Real World Faith
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Real World Faith articulates a faith that is effectively linked to our real world, the world of our bodies and of the body politic. The real world of our bodies causes us to be largely preoccupied with our health, security, dignity, and sexuality, and causes concern for food and shelter for ourselves and for our neighbors. The real world of the body politic puts us in inescapable touch with issues of money, power, weapons, policies, treaties, taxes, and trade agreements. These are the matters that occupy us most of the time on most of our days. They are the proper agenda of our faith, because our faith consists in trust in the One who governs our bodily life in the world. Our interpretive work is to try to articulate the ways--albeit hidden ways--in which the agency and character of God make effective contact with our world. This is real-life faith.
Walter Brueggemann
Walter Brueggemann is William Marcellus McPheeters Professor of Old Testament Emeritus at Columbia Theological Seminary, Decatur, Georgia. He is past President of the Society of Biblical Literature and the author of several books from Cascade Books, including: A Pathway of Interpretation, David and His Theologian, Divine Presence amid Violence, Praying the Psalms (2nd ed.), and The Role of Old Testament Theology in Old Testament Interpretation.(2011), Remember You Are Dust (2012), Embracing the Transformation (2013), and The Practice of Homefulness (2014).
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Real World Faith - Walter Brueggemann
Real World Faith
Real World Faith
Walter Brueggemann
Foreword
Erskine Clarke
Fortress Press
Minneapolis
REAL WORLD FAITH
Copyright © 2023 Fortress Press, an imprint of 1517 Media. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical articles or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Email copyright@1517.media or write to Permissions, Fortress Press, PO Box 1209, Minneapolis, MN 55440-1209.
Library of Congress Control Number: 2023932816 (print)
Cover design: John Lucas
Cover image: Bokeh photography of city lights during night time, Photo by ibuki Tsubo on Unsplash
Print ISBN: 978-1-5064-9267-4
eBook ISBN: 978-1-5064-9268-1
Contents
Foreword
Introduction
Prayer: Life Outside Our Homemade Cages
Part I: The Church in Its Life and Mission
1. Barmen Again?
2. On Sacramental Pronouns
3. Seeing More Than Trees
4. Stay Safe?
5. There Are Conspiracies and Then There Are Conspiracies
6. Who Knows?
7. Without Hindrance!
Part II: Social Pain and Possibility!
8. Habeas Corpus
9. Let Us Now Praise Famous Health-Care Providers
10. Not Comforted!
11. Speak Truth; Do Justice
12. Strange Business!
13. The Strangeness of the Stranger
14. Unemancipated!
Part III: Civic Membership, Responsibility, and Failure
15. Bonds of Affection!
16. Bonds of Affection
. . . Once More
17. Homegrown Taliban!
18. On Getting Us Something
19. The Role of Government?
20. The Size of Government: A Retraction
Part IV: War and Peace
21. Iron Rationed
22. On the Way to Peaceable Torah
23. Sleepless in Babylon
24. The Holy Fog of War
Part V: Reflections More Personal
25. Divine Arithmetic!
26. Dugout Dialogues
27. Norman Gottwald
28. Ode to Sammy
29. Reflections on Social Location
30. Reprise for Sammy
31. Undeserving in Michigan
Conclusion
Foreword
It is often said that Walter Brueggemann is the nation’s most influential biblical scholar. This perception reflects the respect—indeed the awe—of other scholars who gladly claim him as a colleague. But his influence, of course, goes far beyond the academy and its important concerns. Where his influence has been most deeply felt is among the theologians of the church, the faithful pastors who week by week interpret for congregations the Word of God as it confronts our Real World,
and among the congregations who hear him quoted directly or hear his interpretive insights embedded in sermons, in church classes, in pastoral care, and in the church’s ministry to a hurting world. The church is Brueggemann’s natural habitat,
and in his Introduction to this present volume he says that his recurring effort is to try to open the biblical text through exposition that may serve in critical ways to empower the church in its life and mission.
