Resisting Structural Evil: Love as Ecological-Economic Vocation, Cynthia Moe-Lobeda
Leads the reader to see the systemic evil of colossal structures that will only be changed as we are also changed. Transformation by another name, of both ourselves and the systems we live by. And how is that done? Only by forces with the tenacity and strength of genuine faith in the possibility of a different way of life, this one attuned to all life and its parental, generative elements—earth (soil), air, fire (energy), and water. In short, attuned to creation and its claims upon our lives. My response to the author and the book is gratitude. The times ahead will be neither comfortable nor easy. They are not for the faint of heart. Yet gratitude is the fitting response for a work in which the right questions and the right analysis are brought to the challenge we and future generations face: creating new wineskins for the new wine of a tough, new planet. 109
What does it mean for the “uncreators” to “love”? Christianity, along with other religious and wisdom traditions, must enter the question anew for each time and place, learning from the wisdom and the mistakes of the past. We must step cautiously into this mystery, moving with the humility of knowing that the question defies conclusive answers. This volume will tease out what is entailed in loving for a particular people in a particular context. It is a context of economic and ecological violence that shapes our moral relationships with self, neighbor around the globe, and Earth itself. For the material beneficiaries of that violence, love becomes not only an interpersonal vocation but also an economic-ecological vocation. That the two—economic and ecological—are inseparable will become apparent. 215
One tiny part of a much larger human endeavor, the seeming impossibility of which should dissuade no one from joining it. It is the reorienting of human life to render it both sustainable on this planet home and characterized by increasing degrees of social justice. In this reorientation we are called by God and by life itself to celebrate, relish, and stand in awe of Earth’s beauty, unfolding complexity, and life-generating goodness.
1 Introduction “We are now faced with the fact that tomorrow is today. We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now. In this unfolding conundrum of life and history there is such a thing as being too late. . . . Over the bleached bones and jumbled residue of numerous civilizations are written the pathetic words: ‘too late.’ . . . Now let us begin. Now let us rededicate ourselves to the long and bitter—but beautiful—struggle for a new world.” Martin Luther King Jr.[1] ♦ “If we don’t do the impossible, we shall be faced with the unthinkable.” Petra Kelly[2] 228
crisis divides us both in terms of culpability and vulnerability.”[4] The devastating hand of economic violence is not limited to other lands. It strikes incessantly in the U.S. as well, and has been all the more virulent with the rise of neoliberal economic globalization in the late 1970s through today. Of the “new financial wealth created by the [U.S.] American economy” from 1983 through 2004, 94 percent went to the richest 20 percent of the nation’s people. It should come as no surprise then that the most recent census shows nearly half (48 percent) of [U.S.] Americans are either poor or low-income.[5] The “sinking abyss of poverty” now traps all kinds of Americans.[6] However, the poor in this country are disproportionately women and people of color.[7] That racial wealth gap is the “largest since the government began publishing such data a quarter century ago.”[8] Poverty today in the United States is devastating; it renders countless children malnourished and without homes or healthcare. I recall the sinking feeling when I learned that many of the homeless people in my city, Seattle, are children whose parents or parent work but are not paid enough to cover the rent. 292
the prevailing social order morally legitimates our exploitative ways of life by failing to effectively recognize them as such. Structures of exploitation persist and grow when people who benefit from them fail to recognize and resist them. This moral oblivion and the ensuing abdication of moral power are pernicious forms of sin pervading our society, and must therefore be faced practically and theologically. In this book, I seek to do so. Assumed powerlessness in the face of systemic evil is a fundamental problem of contemporary United States society. It is a society rich with compassionate and well-intentioned people who, nevertheless, live in ways that spell death for many of Earth’s most impoverished human beings and for the planetary web of life. I write for these dangerous people, and as one of them. What does it mean for us, killers, to claim moral lives? Morality and Christian ethics in the context of systemic evil that parades as good is the focus of this book. 310
My purpose, rather, is to nourish moral-spiritual power for imagining, recognizing, forging, and adopting ways of life that build equity among human beings and a sustainable relationship between the human species and our planetary home. (By “ways of life,” I mean overarching principles, policies, and practices applied on household, corporate, institutional, and government levels.) Moving in that direction requires recognizing truths about society that most people strive to avoid. I believe that vast numbers of “us,” the “overconsumers,” would refuse to comply with economic and ecological exploitation if we truly recognized the pain, suffering, and damage caused by the ways that we live and if we could envision viable alternatives. This simple statement belies an extraordinarily complex claim. My intent in this book is to play it out by enabling moral vision. Moral vision is clearer vision of (1) the consequences of economic and ecological injustice woven into our lives; (2) more just and sustainable alternatives; and (3) moral-spiritual power for embracing these alternatives. For me, that moral-spiritual power lies in a trust that the sacred forces of life, known in Jewish, Christian, and Muslim traditions as God, is coursing through all of creation, and is bringing about healing and liberation despite all evidence to the contrary. This 323
am not asking you to take on another cause—be it poverty, environmental degradation, economic exploitation, or other. Rather I am inviting you and myself to perceive more fully: the profound necessity of radical change in foundational aspects of the way “we” live, the shape of that change and paths toward it, and sacred power at work in the world to bring abundant life for all. It is my fervent hope that you and I will experience a growing sense of power and hope for living into those paths and that sacred power. 338
This deep-seated knowing led me to advocate against the death penalty for these men. That nothing in this world or beyond it can separate us individually or collectively from this Love, and that we have it as pure gift, is known theologically as grace.[12] Trust in the steadfastness of this Love enables me to face the horror of my own participation in systemic evil, and thus to repent. To begin with faith claims is dangerous. It could imply that this book is not relevant for people outside of these claims. Be assured that it is not important for the reader to share this faith perspective, only to be aware of it in order to understand the grounding of the work to come. Two other motivations beyond the aforementioned theological claims motivated this project. One is outrage that a small portion of the world’s people are disproportionally responsible for severe ecological degradation, yet others, who bear far less responsibility for the ecological disasters at hand, suffer first and foremost from them. Equally important as a motivating force is the beauty and sacredness of creation. The extravagant beauty surrounding and imbuing this planet’s living beings and the life-force pulsing within creation feed my spirit. 353
theology or social theory alone. Theology is the age-old effort to make sense of our many stories in light of God’s presence and power in, with, and for this good creation. Theology is the quest to hold the stories of one’s life and kin, of societies and cultures, of humankind, of otherkind, of the Earth, and of the cosmos in one breath with the mystery that some call God. 369
with any religious tradition. I believe that all of Earth’s great spiritual traditions are called upon to plumb their depths for the wisdom to meet the moral challenges of our day. 373
the damage done by Christian beliefs and practices undergirding human dominion and oppression. I assume also that, having played this historic role, Christianity bears a tremendous responsibility to offer its resources to the pan-human task of rebuilding Earth’s health. Yet I write out of a sister assumption, a conviction that the damage wrought by Christianity is matched and surpassed by the potential within Christianity for helping to build new ways of being human marked by equity among people and mutually enhancing Earth-human relations. This potential exists, I believe, in all of Earth’s great faith traditions. As a result, all bear a tremendous moral responsibility: if the people faithful to particular religious traditions do not uncover and draw upon the resources offered by their tradition, then those life-saving and life-sustaining resources remain dormant. Tremendous gifts of power for life and for the good are left untapped. 390
If religion were understood primarily as doctrinal teaching about God, then it would be an inappropriate resource for use beyond the sphere of the particular religion considered. However, that is a highly truncated understanding of religion, so much so as to be false. Religion in a broader sense refers to the systems of beliefs, moral vision and norms, ethical behaviors, rituals, symbols, institutional arrangements, and historical legacy that “are premised on the understanding of human beings as other than or more than simply their purely social or physical identities”[16] and that link humans to the “matrix of mystery from which life arises and unfolds.”[17] As such, religious wisdom is essential to debates about what will enable human and planetary flourishing. To exclude it from discussions of how to shape society would be to rip the heart and purpose out of the deliberations that shape how we will live together. In reality however, the question of whether religion should play a role in matters of public morality is moot. Because so much of Earth’s human population derives its moral bearing from religious grounds, religion is inherently at play in public morality. The question is not whether but how; by what criteria is religion’s role appropriate and valid? 402
This chapter faces head-on the paralyzing forces of hopelessness and denial that so easily thwart the desire to confront social injustice and work for a more just and ecologically healthy world. We examine seeds of hope and moral vision for contemporary life that are found in ancient theological claims. Love as an Economic and Ecological Vocation In Christian traditions, “vocation” refers to a calling, something to which a person or group is called by God. (The word comes from the Latin vocare, meaning “to call out.”) Neighbor-love is understood as a vocation. Humans are called by God to love neighbor as self. This is the central moral norm of Christian life. 525
This book is, in the first place, about morality, about living a moral life for people whose everyday ways of life have decidedly immoral consequences on others and on the Earth. Secondarily this book is about ethics. Within Christianity, Christian ethics is the theological discipline charged with enabling people to draw upon their faith heritage to meet the moral challenges of each particular time and place in a way that reflects the love of God for all of creation. The aim of Christian ethics is, in the words of Christian ethicist Miguel de la Torre, to enable “relationships where all people can live full abundant lives, able to become all that God has called them to be,”[24] to “have life and have it abundantly” (John 10:10). By definition, then, ethics seeks to dismantle dehumanizing and destructive forces such as racism, colonialism, classism, sexism, and ecological degradation, and seeks to cultivate conditions that enable right relationships within Earth’s web of life and with God. However, Christian ethics in the North Atlantic world has not significantly enabled church or broader society to craft ways of life that counter both the ecological destruction and the economic violence that mark our day. The problem in Christian ethics has roots in fundamental presuppositions about neighbor-love as a biblical and theological norm, about sin, and about moral vision. Equally significant, ethical norms and processes in any society are established by dominant sectors to reflect their sense of morality and to uphold the power arrangements that maintain their dominance. Thus, the established moral code rationalizes itself and cannot assess itself. That is, socially constructed moral values and norms perpetuate, through moral sanctioning, a prevailing order that might be considered unjust according to another moral vision. As de la Torre points out, conscience, and even interpretations of “what Jesus would do,” are socially constructed within this moral code and therefore are ill-equipped to counter it. The focus of ethics becomes determining what is ethical according to the prevailing moral code, rather than challenging the rightness of that moral framework itself.[25] Christian ethics, therefore, must reveal the presupposed assumptions regarding what is morally good that sanction “the way things are.” 577
According to one understanding, Christian ethics is the disciplined art of coming to know ever more fully the mystery that is God and the realities of life on Earth, and holding these two together, so that we may shape ways of living consistent with and empowered by God being with, in, among, and for creation. “Knowing” here refers not merely to “knowledge of,” but to “being in relationship with.” Where vision and knowledge of God and of life’s realities (what is going on and the historical roots and consequences of what is going on) are obscured or distorted, a task of Christian ethics is to know and see differently, so that we might live differently. In another and complementary sense, the “meaning of ethics” is, as Paul Tillich writes, “to express the ways in which love embodies itself and life is maintained and saved.”[26] The boundless implications of ethics thus understood depend upon the meaning of “love” as a biblical and theological norm. Herein lies the import of our effort to see love as inherently justice-making and Earth-honoring, and as an ecological-economic vocation. Third, Christian ethics may be seen as disciplined inquiry into morality. It is the art-science bringing self-consciousness, method, critical vision, and faith to the tasks of (1) discerning what is good and right for any given situation and context, (2) finding the moral-spiritual power to act on that discernment, and (3) discovering what forms individuals and society toward and away from the good. Finally, Christian ethics is the theological art-science enabling Christian communities to draw critically upon their traditions and read “the signs of the times,” in order to shape ways of living consistent with faith in the God whom Jesus loved. That God is revealed in Jesus Christ and through the Spirit and may be revealed in scripture and in God’s first book of revelation, the creation itself. Critical mystical vision is key to “reading the signs of the times” in ways that disclose and counter structural injustice. In all four of these understandings, the overall question of Christian ethics becomes: “How are we to perceive our world, and how are we to live in it because of God’s boundless love for creation and presence with and in it?” 597
to perceive and “tell the truth” about the human capacity to render and rationalize brutality while never subordinating that reality to the bigger one: the goodness, beauty, joy, and laughter in life and the inherent goodness of being created in the image of God. To “tell the truth” about the former without also celebrating the latter, in the long run, is to harbor a lie. Clearly, my approach to ethics assumes an overlap of the mystical and the moral aspects of life. That is, the human longing for the sacred relates in some vital ways to the longing for more compassionate, just, and Earth-honoring ways of being human. That connection is central to a moral framework capable of meeting the challenge of systemic evil in our day. The moral framework emerging herein has four fundamental markers. The first is its focus on moral agency. The inadequacies in ethical method addressed in this work contribute to (and, to a certain extent, derive from) a basic flaw in Christian ethics. It is the reduction of ethics to questions of moral deliberation and formation, largely bypassing questions of moral agency. The “deliberative dimension” of ethics refers to processes of moral decision making, responding to the question of “what are we to do and be?” “Moral agency” on the other hand, refers to moral-spiritual power to “do and be” what we discern we ought. Ethics as response to the question of “what we are to do and be” is dangerously inadequate, especially in the contemporary context, because far too readily we do know what we ought to do in response to economic and ecological violence, but fail to find the moral agency to act on that knowledge. Ethics in the context of structural sin must go beyond moral deliberation and formation; ethics must be concerned with the moral agency to move toward more equitable, compassionate, and sustainable social orders. The basic moves in ethics and morality developed herein foster moral agency. 616
argues for a more structural sense of sin and of love, and more relational and collective notions of moral being and doing. The next marker is the commitment to hold the quest for social justice and the quest for ecological sustainability as inseparable. Finally, the proposed ethical framework centers in critical mystical vision—enhanced capacity to see “what is,” “what could be,” and God’s presence within creation working toward the latter. 632
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), in its rituals of baptism and confirmation, makes an utterly astounding (but often not recognized as such) affirmation. The people gathered in worship affirm that, at baptism, God makes a covenant with the baptized person that she or he will “strive for justice and peace in all the earth.” The Spirit is breathed into us, and into all of creation, as moral-spiritual power for this lifework. 646
tumult. Life lived in ways that cost other people their lives, where alternatives exist or are in the making and where political action toward them is possible, is not a moral life. To claim a moral life without seeking to challenge the systemic evil of which I am a part seems to me an absurdity.[7] The truth is that the structural violence depicted in these stories will not change unless some of us who benefit materially from it decide to recognize the problem and act on 769
“Financialization” refers to the “increasing role of financial motives, financial markets, financial actors, and financial institutions in the operations of the domestic and international economies.”[8] Various forms of speculative investment are the core of financialization. Financialization redirects capital toward achieving short-range high profits for its owners despite the terrible costs to many others.[9] The recent global financial crisis was one result. Two of these links—ecological injustice and neoliberal globalization—are maintained currently through policies and practices established by human beings. As humanly constructed, they can be challenged and changed. That is, perhaps, the most important point in this glimpse of the links between affluence and poverty. 778
Catastrophic impacts on food production have begun and will increase for already-impoverished people. “Even slight warming decreases yields [of major cereal crops: wheat, corn, barley, rice] in seasonally dry and low-latitude regions. . . . Smallholder and subsistence farmers, pastoralists and artisanal fisherfolk will suffer complex, localized impacts of climate change . . . [including] spread in prevalence of human diseases affecting agricultural labor supply.”[16] 874
a 3-foot sea-level rise by 2100. According to a 2001 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency study, this increase would inundate some 22,400 square miles of land along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States, primarily in Louisiana, Texas, Florida and North Carolina.” Loss of 878
Gus Speth, former Dean of the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies at Yale University, speaking of the factors behind environmental deterioration, avers: The much larger and more threatening impacts stem from the economic activity of those of us participating in the modern, increasingly prosperous world economy. This activity is consuming vast quantities of resources from the environment and returning to the environment vast quantities of waste products. The damages are already huge and are on a path to be ruinous in the future. So, a fundamental question facing societies today—perhaps the fundamental question—is how can the operating instructions for the modern world economy be changed so that economic activity both protects and restores the natural world?[18] 884
before. The distance between the incomes of the richest and poorest country was about 3 to 1 in 1820, 35 to 1 in 1950, 44 to 1 in 1973 and 72 to 1 in 1992.”[19] Recent reports indicate the distance to be nearing 100 to 895
225 people now possess wealth equal to nearly half of the human family.[21] The number of children under age five who die each day, mostly of poverty-related causes, equals roughly 26,000.[22] Pause for a moment, to resist letting these numbers drift by unconsidered. . Regional Wealth Shares (%) 901
Wealth in the United States is highly concentrated, with income disparity rising dramatically since the late 1970s (the beginning of neoliberal economic globalization) and reaching its highest recorded level in 2007.[23] The wealthiest 1 percent now owns nearly 43 percent of financial wealth (defined as net worth excluding the value of one’s house), while the bottom 80 percent owns only 7 percent.[24] Imagine, then, an accompanying chart revealing a United States of ten people in which one of them owns close to half the wealth and eight of the people have a mere 7 percent. 912
this: poverty on a global and domestic basis is directly related to what Pope John Paul II called “inadmissible overdevelopment.” By this he means an economic order that enables a few of us to consume a vast proportion of Earth’s life-enabling gifts, while many others die or suffer for want of “enough,” and in which the poverty of many is linked to the wealth of others.[29] Vigorously avoided in common knowledge, for example, is the reality that famine often is not the result of insufficient food supplies. It is the result of maldistribution of land and income.[30] And the distribution of the world’s food supplies is determined by the decisions, policies, and actions of the world’s powerful nations and people.[31] The global wealth gap, like wealth inequity in the U.S., is shaped around color lines. Worldwide, people of colors other than white are overwhelmingly among the economically impoverished. “Massive poverty and obscene inequality are such terrible scourges of our times,” declared Nelson Mandela in 2005, “that they have to rank alongside slavery and apartheid as social evils.”[32] 929
