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How Christians went to war.


FIFTH IN A 10-PART SERIES ON CHURCH HISTORY

The Persian Gulf War Persian Gulf War
 or Gulf War

(1990–91) International conflict triggered by Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in August 1990. Though justified by Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein on grounds that Kuwait was historically part of Iraq, the invasion was presumed to be
 and subsequent conflicts with Iraq saw government and military officials discussing the ancient Christian moral tradition of "just war." Saint Augustine Saint Augustine (sānt ô`gəstēn), city (1990 pop. 11,692), seat of St. Johns co., NE Fla.; inc. 1824. Located on a peninsula between the Matanzas and San Sebastian rivers, it is separated from the Atlantic Ocean by Anastasia Island;  would be proud.

Among the remarkable side effects Side effects

Effects of a proposed project on other parts of the firm.
 of the conflict between the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  and Iraq has been the revival of the just war theory, the set of ethical reflections specifying the conditions under which a "just war" may be declared (jus ad bellum Jus ad bellum (Latin for "Justice to War"; see also Just War Theory) are a set of criteria that are consulted before engaging in war, in order to determine whether entering into war is justifiable. ) and how it must be waged (jus in bello). Catholic moral theologians, accustomed to talking shop primarily to their students and to one another, enjoyed a short but intense heyday in the media spotlight during Operation Desert Storm Noun 1. Operation Desert Storm - the United States and its allies defeated Iraq in a ground war that lasted 100 hours (1991)
Gulf War, Persian Gulf War - a war fought between Iraq and a coalition led by the United States that freed Kuwait from Iraqi invaders;
 and again, briefly, during the recent U.S. bombing of Iraq There have been several bombings of Iraq:
  • during the Gulf War
  • Bombing of Iraq (September 1996)
  • Bombing of Iraq (December 1998)
  • during the 2003 invasion of Iraq
.

As the conflict unfolded in 1990 and early 1991, these theologians authored innumerable articles and appeared on talk shows to discuss the criteria for a just war--namely, that war is the last resort, taken only after all other measures have been exhausted; that the cause is just (e.g., self-defense against an aggressor); that the war is waged with the right intention (not to exact vengeance or confiscate To expropriate private property for public use without compensating the owner under the authority of the Police Power of the government. To seize property.

When property is confiscated it is transferred from private to public use, usually for reasons such as
 territory); and that the war is declared by the proper authority and with a reasonable hope of success in attaining its objectives.

Had the Bush administration and the international coalition satisfied these criteria? Once Desert Storm was under way, did it satisfy the jus in bello criteria: Were noncombatants reasonably protected from attack? Was the damage and suffering caused by the war in proportion to the moral benefits gained (e.g., the defense of Kuwait)?

As they clarified these concepts and applied them to the situation in the gulf, theologians were suddenly "relevant" again. "It is not too much to say," wrote Russell Sizemore, "that for a brief moment just war rhetoric served as the lingua franca of American moral reflection." Indeed, the sight of government and military officials, politicians, educators, and pundits taking seriously a moral tradition rooted in Christianity was striking.

Saint Augustine must be pleased. The famous convert, who was consecrated con·se·crate  
tr.v. con·se·crat·ed, con·se·crat·ing, con·se·crates
1. To declare or set apart as sacred: consecrate a church.

2. Christianity
a.
 bishop of Hippo (in North Africa) in 395, was perhaps the church's most influential thinker on the subject of the relevance and applicability of Christian ideals and values to the so-called "real world"--that den of iniquity INIQUITY. Vice; contrary to equity; injustice.
     2. Where, in a doubtful matter, the judge is required to pronounce, it is his duty to decide in such a manner as is the least against equity.
, power politics, and remorseless, take-no-prisoners warfare we call home. It was Augustine's singular achievement to provide an elaborate theological rationale for Christian participation in the affairs of the world, not least in its governance. From Roman political theory and Christian eschatology (the divine plan for bringing history to fulfillment) he fashioned the classic statement of the just war tradition.

Christians of the early church had set themselves apart from the fallen world, standing both in judgment of it and in literal imitation of Jesus. Rejecting "an eye for an eye" morality, as the Lord had done, many practiced pacifism pacifism, advocacy of opposition to war through individual or collective action against militarism. Although complete, enduring peace is the goal of all pacifism, the methods of achieving it differ. , refusing to serve in the military or take up arms Verb 1. take up arms - commence hostilities
go to war, take arms

war - make or wage war
, even in self-defense. No war could be considered "just" in their eyes.

Once the emperor Constantine ended the Roman empire's persecution of Christians The persecution of Christians is religious persecution that Christians sometimes undergo as a consequence of professing their faith, both historically and in the current era. Christians are by far the most persecuted religious group in human history.  in 313, however, the radical witness of the few was eclipsed by the worldliness of the many. The church made room for thousands of new members who were quite at ease in the old dispensation DISPENSATION. A relaxation of law for the benefit or advantage of an individual. In the United States, no power exists, except in the legislature, to dispense with law, and then it is not so much a dispensation as a change of the law. . As Christians gradually moved into positions of civic authority, they developed a more flexible attitude toward the world and its foibles. Their enhanced sense of responsibility for public affairs necessitated the kind of theological justifications for "public Christianity" that Augustine and other theologians provided.