Any reader of Brueggemann knows his astonishing knowledge of biblical texts, how he moves with ease and stunning insights among familiar and often obscure—to the rest of us—texts to focus on a particular concern or theme. The biblical texts all seem to be his old friends among whom he has spent a lifetime asking questions of them and being questioned by them. And he asks these old friends questions that few of us would ever think of asking and he hears questions from them that most of us are too deaf or preoccupied to hear. It is this asking and hearing conversation that he has shared with us over many years and that has been such a gift to the life of the church.
Brueggemann, however, has invited others into the conversation; indeed, the biblical texts themselves have insisted that he invite others into the conversation as the texts confront our Real World.
Again, any reader of Brueggemann will know the astonishing breadth of his reading, not only biblical studies but also novels, history, sociology, cultural studies, psychology and philosophy, political commentaries, and on and on. All of these are brought into his conversation with biblical texts and with the Holy One encountered in the texts.
But Brueggemann also invites us into this conversation. He invites us to question and be questioned by the biblical texts and by those studies of our Real World.
His invitation is for the sake of the church’s life and mission and to a glad and faithful obedience to the One who is Lord of the church. The conversation, he says, which is at the interface of faith and life,
is not one that ends at the conclusion of a church service or study group but is open-ended and never finished
because the Spirit is always unsettling our best conclusion.
So this volume is a gracious invitation into this larger conversation. As a collection of discrete yet related essays, each of modest length, it can be especially helpful to faithful preachers busy with many aspects of the church’s common life and to others eager to think about how faith relates to pressing issues of contemporary life. And not incidentally, it provides splendid examples of Brueggemann’s own ongoing conversation that has been such a gift to the church. Chapter titles provide hints of particular subjects addressed in that conversation: There Are Conspiracies and Then There Are Conspiracies,
Habeas Corpus,
Speak Truth; Do Justice,
The Strangeness of the Stranger,
and on and on, thirty-one essays altogether plus an introduction and conclusion. Real World Faith is consequently another gift Walter Brueggemann offers to the church, a gift forged in his own faithful attention to his calling, and a gift we eagerly unwrap in anticipation of being surprised and encouraged by Good News.
Erskine Clarke
Introduction
It turns out that blogs are just the right genre for an old man who still has a lively critical thought, but lacks the energy for extended exposition. For that reason I am glad to have been able to write these several pieces originally published in 2021 and 2022, and glad that I may share them more broadly in this collection. My grounding, as always, is in the exposition of the biblical text. And the natural habitat for my work is the church in which I am a critical insider. Thus my effort, recurringly, is to try to open the biblical text through exposition that may serve in critical ways to empower the church in its life and mission. My assumption is that most readers of my blogs at Church Anew (https://churchanew.org) are engaged church members, many of whom are pastors. I take that company as my natural readership, and so my writing is an effort at collegiality with those who care about gospel faith and who seek to live it out in ways that make a difference. I belong—not surprisingly—to a theological tradition rooted in Calvin, shaped by German pietism, and mediated through Reinhold Niebuhr among others, that believes that the claims of gospel faith voiced in the Bible concern our common life and the practice of civic responsibility. Thus my intent here is to support the rich and varied ways in which our faith impinges on our common public life.
The organization of these materials here is more than a bit arbitrary, but hopefully the five parts into which the book is divided will aid the reader in following my general line of thinking. I have placed several pieces concerning the church in part I, both because of my readership and because of my own glad habitat in the church. I have considered several aspects of church life and practice, always with an eye on the ways in which the fresh challenges we face summon us in ways that never come without some risk.
The preoccupation of the church with the reality of suffering and pain in the world has led me in part II to consider some instances of social pain among us. Our current season of fear and anxiety (that tilts us toward exclusivism for our own kind) compels us to think of and notice especially the stranger
who is welcomed in the gospel. Of course this welcome pertains particularly toward the stranger
of another race.
And this as our society now is much bent toward racism and white supremacy.
This accent on social pain, and the chance to redeem that pain, has pressed upon me a number of civic issues in part III. These issues concern the role and size of government, the glue of friendship that makes democracy work, and our current exclusionary practices that want to deny membership to some who feel like a threat to our preferred social arrangements.
