From the handful of followers
who first heard his message to the 2.2 billion Christians alive today,
the followers of Jesus were to be the salt of the earth, the city on a
hill, the force that would heal and transform the world. Christians now
comprise 33 percent of the world's population, but beyond the impressive
numbers, how successful has this faith been? What are its prospects for
the future? And if Jesus were return to Earth today, would he recognize
his teachings?
Any individual who has been lifted
from despair to hope, moved from hate to love, or vaulted from doubt to
faith is likely to judge the 20 centuries of Christianity as worthwhile.
So would any company of believers who have been sustained in slavery, oppressed
because of race or gender or class, and then have experienced liberation.
Anyone who has experienced healing,
received solace when the candle burns low or the life of a dear one ebbs,
or who has been inspired or intellectually moved when the faith elicits
art or makes sense, will use that experience to do the measuring. So much
for the private side. So very much.
THE PUBLIC FACE OF FAITH
Christianity, however, has its public side, its powerful presence. From the fourth century onward, its institutions dominated in East and West. As dominators, Christians have probably been no better and no worse than Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus, or people of faiths once called "primitive." Anyone who has been lifted from despair to hope, moved from hate to love, or vaulted from doubt to faith is likely to judge the 20 centuries of Christianity as worthwhile.
The record of holy wars, jihads and human sacrifice is ecumenical, interfaith and horrifying in all cases. But each faith must do its own accounting, and in our part of the world, Christianity is subjected to much scrutiny.
First, the negatives: Crusaders in the name of Christ rejoiced when "infidel" blood swelled the streets above their horses' ankles as they marched into Jerusalem. In Spain and elsewhere in Europe, Inquisitors in the name of Jesus ferreted out the suspicious, the troublemakers, and the innocents who seemed different _ all for the sake of God's truth and purity, as they defined it. Then they turned the innocents who were guilty over to the crown for unusual and cruel punishment, with death being the lesser evil than torture. During the Spanish Inquisition, torture and execution were the means to enforce religious orthodoxy.
Through the centuries, Christian
emperors, nobles, knights, invaders, ruffians, and drunken feudal lords
fought with one another just as ethno-nationalist leaders do today. And
in cases so common that one has difficulty thinking of exceptions, right
down through the Vietnam War, Christian leaders blessed the cannon. They
called down a God of
vengeance, yet spoke of God as
the God of love. Rivers of blood and oceans of ink were spilled in support
of Christian wars. Whoever does not think that the adjective "Christian"
is accurately applied to the noun "wars" need only listen to the prayers
and preachments of the contenders through the ages to find reason to hang
heads in shame.
THE GOOD IT HAS DONE
Catholic ideas of human dignity and Protestant impulses for freedom of conscience fused with ideas we associate with others from the 18th-century Enlightenment.
The public presence of Christianity, however, shows another side and offers a positive balance. What good has it done? Charity and accuracy bid me to point out that often this good has been done in conjunction with forces not directly native to the Christian church. But it has been done, no doubt, with light and leaven from people of faith often mingled with those of other faiths or no faith at all.
Take, first, modern liberties.
Catholic ideas of human dignity and Protestant impulses for freedom of
conscience fused with ideas we associate with others from the 18th-century
Enlightenment. Here is a perfect illustration of how Christian influences
come in tandem with others. Some scholars who hear Christians claim a patent
on liberty ask, "What took you so long?" The faithful at least ought to
send a thank-you card to the secular forces of modernity. These helped
develop what had only been latent in Christian teachings for centuries,
but had never found political expression on their own.
Out of this fusion of the sacred
and secular came previously unheard of personal liberties, the advocacies
of human rights, and concern for the spread of freedom. The search for
liberty is unfinished, and is sometimes inhibited by some versions of Christian
teaching. One thinks of the only partial liberation of women from spheres
and years of abuse, degradation, indignity, and half-fulfillment. Yet the
seeds of liberty have been sown.
AN ARTISTIC HERITAGE
A second accomplishment of Christianity has to do with beauty. No monopoly here: Buddhist and Hindu-inspired art evokes awe, too. But around the world, by no means only in the West, Christianity through the centuries provided what E. M. Forster called "breathing holes for the human spirit." Its poetry is for the ages. These were evidenced in the wonders of stained glass in the cathedrals, through the great classical music of the West, in songs and poetry. You will hear soughings of the spirit as well in African Christian chants, or see the sightings of the Spirit's effects in Latin American or Korean folk art.
Johann Sebastian Bach said that
music was God's greatest gift to God's sorrowing creatures, to give them
a joy worthy of their destiny. Christian art helped dispel some of the
sorrows that come with the human condition and experience. When one looks
at or hears some of the barrenness and vapidity that go with much Christian
artistic expression today there is a temptation to ask the churches, "What
have you done for me lately?" But the record has been positive overall.
A HEALING INFLUENCE
The concepts of health care we
have today have roots in the Christian West, from the priests, nuns and
deaconesses who tended the sick and the dying in medieval Europe. It is
easy to recall how early Christians resisted many scientific advances that
promote healing. Non-Christians did too. But behind the veil of pre-scientific
ignorance, much good was done. Again, Christianity holds no monopoly here.
Medieval Muslims and the ancient
Chinese knew a thing or two about
the care of the body through medicine and its alternatives. Yet the concepts
of health care we have today have roots in the Christian West.