United States citizens, to illustrate the former, daily produce roughly forty times the greenhouse gases per capita as do our counterparts in some lands,[33] while the world’s more impoverished people and peoples suffer most and first from the more life-threatening consequences of global warming.[34] White privilege also marks the climate crisis. The over six hundred million environmental refugees whose lands will be lost to rising seas if Antarctica or Greenland melt significantly will be disproportionately people of color, as are the twenty-five million environmental refugees already suffering the consequences of global warming. So too will be the people who starve as global warming diminishes crop yields of the world’s three staples—corn, rice, and wheat. The 40 percent of the world’s population whose lives depend upon water from the seven rivers fed by rapidly diminishing Himalayan glaciers are largely not white people. Moreover, impoverished countries are less able to implement adapting strategies 942
The ongoing grind of “hidden” environmental racism is ubiquitous. Our food, clothing, transportation, housing, and consumption are built on it. “The production chain of textiles is a sequence of poisons: cotton fields are sprayed with chemical cocktails to which the workers are also exposed without protection and which subsequently contaminate the soil. In spinning and weaving factories, workers are exposed to dust as the dyers later are to fumes from the dye.” The razing of rainforests for cattle strips livelihood and home from many of the world’s 350 million forest dwellers. The beneficiaries are the corporations responsible and “we,” the consumers. Neither bear the environmental and human costs. The victims are disproportionately not white. The transfer of ecologically dangerous production plants and toxic waste in mass quantities to countries of the Global South are two further manifestations of environmental racism on a global level. 977
Lawrence Summers, President Emeritus of Harvard University and former Secretary of the Treasury (1999–2001) “is infamous for writing a 12 December 1991 memo as a chief economist at the World Bank that argued that ‘the economic logic behind dumping a load of toxic waste in the lowest wage country is impeccable,’ and that the Bank should be ‘encouraging more migration of the dirty industries to the LDCs [less developed countries].’”[38] Thus we see two broad dimensions of the link between social injustice and ecological degradation: climate injustice and environmental racism. Together on the global stage, they are known by some as “ecological imperialism.” 985
Julian Agyeman, Robert Bullard, and Bob Evans summarize it well: While the rich can ensure [at least for the time being] that their children breathe cleaner air . . . and that they do not suffer from polluted water supplies, those at the bottom of the socio-economic ladder are less able to avoid the consequences of motor vehicle exhausts, polluting industry and power generation or the poor distribution of essential facilities. This unequal distribution of environmental ‘bads’ is, of course, compounded by the fact that globally and nationally the poor are not the major polluters. Most environmental pollution and degradation is caused by the actions of those in the rich high-consumption nations, especially by the more affluent groups within those societies . . . [yet] affluent countries in the North are avoiding or delaying any real reduction in their greenhouse gas emissions.[39] 992
High-level leaders of Christian denominations and networks throughout India, they had been gathered by the National Council of Churches of India to design an “eco-justice Sunday School curriculum” to be used throughout the nation. The next day would begin a second consultation, in which I had been invited to participate as a co-planner and a presenter. It convened thirty-some professors of theology from throughout India and Sri Lanka who taught or were preparing to teach green theology and eco-justice as a required component of graduate-level education in theology and ministry. They were people of courage and commitment. They were teaching eco-justice because the lives of their people depended upon it and because they understood it as integral to faith in God. 1009
Earth as a biophysical system cannot continue to operate according to the defining features of capitalism as we know it. Capitalism as it has developed from classical economic theory, through neoclassical theory and on to neoliberalism, aims at and presupposes what Earth can no longer provide or provide for: Unlimited growth in production of goods and services. Unlimited “services” (required for unlimited growth) provided by Earth. Those services include “soil formation and erosion control, pollination, climate and atmosphere regulation, biological control of pests and diseases,” and more.[44] Unlimited “resources” (required for unlimited growth) provided by Earth, such as oil, coal, timber, minerals, breathable air, cultivable soil, air with a CO2 concentration of somewhere between 275 and 350 parts per million,[45] oceans with a balanced pH factor, the ocean’s food chain, potable water, etc. An unregulated market in which the most powerful players are economic entities having: a mandate to maximize profit the legal and civil rights of a person limited liability the legal right and resources to achieve size larger than many nations no accountability to bodies politic, be they cities, states, nations, or other the right to privatize, own, and sell goods long considered public. Freedom of individuals to do as they please with economic assets (including unlimited carbon emissions and speculative investment that may result in the economies of nations crashing). 1065
This is not a stand against business. It is a stand for business that is not dominated by mega-corporations, business that is not entitled to the rights of a citizen and compelled by a mandate to maximize profit. And it is an appeal for business to become an active force of ecological sustainability and restoration. Moreover, it is a firm appeal to resituating the market as one instrument of society, rather than the determining actor in society. While we have no choice in whether or not economic life will change dramatically, we have tremendous choice about the nature of that change. Enter here ethics and morality. Humankind understands itself to be a moral species. We determine (or seek to determine) how to live together based not only on brute force, bare necessity, or survival of the fittest, but on what whatever we deem to be right, true, and good. What are the options for the economic order following corporate and finance-driven, fossil-fueled global capitalism? The default option is to try to carry on with the economy largely as it is while establishing a few regulations related to carbon emissions and pollution. The consequence—relatively unchecked climate change—is horrific. Another possibility would be serious concerted efforts to mitigate climate change, without also questioning some basic market norms, such as the assumption that certain rights (the right to potable water, protein sources, nontoxic food, clean air, and so on) are based on ability to pay. This option would continue to grant a few people of the Global North disproportionate use of the atmosphere and oceans for absorbing carbon emissions. This group also would continue to have relatively greater protection from floods, hurricanes, and other climate-related “natural” disasters. As crops and water supplies diminish, this group would consume an increasingly disproportionate share of them. Where this option would lead, we do not know. We do know that it would produce millions of environmentally caused deaths in Asia and Africa. Or we could choose to move toward economic orders shaped by other norms. This book will propose four. They are ecological sustainability, environmental equity, economic equity, and distributed accountable power. Said differently, we would aim toward economies that: operate within, rather than outside of, Earth’s great economy. move toward more equitable “environmental space” use. move toward an ever-decreasing gap between the world’s “enriched” and “impoverished” people and peoples, and prioritize need over wealth accumulation. are accountable to bodies politic (be they of localities, states, nations, or other), and favor distributed power over concentrated power. At first glance, these aims may seem far beyond the realm of the possible. I will argue the opposite. Let us assume, for a moment, adequate moral courage and political will to move toward economies shaped by the four aforementioned norms. A flock of birds flying gracefully through the sky presses forward in one direction. Then, in a flash and as a whole, a great swoop occurs and they are off in an utterly different direction. The radical change to which we are called is that dramatic: an “utterly different direction.” The birds have an ingrained mechanism that enables them to redirect themselves radically as a whole and with tremendous grace and apparent ease. We don’t. We must forge an unknown path, step by step, piece by piece. The only way to get there is to go there. We will end up in the direction that we head. Needed is an ethic for this move toward more sustainable, equitable, and democratic economic orders. This book is one small contribution to that ethic. Something New Required of Religion and Religious Ethics When something new is required of humankind, something new is required of Earth’s longstanding faith traditions, primary sources of moral wisdom and moral courage. They are called to plumb their depths for relevant moral-spiritual wisdom, and to offer those gifts to the table of public discourse and decision making. 1082
Where Christian beliefs and practices have contributed to the Earth crisis, we are called to critique and “re-formation.” Where the resources of Christian traditions reflect God’s boundless love for creation and offer moral power for the good, we must grasp their depths, and tender them to the broader community. Similar opportunity and responsibility sits on the shoulders of people within the other religious traditions. 1118
Structural Violence as Structural Evil “The great masquerade of evil has played havoc with all our ethical concepts. For evil to appear disguised as light, charity, historical necessity, or social justice is quite bewildering to anyone brought up on our traditional ethical concepts.” Dietrich Bonhoeffer[1] ♦ “Evil exists as an interstructural web of oppressive relationships.” Mary Hobgood[2] ♦ “Evil is as long as evil has the last say.” Dwight Hopkins and Linda E. Thomas[3] 1214
In the first thirty waking seconds of my day—between pulling back the sheets on my bed, placing my feet on the carpet, and reaching for my glasses—oil has already played an indispensible role. My sheets are a cotton polyester blend; the cotton was grown in fields dependent upon petroleum-based fertilizers, pesticides, and fungicides, as well as the irrigation systems and machinery to grow and harvest the crop. Afterwards, this cotton was mechanically picked, separated in a mechanical gin, blended with polyester (petroleum-derived) fibers and treated with polystyrene (also derived from crude oil). Finally, it was dyed with petroleum-based chemicals, wrapped in plastic, and transported in an oil-fueled vehicle to a distribution center and then a store. An oil-burning furnace in the basement of my home heats my bedroom. The carpeting on my floor is polypropylene-based with synthetic latex backing, all derived from petroleum. The lenses in glasses that I sleepily don contain ore-based strontium and barium oxide, coated in graphite made from petroleum. Circling the lenses are frames made of petroleum-based plastics and covered with a petroleum-based varnish. My morning continues as I pull on a polyester-cotton blend shirt, which started out as a few ounces of petroleum. [5] The 1930s saw the introduction of nylon, a petroleum-derived synthetic polymer, into the textile industry. I slip nylon stockings on my legs, followed by shoes with rubber soles made of styrene-butadiene, synthesized from Saudi petroleum and benzene. Breakfast consists of Cheerios, the grains of which were grown, irrigated, and transported with the help of petroleum. Nearly all plastics are derived from oil. After consuming my Cheerios, I reach into my freezer and pull out a plastic drawer containing bags of frozen fruit—enclosed in plastic wrapping made of polyethylene terephthalate, kept from expiring by petroleum-derived preservatives. While eating, I peruse information on my laptop about my upcoming flight across the country to see my family for Thanksgiving. Little do I know that the round-trip flight will consume about 30,000 gallons of fuel and produce a total of about 0.68 metric tons / 650,000 pounds of greenhouse gases. [6] Divided by some 200 passengers, my share is about 3,250 pounds. As I step outside, my first inhalation sends traces of traffic-produced petroleum fumes and microscopic particulate matter into my lungs. My car pulls out of the driveway and onto pavement: twelve inches of asphalt from Texas petroleum poured over a graded roadbed. Petroleum fuels my car and about 87 percent of the cars I see on the road, as well as the airplanes flying over my head. [7] The rubber tires of my car came from oil, and the petroleum-based engine lubricant and antifreeze trace my path with a drip line that will end up in the water system after the next rain. The voices on my radio include politicians who are heavily influenced by oil lobbies, reporters announcing a catastrophic oil spill, and guests commenting on a war that depends upon and is arguably fought over, oil. Living on the outskirts of a city and commuting by car is made possible by the powerful automobile industry’s influence on developers.[8] Transportation is the primary use of oil in the U.S. The estimated cost of financial aid given directly or indirectly to the auto and oil industry by each American every year is $2700. [9] In short, I am a petroleum addict. Facing the moral implications of this addiction means asking, how do we acquire that oil? What happens to people and the earth in the extraction and refining process? 1240
“Please ladies and gentlemen, we did not do any of these things [lead high carbon-emission lifestyles] but if things go business as usual, we will not live. We will die. Our country will not exist.” President of Maldives, Mohammed Nasheed[10] The Maldives is a country composed of 1200 islands and atolls in the Indian Ocean, covering about 115 square miles. Its highest point is only eight feet above sea level, making it one of the countries most vulnerable to sea level rise. In addition to loss of land, the impacts of climate change threaten the Maldives with more powerful tropical storms and higher storm surges, beach erosion, biodiversity loss, and a blow to the fishing industry upon which many livelihoods depend. [11] The Maldives has become a leading nation in calling for serious action around climate change. In 2009 the president and his advisors staged an underwater cabinet meeting in scuba gear, to draw attention to the plight of this nation and other countries that may be first and hardest hit by the effects of unchecked climate change. Sea level rise is just one impact of climate change. Ocean acidification, caused by dissolved CO2 from the atmosphere, threatens the bottom rung of the marine food chain by lowering the pH of the entire ocean. Algae and other tiny sea creatures are strongly affected by this phenomenon. [12] Pteropods, for example, have translucent shells that are literally dissolving from the levels of acid in the ocean. As they die off, so do the small fish that feed on them, and the larger fish that in turn feed on the smaller fish. A significant part of humankind’s food chain is in a state of invisible jeopardy. Mississippi River Chemical Corridor The Louisiana industrial corridor, aka “Cancer Alley,” is a stretch of the Mississippi River lined with petrochemical companies and oil refineries. The ground, air, and water along this corridor are so infused with carcinogens and mutagens that the area has been called a “massive human experiment.” [13] Louisiana ranks number one in per capita toxic releases into the environment. [14] The polluting facilities are clustered predominantly in areas with high concentrations of African Americans. Eighty percent of the total African American community in this industrial corridor lives within three miles of a polluting facility. The petrochemical industry denies any responsibility for the noxious odors and ill health effects on the area residents, despite contradictory scientific evidence. Petrochemical corporations wield tremendous power in the state of Louisiana. The industry’s lobby shamelessly uses its power to ensure that the state legislature represents its interests, such as offering tax incentives and loopholes that privilege the industry. In 2000, the Louisiana Shell Corporation had an income of 26 billion dollars and ranked fourth in the state in receipt of tax exemptions. During a tour of Cancer Alley by the Deep South Center for Environmental Justice, a Nigerian man said, “I cannot believe that this is happening in the U.S. I know that the oil companies exploit my people and degrade and devastate the environment, but I had no idea that this was being done in the U.S.” [15] Niger River Delta Nigeria exported 962,000 barrels of oil per day to the U.S. in 2010. [16] Oil and violence travel hand in hand in Nigeria, Africa’s leading petroleum producer. The Ogoni are a minority ethnic group that have lived in the Niger River Delta for centuries. Today they live daily with oil spills, gas flares, seepage from drilling, soot spewing from the methane gas flares, and constant noise and flickering lights. Their aquatic life is decimated, their waterways are infused with oil, and their mangrove forests are destroyed. They suffer from elevated rates of asthma, bronchitis, pneumonia, skin diseases, and emphysema. Food shortages and limited health services and educational opportunities are their reality. [17] In the industrial city of Port Harcourt, natural gas flares dot the land, acid rain rusts the galvanized iron roofs within two… 1274
Fundamental to Christian faith is the claim that creation is “good,” tov (Genesis 1). The Hebrew tov, while often translated as “good,” also implies “life-furthering.” 1344
Its essential quality seems to be its life-furthering capacity. Earth is the only body in our solar system and the only body of which we are aware in the universe that generates the capacity to produce and further life itself. The great Mystery that we call God must have a voracious, insatiable hunger for life. This God uses even death and destruction to produce life. The signature moment of the God revealed in Jesus was to raise up life from a brutal death, execution on a stake. Resurrection is the song of Earth. The song resounds throughout the earth. After Mount Saint Helens erupted over thirty years ago in Washington State, it was thought that life could never return to the barren volcanic wasteland that once was a mountaintop. To the surprise of all, within a year plants began, as if by miracle, to emerge. Walking in the Olympic rainforest, one occasionally is struck by an absolutely straight line of five or six young hemlocks. Again, death itself spawns life; this string of trees has emerged from the decay of a magnificent cedar fallen to the ground. These logs, known as nurse logs, are a voice in the forest’s song of resurrection. So thirsty for the tov (the life-furthering goodness) was this Originating Force that from cold lifeless cosmic space and from cosmic infernos it caused a rocky muddy watery planet capable of generating life to spring forth. But no, not merely life—what came into being was more. It was life capable of furthering life in ever more complex and life-generating forms. It was creative and life-creating life. This is the mystery of tov. And God says it over and over, seven times: “God saw that it was tov.” Out of nothingness, some fourteen billion years past, spewed forth all the matter and energy that ever would exist. Some four hundred thousand years after the “big bang,” as this wildly expanding universe began to cool, free electrons and other subatomic particles combined with nuclei to form neutral atoms. Hydrogen, helium, and traces of lithium were made. By the time of Earth’s birth some 4.6 billion years ago, the creative energy and cosmic elements of the universe had formed carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and all the other elements in the periodic table. Earth thus had all the ingredients to form rocks and water, and to generate life. Yet, lifeless it was. The creating urge toward life and toward greater complexity forged on. Organic molecules composed of oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, and carbon (with traces of sulfur and phosphorus) came into being. As they combined variously to form cells of proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acid, a creative process—beyond human full comprehension—gave birth to life itself. Possibly as “soon” as a billion years after earth formed, single-celled life emerged. This lone planet had become life-generating, Planet Home. 1347
