A Response to Tony Campolo on Fighting the Powers
http://reknew.org/2012/10/a-response-to-tony-campolo-on-fighting-the-powers-part-i/
24 Oct 2012
Posted By: Greg Boyd
While I have nothing but admiration for Tony Campolo,
I differ with his views on how Christians are to be change agents in the world.
He has always been a strong proponent of Christians bringing about change by
political means. I, on the other hand, am not in principle opposed to
Christians engaging in politics, so long as they’re very careful about
it. Yet, while they may engage in political activity as citizens,
there’s nothing uniquely kingdom about this. So, in my opinion, this is
not where our focus should lie.
The church is the body of Christ, and its job is to be
a corporate version of what Jesus was when he was present on earth in his
“first” body. We are the church, therefore, insofar as we individually and
corporately love, serve, and sacrifice for others. This is what the reign of
God looks like. What deeply concerns me is that, by this criterion, the church
in America hardly exists. So rather than trying to get Christians to
rally around this or that political cause, which neither Jesus nor anyone else
in the New Testament ever encouraged us to do, it seems to me we should be
singularly focused on becoming the church, which is the one thing Jesus calls
us to be.
In any event, in this post I’d like to offer a second
response to a comment made by Tony Campolo in an excerpt from The Red Letter Revolution: What If Jesus
Meant What He Said?. It concerns Tony’s view that Christians are
to engage the principalities and powers through political activism.
Tony believes that “Christians should challenge
government to do the will of God” and that “we have the right to resist
governments when they don’t do what is good for their people.” The reason is
because Tony believes “all the principalities and powers were created by God
and for God’s purposes in the world” (Colossians 1:16–17). He therefore
believes “[i]t is the task of government, which is one of those principalities
and powers, to do the will of God every bit as much as it is the task of the
institutional church to do the will of God.” There are three things I’d like to
say in response to this.
First, Tony is mistaken when he identifies government
as “one of those principalities and powers.” As I’ve argued in several books
and articles, within the first century apocalyptic worldview, the terms
“principalities and powers,” as well as similar terms such as “rulers,”
“authorities,” “powers” and “spiritual forces” (e.g. 1 Cor. 2:7-8; Eph. 6:12),
referred to different categories of cosmic agents or archangels who were
understood to rule over systemic aspects of society and over all aspects of
creation.* While these terms were occasionally applied to godly agents,
they usually referred to fallen and rebellious cosmic agents,
which is how they are generally viewed in the New Testament. Hence, while these
agents negatively influence government, they cannot be identified
with government, as Tony suggests.
Second, while God uses governments to preserve law and
order in our fallen world (Rom. 13: 1-7), and while God holds governments
accountable for their injustices, I don’t think I can fully agree with Tony
when he claims that, “[i]t is the task of government…to do the will of God
every bit as much as it is the task of the institutional church to do the will
of God.” This makes it sound like the Church and government are on equal
footing when it comes to carrying out God’s will. But as I read Scripture, the
very fact that we have systems where some humans exercise power over others is
already against God’s will.
Humans were originally created to have “dominion” over
the animals and the earth, not each other (Gen. 1:26-28). God alone was
supposed to rule us. This is why Israel, who were set apart as God’s chosen
people, originally had no king. When they eventually stopped trusting God, they
insisted on acquiring a human king to help protect them. Yahweh finally
acquiesced, and he told Samuel, “they have rejected me as their king” (1
Sam. 8:7). The passage is suggesting that to have a human king is to reject
God as king. It’s why Jesus said that, while pagans struggle to gain power
to rule others, there is no place for this in the kingdom, where God’s original
design for humans is restored. In the kingdom, which always looks like Jesus,
greatness is defined by service, not power (Lk 22:25-27).