Part IV singles out, from more general civic concerns, the crisis of war and peace in which we are now embroiled, and in which we are endlessly entangled in our national posturing, along with our imagined exceptionalism. That national preoccupation permits us to further imagine that the Holy One is on our side, while at the same time wanting to disregard the restraints that the Holy One imposes everywhere in creation.
Part V is more or less random, in which I have included some commentary of a more personal kind, most especially concerning our beloved cat, Sammy. It turns out (see chapter 30: Reprise for Sammy) that our beloved cat has embodied and continues to represent the truth of our dialogic existence. I have included here as well a critical tribute to Norman Gottwald from whom I have learned most and best.
I have settled on the title for this collection, Real World Faith. That is, this collection is among our main attempts to articulate faith that is effectively linked to our real world, the world of our bodies and the body politic. (On this accent, see my book, Materiality as Resistance: Five Elements for Moral Action in the Real World [2020].) The real world of our bodies causes us to be largely preoccupied with our health, security, dignity, and sexuality, and causes us concern for food and shelter, for us and for our neighbors. The real world of the body politic puts us in inescapable touch with issues of money, power, weapons, policies, treaties, taxes, and trade agreements. These are the matters that occupy us most of the time on most of our days. They are the proper agenda of our faith because our faith consists in trust in the One who governs our bodily life in the world. Our interpretive work is to try to articulate the ways—albeit hidden ways—in which the agency and character of God makes effective contact with our world. This is real-life faith.
In all of these reflective pieces I bear witness in two ways. First, they all attest to the rich and compelling ways in which our faith matters to the practice of our common life. But second, they attest that the work is open-ended and never finished. Thus the ongoing project of interpretation that lives at the interface of faith and life continues to press upon us. It is work that on the one hand refuses to settle for any final solution
of interpretation that we especially treasure because the Spirit is always unsettling our best conclusion. On the other hand, our ongoing interpretive work, when we have courage and wisdom, may always impinge upon our common life in significant ways that continue to empower and perplex us.
I am especially glad to thank Mary Brown, who has invited me to her blog platform, Church Anew, where I have been able to continue my work. Mary is endlessly attentive and generous. And I am grateful to Carey Newman at Fortress Press who has agreed to edit and publish this collection, a happy affirmation for me since my connection with Fortress Press goes back to ancient days, all of which are filled with gratitude for the long succession of editors at the press. In the same way, my links to Carey are long-running, so I am grateful to him. Most especially I am grateful to Tia Brueggemann who has proofed and edited every syllable of this manuscript. Without her attentiveness I would not have gotten this into print. It is my hope that this collection will serve as a support and resources for many colleagues who take their faith with straight-up seriousness. These friends and colleagues matter a great deal, and I am glad to be in solidarity with them.
Prayer
Life Outside Our Homemade Cages
(On reading John 9)
We live conveniently in our homemade cages of explanation.
We live comfortably in our cages of cause and effect.
We liberals live in our cages of being smarter and more woke;
We conservatives live in our cages of being better grounded and more reliable.
In our cages of ideology, we sense our control,
our ability to explain,
our capacity to link cause to effect,
to connect deed to consequence.
Our cages are self-justifying; we never question them, and the world is made morally sensible.
We win the blame game every time!
We reason backward from consequence to deed
from effect to cause;
our arithmetic never fails us.
But then sometimes—not often—but often enough
Your wonders elude our explanations;
Your miracles violate our confident calculations.
Once in a while . . .
healing breaks through,
generosity overwhelms our arithmetic,
forgiveness moves beyond our reasoning,
hospitality exposes our careful management.
Beyond our expectation
comes your freighted holiness:
new sight for the blind,
new walking for the lame,
new hearing for the deaf,
new possibility for the poor,
new freedom, new wellbeing, new joy,
all beyond our caged explanations.
Your holiness breaks our numbness;
Your holiness mocks our moral control;
Your holiness opens life beyond our blame games.
We pause in awe before your transformative power.
We move beyond our management;
we mount up with wings like eagles,
we run in eagerness and are not tired;
we walk in wellbeing and do not grow faint.
We are made new well beyond our best selves.
It is no surprise that we break out in loud praise,
lost in wonder at your goodness,
lost in love for the new world you give,
Lost in praise for you . . . you . . . you alone! Amen.
