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There are many, far too many times, when our nation
collectively forgets that the invasion of Iraq was both
immoral and illegal, fabricated around lies, deceptions,
and distortions, and supported by an undercurrent of
militaristic Christianity.
We forget that this administration cooked the intelligence
books and willfully deceived the American people. We forget
that this administration opened the door to both the torture
of prisoners and the shrinking of civil rights of citizens.
We forget that this administration has illegally, and
blatantly, undertaken extensive spying and harassment
of American citizens.
We forget that our official national security policy now
affirms that free markets, free trade, and free enterprise
are the standard for justice in the world. Indeed, one
of the first actions of our Iraqi occupation was to impose
an entirely new economy on those we conquered: to slash
taxes, curtail the right of unions to organize and strike,
remove restrictions on foreign corporate ownership, gut
the public sector, and privatize state industries. It
is a policy of despair intended to create the fear and
anxiety necessary for economic slavery. We forget that
Iraq is the economic model that this administration would
like to impose on the world and, yes, on our own nation.
We forget that this administration believes that the purpose
of government is to protect the assets of capital. We
forget that military spending consumes 40 percent of every
tax dollar. And lest we further forget, with the rise
of profit-centered paramilitary organizations such as
Blackwater, our military apparatus increasingly operates
outside of citizen authority.
To make matters even grimmer, one
will search in vain for a coherent moral counterweight
to this administration’s seizure of power and
sabotage of the Constitution. Despite the Democrats’
rhetoric of withdrawal, there are no plans to dismantle
our permanent bases in Iraq, cut the military budget,
or reduce the hundreds of global military bases we have
worldwide. There are no plans to return our economy
to one that serves the commonwealth, that values labor
over capital, sustainability over profit, and the rights
of neighborhoods over corporations.
In this context of creeping despair, what can the citizenry
really do to effect a genuine change in American global
economic-military policy? Or are we simply fated to continually
expand our global empire until, like Rome, our Republic
collapses into military dictatorship?
Since I am a pastor, these questions take on an additional
urgency. To its credit, most of the global Church judged
the invasion of Iraq immoral and unjust. Despite this
counsel, congregations continued to support the war and
bless the troops even in their (theologically speaking)
sinful occupation and theft of another’s land and
way of life. And today, although public opinion has shifted,
congregations continue to lapse into a spiritual capitulation
that all we can do is pray for a generic peace. They offer
no liturgies of repentance or lamentation. They offer
no spiritual disciplines of penance, either for the soldiers
who fight or for the citizenry who fund this unleashing
of the demonic.
All of us, both within the Church and outside of it, are
facing a world-changing, critical, urgent moral decision.
We are at a historical crossroads where we must choose
between evolution or empire. As a society we must morally
and spiritually evolve so as to be capable of choosing
the path that leads to cooperation, compassion, care of
the earth, sustainability, and an ability to seek justice
through reconciliation. Otherwise, we are scripted to
continue down into the spiraling sewer of empire with
its competitive anxiety, its increasing toleration of
genocide, ecocide, and enslavement of the world’s
poor, and the relentless pursuit of economic decadence
for a few facilitated by absolute military brutality over
the many.
What is needed from the Church is
a more faithful spiritual revival: a returning to our
roots as an anti-imperial movement equipped with a vastly
different worldview. A spiritual revival is a hope-filled
optimism about a future worth living. But revival also
implies a turning away (i.e., repentance) from a path
discerned as leading to certain destruction and despair.
A more faithful spiritual revival will summon us as
a nation to massively reduce our dependency on our military
and the imperial ambitions that it serves. It is within
this context that the Church has the moral responsibility,
on behalf of all creation, to wrestle deeply with the
theological question, “How do we pray for the
defeat of our nation so that this war may end and a
time of national revival may begin?” The question,
and the prayer, must lead to action, courageous decision,
and a living example of what a world not dependent on
military consumerism looks like. To this question, and
this prayer, the Church will stand or fall, evolve or
wither, serve the purposes of God or enslave itself
to the demands of the demonic. And, I submit, as the
Church goes, so goes the nation.
Rich Lang is Pastor of Trinity
United Methodist Church in Ballard and the host of a
progressive Christian radio show, Living Faith Now
(www.livingfaithnow.org).
He can be reached at oddrev@yahoo.com.
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