Science today suggests yet another depth of life-generating capacity. Amino acids, the building blocks of living cells, may have the capacity not only to encode and transmit the instructions and patterns that shape life but to alter them based upon learning.[22] With the evolution of the human animal, the complexity gravitated to the human mind. The creature called human had the ability and fierce urge for something new. It was the impulse for self-reflection and conscious pursuit of the good. Morality was born. With time, the scope of that morality expanded, both temporally and spatially, from tribe to nation to global community, and from things of the present and past to include things of the future. In the last century, yet another unprecedented human ability emerged. Humankind today possesses the knowledge and resources to abad and shamar (Genesis 2:15)—“tend and protect”[23]—Earth’s life-web on a global scale. That is, we comprehend that actions in one location on Earth have impacts around the globe (deforestation in the Amazon affects the North Pole and North Dakota), and we have the resources to take actions that either “tend and protect” or degrade the planetary garden. We arrive at the first and haunting theological problem. The primal, first, and most characteristic act of the God proclaimed in Judaism and then in Christianity is not merely to create a magnificent world but a magnificently life-furthering world that mirrors and embodies the Life-Creating Energy who brought it into being. The scandalous point is this. We are undoing that very tov, life-generating capacity. We, or rather some of us, are “uncreating.”[24] A second theological problem concerns the ancient faith claim, present in multiple streams of Christian traditions, that God dwells within creation. If Christ fills Earth’s creatures and elements, then the Earth now being “crucified” by human ignorance, greed, and arrogance is, in some sense, also the body of Christ. Are those of us most responsible for global warming, poisoned rivers, the extinction of tens of thousands of species per year, and ocean acidification crucifying Christ? A third theological problem concerns revelation. Christian traditions hold that God not only creates the Earth and sees it as good, but also reveals Godself in that creation. It is the “first book” of revelation. If to do and be as God would have us, we must receive God’s self-revelation, then God’s self-revelation is necessary for the life of faith. Yet, humankind is pelting headlong down a trajectory of destroying essential features of God’s “first book” of revelation. What do we make of endangering the first and enduring “book” of revelation? Fourth, Christians claim that human beings are created “in the image of God.” Yet, if global warming continues unchecked, we may be, in the words of Catholic moral theologian Daniel Maguire, “an endangered species.” How do we make sense of a human trajectory now aimed at destroying the creatures crafted “in the image of God”? These four unprecedented theological problems are accompanied by a fifth that is more familiar. Two millennia of Christians and the Hebrew people before them claimed that God calls Her people to receive Her love and then “to love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your strength (Deut. 6:5),” and “to love your neighbor as yourself” (Lev. 19:18). This is our lifework, to receive God’s love, and to live that justice-making mysterious and marvelous love into the world. This, according to a widespread understanding of the Christian story, is the human vocation. Love implies active commitment to the well-being of whom or what is loved. Where people suffer under systemic injustice, seeking their well-being entails seeking to undo that injustice. The implication is shaking: If we fail to recognize the injustice that is damaging neighbor, and hence fail to address it, are we not defying the call to love? If I am professing love for neighbor by feeding the poor… 1371
Sin in its fullest sense refers to disorientation from right relationship with God, which then leads to disorientation from right relationship with self, others, and all of creation. That disorientation results in wrongdoings. Sin is dislocating God from the center of reality. Sin as disorientation may be manifest in serving one’s own uncensored desires and perceived interests regardless of the cost to self, others, and Earth, and regardless of what would “displease” God. Paradoxically, sin may be quite the opposite of this “self-centeredness” for people whose full self and center have been denied them. For those who have been socialized or coerced into self-sacrifice, self-denial, or self-hatred, sin may take the form of not attending to one’s own well-being. The former is sin as defined by patriarchy and the experience of men in positions of domination, while the latter reflects womanist and feminist theologies. Both are valid and powerful expressions of human reality. In either case, sin counters the call to love God with “heart, soul, mind, and strength,” and to love neighbor as self. Martin Luther provides a useful image of sin in the former and more recognized form. Drawing upon Augustine, he taught that human beings tend toward serving their own self-interest above all other considerations and deceive themselves into believing that they are not. He insisted on the pervasive presence of sin, the humanly insurmountable reality of “selves curved in on self” (se incurvatus in se).[26] This idea that sin denotes both the individual’s wrongdoings (sins) and the individual’s state of profound disorientation (sin) overcomes the problem of reducing sin to wrongdoings. Yet this expanded notion remains inadequate and misleading. The remaining problem is the reduction of sin to a condition of individuals. To the contrary, sin exists not only in the individual, but also in the social structural relationships that shape societies and their impact on eco-systems. That is, groups and societies as well as individuals may be agents of sin. Racism, classism, sexism, and imperialism are examples of social structural sin. The increasing destructive power of humankind, seen most blatantly in the buildup of nuclear weaponry and in destructive climate change, calls for probing structural sin and its power more deeply. The image of many human beings “curved in on” their imagined self-interest speaks directly to the heart of life for people positioned in relative privilege in the global community today. Collectively, we are selves curved in on ourselves. We may long to live according to justice-making, self-honoring love for Earth and neighbor, to live without exploiting neighbor or Earth. But look at us. A species destroying the very life-support systems upon which life depends. A society so addicted to our consumption-oriented ways that we close our hearts and minds to the death and destruction required to sustain them. Advanced global capitalism gorges on “selves turned in on self.” For the global market to continue in its purpose of maximizing growth and accumulating wealth, it must convince people to consume as much as possible. Advanced global capitalism is an engine of “selves turned in on self.” It stokes the compulsion to consume, quietly coiling chains 1420
Given my concerns in this book, however, I expand the understanding of salvation to include not only liberation from oppression but also liberation from committing or perpetrating it. Ultimately, salvation entails the restoration of the entire created world to one in which none flourish by degrading others or otherkind. The church’s entry into struggles for ecological well-being has expanded the notion of sin to include degradation of the earth. This move—first made on an ecclesial level by His Holiness Patriarch Bartholomew, leader of Orthodox Christianity—is now affirmed by many Catholic, mainstream Protestant, and evangelical voices. With this move, sin as “selves curved in on self” expands to include not only individuals and societies but humankind in relationship to the rest of creation. We became a species “turned in on itself,” oriented around humankind and human desire as the centerpiece of earthly reality to the detriment of all else. Sin as disoriented relationship with God, self, others, and “the rest of creation” takes on fuller meaning. 1449
four defining features of structural injustice as structural sin reveals more about their implications for the moral life. These features are: the relative invisibility of structural injustice to those who do not suffer directly from it, the fact that structural injustice continues regardless of the virtue or vice of people involved, its transmission from generation to generation unless exposed and confronted, and its expansion as a result of concentrated power. 1465
If Unseen, Then Unrenounced The first challenge pertains to renouncing sin. Fundamental to virtually all forms of Christianity is the claim that Christians are called to eschew sin, and that freedom from sin begins with repentance. Repentance means ceasing the way of sin and “turning the other direction.” Teshuvah, the Hebrew word often translated as repentance, suggests turning from sinful ways and toward the good by means of turning back to God. It is a powerful act of changing direction that can redirect one’s life. The Greek metanoia means to think and perceive differently, to have a new mind and consciousness. Repentance then involves a distinct turning away from sin, in both consciousness and action. Repentance and confession are possible only where sin is acknowledged. One insidious characteristic of structural injustice (structural sin), however, is its tendency to remain invisible to those not suffering from it. If we do not see the structural injustice in which we live, we cannot repent of it. Failing to renounce it, we remain captive to it. Failure to see structural sin breeds complicity with it, and passes it on to the next generation. The call to renounce sin contains a call to “see” the structural sin of which we are a part, in order that we might repent of it, renounce it, and resist it.[27] 1471
This is an impossible calling for individuals alone; it is, instead, the work of communities. The Paradox of Privilege The first challenge thickens with the second. It is the paradox of privilege.[28] Even when a person does recognize and repent of structural sin, it is not possible to divest oneself from the impact of the social structures into which our lives are woven. Not by will or intent, I am involved in the sins of economic and ecological exploitation even where I seek to resist them. Regardless of personal repentance through radical changes in how I live, I continue to reap the “benefits” of economic and ecological violence. My life continues to depend, for example, upon products containing petroleum extracted by destroying the homelands and livelihoods of people in the Niger Delta, Chad, the Gulf Coast of the United States, or elsewhere, or by waging war in Iraq. I cannot refuse all use of petroleum-based roads, fabrics, plastics, fire trucks, public utilities, and medical care, and more that, in today’s world especially, depend on petroleum. Social sin transcends individual moral agency. Aida Hurtado, speaking of white privilege, cuts to the heart of the paradox of privilege: “[I]t does not matter how good you are, as a person, if the political structures provide privilege to you individually based on the group oppression of others; in fact, individuals belonging to dominant groups can be infinitely good because they never are required to be personally bad. That is the irony of structural privilege: the more you have, the less you have to fight for it.”[29] As a citizen of this nation, I belong to a group that “has an oppressive relationship with” other groups without being “an oppressive person who behaves in oppressive ways.”[30] This paradox helps to hide oppression. But that is not the end of the story. The fact that individual actions are relatively powerless in the face of structural sin does not mean that personal efforts to counter it are immaterial, ineffectual, or unnecessary. To the contrary, the individual’s response is essential and effectual. I cannot overstate the importance of recognizing this paradox: Structural sin, while it cannot be dismantled by individual actions, cannot be dismantled without them. As James Poling notes: Every “system of evil requires personal actions to make it work.”[31] Thus every system of evil also requires people to resist their own and others’ participation in it, even while acknowledging that their acts of resistance in themselves appear relatively ineffectual. While individual acts will not in themselves change the course of social structures, they are necessary for that change to be achieved. This is powerful knowledge. It makes individuals’ actions infinitely important. Living responsibly within this paradox is central to the work of loving neighbor as self in the context of structural sin. While structural sin transcends individual moral agency, it does not transcend collective agency. The imperviousness of structural sin to individual actions “forces us to look beyond individual agency.”[32] Social movements demonstrate that people, working together, can indeed counter structural sin. Again, a systemic view of the world is called to the fore as a vital ingredient of moral vision. From Generation to Generation unless Challenged The structural sin of socio-ecological injustice is transmitted from generation to generation. Because human beings are inherently social, we establish patterns of interaction. Sociologists refer to these patterns, power arrangements within them, and belief systems by rationalizing them as “institutions” or “social structures.” They may be as small as families and as large as economic systems. Members of a society are socialized toward assuming unconsciously that its social structures and attendant values and worldviews are normal, natural, inevitable, and even divinely ordained. In this process of socialization cultural, political, economic, and ideological structures that perpetuate injustice… 1490
Perhaps more than any other nation in history, the United States has held power to pursue its perceived interests regardless of the harm to others or to Earth’s ecosystems, and to distort that state of affairs into the appearance of a moral “good.” Accordingly, we, the nation’s citizens, participate in that unprecedented power for committing structural sin. The call to renounce sin entails a hermeneutic of suspicion regarding moves to concentrate power. The movement against the reigning form of economic globalization is in large part a movement against the concentration of economic power (and hence political power). Neoliberal globalization, by concentrating wealth into the hands of a few enormous global corporations, also has concentrated their power for structural sin. Structural injustice, when it is viewed as structural sin, unearths these four moral challenges. Facing them requires acknowledging the reality of structural or collective sin. Jesus’ call to repent entails a call to see the social and ecological systems and collective actions in which our lives are entangled. This notion of a “systemic” moral vision will emerge as central in our quest for moral–spiritual power to counter systemic injustice. 1547
Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s letters from prison. In taking these steps, our primary aim is insight into how evil manages to hide itself from the consciousness of its perpetrators, or to become acceptable. Bonhoeffer, reflecting from prison on the widespread complicity with fascism in Hitler’s Germany, provides striking insight into the hiddenness of evil. “The great masquerade of evil has played havoc with all our ethical concepts,” he writes. “For evil to appear disguised as light, charity, historical necessity, or social justice is quite bewildering to anyone brought up on our traditional ethical concepts, while for the Christian who bases his [sic] life on the Bible, it merely confirms the fundamental wickedness of evil.”[41]Its ability to “appear disguised”—to hide—confirms its wickedness. That is, the cloaked nature of structural evil is at its very heart. Bonhoeffer’s words reveal more. They name four masks behind which evil hides: “light, charity, historical necessity, [and] social justice.”[42] As a Lutheran theologian, Bonhoeffer is steeped in the longstanding theological recognition that, in all things human, evil and good are intertwined. That is, though we strive for the good, the human condition of finitude and fallibility means that never is the good, as a human doing, completely free from evil. This insight draws attention to the ambiguity of what is just and unjust, what is consistent with the ways and will of God and what is not. The call to resist evil is fraught with vexing ambiguity in a world in which all alternatives to an unjust situation may themselves be tainted with injustice and in which what brings well-being to some vulnerable people may bring damage to others. For example, if public advocacy closes down a shale-fracking operation in Pennsylvania because of the many dangers it poses, what becomes of the families whose bread-earners are left unemployed? 1600
Poling too finds evil hiding by “masking itself as good,” “claiming necessity,” or “remaining intertwined with the good.”[43] And like Bonhoeffer, he sees evil’s “double character—its existence and its hiddenness.”[44] People perpetrating structural evil enable it to hide either by denying its existence or allowing it to remain in the unconscious.[45] 1623
Gebara suggests three avenues for evil’s slippery escape into obscurity: it may be “accepted as fate, as God’s design, or as punishment for hidden sins.” Moreover, like Bonhoeffer and Poling, she notes that evil slips into obscurity by intermingling with good: It is “not easy to spot evil’s presence” when it is “intermingled in our culture, education, and religion—events or behaviours regarded as normal, common, even good.”[47] 1640
“Free” Trade and Sweatshops For generations, the Chantico family of Oaxaca, Mexico grew maize on their three-hectare plot, just as their Zapotec Indian ancestors did for centuries before Columbus landed. This corn fed the family, providing 70 percent of their caloric intake, with some left over to sell in the local market.[48]The Chanticos and their ancestors developed this particular corn cultivar, criollo, over centuries to suit the area’s climate and soil, to resist pests, and to provide essential proteins and vitamins. This lifestyle staved off poverty and allowed the Chanticos to provide for themselves and their community. In 1993 President Bill Clinton signed into law an international trade agreement between American neighbors Mexico, Canada, and the United States called the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). As the name suggests, this trilateral agreement reduced tariffs on trade between these countries in an effort to foster economic growth for all three nations and reduce protectionist policies on certain types of goods or industries. But in practice several measures required by NAFTA prevent the agreement from being fair, beneficial, or effective. In 1994, the Mexican government enacted a series of “reforms” called for by NAFTA. These included signing away its right to protect its own corn industry. Inexpensive U.S. corn flooded the Mexican market, priced around 20 percent less than Mexican corn. Although the U.S. corn was intended for animal feed, it nevertheless depressed the entire Mexican corn market. American agribusinesses, highly subsidized by its own federal government, bankrupted Mexican farmers like the Chantico family, who were forced off their land—land that had grown indigenous corn for centuries. Their land was bought for a pittance by foreign direct investors who streamlined operations and planted mass monoculture acres of genetically modified, chemical-dependent crops for export—all in order to meet the American demand for off-season fruits and vegetables, and cheap beef. The profits of these exports pad the coffers of foreign-based corporations. The displaced Chantico family migrated north to the town of Nogales at the border, where rumor spoke of $0.85 per hour factory shifts in the maquiladoras. [49] Many factories in Nogales had formerly operated out of small towns in the United States, but the managers knew costs would now be lower in Mexico. No labor unions, no worker benefits, longer hours, lower wages, no disability benefits, and the possibility of child labor all made the shift an enticing one. Maria Chantico began mind-numbing work in a factory, hunched over for fifteen hours a day and ending her shift at 4:00 am. The youngest children scavenged food and clothing from the nearby trash dump. They lived in a cramped shack made of cast-off materials from the factory, next to a dry riverbed (dry due to the factory’s overpumping) that now served as a dumpsite for industrial waste: copper tailings, unregulated dumped toxic chemicals, and untreated sewage. [50] The people of Nogales experience unusually high rates of cancer, neurological disease, miscarriages, and birth defects. Maria’s children scavenge a 55-gallon drum from the factory to contain the potable water brought in on trucks—a drum that used to hold toxic chemicals. In addition to the injuries that Maria and her fellow workers experience due to the elimination of safety devices, many of the women are victims of sexual exploitation and physical abuse. Meanwhile, Colleen, a young woman living in New Hampshire, shops at her local Old Navy where tank tops are on sale for $5.99. In the clearance section she can buy two and get the third for free. The “Made in Mexico” label was tiny, hard to see. Holding the clean, fresh-smelling shirt in her hands, surrounded by immaculate tile floors, fluorescent lighting, and pleasant music, it’s difficult to imagine the series of events that led to the production of this shirt. Colleen knows none of this backstory as she compares the sky-blue racerback tank to… 1648
“Social structure” is a very broad term used to denote the ordering of human relationships on multiple levels from macro (that is, a national economy or social classes) to institutional (that is, an educational system), to micro (that is, a family), to ideological (that is, a value system). A structural perspective assumes that social structures shape human identities, interests, and interactions, providing, to an extent, “both the possibilities and limits for human action.”[55] “Structural violence” refers to the physical, psychological, and spiritual harm that certain groups of people experience as a result of unequal distribution of power and privilege. James Gilligan, Harvard Medical School professor, defines structural violence as “the increased rates of death and disability suffered by those who occupy the bottom rungs of society.”[56] Astrophysicist and sustainability leader Robert Gilman describes structural violence as “physical and psychological harm that results from exploitive and unjust social, political and economic systems. . . . Hunger and poverty are two prime examples of what is described as ‘structural violence.’”[57] He cites others who estimate structural violence on an international level by asking, “[H]ow many extra deaths occur each year due to the unequal distribution of wealth between countries?”[58] In short, structural violence degrades, dehumanizes, damages, and kills people by limiting or preventing their access to the necessities for life or for its flourishing. I suggest a second aspect of structural violence: the complicity or silent acquiescence of those who fail to take responsibility for it and challenge it. Herein structural violence refers to these two dimensions—the harm that is done and silent acquiescence to it. Racism, classism, sexism, and heterosexism are common forms. Paul Farmer vividly illustrates the ways in which structural violence causes extreme poverty and ill health in Haiti. He emphasizes that structural violence is the result of power disparities.[59] This power disparity generally runs along the lines of class, race, and gender. “Structural violence” is his shorthand for “inegalitarian social structures.”[60] Power asymmetries determine who is most at risk for devastation by disease, weather-related disasters, unjust imprisonment, economic downturns, poverty, and other afflictions, including incidents often labeled natural disasters. “These afflictions,” Farmer insists, “are not the result of accident . . . they are consequences, direct or indirect of human agency.” This agency is not primarily the acts of individuals but of historically developed and often economically driven social processes. The importance of these final points cannot be overstated: That which is the result of human agency can be challenged by it! My use of “structural violence” shares Farmer’s emphasis. 1720
