By Mark Davis, dabbler in many things, expert in none.
There is no secret that the Presbyterian Church (USA), along with many other church bodies, is beset by differences that threaten to undo us. We consider those differences so critical that not even our common confession of Jesus Christ as Lord is enough to keep us from severing from one another into separate worshiping communities. Many are the analyses and passionate pleas for us to find unity within our differences, to practice a kind of compassion that will help us to overcome our differences, or to tolerate one another despite our differences. However, what we do not often do in times of differences is to differentiate between different kinds of differences. Some differences may require dividing into separate worshiping communities, but most do not. Even the kinds of differences that do seem to warrant separation can contain a hidden grace that may surprise us.
There is no secret that the Presbyterian Church (USA), along with many other church bodies, is beset by differences that threaten to undo us. We consider those differences so critical that not even our common confession of Jesus Christ as Lord is enough to keep us from severing from one another into separate worshiping communities. Many are the analyses and passionate pleas for us to find unity within our differences, to practice a kind of compassion that will help us to overcome our differences, or to tolerate one another despite our differences. However, what we do not often do in times of differences is to differentiate between different kinds of differences. Some differences may require dividing into separate worshiping communities, but most do not. Even the kinds of differences that do seem to warrant separation can contain a hidden grace that may surprise us.
Different Kinds of Differences
Consider these different kinds of differences:
1. "The
difference between night and day."[1]
This familiar phrase suggests a kind of oppositional
difference where the 'two sides' seem utterly incompatible and their positions
irreconcilable. One can argue whether or not the assumption that there are ‘two
sides’ is correct in the first place, but this is often the kind of difference
that seems to warrant dramatic action such as dividing a worshiping community
into separated communities. The tension indicated by this kind of difference is
that one cannot have both night and day, but must have one or the other.
2. "The
difference between month and day." Now we're talking about a difference,
but not an oppositional difference. There are ways that one might compare a
month and a day, since both of them signify ways of marking time. But, when we
compare a month and a day, we do not imagine that one must choose between them
as incompatible co-existents. At most, their difference is that one is the
subset of the other.
3. "The
difference between salt and day." Now we are comparing two categorically
different referents, so different in kind that to speak as if their difference
means anything is almost akin to speaking nonsense. Salt is one kind of thing
and day is simply another. So, while salt and day are indeed different, their
differences are both obvious and fairly meaningless.
We've identified three different types of differences. There may be
more, but for now the differences between these three different types of
difference at least give us pause to consider this question: When we discuss
our differences, what kind of differences are we discussing?
To be sure, most of us would presume that the differences that have
divided us for some time now are the incompatible, irreconcilable oppositional
kind of differences indicated by the phrase "as different as night and
day." Marriage is either only between a man and a woman or it is not. The
church will either ordain women and men who are engaged in same-sex
relationships or it will not. There seems to be no middle ground to consider,
so that in the end there must be a 'winner' or a 'loser.' Therefore, as the
General Assembly convenes there are pre-Assembly caucuses, mid-Assembly
strategy luncheons, and post-Assembly interpretations, most of which reinforce
the ‘win or lose’ mentality. What often results is that a process, which should
be an act of discerning God’s direction, becomes a process where people from
every side and at all points in between experience anger, despair, elation, or
knots in their stomachs at the whole process.
To describe these differences with the adjectives, 'incompatible,
irreconcilable, and oppositional' may sound a bit strong, but dividing the body
of Christ into separate worshiping communities is no small thing. Strong
language seems warranted to show the critical seriousness of where our
differences have taken us. Indeed, it would be shameful to imagine that a
church would sever itself over trivial matters. And so we name our differences
starkly: The love of God v. the holiness of God; upholding the marriage
covenant v. honoring loving relationship; integrity in ordination standards v.
affirming the diversity of the Spirit; etc. While we may not like the terms
given to the debates (especially when others do the naming), they are not
simply the product of strategic spin-doctoring. The terms are stark because the
passions run deep.
If we take for granted that the differences that divide us are
"the difference between night and day" kinds of differences, there
are reasons to take heart. One thing we might appreciate in one another -
especially those with whom we disagree most ardently - is that 'both sides'
seem to share a true passion over our differences. We disagree passionately
only because we agree that our differences are meaningful differences. In other
words, the platform of our differences and what gives passion to them is
actually constructed out of the things we hold in common. People matter.