Augustine, not one to shy from big ideas, developed a philosophy of history that captured the ordinary Christian's sense of divided loyalties that arose from living spiritually under Christ's reign but physically in a dissolute dis·so·lute  
adj.
Lacking moral restraint; indulging in sensual pleasures or vices.



[Middle English, from Latin dissol
 and declining empire. In his masterpiece, The City of God, written toward the end of his life, Augustine ruminated on ways of bridging the vast gulf between the "City of God" and the "City of Man," the two realms vying daily for the loyalty of the Christian. In so doing he articulated a powerful form of moral reasoning that translates abstract Christian values into concrete norms for living in the rough-and-tumble world of realpolitik realpolitik

Politics based on practical objectives rather than on ideals. The word does not mean “real” in the English sense but rather connotes “things”—hence a politics of adaptation to things as they are.
.

Part of Augustine's brilliance as a theologian was his uncanny ability to incorporate and subtly transform lessons learned from his intellectually charged (and somewhat checkered) past. Specifically, he borrowed elements from Manicheanism, the pagan philosophy of his youth, which divided the world into duelling absolutes, realms of pure light and impenetrable darkness. Behind this dualism dualism, any philosophical system that seeks to explain all phenomena in terms of two distinct and irreducible principles. It is opposed to monism and pluralism. In Plato's philosophy there is an ultimate dualism of being and becoming, of ideas and matter.  of spheres, however, lies an encompassing order of love and justice, the mature Augustine--the Christian Augustine--now asserted. This divine ordering of reality is the standard by which partial realizations of love and justice are measured.

In a sublimely practical move, Augustine refused to allow the perfection of the heavenly city to undermine striving for its semblance in the earthly. Christians are only passing through the City of Man, he acknowledged. Yet even on earth they may taste some of the happiness of the heavenly city. Partial and imperfect realizations of the eschaton, the final age of fulfillment, would have to suffice. Achieving them would be the burden of Christian politics.

Politics, Christian or otherwise, is the art of compromise. If the definitive peace of the heavenly city is beyond the power of earthly rulers to deliver, he reasoned, they must strive for the next best thing--the provisional sort of peace and social order that is necessary for the cultivation of personal virtue and piety. Peace expressed as order, however imperfect, provides people with the opportunity to maintain or restore relationships threatened by turmoil in the political or ecclesial Ec`cle´si`al

a. 1. Ecclesiastical.
 community. For Augustine, the Catholic ethicist eth·i·cist   also e·thi·cian
n.
A specialist in ethics.

Noun 1. ethicist - a philosopher who specializes in ethics
ethician

philosopher - a specialist in philosophy
 Lisa Sowle Cahill comments, "social order as a form of peace is also a form of love."

To preserve order, however, the proper authorities must be able to control the violent and anarchic behavior that fuels wars of conquest and revenge. And they must do so without adopting the tactics of the marauders and mercenaries bent on escalating the violence. Use compelling force, in other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, but don't get carried away with it. The just war theory lays down the guidelines for achieving this delicate balance.

Augustine's writings on the justified use of force--the core of the just war theory--commended the use of violence under certain conditions. The violence must be deemed necessary to punish crime or to uphold the peace. The goal in using potentially lethal force, further, must be the establishment of justice rather than the punishment of enemies. Most important, only the legitimate civil authority could make the decision to employ violence. Obedience to just war criteria, in fact, was considered one sign of the ruler's legitimacy before God.

Confronted with the growing acceptance of just war reasoning, pacifists invoked Jesus' "hard sayings" about turning the other cheek and loving the enemy. Augustine responded that Christians should heed these "counsels of perfection" in their personal affairs, but they should apply a different calculus when translating them to the complex arena of public governance. To kill selflessly for the common good may be the highest form of self-denial and love.

Each age has its own Saddam Hussein. For Christians of late antiquity, whose faith had flowered under the peace of Constantine, the barbarians who sacked Rome and set about to dismantle Christian civilization embodied the anarchic violence that the just war theory compelled legitimate civic authorities to resist. It's perhaps harder for us to understand that heretics who threatened the unity of the African church also qualified, in Augustine's book, as candidates for "tough love" of the most lethal kind.

Many Catholics, including scores of bishops, have recently questioned whether there can still be a just war of "right proportion" in our era of nuclear and biological weapons. Others continue to defend the instrumental use of deadly violence to preserve peace and avert greater evils. Augustine's logic of war remains relevant, they contend, in a world where peace must be understood not as the absence of violence, but as the preservation of a minimum standard of order within which Christianity might flourish.

Saint Augustine may have to be held accountable, nonetheless, Cahill observes, for "his willingness to allow considerable leeway in history for Christian compromise with secular and civic values and `necessities,' deferring eschatological es·cha·tol·o·gy  
n.
1. The branch of theology that is concerned with the end of the world or of humankind.

2. A belief or a doctrine concerning the ultimate or final things, such as death, the destiny of humanity, the Second
 transformation of major dimensions of Christian practice from history to heaven." Heaven can wait, in other words. But can we?

R. Scott Appleby, professor of history and director of the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Claretian Publications
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Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Appleby, R. Scott
Publication:U.S. Catholic
Date:May 1, 1999
Words:1437
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