Violence The presence and nature of structural violence become clearer in contrast to what Galtung refers to as “personal violence” or “direct violence.”[61] Whereas in direct violence the perpetrator (person or group) can be identified, in structural (or “indirect”) violence, “there may not be any person who directly harms another person in the structure. The violence is built into the structure and shows up as unequal power and consequently unequal life chances.”[62] “In both cases individuals may be killed or mutilated. . . . But whereas in the [case of direct violence] these consequences may be traced back to concrete persons or actors, in the [case of structural violence] this is no longer meaningful. . . . The important point here is that if people are starving when this is objectively avoidable, then violence is committed, regardless of whether there is a clear subject-action-object relation.”[63] Galtung illustrates, “[I]n a society where life expectancy is twice as high in the upper as in the lower classes, violence is exercised even if there are not concrete actors one can point to directly attacking others, as when one person kills another.”[64] “Direct violence is an event; structural violence is a process.”[65] 1744
Maria’s misery is not Colleen’s fault. No specific person may be held responsible for what has been done to Maria. No single person was responsible for the NAFTA treaty that destroyed her corn-based livelihood and forced her to move north to the border. No one “forced” her to hire on with the maquiladora; she technically is “free” to leave if she wants to avoid the toxic dangers and sexual overtures of supervisors. The wage structure was set by corporate policy and is not traceable to any one person. Plant managers are simply carrying out their orders and obeying policy; they may even be paying a slight bit more than neighboring plants. The constellation of violence against Maria and countless like her is a process, not a direct act by identifiable individuals.[66] Many people involved in that process and benefiting from it remain oblivious to the impact on Maria. Structural violence generally is not criminalized. Direct violence is far more likely to be perceived by society as a crime, punishable by legal systems. This status of legality helps to maintain the relative “invisibility” of structural violence. Galtung’s assertion that structural violence is a “process” involving many people over time yields further insight into society’s astounding capacity to ignore it. The people involved generally are disconnected from each other and are kept relatively unaware of each other’s actions and of other stages in the process. More importantly, many actions required to maintain structural violence are taken by people who may not be responsible for the decisions that mandate those actions. To illustrate: the middle-level manager at Walmart did not make the policy that denies some employees benefits and wages adequate to maintain their health. The gas station employee did not decide to pay militias to kill Ogoni people who protested Shell Oil’s desecration of their lands in the Niger Delta. The insidious nature of structural violence has yet another face. Those who perpetrate one form of structural violence may themselves be victims of another form that precludes their taking opposing actions without the support of a broader community. 1761
The Walmart middle manager may risk losing her job if she fails to fire the employee who has been unable to work due to illness. The gas station employee may have lost his previous job to downsizing by a corporation whose CEO earned 450 times what this worker earned. Resistance to structural violence calls for change not only in individuals’ lives but also in the structures of society—public policy, corporate rights, and institutions. The call to neighbor-love pertains not only to private life but also to the ecological and economic dimensions of life. Structural violence at any given time stands on a vast array of decisions and actions that began decades, sometimes centuries, ago. Without structural moral vision—vision that enables seeing that history—we march on in moral oblivion. When structural violence begins to break into public awareness, those responsible for it briskly and effectively deflect that dawning awareness onto more sensational and easily understood acts of direct violence. When torture at Abu Graib prison in Iraq was publicly exposed, the high-ranking people who had decided to make torture an “acceptable” means of interrogation and to socialize young soldiers into accepting it as normal, quickly hid by blaming the individual soldiers at Abu Graib. The powerful people and processes responsible for implanting brutality into the hearts and minds of the young soldiers were off the hook. Blaming direct violence obscures the more dangerous structural violence. Structural violence theory offers yet another tool for explaining complicity with structural evil. It is the concept of “cultural violence.” The term was coined by John Galtung to denote “those aspects of culture . . . that can be used to justify or legitimize direct or structural violence. . . . Cultural violence makes direct and structural violence look, even feel, right—or at least not wrong.”[67] Direct, structural, and cultural violence form what Galtung calls a tri-fold paradigm of violence. “[A]t the bottom is the steady flow through time of cultural violence, a substratum from which the other two can derive their nutrients. In the next stratum the rhythms of structural violence are located. Patterns of exploitation are building up, wearing out, or torn down. . . . And at the top, visible to the naked eye . . . is the stratum of direct violence with the whole record of direct cruelty perpetrated by human beings against each other and against other forms of life and nature in general.”[68] Dismantling structural violence thus calls for identifying the cultural violence that nourishes it. What is the cultural violence that enables U.S. society to normalize and accept the practice of paying CEOs 450 times the earnings of their lowest-paid workers, especially when that wage does not meet the bare-bone needs of food and shelter? What mesmerizing forces of cultural violence make it desirable for Seattleites to build huge luxurious houses while ignoring the city’s six to ten thousand homeless people and lobbying against the movement to effect an income tax on the wealthiest citizens of Washington State? Tom Shadyac in his film, “I Am,” calls such cultural violence into question with a brief story: “Here’s a story, a true story,” he begins, “to show just who we’ve become.” Once there was a native tribe that lived in peace and harmony for thousands of years, and every day the routine was the same: the hunters would go out from the tribe, and when they returned, the bounty from the hunt was shared equally by all members of the tribe. No one went hungry when food was available, not even the weak, the sick or the elderly. One day the most skilled hunter said, ‘I’m the best hunter. I kill more than my share of deer. Why should I share the bounty of my hunt?’ And from that day forward he began storing his meat in a high mountain cave. And then other skilled hunters said, ‘we kill more than our share of deer too. Shouldn’t we have the right to keep the bounty of our hunt?’ And they too began to store… 1777
Trying to solve the problems of structural violence with individualized responses not only fails to solve the problem, but also reinforces its invisibility. To counter structural violence, moral vision must, itself, be structural. In Sum We noted five theological problems stemming from our complicity in structural injustice, and identified them as structural sin. Viewing structural injustice as structural sin revealed obstacles to overcoming it: Where we remain unaware of structural sin/injustice, we cannot repent of it. Where awareness leads to repentance, we are faced with the paradox of privilege. Structural sin/injustice is passed on from generation to generation unless recognized and challenged. Concentrated power renders structural sin/injustice more potent. Next, seeing structural injustice as structural evil illumined how it is woven into our daily lives and how it hides under the guise of good, inevitability, divine mandate, or social necessity. The lens of structural violence theory confirmed power disparity as a cause of structural injustice, and pointed out the ominous role of cultural violence in breeding and perpetuating structural violence. These dynamics cry out: A core aspect of Christian faith, renouncing sin, requires a moral consciousness that accounts for the impact of people’s collective actions. The structural nature of sin and evil calls forth also a structural understanding of neighbor-love. We will call it love as an ecological-economic vocation. 1842
Unmasking Evil That Parades as Good “Through clever and constant application of propaganda, people can be made to see paradise as hell, and also the other way round.” Adolf Hitler[1] 1948
In the context of a Congolese war in which warlords use terror as an essential weapon to ensure control of regions where international companies mine for valuable metals, sexual violence is especially horrendous. “Competing militias rape in order either to drive communities out of contested areas or else as a means of controlling or subjugating those living in the areas they control.” [4] The impact of coltan mining on biodiversity and soil and water quality is devastating. Much coltan is mined near national parks, and some workers rely on poaching to eat. Kahuzi Biega National Park, home of the mountain gorilla, has suffered particularly from coltan mining. Widespread hunting has driven lowland gorillas and elephants to the brink of extinction, and massive deforestation from mines and airstrips, as well as water pollution from mine tailings, has killed off all edible wildlife in the park. The ecosystem has been effectively plundered, according to a UNEP report. [5] When I upgrade my cell phone using Verizon’s “new every two” plan, or replace my old TV with a plasma screen, or make the leap to an iPad, the new devices will not come with a label that reads “Warning! This device was made with raw materials from Central Africa that are nonrenewable, were mined in inhumane conditions, and then sold to fund a bloody war of occupation. Moreover, the device has caused massive soil and water contamination and the virtual elimination of endangered species. Enjoy.” Even with such a label, would I think twice about where my electronics come from? Would I speak up to influence public policy around coltan imports? Would I consider sharing electronics with neighbors, or forgo owning some of them at all? Would I contact Apple, Microsoft, or other companies that produce 1987
Coltan is a shorthand term for columbium-tantalum. Many devices beyond cell phones contain this mineral: cameras, mp3 players, computer chips, pagers, DVD players, video game systems, missiles, and airplanes all depend on coltan. Americans use and discard cell phones at a faster rate than any other nation and tend to own far more household electronics than do other people. The United States is the largest consumer of coltan in the world, accounting for 40 percent of global demand. 2006
Power arrangements, economic power in particular, play a role in obscuring from the “haves” the reality of the “have nots.” Public sociologist, Gary Perry, describes how freeways were designed in New Orleans to enable tourists and other airline travelers to move from the airport to tourist havens and other relatively wealthy parts of town without seeing the impoverished areas and the people who inhabit them.[8] They are hidden from view of wealthier people. People who live, work, and play in non-poor neighborhoods are drawn into moral oblivion by “powers that be” who have a strong vested interest in hiding the horrors of abject poverty. Indeed, crucial moral weight lies in perceptions of “what is.” What we see and refuse to see, and how we see are morally loaded, bearing on whether we foster or thwart life-saving change. A primary function of Christian ethics is developing tools for morally responsible vision, especially vision of the power dynamics that determine who has the necessities for life and determine humans’ impact on planet Earth. 2022
Christian ethicist Daniel Maguire: The “bane of ethics” is to ignore or “inadequately see reality.”[11] Jesus: “Are your hearts hardened? Do you have eyes, and fail to see?” (Mark 8:17-18) 2040
The challenge is to do so in ways that evoke and sustain moral agency for the long haul toward forms of economic life that do not accumulate massive wealth for a few at great cost to the many and that do not endanger Earth’s regenerative capacities. 2047
Or if “the way things are” is not perceived as good, it is accepted as the way things simply must be. More specifically, vision is constructed to normalize and rationalize existing social and ecological conditions (the way things are) that may be evil, allowing them to parade as good, inevitable, or normal. This entails not seeing (or seeing but disregarding) evidence to the contrary. To understand the social construction of vision, we turn to a sister concept with a more developed body of theory: hegemonic knowledge or vision. 2052
“What in any given circumstance is uncritically presupposed to be natural, normal, inevitable, or divinely ordained, that in fact may be none of these, but rather a social construct?” The purpose of this “boilerplate question” is to expose and examine the “knowing” and social vision that shapes our unconscious and semi-conscious assumptions about what is natural, normal, inevitable, or divinely ordained and about what power we have or do not have to build a more just world. The students are exposing “hegemonic vision.” The term refers to the constellation of socially constructed perceptions and assumptions about “what is,” “what could be,” and “what ought to be” that maintain the power or privilege of some people over others, and “blind” the former to that privilege. We are working here with a basic insight of the postmodern turn: that ideas have the power to shape social reality and to do so in ways that may not be recognized by those who benefit most from that constructed reality. The grave danger of hegemonic vision is its deadening impact on social change. What is natural, inevitable, or divinely mandated is not subject to human decisions and actions. With hegemony, notes Stephen Brookfield, “there seems to be no chance of opposition, no way to develop alternative possibilities.”[13] To probe the forces that hide injustice from the eyes of those who “benefit” from it, but could resist it, may seem to be a breeding ground for hopelessness itself. To the contrary, it is an excursion of hope and into hope. For this quest is born of the firm conviction that human beings—enlivened by the breath of God—bear vast moral power. It is the power to see and resist what betrays God’s boundless, unquenchable yearning toward abundant life for all. That power requires stark honesty. Uncovering hegemonic vision is an act of stark, subversive honesty. The theorist most associated with the term “hegemony” is Italian political theorist and cultural critic Antonio Gramsci. Gramsci used “hegemony” to denote the social control exercised by dominant sectors through ideological means. Neither state nor military domination is required to elicit the general population’s consent to the overall direction imposed on life by dominant sectors or culture. Rather, consent is garnered through worldview, values, and ideas, even where that societal direction is exploitative or oppressive to the very people who consent to it. For Gramsci and many other theorists, hegemony refers in particular to the processes that convince people to accept rather than to resist cultural norms and practices that betray their own best interests while appearing to support them.[14] A hegemonic culture, notes Cornel West, is “a culture successful in persuading people to consent to their oppression and exploitation.”[15] Hegemony elicits consent in part by convincing people that existing social arrangements are normal or necessary. Hegemony is, in West’s words, “the set of formal ideas and beliefs and informal modes of behaviors, habits, manners, sensibilities, and outlooks that support and sanction the existing order.”[16] Particularly relevant to the contemporary reality of unintentional yet brutal economic and ecological exploitation woven into our lives is the insight that hegemony “constitutes a sense of reality . . . beyond which it is very difficult for most members of the society to move, in most areas of their lives.”[17] In opposition to hegemonic vision stands critical vision. To accept as reality the world as it appears to be through lenses constructed by dominant social forces is, in Gramsci’s words, to live without “a critical awareness.”[18] It is to adopt “the uncritical and largely unconscious way of perceiving and understanding the world that has become ‘common’ in any given epoch” regardless of its detrimental impact on the very people who hold it.[19] My intent is not to adopt precisely Gramsci’s use of “hegemony.” Rather, I draw critically upon his insights and the… 2060
What processes garner consent to the dominant mode of economic life despite its dangerous consequences? What convinces us that there is “no chance of opposition, no way to develop alternative possibilities”?[22] The factors behind moral oblivion may be values, ideas, practices, symbols, social trends, norms, emotions, presuppositions, or other influences. They may be conscious or not. 2107
Ingredient #1: Privatized Morality and the Blinders of Charity Impervious adherence to economically and ecologically exploitative lifeways stems in part from a historical penchant for misperceiving social problems as individuals’ problems. 2116
the tendency to locate the causes of social suffering—particularly poverty—in individual failings or misfortune rather than in the historical and current political, economic, and cultural forces that produce it. We sever the link, for example, between a certain homeless woman on the street and the real estate development that replaced her low-cost apartment complex with luxury condos. Another common avenue for avoiding structural causes of poverty is locating them in the inadequacy or historical misfortune of groups. What do Euro-Americans in areas of significant indigenous American populations do to rationalize the vast economic disparity between white people and the indigenous of their locales? A mere 150 years ago, native peoples thrived on land now covered by cities in northwest Washington. Today, the native population suffers from shockingly high rates of death from diabetes, alcoholism, tuberculosis, suicide, and unintentional injuries compared to all other Americans.[24] On some deep unconscious level, do we rationalize the disparity by assuming historical necessity or tribal peoples’ inadequacy in the face of modernity? In like manner, if hunger in Africa or India is understood to be caused by the tragic misfortune of drought or by people’s inability to develop adequate farming techniques, then foreign aid and development assistance are in themselves adequate responses. If, however, hunger is the result of colonial policy that destroyed African economies, trade policies that shift market advantage to wealthier nations, corporate takeover of coastal fishing areas, lakes dried up by global warming, or water supplies privatized and sold on the global market, then the moral response called for is quite different. Our turn to foreign aid and development assistance may distract us from the trade policies, corporate exploitation, climate change, and other connections between our overconsumption and others’ hunger. Even where social structural causes of suffering are recognized, solutions often are seen in personalized terms of charitable giving or service. Far too readily, deep and heartfelt concern about poverty and hunger is channeled primarily into the interpersonal or private arenas of charitable service and giving, and concern for the morality of society itself drifts to the wayside. Impeded then are sustained efforts to counter injustice in public policies, social systems, institutions, economic policies and theories, corporate practice, public budgets, cultural norms, and other dimensions of public life. While in many circles—ecclesial, academic, activist—“social justice” is common parlance, it often is used to signify a commitment to service in society or to helping the needy rather than to uprooting structures of unjust power and privilege. 2119
My point here is not the long-touted and mistaken idea that charity must be replaced by work toward social justice. I do not believe this simplistic formula. The two overlap and are both mandates of Christian faith. To affirm work for systemic change while devaluing charitable response to suffering would be naïve and cruel. Rather, my point is this: Where suffering is caused, at least in part, by societal or systemic factors, rather than singularly individual factors, charitable service aimed at meeting the needs of individuals and groups without also challenging those systemic factors may build social consent that perpetuates the suffering’s powerful systemic roots. It is crucial, therefore, to excavate the dangers of channeling compassion for suffering singularly through the individualized lens of charitable service and giving. Charity may become a blinder, obfuscating the systemic roots of suffering. A problem that is addressed by helping individual people may be seen as a problem rooted in individual misfortune, inadequacy, loss, or lack of knowledge or opportunity. In Lee Artz’s terms, charitable service throws a “cloak of invisibility” over structured oppressions and may lead inadvertently to constructing the oppressor as good.[25] Charitable service may individualize or privatize the causes of social problems, obscuring their systemic roots. 2150
second danger is that a turn to charity suggests its adequacy. An old adage notes that it is better to teach a person how to fish than to give her or him a fish. And yet the charitable act of teaching someone to fish will not provide food if the fish supply is rapidly drained by a large dam built upstream to benefit elite interests, overfishing by global corporations, global warming, or toxic waste. The individualized response of charitable service and giving may reinforce a dominant worldview that “a thousand points of light” is alone the answer to social suffering. Privitizing systemic problems helps us ignore and accept unjust systems. In the words of Margaret Miles, the “effort to remain altogether private [beings] is to become “morally insensible.” Bonhoeffer’s warning that evil can “masquerade as . . . charity” echoes here. Ingredient #2: Blessings Veiling Stolen Goods “The rich are in possession of the goods of the poor even if they have acquired them honestly or inherited them legally. . . . [If they do not share,] the wealthy are a species of bandit.” John Chrysostom, fourth-century church “father” 2160