Part I
The Church in Its Life and Mission
1
Barmen Again?
The draft court opinion written by Justice Alito concerning Roe v. Wade is no doubt an important step in our society toward fascism—or some other less-named form of authoritarianism. Whereas the historical function of the Supreme Court has been to protect individual liberty from the incursion of the states, the Alito opinion does just the opposite; it invites the ruthless incursion of the state into individual lives and personal matters. It does so, moreover, at the behest of a small minority against the better judgment of the great majority of our citizens. It is the imprint of state control on the most intimate personal dimensions of our human life.
The forthcoming court ruling may be an important wake-up call to the church and its pastors. While there are and will be disagreements concerning pro-life
and pro-choice
positions, there can hardly be disagreement about the incursion of the state into a zone of human freedom and responsibility. We may pause over the question and answer of the Heidelberg Catechism:
What is your only comfort, in life and in death?
That I belong—body and soul, in life and in death—not to myself but to my faithful Savior, Jesus Christ . . .
The full answer in the catechism is more extended, but the key phrase is, I belong not to myself but to Jesus Christ.
In our present context, the answer might also have said, I belong not to the state, but to Jesus Christ.
That affirmation of course is a Christian confession that many others may not make. It is, nonetheless, the claim of our faith that whether we confess Christ or not, we are—all of us!—creatures who receive life from the creator, live our lives back to the creator, and belong to our creator. It is the claim of our faith that we are creatures well beloved by the creator, created by God ex nihilo, or as Norman Wirzba has said so well, creatio ex amore, out of nothing . . . out of love. Such beloved creatures do not and cannot belong to the state, and cannot have the state making claims on our bodies that are gifts from God. Thus it is striking that the catechism affirms that we belong to God, body and soul.
It is a stunning act of hubris for the state to imagine that it can properly control our bodies and mandate their performance.
This crisis moment in the long history of court rulings, a moment in which the court proposes to take away from us an elemental right, may be an alert to the church that we may be ready to teach and preach the most elemental claims of our faith in a way that clarifies the deep either/or of faith: Either we belong to our creator God, or we belong to the state that can accordingly command our lives and our bodies. We may not render to Caesar what we properly render to God.
It is my thought that this will be a very good and important time for pastors and teachers in the church to reintroduce the church to the Barmen Declaration that has been largely forgotten among us. The reason for this thinking is that the Barmen Declaration is the most important act in the church in recent time that staked out the elemental claims for the gospel in opposition to disastrous idolatrous distraction, an act that has been boldly reiterated in the Kairos Document and in the Belhar Confession in South Africa. The Barmen Declaration, written in 1934, largely by Karl Barth, was a confessional, confessing act whereby the church in Germany sought to assert its gospel truth in opposition to the false claims of National Socialism. The declaration contains six paragraphs, each of which is introduced by a scriptural citation, and each of which makes a frontal affirmation with a concluding sharp rejection linked to the affirmation. The declaration is easily and readily critiqued because it reflects a certain mode of German theology geared to a particular historical crisis and, most notably, it is silent concerning the fate of Jews in Germany. Given those problems with the declaration, it is nonetheless a bold act of faith that joins issue with the false claims of the state in Germany. It is to be noted that the Kairos Document in South Africa in like manner includes a sharp critique of state theology.
Given the strength and energy of state theology
in the United States now, reflected in Alito’s opinion, it is important for church members in the United States to be educated about Barmen, Behlar, and the Kairos Document, to be made aware of the way in which Christians elsewhere in our lifetime have faced idolatrous regimes in their particular contexts. My sense is that most church members in the United States little suspect this sharp edge to the life and faith of the church, and little understand the risks that our contemporaries have run for the truth of the gospel. For the most part, church theology in the United States is accommodationist, and church practice is keenly domesticated to fit in easily with state theology. And now the draft court ruling is an indication of the ways in which state theology has grown in energy and boldness, sadly and pathetically supported in uncritical ways by many who claim to speak for the church.
This moment of crisis requires determined political action. But it also requires that the church do critical thinking about our faith after the US church has been easily domesticated for a long time. While the actions