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June 11, 2017
Einstein Would Grasp this Response to Terrorism: Why Don't Christians? (Homily for Trinity Sunday)
By Mike Rivage-Seul
What would it mean to recognize al-Qaeda, the Taliban, and ISIS as organizations composed of human beings like us? Each of them has ideas, hopes, and dreams. They all have families like ours. They are desperate people under attack, with homes they cherish every bit as much as we cherish our own.
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Readings for Trinity Sunday: EX 34:4B-5, 8-9; DN 3: 52-56; 2 COR 13: 11-13; JN 3: 16-18
All of us were horrified last week by the London attacks. And before that it was Manchester. And then there were the recent bombings in Kabul and the killings in Iran. The problem of terrorism seems to worsen each week, doesn't it?
And every time terror strikes, our leaders say the same thing. They assure us that they'll finally solve the problem -- but always in the same way: more bombings. So right now we're dropping bombs on weddings, funerals, and civilian neighborhoods in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Somalia, and who knows where else?
The problem is: the bombings seem not to be working at all. And you know what Einstein said about doing the same thing over and over again while expecting different results. It's the very definition of insanity
But there is another way. You might call it Trinitarian.
Of course, what I'm talking about is diplomacy and dialog based on shared humanity. It involves listening to the other and making accommodations. It entails compromise, and working from the premise that there's more that unites us with al-Qaeda, ISIS, and other terrorists than what divides us. That's true, because we're all human beings.
People of faith -- both Christians and Muslims -- should see that. Their faith perspective even tells them that we're all children of God.
In fact, that's the message of today's liturgy of the word on this Trinity Sunday with its emphasis on unity in plurality.
The Trinitarian doctrine tells us that what unifies all of reality -- including God -- is the divine nature we all share. It makes the many -- all of reality -- one. In the mystical words of today's gospel, that shared divine nature (the Holy Spirit dwelling within each of us) makes us all God's only Son -- his only daughter. That is: we though many are, in reality, one. Paul's favorite image for that unity was the human body. It has many parts, but it's a single entity. In a sense, there is really only one of us here.
Jesus explained what that means in practice:
The problem is that those of us who pretend to follow Jesus confine such faith claims to the personal realm. But that's not what Jesus did at all. He made no distinction between the personal and political. No good Jew could!
However, you might object: how can anyone dialog with insane people like al-Qaeda and the other terrorists? (Btw: do you think the "terrorists" might be asking the same question about us?)
The answer is, of course, that Washington's been conversing with these people for years. Remember, the U.S. created al-Qaeda in the 1980s when they were the Mujahedeen. Our leaders had no trouble talking with them then. It was at that point that Washington formed them to defeat the Soviets in Afghanistan.
And the United States did more than dialog with them, it actually armed and funded them. It even identified their cause with the cause of Allah. In 1979, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Jimmy Carter's National Security Advisor, gave the Mujahedeen $3 billion. He told them "Your cause is right, and God is on your side. Your fight will prevail." He pointed to Afghanistan, "That land over there is yours. You'll go back to it one day."
The point is these people can once again be dialog partners. But to do so, their identity as children of God -- as our brothers and sisters -- must be recognized. They share a common humanity with all of us. They have legitimate grievances -- not the least of which is that U.S. aggression has killed more than a million of them over the last 16 years -- in countries that never attacked the United States.
What would it mean to recognize al-Qaeda, the Taliban, and ISIS as organizations composed of human beings like us? Each of them has ideas, hopes, and dreams. They are people like us with families like ours -- with grandparents, parents, brothers, sisters, children, and grandchildren. What if we saw them as such? What if we recognized them as desperate people under attack, with homes they cherish every bit as much as we cherish our own? They are patriotic and as confused and angry as we might be if we were suddenly and inexplicably attacked by inscrutable people located more than 7000 miles away.
So what if, instead of continuing with their current insane unvarying response to terrorism, our mad bombers in D.C.:
Measures like those would not only restore a token of sanity to combatting terrorism; they'd save lives and money. And they'd restore the good will the United States once enjoyed in the world.
They are the measures would-be followers of Jesus should be advancing instead of quietly going along with business as usual. Otherwise, what good is our faith? How is it Trinitarian? How does it affirm in any meaningful way, life's fundamental unity in the face of its apparent plurality?
Mike Rivage-Seul is a liberation theologian and former Roman Catholic priest. His undergraduate degree in philosophy was received from St. Columban's Major Seminary in Milton Massachusetts and awarded through D.C.'s Catholic University. He received his theology licentiate from the Atheneum Anselmianum and his doctorate in moral theology (magna cum laude) from the Academia Alfonsiana in Rome where Mike studied for five years. There he also played club basketball for Eurosport and a team within Rome's Stella Azzurra professional organization. In 1972 he served for a year as coordinator of volunteers in Monsignor Ralph Beiting's Christian Appalachian Project. Then for 40 years, Mike taught theology and general studies at Berea College in Kentucky receiving its Seabury Award for excellence in teaching, Berea's highest faculty award. At Berea, Mike founded its Peace and Social Justice Studies program. He and his wife, Peggy, also organized and started the Berea Interfaith Taskforce for Peace. For years, he periodically taught liberation theology in a Latin American Studies Program in Costa Rica sponsored by the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities. In Costa Rica Mike and Peggy were fellows at the liberation theology research institute, the Departamento Ecumenico de Investigaciones (DEI) headed by the great Franz Hinkelammert. In Mexico, they also served as fellows and program directors in San Miguel de Allende's Center for Global Justice. Mike's studies and teaching have brought him to countries across Europe and to Cuba (on 10 occasions), Nicaragua (12 occasions), Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Israel, India, Zimbabwe, South Africa, and Brazil where he and Peggy were associates of Paulo Freire. Mike's languages include Latin, Greek, Hebrew, French, Italian, German, Portuguese, and Spanish. For three years he was a monthly columnist at the Lexington Herald-Leader in Lexington Kentucky. He has contributed more than 400 articles to the online news source OpEdNews where he is a senior editor. He has also published in the DEI's Pasos Journal, in the National Catholic Reporter and Christianity Today. His scholarship has been cited in the New York Times. Mike has authored or edited 10 books including one of poetry and a novel based on his experiences in Cuba. His latest book is The Magic Glasses of Critical Thinking: seeing through alternative fact & fake news (Peter Lang publishers). He blogs at http://mikerivageseul.wordpress.com/ Attempting to appropriate his identity as an ordained exorcist (all Catholic priests are), Mike also reads Tarot cards. He is a lifelong golfer and Chicago Cubs fan.