Theology matters. Identity matters. Covenant relationships matter. The
authority of Scripture matters. How we interpret Scripture matters. Even
policies matter. Without this platform of agreements, our differences would be
as passion-less as "the difference between salt and day." Different,
yes. Meaningful, no. What we hold in common is that our differences matter.
They matter precisely because we agree on so much.
So, even if the differences that divide us are "different as
night and day" kind of differences, perhaps we can build on that platform
of those things that we share in common in order to explore those places of
difference boldly. When we do so, we may find ways to consider those night and
day differences other than as utterly incompatible, irreconcilable, and
oppositional. Below are three theses that can make our “night and day”
differences opportunities for hope.
Night and day need one another to mean anything
When we explore differences that are "as different as night and
day," we discover something quite promising. 'Night' and 'day' are partner
terms, correlate terms, that need one another in order to make sense. One way
that we think of 'night' is that it is 'day' without light. One way we think of
'day' is that it is night with the lights turned on. The oppositional
difference between them shows that day and night depend on one another for
meaning. That is how oppositional differences work. The contrasting poles of
oppositional differences are not two arrival points that have nothing to do
with one another. They are only meaningful insofar as they depend on one
another. They need one another. They feed on one another and they feed one
another.
Even if we believe that that the differences that divide us are
"different as night and day" differences, as such, "each
side" needs the other to be whole. Tradition needs the emergence of something
new, because it is a constitutive part of the Presbyterian tradition that we
are "Reformed always being reformed." Emerging ways of being church
or of being in covenant relationships need tradition, because it is precisely
the tutelage of tradition that prevents an emerging movement from being merely
a passing whim and instills in it the notion that 'doing theology' has
significance. Any ‘new’ understanding of marriage relies heavily on the ‘old’
existing understanding of marriage to give the word meaning. And so on. What
looks at first glance like simple opposition becomes on further reflection an
interdependent correlation where ‘both sides’ need one another.
Night and day are not the only possibilities
For those involved in oppositional differences, the opposing sides
seem to be the only two options. Think of the oppositional difference between
Jews and Samaritans in the New Testament era. When the Samaritan woman at the
well poses the question to Jesus, "Should we worship God on our mountain
or yours?" she was staking out the 'two sides' that had divided these
theological cousins passionately for many years. However, she was also asking a
question that only had significance for Jews and Samaritans. The occupying
Romans, for example, thought the question was utterly meaningless. As far as
they were concerned Rome had thoroughly conquered both mountains, so the
question was over two piles of Roman dirt. But, for Samaritans and for Jews,
the oppositional difference behind this question of sacred geography warranted
enmity strong enough to divide them into separate and rival worshiping
communities.
Frankly, Jesus' answer to the Samaritan woman's question of sacred
geography has more in common with what a Roman soldier might say than what a
Jew or a Samaritan of that day had been trained to say. In answer to the
question, "Which mountain, ours or yours?" Jesus says
"Neither." Likewise, later in John's gospel Jesus will encounter
another question of oppositional difference, "Who sinned this man or his
parents that he was born blind?" with the same answer,
"Neither." What Jesus' answer suggests is that the Roman soldier may
be on to something here - the oppositional difference that provokes us to
separate ourselves from one another may be fairly meaningless in the larger
view of things. The Roman soldier's jaded view that both mountains are
conquered territories actually opens the way for Jesus' beatific view that all
mountains can be sacred geography. What is important is not the mountain itself
- as hard as it might be for those of us who adhere to one side of the
oppositional difference or the other to hear it. What is important is the
Spirit that makes geography sacred in the first place - something that both
Jews and Samaritans can lose sight of when differing.
When we differ over the question of ordination, for example, we
imagine that the ultimate issue is the degree to which we tighten or loosen the
‘standards’ for ordination. Attempts to guard the 'sanctity' of ordination vows
are grounded in real conviction that when a church discerns and agrees together
about the calling and vocation of its elders, it is practicing the presence of
the Spirit. Likewise, attempts to change the requirements surrounding
ordination vows feed off of that very same sense of sanctity – that part of
practicing the presence of the Spirit is to discern anew how God is calling and
leading God's people into ministry in the church and the world. No one 'side'
of our differences has a corner on meaning or on the Spirit. Just as Jesus’
answer to the Samaritan woman suggested for their oppositional difference, the primary
matter in ordination, covenant relationships, and other issues that divide us
is not the position that we hold. It is the Spirit that holds us.