accepted as a moral good. I firmly agree. Christians affirm that material goods and the life-enhancing opportunities they provide are fundamentally a blessing, a gift from God for which we give thanks. According to this idea, we ought to live in gratitude for these gifts and generously share them with others. The liturgical life and prayer life of the church, as well as Christian education, teach this understanding. It is the basis of the stewardship practices that have enabled the church worldwide (in its various ecclesial communions) to provide hospitals, schools, housing, and other vital life services. Gratitude 2172
Many of the material goods for which I give thanks became mine because they were “taken” from others through complex economic, political, cultural, and military systems. For those others, as illustrated in the stories throughout this book, that loss may have been devastating, even deadly. Is it possible that our prayers and attitudes of gratitude for our many blessings subtly rationalize and normalize the ways of life that produced my material blessings while also generating global warming and toxic dumping?[26] Do those prayers conceal the enormous extent to which those blessings are stolen goods, stolen primarily from the world’s peoples of color? To conceal that theft is to perpetuate it. Here, therefore, we dare to look. 2186
St. Ambrose, a fourth-century theologian, cried out: “How far, oh rich, do you extend your senseless avarice? Do you intend to be the sole inhabitants of the earth? Why do you drive out the fellow sharers of nature, and claim it all for yourselves? The earth was made for all, rich and poor, in common. Why do you rich claim it as your exclusive right? The soil was given to the rich and poor in common—wherefore, oh, ye rich, do you unjustly claim it for yourselves alone? Nature gave all things in common for the use of all.” Ambrose speaks to us. The questions raised are these: Does giving thanks for our material benefits help us not “see how the suffering and unearned disadvantages of subordinate groups are the foundation for [our material] privileges?”[27] If so, how could our practices of gratitude spur us to the work of creating more equitable and ecologically healthy economic relationships? 2209
Many of us do not see because seeing would be too terrible. We are like the mourner, distracting himself or herself from engaging the grief of a loss because the emotions are simply too raw, too sad. It would be too painful to recognize our implication in profound and widespread suffering, and in what threatens the life of the world today. 2227
Profoundly needed is knowledge that they exist and recognition of the connections between them. 2653
the public was aware, on a regular basis, of these movements and the rapidly growing number of people they represent, we would be far more likely to believe that alternatives are possible and are worth joining. That knowledge whittles away at the doors of denial and allows recognizing the economic and ecological violence embedded in our lives. Seeing “what could be” opens windows to seeing “what is.” Moreover, seeing “what could be” breeds the joy and freedom of moving in that direction. Indeed, seeing alternative paths is a crucial ingredient of moral power. 2657
Recognizing systemic violence and the possibilities for a more equitable and Earth-honoring future is impeded by the privatized, victor-oriented, and anthropocentric moral consciousness that shapes the Western world. Developing “critical mystical vision” calls for profound shifts in moral consciousness. To that challenge we now turn. A Profound Shift in Moral Consciousness A Revealing Contradiction Contradictions often illumine a way through murky problems. Here, the contradiction between the public or collective moral impact of our lives on the one hand, and pervasive perceptions of the moral life as a private matter on the other, is revealing. Collective human activity is shaping the material and cultural conditions of life. Yet, moral consciousness enacted in our society is, generally speaking, increasingly privatized. We practice the privatization of morality and deny our moral responsibility for collective morality, even while that collective activity has enormous moral consequences.[8] For instance, the culture of the automobile—generated through many forms of corporate persuasion including legislative lobbies, campaign financing, and consumer persuasion—is a central feature of public life in the United States. The ecological consequences of the automobile obsession are infinitely public and costly. Yet we hold the absurd assumption that driving a large vehicle that produces enormous quantities of greenhouse gases is a matter of individual freedom, and that the move not to do so must depend upon individual conscience rather than on a move of public policy aimed at limiting global warming. Moral consciousness must confront the contradiction between the collective shaping of public life on the one hand, and our privatized sense of moral response on the other. Here, we call for and sketch a shift to moral consciousness that: (1) perceives the world as interconnected; (2) seeks persistently and humbly to perceive reality through the narratives and experiences of subjugated people and peoples; and (3) locates human life and morality within Earth’s matrix of life, rather than outside of it. While others have called for similar shifts in worldview, I relate these shifts specifically to moral consciousness. And I aver that they are required if we are to see more clearly the roots and consequences of ecological and economic violence. Moreover, I insist that such shifts have vast implications for the meaning of neighbor-love. Moral Consciousness: Seismic Shifts This contradiction between privatized moral consciousness and the inherently public moral impact of our lives presents a clue to morally responsible vision. It prescribes a shift in moral consciousness that would be an antidote to many ingredients of moral oblivion identified in the previous chapter. We consider three facets of that shift and then suggest a way of putting them into practice. Moral Consciousness: Interconnected In the first place, the shift is away from the privatized sense of morality created by modernity’s “turn to the individual” as the primary unit of existence and neoliberalism’s fetishizing of it. The modern individualized moral consciousness allows us to assume that because I am not individually culpable in another’s suffering, I am innocent. An interconnected sense of morality, in contrast, recognizes that while I am I, I am not only I, but also am “we” and “us.” What I do as part of a larger body of people has moral consequences for which I am, to some extent, accountable. What I eat, how I heat my home, what I purchase, where I vacation, how I speak as part of a society in which these ways are common practice has moral impact even if my individual piece, isolated, does not. By “interconnected,” therefore, I mean not only awareness of the structural connections between me and others the world over, but also awareness of the moral weight of those connections. A privatized moral consciousness has another related consequence. It is the subtle but engulfing persuasion to serve the well-being of self, family, and… 2722
A responsible moral consciousness must seek to stand “outside dominant thought patterns and to know something we could not have known without the tools of the outsider’s point of view.”[9] That is, we are to learn about what is and what could be from people whose lives are damaged or threatened by ours, and who are proposing alternatives. There is revealed the deeply disturbing truth from which we run. “If the perpetrators of injustice want to step into the truth of their lives,” writes Jürgen Moltmann, “they must learn to see themselves through the eyes of their victims.”[10] Perhaps the most unsavory revelation of a structural view of the world informed by voices from the underside of history is awareness that “privilege and oppression do not simply coexist side by side. Rather, the suffering and unearned disadvantage of subordinate groups are the foundation for the privileges of the dominant group.”[11] In short, humanity and the planet now need wisdom born on the underbelly of power and privilege. Moral wisdom for a humane future will be learned by listening to people and places who suffer from the ecological and social exploitation of our day, and by putting their wisdom into conversation with other moral sources. 2770
philosopher of science Donna Haraway says it well. “To see from below is neither easily learned nor unproblematic.”[12] The problems are countless. Who has the right to determine what is “below” or what are the “margins”? How are we to locate and see from social sites that we never have imagined and that we may not even know exist? One cannot “be” a colonized indigenous person, a poisoned river, a displaced campesino if one is not. Furthermore, the standpoints of the subjugated are infinitely multiform and conflicting, and they are not “innocent positions.”[13] The intention to see and learn from standpoints on the underside of one’s own privilege, though crucial, is also audacious and presumptuous unless accompanied by admitting the inherent dangers. How am I to “learn from” without repeating colonializing assumptions of my right to possess what “they” have, in this case knowledge or wisdom? And what of the dangers of patronizing and silencing when I try to communicate another’s story? The effort to see from the margins demands accountability. 2781
represent the other while unknowingly misrepresenting. All in all, “from below” or “from the margins” is not an uncomplicated visual lens. Nevertheless, it is imperative because the magnitude of evil is known most fully by those who experience it, and by their stories that reveal my participation in it. Beyond this, a surefire antidote to hopelessness is to encounter and act with people who are indeed impoverished or otherwise hurt by our economic or ecological violence and who are going forward in hope to resist it and build alternatives. Becoming an “ally” ignites hope and with it, moral agency.[14] Moral Consciousness: Ecocentric Finally, the requisite shift in moral consciousness includes moving from our anthropocentric to an emerging ecocentric perception of the world and of morality. By ecocentric I do not mean necessarily prioritizing the well-being of Earth over that of humans. Such prioritizing by a person of the Global North is morally questionable, given that so many of Earth’s human beings still are denied the basic necessities for human life. The shift from anthropocentric to ecocentric consciousness does not refer to a shift in what gets priority. It means a shift in how we fundamentally see the human in relationship to the rest of creation. It is a move from assuming that all of life centers around the human, to recognizing that this is biologically not true. And it is a move to expand the moral universe beyond the human. Moving from anthropocentric to ecocentric perceptions of reality is not, in itself, adequate. Alone, it would not address the power asymmetries within and between human societies. Indian Christian ethicist George Zachariah says it well: “Environmental ethics that locates the earth crisis in anthropocentrism that can be rectified by interconnectedness, relationships, community and the like” is sorely mistaken. The crisis of earth is also a “crisis of prevailing social relations,” by which he means in particular relations of domination.[15] Ecocentric moral consciousness will perceive the “exquisite interconnectivity of all life” and its implications for morality.[16] That interconnectedness renders humankind first and foremost a part of nature and its economy, rather than apart from these. Moral obligation and even moral agency extend beyond the human to the greater community of life. The purpose of economic life is not only production and distribution, but also the well-being of Earth’s ecosystems.[17] Such a sense of morality recognizes that “I” and “we” do not act apart from our literally countless relationships with other species and elements. They enable every breath we take. Not even a twitch of my muscle is possible without the aid of other creatures and the elements that give them life. And all that I do has impact on the other-than-human conglomerates of organic and inorganic molecules making home on this planet. D. John Chelladurai, Director of the India Peace Center in Nagpur, expresses eloquently this ecocentric dimension of the shift in moral consciousness. He writes: The five elements . . . make us shareholders of the same body. The oxygen we consumed ten minutes before is now part of our body. We can no more distinguish it as oxygen. It has gone into the remotest interior of our body and merged with it to become an integral part of the body. . . . The oxygen we consumed just now was released a while before by a plant close to us. Before it was released, that oxygen was part of the plant’s body. That which was the body of a plant is now the body of me. Blood is our lifeline, an integral part of our being. The blood cells in our body have a life span of forty to one hundred and twenty days. Then they are eliminated from our body through excretion and urination. The epithelial cells constantly are eroded and washed out of our body. Every day when we bathe, we remove a thin layer of our body that is flushed out down the gutter. The cell that was ‘I’ travels through the gutter and reaches a canal or a pond in the outskirts, settles in… 2794
of witnessing to the power and presence of God. Moral consciousness 2853
The call for privileging perspectives from the margins of power discussed in the previous section alters dramatically from an ecocentric moral perspective. The Earth crisis has moved the “margins” and the “underside.” If moral wisdom is to be found on the underside of dominant power structures, then the other-than-human has wisdom to communicate. 2858
the rise of fascism and totalitarianism. His findings attribute that acquiescence in part to an “individualized view” of life, an inability to perceive the broader societal dimensions of personal life. He called for “a structuralized picture of the world” as a necessary ingredient in action for social change toward “a social order governed by the principles of equality, justice and love.”[21] A structuralized view of the world “interprets individual experience in terms of broader social and economic forces,” analyzing “private problems and personal dilemmas as structurally produced.”[22] Fromm held that the lack of “structuralized picture of the world . . . [paralyzes] the ability to think critically.” In 1959 the American sociologist C. Wright Mills coined the term “sociological imagination” for the capacity to connect the experiences of individual life with broader social and historical forces. He recognized the trauma of ordinary people attributing their difficulties to personal circumstances while, in fact, their lives were tossed about by circumstances of social history such as wars, industrialization, and macroeconomic developments. By recognizing that seemingly private troubles are manifestations of larger societal circumstances, people would see that change in personal life required political action and could seek to become politically engaged. Subsequently, political theologies arising in Germany and liberation theologies beginning in Latin America insisted that work for justice requires social analysis, analysis of the historical and structural roots of poverty and oppression. The early decades of liberation theologies paid special attention to uncovering the players and power arrangements that enabled wealthy and powerful—yet relatively small—social sectors to accumulate enormous wealth by exploiting and subduing the majority of people who were forced into abject poverty. Liberation theologians were not the first theologians to insist that Christian moral responsibility demands close and critical attention to the structural dynamics that determine the distribution of economic resources. “The lack of thinking in economic terms is fatal to a sense of reality, and every Christian is under orders to learn how to think in these terms.” The voice is Vida Scudder, a late nineteenth-century/early twentieth-century Episcopalian churchwoman and professor of literature at Wellesley College. Scudder was an economically privileged United States citizen. Having spent much time in the burgeoning Settlement House movement, seeking to help people in poverty, Scudder decried Christians’ tendency to see poverty as a malady affecting individuals that could be addressed primarily through helping those individuals. Christian faith, she insisted, calls people to see the social structural roots of poverty, and to engage actively in advocacy for systemic change. Scudder insisted on action for structural change as a necessary and integral dimension of Christian faith. Fromm’s “structuralized picture of the world,” Mills’s “sociological imagination,” liberation theology’s “social analysis,” and Scudder’s insistence on “thinking in economic terms” all demystify social systems that accumulate wealth for some at the expense of poverty and oppression for others. These movements have been invaluable. Efforts to dismantle social justice in its many insidious forms are indebted to them. These early- and mid-century admonitions to a structural sense of morality, important as they are, bear two lethal flaws. First, they prescribed and described a structural worldview that was not a view of the world, but rather a view of the human world. The rest of creation was a kind of stage on which the “real” drama, the story of humankind, unfolded. Clearer perception of the economic and ecological violence infecting our lives requires a view of reality that encompasses the earth as well as its human societies. The other faultline is epistemological and stems from socio-ecological… 2878
uncovering the ecological and social justice consequences of our lifeways and building that knowledge into common consciousness is not the work of individuals alone. It is collective work, people collaboratively generating the wisdom they need to live responsibly. This means incorporating such inquiry into church life, healthcare, childrearing, educational systems, and dinner conversations. It means weaving these questions into the body of “tips for living” that we commonly pass from friend to friend. “Ecological-economic justice literacy” implies making questions about the consequences of our individual and collective economic practices and policies a fundamental frame of reference while treading the hallways of everyday life. Ecological-economic justice literacy calls for shifting the information-gathering habits of daily life—frequenting websites and journals that provide information about the justice implications of products and activities. And it implies a shift in public discourse on individual and institutional levels and in the discourse of faith. In teaching this shift to my students, I have instituted a set of “reality-revealing questions” for them to weave into daily life. The first is this: Who benefits and who loses from “the way things are”? “The way things are” could refer to a purchase, a public policy, a power structure, or more. The economic side of “ecological-economic justice literacy” is arguably integral to Christian faith; it is a tool for responding to God’s love and God’s call to “love neighbor.” This tool enables unmasking structural evil; it enables discerning where our lives serve to “love neighbor” and where they do quite the opposite. For this reason, economic justice literacy ought to be integral to Christian education. In Vida Scudder’s words, “[T]he lack of thinking in economic terms is fatal to a sense of reality, and every Christian is under orders to learn how to think in these terms.” “Ecological literacy,” the ability to “read” the language and realities of Earth’s life-systems and how they interact with human factors, is equally key to the life of faith. If God loves this world, found it essentially good, and calls upon it to witness, testify, and praise God’s self, then how wildly absurd that many of us have assumed no need to understand how it works (with the exception of the scientists among us), or to interpret its languages. 2950
did not realize that a single gram of forest soil contains about ten billion individual organisms—and only four thousand or so are known to scientists. Never did I imagine that the cells in my body contain atoms that were once part of stars. More elusive than learning about the Earth and its life-systems is the question of learning from them. What—in practical terms—does it mean to “learn” moral wisdom, and how to live from voices that are not human? Of this, modern humans know very little. We 2971
The move to ecological literacy is underway. Ethicist Dan Spencer initiated ecological autobiography exercises for his students, and he identifies “ecological location” along with social location. Elementary school children in Seattle work with salmon and their life-cycles vis-à-vis the city’s waterways. The Earth Bible series explores scripture from perspectives of the Earth. “Green Sisters” (Catholic sisters dedicated to hearing the cry of the earth, healing the earth, and developing religious culture that enables both) offer “earth-literacy training.”[32] 2978
Biomimicry, the art and science of imitating nature’s designs for human use, has gained traction in recent years. Airplane designers are inspired by the tiny bumps on the edge of a whale fin called tubicles, which could increase airplane efficiency by 32 percent and save significant fossil fuels. Peacocks emit color in their feathers not with pigment, but through carefully designed shapes that emit a certain hue when light passes through—potentially reducing our use of harmful dyes. In short, if our economic policies and practices mean life and death for people thousands of miles across the globe, and threaten Earth’s life-systems, then we must develop tools to understand the impact of what we are doing and the possibility of alternatives. From a theological perspective, if repentance calls for seeing structural sin that is craftily hidden, then repentance also calls for literacy in the fields of that sin, including ecological and economic violence. Literacy of this kind is a way to practice a transformed moral consciousness. Countering Moral Oblivion: A Re-View The individualized, anthropocentric, and victor-oriented moral consciousness shaping the modern world obscures critical vision—our sense of “what is” and “what could be.” A transformation in moral consciousness is called for. It will be less privatized and anthropocentric, and will seek persistently to know reality as it is experienced on the losing side of power and privilege. Such a consciousness will acknowledge the moral consequences of collective human actions as well as individual actions. If critical mystical vision entails three forms of seeing—“what is,” “what could be,” and “the sacred powers of life at work in the world to bring wholeness for all”—then it remains to consider the third of these, what I call the “mystical vision” dimension of critical mystical vision. Like seeing “what could be,” seeing sacred healing power at play is an antidote to the denial, hopelessness, and the powerlessness that may ensue with daring to see “what is.” “Mystical vision” and the hope it brings claim our attention in the next chapter. Before going there, we return to a life story begun in chapter 3. In hearing it, be alert for the shifts in moral consciousness traced in the current chapter. 2983