Not only this, but as I suggested in the previous
post, the New Testament depicts all the governments of the world as being under
Satan’s oppressive rule. Satan told Jesus that he owns all the splendor and
authority of all worldly kingdoms and can “give it to anyone he wants” (Lk
4:5-7), and Jesus never disputed this. Because it was not original will for
humans to rule each other, however, Jesus had no interest in gaining that kind
of power, even though he could have massively improved the world by grabbing
hold of it. Jesus rather chose to win the world using the only kind of power
that is consistent with the reign of God, which is the power of
self-sacrificial love. This is the kind of power the church is to rely on
to transform the world, which is yet another reason why it is misguided for
Christians to focus on gaining political power.
The extent to which governments are at odds with the
will of God and under Satans power is also reflected in the fact that Jesus
three times refers to Satan as the ruler (arche) of the world (Jn 12:31;
14:30; 16;11). The Greek word arche was used in political contexts to
refer to the highest authority in any region. So too, Paul calls Satan “the god
of this age” and “the principality and power of the air” (2 Cor 4:4; Eph 2:2).
John goes so far as to say that “the whole world lies under the power of the
evil one” (I Jn 5:19): “the entire world” obviously includes all governments.
In this light, we shouldn’t be surprised when John
depicts Satan as “the destroyer” who “deceives the nations” in the book of
Revelation (Rev. 9:11; 20:3, 8 cf. 13:14). In keeping with this, all the
governments of the world are depicted as part of one kingdom that belongs to
Satan (Rev. 11:15), and it is this one kingdom that John symbolizes as
“Babylon,” whose servants are the “rulers “of “all nations” who are “deceived”
by her “sorcery” (viz. the deceptive lure of power) (Rev. 18:23, cf. 17:5;
18:2, 10, 21).
This is about as pessimistic a portrait of government
as one could imagine! If we believed this, I submit it would never occur to us
to be surprised when our politicians turn out to be corrupt, and we’d never be
inclined to place any hope in any particular political candidate,
program, or system. I would rather think we should be surprised when
some turn out to be godly! This intensely pessimistic outlook
explains why it is that there is no indication in the New Testament that Jesus or
any early disciple expected government to “do the will of God,” let alone do it
“every bit as much as…the institutional church,” as Tony suggests. It also
explains why there is no precedent in the life of Jesus or anyone in the early
church for a follower of Jesus to imagine that it’s their job as ambassadors of
the kingdom (2 Cor. 5:20) to try to get government to do the will of God.
As I mentioned at the start, this isn’t to suggest
it’s wrong for Christians to get government to be as just as possible. But in
light of the picture given us in the New Testament, it certainly means we
shouldn’t expect government to do God’s will, let alone that it is our
job to get government to do this – especially since we aren’t doing much of
what God calls us to do, namely, to be the body of Christ!
Finally, far from trying to get the principalities and
powers to clean up their act, Paul tells us that our job is to battle
them. But because the principalities and powers are spiritual entities, not
government, we don’t battle these forces by trying to change government.
Indeed, Paul tells us that our struggle is never against “flesh and blood” –
whether this “flesh and blood” are politicians or otherwise (Eph. 6:12). We
rather fight against the powers by fighting for all humans, including
those who consider themselves our enemies. And one of the ways we resist the
powers is by refusing to make other humans our enemies. As I’ve argued in Myth of a Christian Religion, we engage in
spiritual warfare by imitating every aspect of Jesus’ life and obeying his
teachings, including his command to love, bless and sacrifice for our would-be
enemies, even when they threaten our lives (Mt. 5:39-45; Lk 6:27-35).
When we forget that our battle is against forces of
evil, not humans, and when we forget that we are called to struggle against
them by the loving way we live every day of our lives, we end up fighting other
humans as though they were the enemy. Our distinct calling as followers of
Jesus is to individually and collectively be faithful servants of Christ by
living as he lived. If we do this, we will battle the powers and put on display
the beauty of our king and his kingdom. If we do this, we will be social
activists who change the world. But we will change it not be using Caesar’s
power over others, but by using Christ’s love to serve and heal.
————–
*I discuss these concepts in God at War (IVP, 1996); “The Kingdom as
a Political-Spiritual Revolution,” Criswell Theological Review, 6.1.
(Fall, 2008), and most fully in The Myth of a Christian Religion (Zondervan,
2009).
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