(8) Pacifism is a faith conviction
Commentary
Teaching
Is pacifism an "absolute" for Christians?
Pull-quote
[Genuine pacifism can never be coercive when it advocates for truth]
A challenge often presented to Christian pacifists is
the assertion that simply having strong feelings about our position
is not a persuasive reason for others to accept them. While we may have
clarity based on our own feelings, like all feelings they are nonetheless
personal and subjective-people with other points of view have equally
strong feelings.
In response to such a challenge, I would begin by saying
that we are not talking so much about "faith based feelings"
as about what I would call personal faith convictions.
When I talk about pacifism I am not talking about my feelings,
I am talking about the convictions that shape my entire being.
These convictions are very much based on reason, on experience,
on biblical study, on observation, on my understanding of reality outside
myself. They have to do with my awareness of the objective God (that
exists outside of my subjectivity and projection) and God's will, not
my own feelings.
I believe there is a significant difference between saying
that a conviction is "personal" and saying that it is "subjective."
To me, "personal" connotes that I am involved in the knowledge,
that my perceptions and commitments and values shape what I know. By
definition, I think all faith-knowledge and all moral-knowledge are
personal.
That faith-knowledge is personal does make conversation
difficult. Certainly we cannot simply impose our faith-knowledge on
others and unerringly prove its absolute truthfulness. However, I do
not believe that that difficulty means that all personal knowledge is
purely subjective. That is, personal knowledge is not simply relativistic,
nor do we each simply define truth only for our own individual selves.
I believe we can talk about genuine truth and a hierarchy
of values that exist outside of our subjectivity. However, because faith-oriented
and moral truths are personal, we can not say they are strictly objective.
In thinking about an issue such as pacifism and love of
enemies, we can and, in fact, must, think not only in terms of our personal
experiences and opinions, but we also must struggle with "public"
information. For example, the teachings of the Bible may be diverse
and complicated, but they are not inscrutable or hopelessly self-contradictory.
Likewise, neither the teachings and experiences of our faith tradition
nor the findings of science (broadly defined) are inscrutable nor hopelessly
self-contradictory. Biblical teaching, tradition and science all offer
us crucial data for ascertaining the truthfulness of pacifism.
Our big challenge is to find ways to transcend the either/or
of either authoritarianism (where we impose our views on others) or
relativism (which denies any objectivity). We need to struggle to find
ways to accept the reality of truth without closing the conversation
or making the discernment process less open.
I believe that a commitment to pacifism can help one in
this struggle, since genuine pacifism can never be coercive when it
advocates for truth.
Writer: Ted Grimsrud, Assistant Professor of Theology
and Peace Studies, Eastern Mennonite University
Graphic Designer: Cynthia Friesen
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