NativeSUN is a solar project of the Hopi Foundation, an organization by and for Hopi people.[34]The Foundation makes photovoltaic cell panels affordable to the low-income reservation community through a revolving loan fund. Over three hundred homes now have solar panels on the roof. The project reflected the assessment of the Hopi community regarding its needs. Author and activist Winona LaDuke summarized the guiding mentality as: “Use less, produce what you can on your own, and be cognizant of the implications of each decision on others.”[35]In these few words, LaDuke eloquently voices the call to ecological-economic justice literacy. And what of the places far from home where oil is extracted and refined? How can we practice a collective moral consciousness that attunes itself to the lives of the workers and residents in the Niger River Delta? Rehabilitating our oil addiction in our own homes is certainly necessary. There are also ways to influence the inhumane living and working conditions for communities in Nigeria, the Mississippi River Delta, and other places on earth where oil is extracted or refined. Amnesty International, for example, runs a campaign that would force the Nigerian government to hold oil companies accountable for the oil spills and gas flares that kill the fish, pollute the water and air, and endanger the people of the Niger River Delta. 3030
According to Amnesty International, multinational oil companies such as Shell, Total, and Chevron, as well as the Nigerian government are jointly responsible for gas flaring, but no one is held accountable. Amnesty International teams have now collected over ten years’ worth of satellite imaging, and mapping data revealing the close proximity of gas flares to waters where people drink, bathe, fish, and wash their clothes. When representatives meet with government officials and oil company officials to urge an end to gas flaring, they do so armed not only with collected data but the names of thousands of citizens in the U.S. and across the world who have signed a petition indicating that they know and care about what is happening there. Without that participation of individual citizens, these initiatives would not work. Some people choose to organize around public policy change and corporate change. 350.org is a global, decentralized, volunteer-led, grassroots movement of campaigns, organizing, and mass public actions to solve the climate crisis. The movement is active in 188 countries and at one point initiated a campaign to address the problem with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The Chamber is notoriously supportive of a gas-guzzling America. It fought to weaken clean air standards, [37] lobbied against the Kyoto Protocol, and opposed a hazardous waste dumping ban. The Chamber petitioned the EPA to do nothing about climate change, arguing that “populations can acclimatize to warmer climates via a range of behavioral, physiological, and technological adaptations.” [38] Recognizing that the Chamber of Commerce no longer represents many businesses in America, especially small businesses, 350.org is committed to organizing small businesses to weaken the Chamber’s grip on political life. “Maybe,” the organizers write, “we can finally get rid of the huge subsidies to our fossil fuel industries. Maybe we can finally get a law passed to start dealing with the worst crisis our planet has ever faced.” 3042
We must sleep with eyes open, we must dream with our hands, we must dream the dreams of a river seeking its course, of the sun dreaming its worlds. . . . We must dream backward, toward the source. . . . Octavio Paz Danger lurks. The expansive moral consciousness called for in the previous chapter easily aggravates denial and powerlessness. This enhanced moral vision exposes the devastating impact of economic life as we know it, on the Earth and on neighbors who are dispossessed by our possessions. To acknowledge the widespread suffering that may be linked to my material abundance would be tormenting. How could I live with the knowledge if I truly took it in? And if I dare to see, then I view also the power and complexity of structural violence and the relative insignificance of individual efforts at change. Where would I find the moral-spiritual power to transgress tidal waves of cultural, political, economic, and military force pushing to maintain the way things are? A sense of inevitability has almost magnetic power for depleting hope. What is inevitable, I cannot change. Hope for economic and ecological relations may fade before ever it sees full bloom, and with it moral vision and power. 3114
We are not alone in our quest for just and Earth-honoring ways of living. 3145
The Earth Charter illustrates this recognition that the world’s religions and spiritual perspectives can catalyze the human community toward a sustainable future. Internationally renowned scientists are beckoning religious leaders to address the environmental crisis. In 1992, the Union of Concerned Scientists released their “Warning to Humanity,” stating that “we require the help of the world’s religious leaders” for evoking a “new ethic . . . for caring for ourselves and for the earth.”[1] In 1990 thirty-four internationally recognized scientists wrote an Open Letter to the Religious Community, arguing that “Problems of such magnitude and solutions demanding so broad a perspective must be recognized from the outset as having a religious as well as a scientific dimension” and that “efforts to safeguard and cherish the environment need to be infused with a vision of the sacred.”[2] Hundreds of religious leaders from multiple faith traditions responded, forming the Joint Appeal in Religion and Science, and eventually, the Forum on Religion and Ecology. In such appeals, religion is seen as offering moral norms, values, networks, a sense of obligation beyond the self and “tribe,” hope, vision, and courage. These foment moral power. 3152
One aspect of Christianity (and of some other religions) that breeds hope is the claim that we are called toward some form of union with the great power of life, the source of all, what many call God. We are destined to be with or fully a part of the Holy Source, and that union begins this side of death. In Christian traditions, union with God is also union with the force that we call love. Our destiny is union with divine love. It is not a task to be achieved as much as a gift to be received and then shared, in the present. Irenaeus of Lyon, leader of a persecuted second-century community of Christians, is one of the first to flesh theologically the conviction that human destiny is union and communion with God. According to Irenaeus, not only human beings but the entirety of creation is destined for that end. The role of human creatures is to be “educated” or “matured” by the Spirit. Irenaeus’s imagery is compelling. The “dew of the Holy Spirit [is] dispersed throughout all the earth.”[3] We are to remain moist by that Spirit so that Word and Wisdom may mold us like moist clay toward our destiny of union and communion with God. Throughout the ages, many have referred to this union, experience of it, trust in it, and movement toward it as “mysticism.” 3176
For our purposes here, “mysticism” refers to the experience of or faith in the presence and power of God with, in, and among human beings and the other creatures and elements of Earth, even when God seems absent. In this sense, mysticism does not refer to an esoteric experience to be had by only the few who are dedicated to and privileged by visions or periods of extraordinary consciousness. Nor does it refer singularly to moments of heightened experience of God’s presence. Mysticism, as used herein, is accessible to all. 3188
Seeing Self through the Eyes of God “You will love your neighbor as yourself,” may also be translated accurately as “You will love your neighbor as God loves you.” To love neighbor as God loves oneself implies viewing oneself through the eyes of God’s love. Here we take a clue from the Beguines, a heterogeneous movement of Northern European women religious that rose, flourished, and was suppressed from the late twelfth through mid-fourteenth centuries. Medieval convention bound religious life to specific rules and church-recognized orders that remained detached from secular life. Beguine communities, in contrast, lived dedicated religious lives while remaining engaged in worldly life and relatively unaccountable to male authority figures. Many Beguines professed to be authorized by God, trusted the truth of their own experience, and engaged in public theological discourse. They were, therefore, seen as challenging the exclusive authority of the church hierarchy in its roles as singular medium of redemption, exclusive source of theological truth, and regulator of discourse. The strength of Beguine moral-spiritual power cast fear into the heart of hegemonic power. While some were burned at the stake, others were forbidden to spread their teachings, speak publicly, travel, or become Beguines before the age of forty. The words of Beguines’ persecutors reveal the power of their agency in spite of efforts to repress it. The “way of life” of the Beguines, wrote the General Council of Vienne in 1312, “is to be permanently forbidden and altogether excluded from the Church of God. Because they . . . promise no obedience to anyone and do not profess an approved Rule.” These women did not perceive themselves as “moral agents” or as undermining hegemonic power structures of their day. (Such assertions would be anachronistic.) Yet, many of them were both.[4] Wherein lay their moral-spiritual power to exercise such agency despite the threat of death, even death by fire? It had many roots. Their power derived in part from the lens through which they perceived themselves. The Beguines, at least as we know them through their surviving literary works, saw themselves as they believed that God saw them—as beloved by God. The extraordinary extent to which these women were moral agents and subjects of their lives seems to lie in a perception of self and each other derived directly from knowing themselves as in God, beloved by God, and lovers of God. Hadewijch of Brabant, a thirteenth-century Beguine poet and mystic, declares: “I entreat you . . . open the eyes of your heart (Eph. 1:18) to see clearly and contemplate yourself in God.”[5] This way of knowing self issued in a way of doing and being, a form of moral life characterized by nearly irrepressible agency. They understood themselves to be “subject to no one save Love alone doing service and performing the works of Love . . . day and night in all liberty, without delay of fear and without counting the cost.”[6] 3194
conviction. It was grounded in seeing God as Love itself and seeing self as primarily God’s beloved, in whose veins Godself coursed and was poured out to others. This vision found self to be good and able to act because of who they understood themselves to be in the eyes of God: “. . . and then you will be Love, as I am love . . . go forth and live what I am,” declared God’s voice to Hadewijch. 3219
voices not widely recognized for it. One of those is Martin Luther. “. . . the power of God,” he declares, “. . . must be essentially present in all places even in the tiniest leaf.”[8] “Christ . . . fills all things. . . . Christ is around us and in us in all places . . . he is present in all creatures, and I might find him in stone, in fire, in water.”[9] The assertion that God indwells all created being has been present in Christian theology for two millennia. It is far more present in Orthodox theology than Western, 3237
Broadly speaking, panentheism refers to the idea that the world is “not merely a product of God’s willing or doing, but also a part of God’s very being.”[15] The world is in God and God is in the world. Panentheism is a radical declaration of God’s immanent presence. Panentheism affirms God’s immanence within creation while simultaneously affirming God’s transcendence beyond it and beyond human understanding. Immanence comes from the Latin “immanere”—to remain within. 3257
Christian ethicist Nancy Erhard argues convincingly that other-than-humankind may play a role in moral agency. Her work on Genesis 1–3 and 6–9 finds these texts attributing moral being and doing to creatures and elements. Waters and earth collaborate with God in the acts of creating. “In Genesis 1-2:4a, the waters and Earth respond to God. They fulfill God’s command by action of their own, becoming collaborators if not co-creators.”[17] And what they do in response to God’s bidding, God deems as “good,” tov, connoting not only aesthetic goodness but also moral goodness of a life-generating nature. The story of the flood reveals that “all flesh,”—a category including birds and animals as well as humans—had a role in the destruction resulting in the flood. Their capacity for knowing and acting for good (or refusing) is confirmed in the covenant that God makes with them along with Noah (Gen. 9:10). Moreover, Erhard reminds, “A tree confers ‘knowledge of good and evil.’”[18] Erhard’s point is that the biotic community plays a role in shaping the moral values, assumptions, norms, and imagination that comprise the morality of a given context. These “moral habitats” influence moral agency. They may, she concludes, “transform . . . human agency on behalf of the flourishing of the whole earth community.”[19] Other biblical texts also suggest roles that otherkind may play in nurturing the moral power of human creatures to serve God’s ways. For example: Job 12:7-10 portrays animals and plants as teachers of humans who are admonished to learn from the plants and animals what God does on Earth. “But ask the animals, and they will teach you; the birds of the air, and they will tell you; ask the plants of the earth, and they will teach you; and the fish of the sea will declare to you. Who among all these does not know that the hand of the Lord has done this?” Psalm 19:1 shows the cosmos itself revealing to humans some of the nature of God. “The heavens are telling the glory of God; and the firmament proclaims [God’s] handiwork.” In Psalm 148 God enjoins even fire, frost, cedars, and “creeping things” to praise God. “Praise [the Lord], sun and moon; praise [the Lord], you highest heavens, and you waters above the heavens! . . . Praise the Lord from the earth, you sea monsters and all deeps, fire and hail, snow and frost . . . Mountains and all hills, fruit trees and all cedars! Wild animals and all cattle, creeping things and flying birds!” (vv. 3-4, 7-10). Praising God has moral implications. According to the Deuteronomistic historian, the Earth is called upon as witness in one of the most crucial choices faced by the ancient Hebrews and by people of all times who read life through the lens of faith in God: to choose life or to reject life in accord with God (Deut. 30:19-20). In Job 38:1, as in numerous texts, God works through winds, waters, and creatures: “The Lord answered Job out of the whirlwind.” 3286
The point is not to hold up nature as a blueprint for morality. Rather, the point is to cultivate receptivity to hearing the voice of God in the other-than-human parts of nature, learning from them about how to live rightly, and being nourished for the work of Earth-keeping and justice-making by God’s Spirit at play in creation. We have considered the ancient faith claim that God’s love is “flowing and pouring through all things” and there offers creating, saving, and sustaining power for the healing of a broken world.[20] Two notions stemming from this claim—of Christ crucified in a crucified Earth and of God’s saving presence at work within creation—indeed may render hope and moral agency for the long and uncharted journey toward a world in which humankind is not toxic to our planetary home and in which none amass wealth at the cost of others’ impoverishment. 3314
indwelling human beings. A widely accepted Christian understanding is that we live in a paradoxical moral reality, corresponding to the “already and not yet” reign of God on Earth. This “already and not yet” condition has been expressed diversely throughout Christian history. In sweeping terms: We are alienated from God and as a consequence of this alienation (sin), we will betray (to some extent) the ways and will of God. Instead of living according to God’s commandments to love God, self, and others, and we will live as “selves curved in on self,” captive to self-interest. The profound paradox is that simultaneously, we are saved by God.[21] Salvation frees us from living as “selves curved in on self,” and saves us for loving God, self, others, and this good Earth. God renders us living abodes of God’s justice-making love. This paradox reverberates with power for the good. It means that regardless of our implication in cruel forms of oppression, human beings also are capable of and called to lives of justice-making love. We are the body of God on Earth, bearers of Christic love. We are, that is, filled with moral agency for healing and liberating. Dietrich Bonhoeffer probed the ethical implications of God’s love embodied in human communities. He was adamant that the love of Christ, revealed most fully in the cross, abides in the Christian community. After experiencing non-Christians courageously resisting fascism and the failure of much of the institutional church to do so, he determined that the God-bearing community includes non-Christians who are serving God’s purposes. In Bonhoeffer’s terms, Christ dwelling in the community of people who embody God’s love “conforms” them to “the form of Jesus Christ.” That is the form of God’s overflowing love embodied as community that acts responsibly in the world on behalf of abundant life for all, especially on behalf of those who are persecuted or marginalized.[22] This action requires recognizing structural evil, naming it, and “putting a spoke in the wheel” of earthly powers that demand disobedience to God. The power to resist structural evil, even when so doing is terribly costly, is the actual love of Christ taking form in human community.[23] As revealed in the cross and resurrection, this love is indomitable, even when it appears to be defeated. The God of Christian tradition—and Jewish tradition before it—works with and within extraordinarily fallible human beings and communities. Divine love does not come to people because they deserve it or are particularly noble, good, or courageous. All inhabit the paradoxical state of being both “in bondage to sin” and an “abode of God’s active love.” 3324
enter into it on behalf of life in its fullness. Spirit Awakens Healing Liberating Power Since shortly after Jesus’ execution, Christians have claimed that God’s Spirit works within and on believers. Pneumatology from the first century to the twenty-first affirms that the Spirit enables people to act as God would have them act. In the words of Catholic theologian Yves Congar: “The Spirit-Breath is first and foremost what causes [humans] to act so that God’s plan in history may be fulfilled.”[24] To the extent that living as God would have us live includes challenging structural evil, the Spirit enables that challenge. But what is that morally empowering role of the Spirit? In what sense does the Spirit enable moral agency for serving God’s will? With and through whom does the Spirit act to engender humans’ healing and liberating power? Myriad responses have found their way into church history and into the biblical texts. Responses in Western Christianity reflect its tendency—until recent decades—to prioritize the first and second persons of the Trinity over the third. The Holy Spirit, until recently, was underexamined in Christian ethics. This was unfortunate, for the Spirit is the person of the Trinity most closely aligned with moral agency, at least where moral agency is understood as the capacity to heed the ways and will of God. Here we focus on the biblical witness rather than on later Christian understandings. Seeking insight into how God’s Spirit within humans might engender hope and moral-spiritual power for the healing of the world, we look first at the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) and then at the Second Testament (New Testament). In both, ambiguity and diversity abound. Hebrew Scriptures “Spirit,” where it refers to the Spirit of Yahweh translates the Hebrew, ruach.[25] According to the Hebrew scriptures, the ancient Hebrews experienced a power of the One whom they called YHWH reaching into their lives and into the entire created world, making things happen according to the will of that One. They called this power ruach.[26] Ruach (like pneuma, espiritu, and spirit, its most frequent renditions in Greek, Latin, and English respectively) has multiple denotations and connotations in the biblical texts. Its meanings shift over the centuries of the Old Testament and among different cultures within it. Those meanings range from a forceful movement of air to the fundamental energy of God. While our concern here is the last of these, a sense of it requires insight into what the word means and implies in its other usages. The word’s root significance “probably had to do with the movement of air,”[27] or more specifically with a “gale,”[28] but over time took on varied meanings. At times, ruach is a tempestuous or raging wind coming forth from God or sent by God to move things dramatically, materially, and with life-and-death consequences (that is, the wind that separated the Red Sea in Exod. 14:21 and 15:10). Elsewhere it is a breath, or an impersonal supernatural force, or a temporary or roving mood or disposition sent by God to occupy a person and influence her/his behavior (e.g., the “spirit of jealousy” in Num. 5:14, and the evil ruach from the Lord sent to torment Saul in 1 Sam. 16:14). Ruach may be the breath or animating life-force of all living things, usually but not always given and withdrawn by God (Gen. 7:22; Ps. 104:29, 30). As such its presence or absence determines life or death. The essential vivifying force or energy of a human being is ruach. (“Into your hand I commit my ruach in Ps. 31:5.) Most significant to us here, ruach may refer to the essential energy of God.[29] As such ruach “does not as a rule describe God’s inner personality . . . [but rather] God’s activity in relationship to the world.”[30] As a force that vivifies the human, ruach is the deepest self, the essential energies of the persons, the source of feeling, thinking, responding. (The ruach of Pharaoh was troubled Gen. 41:8.)[31] In this sense, ruach of a human and ruach of God are… 3352