Night and Day only describe perspective, not essence
There is a riddling question that my dad once asked to break up a
long car ride: "What color is a
white house at night?" My brother and I immediately answered "black,"
to which my dad responded, "No, it's still white, you just can't see the
color in the dark." The point of the riddle was to show that the primary
differences between night and day were changes in perspective, not changes in things-in-themselves.
That riddle has always intrigued me when I hear the phrase “as different as
night and day.” What that means is that however stark the differences are, they
are differences of perspective, not essence. They are real differences, to be sure, but they are real differences in
perspective, not in essence. How liberating and appropriate humbling would it
be if all of us who are embroiled in oppositional difference would agree that
our differences are differences in perspective. That would not diminish our
passion, or compromise our conviction. It would, however, relativize the whole
conversation. We cannot presume that we are speaking for God, for all time, for
truth itself when we differ as different as night and day. We can only presume
that we are speaking for our perspective of God, our best understanding in our
moment, and our interpretation of truth.
Red flags warning of “relativism!” will immediately rise at the
suggestion that our differences are perspectival and not essential. But, I
would argue that those red flags are actually red herrings. Even John Calvin
was never presumptuous enough to speak of God ‘in God’s essence,’ but only of
God has God has ‘accommodated’ Godself to our understanding. What Calvin
rightly understood was that God’s ways are indeed higher than our ways and
God’s understanding beyond the reach of our understanding. Any statement we
make of God is, to that extent, perspectival. That is why Christian theology
must always be grounded in humility, not arrogance. It is not that “everything
is relative; nothing is true.” It is that we, qua humans, can only see as far
as our eyes are able, can only understand as our minds are able. And God
accommodates Godself to that limited entity known as humanity.[2]
When our “night and day” differences collide over the issue of
ordination, acknowledging our perspective gives us both courage and humility.
We argue over whether we should ordain persons in same-sex relationships or
whether we should limit ordination to persons in heterosexual relationships or
chastity in singleness. We feel the passion because we agree that ordination is
an act of the community that speaks of how God works among us today. We have
convictions because we agree that the incarnate presence of the Spirit
continues to gift and empower persons for service in a variety of ways. We
argue because we disagree over how we most faithfully exercise authority – the
act of authorizing persons to practice the leadership role of ruling or
teaching elder in the church. Our differences are rooted in how we perceive God
working among and calling us to exercise this authorizing role.
If we begin with the assumption that our differences are differences
of perspective, we might open ourselves to remembering the wonder that God has
invited us to participate in this joy at all. Ordination is, beneath our perspectives
of how it is rightly practiced, a gift from God. The candidate for ordination
is – first and foremost – called by God’s grace, an act that witnesses to the
activity of the Spirit among us. God’s initiating call is then confirmed by the
community. That activity is also initiated by God’s grace. Heck, the gathered
community itself exists only by the grace of God. The whole presumption of
ordination is chock full of grace! As such, there is no room for human
presumption or arrogance. What lies beneath our entire act of ordination is the
recognition that none of us in worthy of ordaining or of being ordained. Unless
our humility in this activity is a feigned humility, we can only engage in
ordination as a “debt of gratitude.” Before we ask the question, “Why would God
call that kind of person?” we first ask, “Why would God call the likes of us?”
And with humility, we can only answer, “Not for any reason other than God’s
sheer grace.” In the end, our perspectives on how to exercise the authorizing
act of ordination is an indication of how we experience a grace that none of us
deserves.
Our differing perspectives, then, are genuine and real. But, they
are perspectives that rely on grace. We may not all come to genuine agreement
when we begin with that humble starting point. But, at least we might be able
to see our way together in the grace that unites us.
[1] I need to note that references to
'night and day,' as well as references to 'black and white,' are often used to
connote moral difference, with darkness denoting sin or evil and brightness
denoting good. That is not at all how I intend these terms to be understood. I
am simply noting that the phrase "as different as night and day"
speaks to a presumed oppositional difference, without any assumption that
either night or day is superior, preferred, or better. If the history of these
terms makes it too difficult to hear them amorally, then I apologize and invite
the reader to help me arrive at better terms that make the same point but do
not involve the same overtones
[2]
This quality of God is what Robert Scharlemann has in mind in his delightfully
entitled article, “The Being of God When God is not Being God.”
No comments:
Post a Comment