No one knew whence came the plague in medieval Europe. But everyone knew that the priest, the consoler, was not to leave town when it struck. Sisters and nuns, deaconesses and nurses pioneered in health care and invented voluntary associations to promote healing. Today, in a scientific age, many are coming again to recognize that they do well to supplement or support technology with religious, in this case Christian, arts of healing and agencies of care.
THE LIFE OF THE MIND
Intellectual productivity is fourth on the list of Christian achievements. The temptation arises to question this because so often Christians have been inquisitors, suspicious of heresy and experiment. They have suppressed the thought of the "other," be it the Jew in the ghetto, the Muslim at a distance, the sectarians driven to the mountain refuges far from Rome, the innovators in the world of science, and often the pious themselves.
In East and West, however, Christians have tried to bring together the Athens of learning or the Rome of law with the Jerusalem of faith. The creeds most Christians recite combine Hebraic biblical narrative with Greek thought patterns. In the Middle Ages, the Christians founded Bologna and Oxford, Paris and Wittenberg as universities where scholars pursued more than theology. They have been teaching forces and spreaders of liberty.
In the same period, Christian
thinkers revisited Aristotle and the other philosophers, relearned the
ancient languages, and produced both scholasticism - formidably systematic
thought about faith and the world, and new philosophies - and they still
do.
MARTYRS AND MYSTICS
From Francis of Assisi to Martin Luther King, Jr. and Mother Teresa, the faith has inspired prophets who risk their lives to change the world.
Lives well-lived are further examples of the good Christianity has done. In the past year alone, according to human rights monitors, 165,000 Christians died for their faith. They have a long ancestry among people who paid the final price for their commitments. From Francis of Assisi to Martin Luther King, Jr. and Mother Teresa, the faith has inspired prophets who risk their lives to change the world. No one could measure the selfless acts that mark the quiet lives of many Christians today and their ancestors in faith. But one would be pretty callow to write them off and forget about them or despise them. Mother Teresa of Calcutta carried on a Christian tradition of healing, compassion and sacrifice that flowered from the earliest days of the church.
Those four examples lead to an
observation and a question. The observation: no part of the Christian record
is unblemished. No part of Christian teaching suggests that Christians
will leap out of their skin, escape the limits of the human condition,
and not need to ask their God for help. All parts of Christian teaching
say that in the moral quest, one first and finally depends upon grace.
It makes up the weightiest contribution to the balance scale of
positives.
WOULD JESUS KNOW THEM?
Would Jesus denounce armed conflict, so much of it done in his name? At last there is a simple answer: Yes.
And what does all this have to
do with Jesus? The name that goes with the church and its culture is "Christ-ian"
not "Jesus-ian." Christ is not a last name but a title, a designation.
He is the anointed one, the hoped-for rescuer, the king of his people.
Believers would say that the best good they have achieved is telling about
him, preaching the Gospel, and pointing, despite their fallibility, to
the Way, the Truth, and the Life.
Some Christians cherish the myth
that in the church of 20 centuries ago, everyone shared a culture and formulated
the faith in the same way. Never. One scholar surveyed how the early Christians
worshiped, governed themselves, and made moral judgments. These differed
vastly from place to place, as they still do. The cultural gaps between
African Indigenous Church movements and St. Peter's in Rome or a university
student group are wide. But despite their differences, all churches would
agree that the human Jesus is also their redeemer. So Jesus remains the
universal and uniting presence. After two millennia, would Jesus recognize
what is done in his name today?
Would Jesus give the modern metropolis a free ride? He didn't do so for the Jerusalem over which he wept or the Galileean cities whose destruction he foresaw, at least as the four Gospels represent him. Would he denounce and then dismiss the cities? Not according to the Gospels. His tears were tears of love and yearning. He took part in town life with zest, and banqueted whether invited or not. Would he despair over the half-heartedness he would see in the church? Nearly. But he did not give up on the ancestors of the lukewarm.
Would he rejoice in the size of the cathedrals, the bigness of budgets, the mega-ness of megachurches that have sprung up on the modern landscape? On whose side would he be when "liberation theologians" come up against proponents of a market economy? Remember that Jesus hung out with the rich as well as other sinners. And he clearly explained how hard it is for the wealthy and the smug to enter the Kingdom of God.
Would Jesus denounce armed conflict, so much of it done in his name?
At last there is a simple answer.
Simply, yes.
JUSTICE AND MERCY
Wherever Christians put their
energy into the works of justice and mercy and the tasks of peacemaking
- whether in company with others or on their own - they contribute to the
tipping of the Christian balance to the positive side. And they will do
this against formidable odds. They know that because they have looked at
the portrait of Jesus and
what he represents, and then
into the mirror to see their own brokenness.
As they look at the portrait and
the mirror, the ideal and the reality, one suspects that the honest realists
among them will say that for all the enormous flaws in the record, the
Christian venture has produced great human good and innumerable positive
contributions to culture. Their faith at its best prohibits them from boasting
and they have reason to be penitent as they say, in effect, "bring on the
new millennium." If they have blights and faults that bring them sorrow,
they are also likely to come up with virtues and graces that they can use
to meet more of their own needs and the enduring needs of the wider world.