Second Testament The Second Testament describes a presence and power of God reaching into Jesus’ life, speaking to him, leading or driving him, filling him, and empowering him for his work. The writers of these texts called that power Pneuma or Pneuma of God. Where the Spirit comes upon, fills, speaks to, bids, drives, leads, or anoints Jesus, the result is tremendous power for remaining faithful to God in the face of temptation; for proclaiming the reign of God and the Jubilee message; and for liberating, healing, and giving sight. These acts lead some people to follow Jesus and others to become furious with him. That anger often is somewhat cloaked. It becomes dangerous and ultimately deadly for Jesus. After Jesus’ ascension the apostles—and people who repented and were baptized—received this Holy Spirit (Acts 2:38). Many of them experienced or witnessed a power of God reaching into their own or other people’s lives, making things happen according to the ways of the God to whom Jesus pointed. This power touched both individuals and communities. These earliest believers apparently understood themselves, as individuals and as a body, to be filled with (Rom. 8:9) and led by the Holy Spirit, and empowered by gifts from that Spirit for doing the will of God. God’s will, in their estimation, seemed to be that all would hear the “good news” and would fashion ways of life oriented around “all that [Jesus] has commanded,” including the commandment to love one’s neighbor as one’s self. This power—like that which reached into Jesus’ life—was called Pneuma and was understood to be the Pneuma of Jesus himself, the risen Christ. Latin translations rendered this “Pneuma” as “Espiritu,” which in turn became “Spirit” for English speakers. Where the Spirit “comes upon” (Acts 19:6), “falls upon” (Acts 10:44), or “dwells within” (Acts 8:9) individuals or the believing community, the consequences are striking. The Spirit may instruct a person concerning what he or she is to do in a particular situation (as with Philip in Acts 8:29 and Peter in Acts 10:19; 11:12), empower a person to heed the instructions (Paul in Acts 20:22), or forewarn him or her about resulting persecutions (Paul in Acts 20:23). The Spirit also enables believers to communicate (Acts 21:4), discern what is good (Acts 15:28), belong to Christ (Rom. 8:9), claim that Jesus is Lord (1 Cor. 12:3), or “be [Jesus’] witnesses . . . to the ends of the Earth” (Acts 1:8). The Spirit according to the Second Testament reveals Christ, sanctifies and justifies, gives life, sets people free from the law of sin and death, leads, prays on behalf of, renders people children of God, bears witness through the human spirit, intercedes within the children of God when they know not how to pray as they ought, enables people to live according to or in the spirit rather than the sarx (flesh), and allots or activates particular fruit or gifts. These gifts include strength, courage to proclaim Jesus as Lord in the face of other gods, prophecy, speaking in tongues, discernment, intercessory prayer, generosity, faith, love, and healing. Many of these gifts are useful for neighbor-love. Indeed Paul admonishes that these gifts are given “for the common good” (1 Cor. 12:7), not for the elevation of the individual. The Spirit was understood to live within the people. This is variously expressed as “being in Christ,” God’s love being “poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit” (Rom. 5:5), “Christ dwelling within,” and “the Spirit of God dwell[ing] in you” (Rom. 8:9). In the words of Finnish theologian Veli-Matti Kärkkäinen, the coming of the Spirit is the coming of God’s power and presence to “dwell in and among the people.”[33] In heeding the direction of the Spirit and using the gifts of the Spirit, the early Christians seem—according to the biblical texts—to manifest a paradox. They tend to gain and use power for doing whatever the Spirit bids them do. Yet, they do so with mistakes, misjudgments, and… 3429
Horizon of Hope “For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Rom. 8:35-39). Christian teachings, at their best, are in the service of hope and life. According to one understanding of Christianity, the destiny of creation is abundant life for all. This is the promise toward which all else points. The God who called this world into being loves it with a love beyond human imagining that will never die. That love cannot be taken from us by any force in heaven or Earth. Nor will that love desist in bringing the entire world into its destiny of life according to God’s reign of love. While the forces of evil are fierce and virulent, the force of good—known in Christian tradition as divine love—ultimately will triumph. The fullness of this promise is neither fathomable nor fully describable. It is articulated with images varied and verdant: paradise, the reign of God, the city of God, the Garden of Eden, the great shalom, heaven, the blessed community, the arc of the universe toward justice. This destiny is glimpsed in human love and in Earth’s splendor, and has been the hope of peoples for millennia. For readers who embrace this promise and for those who find it untenable, may this brief sketch uncover some of its nuance and perplexing twists. Puzzling paradoxes of Christian faith are located in this horizon of hope. One is the strange conviction that while this reality of pure love governing life appears only to be in the future, it also exists already in the present; it is “already and not yet.” That is, eternal life does not begin after death; eternal life begins in the here and now. It is life in connection with the Spirit of God. God’s call to us to love is a call to live according to that destined reality. In doing so, we serve God’s purposes of bringing that reality into being, and of healing the world. By embodying God’s love—even in our desperately imperfect and limited ways—we witness to its presence in the world and God’s fierce intention to liberate and heal the world from all that thwarts the reign of that love. In other words, the future salvation of the world is in some sense already present. (One of the great self-betrayals of Christian faith by the tradition itself is the teaching that God’s intended reign—traditionally referred to as heaven—is for life after death only; life on Earth does not really matter, for our reward and hope are found after death in heaven. This teaching was used for centuries to subdue peoples into accepting their own oppression and domination. It betrays the promise that God’s gift of eternal life begins 3483
this hope in the face of evil’s apparent triumph is the cross and resurrection of Jesus Christ. For many people, as noted previously, moral inertia in the face of ecological and economic violence is born not of failure to see it, but lack of hope that it can change. The forces of wrong seem too powerful for human beings to impact. Resistance and work toward alternatives appear futile. Despair is sown by a deep sense that things will continue as they are in this world. The cross and resurrection promise otherwise. They testify that in the face of death and destruction, God’s life-bringing power prevails. Soul-searing, life-shattering destruction and death are not the last word. In some way that we do not grasp, the last word is life raised up out of brutal death. God “will not allow our complicity in . . . evil to defeat God’s being for us and for the good of all creation.”[37] I have experienced that paradoxical and life-saving hope. In my time of youthful despair about systemic injustice, I needed to talk with a person who recognized the horror of structural sin and yet maintained hope and a sense of deep joy. The late Jon Nelson proved to be that person. After hearing my desperation, he responded with words that flooded my being with hope. “I have hope and joy,” he calmly expressed, “because in all of my struggles for justice and peace, I know the end of the story.” By this he meant the promise that, regardless of compelling indications otherwise, all forms of death and destruction that humankind and this earth may experience are overcome by resurrection. This message of hope also bears danger. It may lead people to abdicate responsibility for public morality, leaving it in “God’s hands.” This would betray another central Christian claim—that God works through and with creation, and in a particular way, through human creatures. Here appears a third paradox of hope central to Christian tradition. It is the strange dialectic between absolute trust in God’s power to bring about the liberation and healing of the world on the one hand, and on the other hand the conviction that human beings—while unable to bring about the reign of God through human effort alone—are called to dedicate our lives to that very endeavor. God, not humans, can and will save the world. Yet, we are to live our lives toward that end, devoting our gifts and resources to it. Dietrich Bonhoeffer expressed this startling dialectic between ultimate trust in God, and the necessity of human engagement through his unwavering critique of liberal Christianity’s notion that God can be called upon like a kind of fix-it machine to solve life’s problems while we just sit and wait. His ethic of responsible action to disclose and confront evil is grounded in absolute dependence on God and trust in God. “I believe that God can and will bring good out of evil,” he writes, “even out of the greatest evil.”[38] Yet Bonhoeffer denounces religion’s proclivity for replacing human responsibility with appeals to God to act. He insists that God’s power on behalf of the world is in God’s embodied presence in and with responsible actions by human beings. To “bring good out of evil,” he insists, “[God] needs [people].”[39] All this is to name a simple faith claim and then to admit the profound complexities within it. The world is in God’s hands and is/will be saved. Despite sin’s pernicious presence, especially manifest in structural evil, we are called by God to live toward that “already but not yet” accomplished salvation. We do so by trusting God’s justice-making love completely and embodying it in the world fallibly. This is, I believe, an inexhaustible source of hope. 3508
Walmart’s CEO makes 2,500 times what an entry-level associate makes in a year. The company cracks down hard on unions, issuing a document called “Manager’s Toolbox to Remaining Union Free” and shuts down stores where unions form. 3602
We could encourage this church to “adopt-a-Walmart” nearby to work for reforms. We could plan a movie screening and educate the congregation. We could write letters to the editor about this . . . there’s really a lot that we could do.” “Religious leaders are involved too,” added Ruth. “The group Wake Up Walmart announced a campaign by thirteen religious leaders from Texas, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Colorado, and Oklahoma to urge Walmart to adopt labor reforms.”[40]Eager to help, I used my iPhone to find an online version of the interfaith letter to Walmart CEO Lee Scott, and passed it around the circle. “Listen to this section,” said Ruth, reading out loud. “Walmart’s values are not Christian values, nor do they reflect the values of any of our faiths. As people of faith, it is our duty, it is our moral obligation, to write to you and ask Walmart to reverse its anti-family policies. Walmart’s anti-family policies are immoral, unjust, and a direct affront to the teachings of our faith. I bet our congregation would be willing to sign that.” We paused to gather our thoughts. Finally I decided to speak up. “You know, another option does come to mind. We keep talking about Walmart and these big box stores with their unjust worker policies, but there are other options for us as consumers: local, small businesses that care about their workers.” 3608
In Bellingham six hundred local businesses formed “Sustainable Connections”—an alliance that creates what they call a “relationship economy” instead of a “one-night stand” economy. [41] 3620
Justin sighed. “You know, we came up with a lot of options tonight. How do we decide what to do?” “But it’s like Ruth said,” Rachel responded. “We’re not here to do it all, or do anything by ourselves. We’re here to discern what steps we can take, as a community, here and now. And we’re not acting alone.” Horace chuckled, “Some people in this church are not going to like these suggestions.” “Yeah,” Ruth replied, “but what better place to talk about tough moral issues than in a church?” The group continued discussing options, possible solutions, ways to engage and ways to educate their congregation. We debated how effective different measures would be, and continued long past the allotted meeting time. The array of possibilities for changing my relationship with people like Robin Martin are greater than I realized. We left the fellowship hall with a plan for several important first steps that we could take to do something about poverty in our city and the unjust working conditions that cause it. 3627
Union of Concerned Scientists, World Scientists’ Warning to Humanity, 1992. ↵ Found at http://fore.research.yale.edu/publications/statements/joint_appeal.html. ↵ Irenaeus of Lyons, Against Heresies, 3.17.3. ↵ The Beguines, as most movements undermining systems of domination, are riddled with paradox in their relationship to those systems, in some senses undermining but in others underwriting them. Excellent secondary sources include Emilie Zum Brunn and Georgette Epiney-Burgard, Women Mystics in Medieval Europe (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1989); John Milhaven, Hadewijch and Her Sisters (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1993); and various works by Carolyn Walker Bynum. Two primary sources for Beguine writings are: Hadewijch of Antwerp, Hadewijch: The Complete Works, trans. Mother Columba Hart (Mahwah, NJ: Paulist, 1980), and Marguerite Porete, The Mirror of Simple Souls, trans. Ellen L. Babinsky (New York and Mahwah, NJ: Paulist, 1993). ↵ Hadewijch: Complete Works, “Letters,” 1. ↵ Ibid., 18. ↵ Ibid., “Verses,” 3. ↵ Luther, “That These Words of Christ, ‘This Is My Body,’ Still Stand Firm against the Fanatics,” Luther’s Works 37:57. ↵ Luther, “The Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ—Against the Fanatics,” in Timothy Lull, ed., Martin Luther’s Basic Theological Works (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1989), 321. ↵ Leonardo Boff, Cry of the Earth, Cry of the Poor (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1997), 153. ↵ Mark Wallace, Finding God in the Singing River: Christianity, Spirit, Nature (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2005) and other works; John Hart, Sacramental Commons: Christian Ecological Ethics (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2006). ↵ Wallace, Finding God in the Singing River, 128. ↵ Hart, Sacramental Commons: Christian Ecological Ethics, 3. ↵ Philip Clayton, “The Panentheistic Turn in Christian Theology,” Dialog 38 (1999): 289–93. ↵ John J. Thatamanil, The Immanent Divine (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2006), 6. ↵ G. W. H. Lampe traces controversies in concepts of God’s immanence as they developed in patristic thought. G. W. H. Lampe, God as Spirit (Oxford: Clarendon, 1977). The trend in modernity has shifted. Theological liberalism emphasized God’s immanence. Neo-orthodoxy critiqued this emphasis and emphasized God’s transcendence. More contemporary theologies, especially some feminist and eco-feminist theologies, have reclaimed the legacy of an immanent God. ↵ Nancie Erhard, MoralHabitat: Ethos and Agency for the Sake of Earth (Albany: State University of New York Press, 2007), 50. ↵ Ibid., 55. ↵ Ibid., 4. ↵ Martin Luther, Luther’s Works, 26, as cited by Larry Rasmussen, “Luther and a Gospel of Earth,” Union Seminary Quarterly Review 51, no. 1–2 (1997): 22. ↵ Theologies vary on who and what is situated in this rather incomprehensible paradox. Some hold that it pertains singularly to followers of Jesus; some see it as the condition of all people; others see the entire cosmos located in the “already and not yet” reign of God. My stance is that no humans, this side of death, can know the parameters of the reality. But I do know that to err on the including side is far more true to the God revealed in Jesus than to err on the excluding side. Thus I rest my hat on understanding that the entire creation is within the fold of God’s “already and not yet” reign. ↵ For Bonhoeffer, conformation with the form of Christ implies refusing conformation with ways of life that betray Christ. His use of gestaltung for “conformation” is a play on the word used by Hitler to mean conforming to fascism. Conformation with the form of Christ crucified, for Bonhoeffer—in response to his context—came to mean both standing on behalf of the persecuted, and assuming the guilt of the Western world. This convergence of two meanings assumes very personal meaning for Bonhoeffer. He lived them both: he was imprisoned and executed for an assassination plot that was, in significant part, a defense of (standing on behalf… 3638
Two claims emphasized by my own tradition, a Lutheran form of Christianity, help to explain this ambiguity. One is the acknowledgment that—in things human—good and evil are intertwined. The other is similar: human finitude renders our actions toward the good, including our acts of love and justice, imperfect. However, despite our imperfection and the intermingling of evil with good, we are called to move forward in justice-making love to the best of our ability. 3735
The word “love” is used to translate more than one word in the Hebrew Bible. The word most frequently translated into English as “love” is aheb. It is used to designate love for neighbor (Lev. 19:18), for God (Deut. 6:5), and God’s love for God’s people (Deut. 5:10; Hos. 3:1). Aheb is rich, vast, and hardly captured by its English translation. The English “love” occasionally is a translation of the Hebrew Bible’s hesed—“steadfast love.” Hesed bears similar but not the same connotations as aheb. Three different words of New Testament Greek are translated into English as “love”: agape, eros, and philio. Most frequently used is agape, which is the word nearly always translating aheb and hesed in the Septuagint.[8]Agape is the Greek word used in Jesus’ injunctions to “love neighbor as self,” as recorded in the synoptic gospels. However, Jesus, as far as we know, may not have used the word “agape,” because he spoke primarily Aramaic and not Greek. “Love,” then, is a translation of a translation.[9] In this book, our inquiry into Jesus’ call to love neighbor as self pertains primarily to agape (and, therefore, also to the Hebrew words aheb and hesed). However, I make no firm or impermeable boundaries between agape and either eros or philio. In reading the word “love” in biblical texts, people make assumptions about what it means. Our unconscious inclination is to understand “love” in the biblical texts according to our existing understanding of the English term. Consequently, preconceived notions of love shape our understanding of Jesus and of what it means to heed his call to love. These assumed meanings may have little to do with love as a biblical norm, and they tend to limit our understanding of God’s love and neighbor-love to our own socially constructed notions of love. This limitation is immense. It diminishes and compromises our sense of divine love and the call to embody it. These problems are partially addressed by focusing on agape. Yet, other problems persist. The word’s meanings shift over time and context, both canonical and historical. Moreover, different scholars and other interpreters over the centuries have held differing accounts of agape, depending on theological stands, social location, worldviews, faith community, and political and cultural context. The differences are consequential; the loci of conflict over what “love” means are also the loci of love’s ethical implications. 3765
First, God’s love is the foundation or the root of human love for God, self, others, and Earth. “From an Old Testament point of view,” writes Hebrew Bible Scholar Katherine Dobb Sakenfeld, “any human loyalty, kindness, love or mercy is rooted ultimately in the loyalty, kindness, love and mercy of God.”[11] This conclusion is widely held. However, how God’s love roots human love remains a matter of inquiry and debate. Are human beings called to “love as God loves,” or because God loves, or in grateful response to God’s love, or with the actual love of God indwelling, or according to some other form of rootedness in God’s love? I recognize all of these “roots.” The call to love as God loves means that God’s love, in Christ, becomes the model for human neighbor-love. The obvious yet audacious question then becomes “What is the love of God like? What does it look like? What does it do?” The question permeates Christian history, human history, and this text. The indwelling love of God as an actual presence abiding within us, being lived into the world by us, implies a boundless power to love. The apostle Paul, the author of the Gospel according to John, Martin Luther, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Dorothy Day, and Martin Luther King Jr. all insisted that God’s love not only inspires human love but also abides within human beings or human communities. “[Those] who [abide] in love [abide] in God, and God abides in [them]” (1 John 4:16). The conviction that God’s love is not only for us but also works within us for the sake of the world, takes on yet more force when accompanied by the claim that love is the most powerful force in all of creation. “Love,” writes Martin Luther King, “is the most durable power in the world. This creative force, so beautifully exemplified in the life of our Christ, is the most potent instrument available in mankind’s quest for peace and security.”[12] I, too, understand human love to be—in some way not humanly fathomable—the love of God dwelling within and among human beings and communities.[13] This love is at play there, on behalf of its human abode and on behalf of the world. This indwelling presence is pure gift from God. It is given freely, not bought by human goodness. God’s indwelling love may be called the Spirit of God or the indwelling Christ. Love is the presence of God active in history (not only human history but cosmic history). That this Spirit also indwells other-than-human parts of creation is highly significant. While these claims say a great deal, they also produce yet more unknowns. While the love of God may dwell within us, we humans do not necessarily love with it, or let it flow out. What enables it to flow, and what blocks it? This too is a core question of Christian life. 3813
A second mark of neighbor-love pertains to its transformative power. Christians throughout the ages have claimed that the love of God, including its embodiment in humans as neighbor-love, “proclaims and creates a new world situation.”[14] Recognizing love as transformative power becomes especially important in light of the historic tendency within Christianity to associate love with abnegation of power. Voiced strongly in feminist theology, the insistence on linking love with power found earlier expression in Martin Luther King. “Power, properly understood,” he writes in response to the Black Power movement, “is the ability to achieve purpose. It is the strength required to bring about social, political, or economic changes. In this sense power is not only desirable but necessary in order to implement the demands of love and justice. One of the greatest problems of history is that the concepts of love and power are usually contrasted as polar opposites. Love is identified with a resignation of power and power with a denial of love. . . . What is needed is a realization that power without love is reckless and abusive and that love without power is sentimental and anemic. Power at its best is love implementing the demands of justice. Justice at its best is love correcting everything that stands against love.”[15] Third, neighbor-love actively serves the well-being of whomever is loved. It is a steadfast commitment to seek the good of whom or what is loved. Gene Outka refers to this as the “normative content most often ascribed to love. Agape is . . . an active concern for the neighbor’s well-being.”[16] Erich Fromm, in his classic text, The Art of Loving, concludes that love is the active concern for the life and the growth of that which we love.[17] Neighbor-love, thus, is a matter of action, not of emotion alone. The Jesus who reveals God’s love and pulls humankind into it, reveals God’s love in actions. “We must remember that love reveals itself not by words or phrases, but by action and experience,” cautioned Bernard of Clairvaux.[18] Centuries later, Martin Luther King insisted that “agape . . . is love in action.”[19] More recently, Daniel Maguire echoes: “[L]ove is an energy that must be incarnated in action.”[20] These figures base their assessment in the biblical witness. 3836
