroying effects of pornography.
They turn away from the now widespread moral
chaos among the poorest and most vulnerable,
focusing instead on the things they want:
abortion on demand should contraception fail,
greater freedom to use an accelerating
technology of reproduction should nature not
cooperate, and the option of doctor-assisted
suicide at the end of life should the trials
of suffering and death be too daunting.
The
truth demands our loyalty |
All of us feel in our bones that a great deal
is at stake, and we can’t simply step aside.
“Take the whole armor of God, that you may be
able to withstand in the evil day, and having
done all, to stand” (Ephesians 6:13). The
truth demands our loyalty. Furthermore,
Christ’s commandment that we love our neighbor
surely means speaking up for the moral order
God has inscribed into every heart. We owe our
neighbors, Christian or not, a faithful
witness to truth, even when those truths are
controversial. Even when our witness gets us
labeled as “culture warriors.” Even when our
witness upsets the status quo and enflames
political passions. The prophets of Israel did
not come to bring peace, but the sword that is
the Word of God.
Though we feel the dark undertow of
post-Christian culture, Christ calls us to do
more than stand against evil, denounce error,
and fight against the corruptions and
betrayals of moral truth. The armor of God
includes a sword, but we’re to beat it into a
plowshare. “Blessed are the peacemakers, for
they shall be called sons of God” (Matthew
5:9). Our Lord arrays us for battle, yes, but
he does so with the “equipment of the gospel
of peace” (Ephesians 6:15). The most profound
Christian vocation in the public square is not
to win debates and elections, but to build a
civilization of love.
This is not easy today. In my view, the
rancor that now greets Christian morality
presents a significant spiritual challenge.
When our witness is part of a society-wide
cultural conflict, when once widely accepted
moral truths are viewed as partisan political
stances, our words can too easily rend the
fabric of society. Our witness can heighten
conflict rather than contribute to a
civilization of love. Thus an important
question all of us face: How, for the sake of
peace in our society, are we to wield the
sharp, sometimes flaming words of truth?
Love seeks the higher
peace of unity in Christ |
Saint Paul gives us a clear principle: We are
to speak the truth in love (Ephesians 4:15).
Love seeks the higher peace of unity in
Christ. In all we say and do, we should aspire
to love’s heights. However, in civic life we
may do better to start with a more modest
enterprise, which is to develop good habits of
public speech, beginning with the virtue of
civility.
The Bible itself can help us become more
civil, and in so doing turn our truth-telling,
if not into peacemaking, then at least into
something that preserves the possibilities of
peace in our era of intense cultural conflict.
In this regard, the Golden Rule teaches the
most obvious lesson: Do unto others as you
would have them do unto you (Matthew 7:12).
I don’t want others to pretend that they
agree with me when they don’t, and I find it
condescending when people remain silent
because they think I might be hurt by
disagreement. The Golden Rule does not warrant
shrinking from sometimes tough and sharply
worded encounters. It is not a counsel of
niceness, which at best produces an artificial
peace in which everyone works very hard to
avoid controversial topics. Admittedly, to
agree to disagree makes a truce of sorts, and
there’s a proper place for it in public life –
we may need a cooling-off period, as it were.
But the peace of Christ that passes all
understanding is not the merely negative peace
of an absence of conflict. It’s the peace of
union with him, and with our brothers and
sisters in Christ. Peacemaking involves
community building, which can’t be done if we
refuse to engage each other about the moral
underpinnings that shape the civic life we
share. That requires us to do unto others as
we would have them do unto us: engaging them
as adults who can bear disagreement without
rancor.
So by all means there should
be public debate. The question is, will such
conversations be civil, or will they be
saturated with ad hominem attacks, as today’s
debates often are? Here the Golden Rule’s
lesson for civility is obvious. I don’t like
having my views distorted, nor do I enjoy it
when others suggest that I have mean, selfish
motives; accordingly, I must refrain from
treating my opponents in these ways. While it
may be true that the thinking of today’s
secular liberals has been distorted by the
modern diminution of moral authority to the
sovereign self, it’s not true that they are
motivated by a selfish interest to make moral
truth revolve around themselves. On the
contrary, many are motivated by a profound
regard for the rights and freedoms of others.
The same goes for me, of course. I’m often the
“conservative” voice arguing against
secular-liberal efforts to change our laws and
social norms to reflect “progressive” views.
But that does not mean I “fear change” or am
in some way psychologically incapable of
engaging other views.
One of the most uncivil and destructive
aspects of today’s progressive project in
morality and culture has been to label morally
reasoned opposition to same-sex marriage as
“homophobia.” It is politically convenient to
summarily dismiss those who disagree rather
than showing how they reason wrongly. But
doing so erodes civility. The Golden Rule
stipulates that, no matter how deeply we
disagree, we must take others seriously as
moral agents who seek to promote the common
good.
“Be wise as serpents
and innocent as doves” |
To the Golden Rule we can add another basic
moral principle: Saint Paul’s exhortation to
refrain from doing evil for the sake of some
greater or higher good (Romans 3:8). Political
debate is a contact sport. It involves sharply
worded polemics, and rightly so, because a
great deal is at stake. It’s no sin against
the Golden Rule to refuse to speak of abortion
supporters as “pro-choice,” saying instead,
“pro-abortion.” A picture of an aborted child
is shocking, but then the reality is as well.
Civility does not shy away from forceful words
and images that our adversaries would like to
parry, dismiss, and hide....
When biblical morality becomes a political
football, we need to follow another of Jesus’
teachings: “Be wise as serpents and innocent
as doves” (Matthew 10:16). We should be aware
of how our convictions are being manipulated
in the political process. Still, we cannot let
the cynicism of the world silence our witness,
which is what happens when we shy away from
issues in order to avoid being partisan. If
our attempts to do justice to the Bible’s
vision of the common good lead to us being
labeled partisan, then so be it.
> See also an
excellent related article, Grace
and Truth On Campus,
by Matthew H. Young, published in First
Things, July 27, 2015
R. R. Reno is the editor of First Things magazine and
the author of Fighting the Noonday Devil: And
Other Essays Personal and Theological
(Eerdmans, 2011).
This article is excerpted from an essay
written by R.R. Reno for the Summer 2015 issue
of Plough Quarterly. Used with permission.
Reno's full essay is available online at Plough
Quarterly. Plough Quarterly is a
publication of the Bruderhof, an international
movement of Christian communities in the
United States, England, Germany, Australia,
and Paraguay.
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