However, love as a theological and biblical vocation is not reducible to action. Love acting toward well-being entails something beyond both action and emotion. It seems that the love to which Jesus calls us emerges from a way of perceiving the world and of being in it, as well as a way of acting and feeling in response to it. It is a perception that the neighbor bears infinite worth and is irrevocably beloved by God; she or he is, before all else, a creature beloved by God. Moreover, the neighbor is no less beloved and no less imbued with inherent worth than am I or my people. The action of love not only is grounded in this perception, but also nurtures it. Perhaps this way of perceiving is a glimpse of reality through the eyes of God. It is a mode of perception that clings to the created goodness of each person and seeks to actualize that goodness and belovedness. In the words of Paul Tillich, “Agape sees [the other] as God sees him [or her].”[21] In this sense, love is a disposition, the fourth defining feature. Disposition, in the Aristotelian sense is nurtured by and nourishes action and emotion, but is distinct from them. It is a whole way of living, a state of being in the world developed and learned by exercising that very state of being. A disposition is an embodied attitude of the heart and mind that is formed by the practice of it and commitment to it. Disposition, used in this way, is not “natural,” as in the temperament with which one is born or that comes naturally to one; rather, a disposition is chosen and cultivated. This aspect of love draws us further into mystery, raising once again the questions: “From whence comes this love? How do people ‘get’ it? What brings it forth?” We harken here to two clues held paradoxically together. Neighbor-love, as God’s indwelling presence, is pure unwarranted and unconditional gift from the Lover of all. Yet, as disposition, neighbor-love is cultivated by one’s practices (choices, priorities, decisions, and actions), the ethos of society, and the communities with which one identifies. The relationship of love as indwelling presence and love as cultivated disposition is the relationship between gift and human response. This relationship has provoked controversy for centuries. I am not suggesting that practicing love is a means of gaining God’s love. One cannot do anything to earn or gain God’s love. It is given unconditionally. “Practicing love” is a response to the already freely given gift of God’s love. The salient point is this: love given by God to dwell within us may, then, be nurtured as a disposition. Through the practice of it, we grow in our tendency and ability to receive that love and live it into the world as neighbor-love. Questions of moral formation spring to the fore. What factors or circumstances form us to perceive the gift of God’s love and respond to it? What practices cultivate the disposition of love? Few questions are more important for opening the doors to more just and sustainable societies. While for Aristotle, a disposition is intentionally cultivated through practice, theories of social construction recognize the formative influence of unintended, even unconscious processes of socialization. We are socialized into practices that form disposition without our being aware of it. For example, our practice of consumerism forms a disposition toward consumerism. To form a disposition toward love in a society forming the disposition of consumerism demands intentionality. Next, loving in the biblical sense seems to be even more important for the well-being of the one who loves than for the beloved. “He who does not love abides in death” (1 John 3:14). Not to follow the call to love then is, in some way, deadly. Likewise in Deuteronomy, God forewarns the people that choosing not to follow God’s commandments, laws in which neighbor-love is central, would be “to perish,” to choose “death and adversity” and “curses.” Following these commandments, in contrast, would bring “life” and “blessings”… 3859
Seventh, human love is never perfect. Love is subject to the brokenness that pervades human history. We are human creatures, not God. The imperfection of neighbor-love does not negate it, nor its power for social transformation. Feminist theology has established mutuality as a normative condition of love from a Christian ethical perspective, by virtue of the imago dei. This is an eighth quality of love as a biblical norm. The triune God is ontologically a relationship of mutual love moving between/within the three “persons” of God.[26] As beings created in the image of God, humans are created also in the image of mutual love; it is the true self toward which we are destined through God’s saving grace. Feminist theologian Dawn Nothwehr offers a definition of mutuality based on her detailed analysis of feminist theology and antecedents to feminist ideas of mutuality in the work of Thomas Aquinas, Martin Buber, John Duns Scotus, and H. Richard Niebuhr: “Mutuality is the sharing of ‘power-with’ by and among all parties in a relationship in a way that recognizes the wholeness and particular experience of each participant toward the end of optimum flourishing of all.”[27] As it pertains to society, mutuality refers to “the sharing of ‘power-with’ by and among members of a society in a way that recognizes the fundamental dignity of each and the obligation to attain and maintain for each what is necessary to sustain that dignity.” Mutuality as a feature of neighbor-love, then, calls for power shared with relative equity. In contexts of massively unbalanced power, love seeks dispersed and accountable power. Mutuality recognizes common power to give to, receive from, learn from, and challenge. And it aims at common well-being. 3913
Theology and many natural sciences have recognized that we are, by our very nature, first and foremost beings-in-relationship. For beings who are ontologically relational in vast and overlapping webs of relationship that span both time and space, mutuality is much broader than interpersonal relationships of individuals. The mutuality of one’s relationships is not a function of one’s personal actions alone, but also of the “me” that is at the same time a “we.” “I” may both give and receive from people and movements the world over by virtue of that collective “I” and a collective “you” or “they.” Said differently, the norm of mutuality in neighbor-love may be manifest in collective as well as individual relationality. As God’s love lures people and all of creation toward union and communion with God and hence union and communion among the creatures and elements, so too agape generates and nurtures community. This is the ninth quality of neighbor-love. Voices in the church since at least the second century have held that God is “reaching from creation to consummation, in which God and all creatures are destined to live together in the mystery of love and communion.”[28] Jesus in his ministry was incessantly creating community. The Hebrew Bible attests to a God who is seeking to build a community of God’s people. Both Testaments indicate that community shaped by this God may take surprising new forms. Always it is community that serves life, and is informed by love.[29] King expounded on “agape [as] love seeking to preserve and create community. . . . In the final analysis, agape means a recognition of the fact that all life is interrelated.”[30] Finally, love is subject to forces that work against it or that diminish, block, or distort it. They are known as sin. A theology of love must contend with sin’s power to sabotage it. As discussed in chapter 2, sin is manifest both in individuals and as structural sin. Neighbor-love is blocked in particular by love for wealth and prestige. According to nineteenth-century theologian Gerhard Kittel, “Two forces particularly are mentioned by Jesus as forces which man must renounce and fight against if he is to love God, namely mammon and vainglory.” By “vainglory,” the author means “love of prestige.” He continues, “The love of prestige is incompatible with the love of God.”[31] The monumental pull of sin, especially on a macro level, means that an adequate ethic of neighbor-love will account for the pervasive and pernicious presence of sin, especially at the societal level. We have noted ten features of neighbor-love as a biblical and theological norm. A remaining few pertain to the identity of the neighbor and to the relationship between love and justice. 3936
My conclusion (and the eleventh attribute of neighbor-love noted herein) is that neighbor-love, as seen in Jesus’ life and teaching, pertains to whomever one’s life in some way impacts or whose life impacts one’s own. 3988
love entails justice. I land firmly in the third. My stance is grounded in many of the features of love discussed thus far, in particular that love seeks the well-being of whatever or whomever is loved. Where systemic injustice damages well-being and causes suffering, seeking the well-being or good of those who suffer—actively loving—entails challenging that injustice. Dietrich Bonhoeffer called this “putting a spoke in the wheel” of unjust power structures.[38] This challenge includes seeing systemic evil for what it is and acknowledging it, resisting it, and creating more just alternatives. Thus, where the neighbor suffers because of injustice, love will not simply bind up the wounds of the suffering. Love will seek to undo the injustice. The response of neighbor-love to slavery was not just to bring relief to individual enslaved people; it was to abolish slavery. In short, the norm of neighbor-love includes the norm of justice. This, then, is yet another mark of neighbor-love, the twelfth noted herein. This makes sense. Jesus was deeply rooted in the historical trajectory of the Hebrew prophets before him, from whom he often draws in his teaching. These prophets were among history’s sharpest critics of injustice perpetrated by those in positions of privilege and power. 4012
The Hebrew words zedaqah (justice, righteousness) 4082
Zedaqah refers to right relationships between God and God’s people, between persons, and between groups. Right relations are those that allow the needs of all to be met in a way in which relationships can flourish and community can be preserved. Mispat has judicial implications and also “has a broader meaning dealing with the rights due to every individual in the community, and the upholding of those rights.”[48] Justice as a norm grounded in the Hebrew scriptures: is “a chief attribute of God’s activity in the world”; when applied to humans, is based on and corresponds to the justice of God that is seen as liberating the oppressed, identifying with the vulnerable and upholding their rights, judgment, and mercy; is integral to love of neighbor, but not synonymous with it; is a foundation of the “already but not yet” reign of God; implies compassion and redistribution, with special attention to the needs of the marginalized; aims at freeing the oppressed, sharing food with the hungry, and housing the homeless; aims also at dismantling the sources of oppression and the political, cultural, and economic arrangements that contribute to hunger, poverty, and homelessness; is understood to be both demand of God and gift from God; is not, at least in the prophets, understood as a utopian impossibility, but as realizable. Social justice, as informed by all of these sources, is a grounding orientation for all relationships. 4083
What cries out for change?”[49] Who has power and who does not? Who benefits and who does not from “the way things are”? Whose voices are heard and whose are ignored? Who counts in decision making and who does not? Justice manifests “right relationship” with the God, self, others, and the Earth. These observations about social justice give content to the norm of love. Problematic Constructions of the Love-Justice Relationship We began by identifying three constructions of the relationship between love and justice, and my stance that love as a biblically based norm entails justice understood as social justice. The other two constructions—that love and justice are opposed or are distinct and complementary—dangerously domesticate the norm of love. That is, they detract from its power as a norm for public life. What remains then is to signal the distinct problems in the logic of these two perspectives. Anders Nygren is the modern theologian most notable for contrasting love and justice. But he assumes a meaning for justice that is not the meaning of “social justice.” “Justice,” for Nygren means that each person is due what she/he deserves. This is not “social justice.” The fact that “to each his due” conflicts with love as a biblical norm does not mean that “social justice” conflicts with love as a biblical norm. 4097
Love, as the more affective or interpersonal counterpart to justice, becomes either emotionalized or spiritualized. The tendency to spiritualize and emotionalize love is theologically and biblically unsound. It truncates the meanings of aheb and agape. Biblical texts affirm that while love may involve emotion—and perhaps, at its best, does—emotion is not a necessary characteristic of love as a biblical norm. God’s call to love the stranger and foreigner cannot depend upon one’s feelings for them. Limiting love to justice’s emotional or spiritual counterpart is dangerous because if love’s power depends upon emotional investment, love as a force for steadfast commitment to justice is effectively disarmed. Thus, systems of oppression are reinforced by the spiritualizing or emotionalizing of love. That reduction is common. 4121
love as a political virtue ensures that even where this intimate and emotional love is not the defining force in one’s relationships with the body politic (as is humanly the case most of the time), society is structured such that the ends of love (the well-being of all with emphasis on the most vulnerable) are served. This is key. Love must seek structures of justice precisely because it usually is not the primary virtue motivating social relations with the impersonal many. As a political vocation then, love cannot depend upon emotions. A society cannot depend for justice upon voluntary feelings of goodwill that may come and go. 4139
suspect that translations of the Hebrew zedaqah (justice) and aheb (love) into Greek, Latin, and English bear some of the fault for this emotionalizing and spiritualizing of love. Aheb, which, as we have seen, meant far more than charity, was translated into Latin as “caritas.” Caritas, also implying more than charity, is often translated into English as only that, charity. Justice, like love, easily becomes spiritualized and domesticated. The apostle Paul translated zedaqah into Greek as dikaiosyne, which often is rendered as “righteousness” in English. “Righteousness”—as commonly understood—does not bear the societal implications inherent in zedaqah. Neighbor-Love: Political and Dangerous Because it seeks justice, love is a political as well as interpersonal vocation. This is yet another feature of neighbor-love. If theft is done through political-economic systems, then love, as response, also works through political-economic systems. Here we use “political” not in its more common meaning—pertaining to government, formal interest groups, party politics, and so on—but rather in its classical or Aristotelian sense. In this sense “political” refers to the processes through which people deliberate and determine the terms of their life in common. Christian ethics inherently recognizes this political nature of neighbor-love. Christian ethics begins with the recognition that how people treat each other is determined not only by interpersonal relationships but also by social structures.[56] Therefore, Jesus’ teachings regarding how individuals are to treat each other apply to social structural spheres of life—political, economic, cultural systems. The final feature of neighbor-love emerges from its justice-making, political, and broad-scoped nature. Neighbor-love may be dangerous. Jesus did not die to sacrifice himself in payment or expiation for human sins. Jesus was executed on a stake—the form of execution reserved by the Roman empire for rebels—because he was a threat to its hegemonic power. “His death was the price he paid for refusing to abandon the radical activity of love—of expressing solidarity and reciprocity with the excluded ones of his community.”[57] 4150
We have noted such features of neighbor-love. It: is grounded in God’s love embodies God’s work to create a new world situation, is transformative actively serves the well-being of those who are loved is a disposition to be practiced may be more important for the well-being of the one who loves than for the one who is loved entails self-love is not perfect is mutual builds community is subject to sin, and is especially blocked by the love of wealth and prestige pertains to whomever my life touches directly or through social or ecological systems seeks justice is political may be dangerous Along these lines unfolds the meaning of neighbor-love as a biblical and theological norm meant to guide our lives today in the midst of economic and ecological violence. To be guided by the call to love is to accept the tempestuous waves of moral ambiguity and paradox. What justice-making love calls for in a given situation is often unclear. Yet, despite pervasive moral ambiguity, limitations, and mistakes, we are called nevertheless to live in the shape of this love. The faultiness of our efforts to serve a God of love is no excuse to abandon them. Moving On The reality of love flows beyond the reach of human knowing and imagination. Love is the Mystery at the heart and source of life itself. Love creates us and the cosmos; love gives breath and awakens our being. “Love,” as a word, is but a pale reflection of the Mystery that it bespeaks. The features of love uncovered herein play out in the next chapter as it suggests the contours and content of neighbor-love for us, the world’s high consumers. Before moving on, notice how the features of love might play out in the story of Ravi and the seeds. 4191
A Life Story Seeds Ravi Chandekar’s back is against the wall. Like many of his fellow cotton farmers in the Indian province of Vidarbha, Ravi has faced years of declining cotton harvests. He took out bank loans to buy hybrid seeds long ago, and then more loans to buy the necessary fertilizers and pesticides to support the genetically modified seed. Finally, he started taking out loans to pay back previous loans. Now he is left with failing crops, yet again, and huge debt. He cannot provide food for his wife and two daughters. One daughter is prepared to marry, but a dowry is unthinkable. His other daughter is chronically ill, and there is no money for medicine or doctor’s fees. The shame of Ravi’s insurmountable debt, his failure to provide for his family, and the bleak hopelessness of the future all weigh on him so heavily that there appears to be only one possible way out of it all. Ravi’s ancestors farmed this land for thousands of years. Long before the British arrived, the province of Vidarbha produced varieties of long cotton, carefully irrigated just so, spun on a charkha loom, and sold in the local market to support the farmers and their families. Seeds and organic fertilizers were either produced on the farm itself, or were affordable to buy, and most farmers made enough money to provide food, clothing, and shelter for themselves and their families. With colonization came railways, farm machinery, factory cotton mills, and a thriving export-oriented cotton industry centered in Bombay (Mumbai). Droughts in the late 1960s spurred the Indian government to support struggling farmers by providing a “safety net” in the form of genetically modified seeds and petroleum-based chemical inputs. These so-called improvements were heavily marketed to them and supplied by the U.S.-based multinational agribusiness corporation Monsanto, as well as Archer Daniels Midland, Cargill, and others. Farmers were told through billboard and poster advertisements that they would benefit tremendously from using the genetically modified seeds. One of the most controversial was Bt cotton, a hybrid cottonseed from the United States that arrived in Vidarbha in 1977. Like many farmers, Ravi was heavily courted by big agribusiness to buy their products. Farmers were shown on posters as having obtained high yields—twenty quintals per acre, when the reality was more like five quintals per acre. Monsanto has also been accused of placing a network of informal agents in villages: “farmers who earn a commission on sales that they bring about by promoting Bt seeds to their fellow farmers.” [59] The new seeds demanded large quantities of petroleum-based fertilizers, at costs far beyond what small-scale farmers could afford. Pests became resistant to the expensive pesticides marketed to farmers. And every year, the Indian government marketed new hybrid seeds from the United States and elsewhere, plastering large billboards with advertisements. Meanwhile interest rates on loans rose and debts accrued. In the 1980s and 1990s, transnational corporations, along with governments of many industrialized nations, successfully shifted the global economy into a model of global trade and investment that highly favors the wealthier countries and their corporations as well as elite sectors in impoverished nations, over the vast majority of impoverished people. Known in the United States as “free trade,” and in Latin America, Africa, and Asia as neoliberalism, this model has forced Ravi and other formerly isolated, subsistence farmers to compete in a global market with relatively little chance of making it. Ravi took his own life out of desperation and utter hopelessness. Nearly two hundred thousand farmers in India have committed suicide since 1997. In the eight years between 1997 and 2005, a farmer in India committed suicide every thirty-two minutes. Farmer suicides numbered 17,368 in 2009 alone; in some districts the rate is six to eight per day. [60] Although some farmers hang or drown themselves, most commit suicide by ingesting the… 4209
“At the heart of the pathology of the environmental crisis is the refusal of humans to see themselves as creatures contingently embedded in networks of relationships with other creatures, and with the Creator. This refusal is the quintessential root of what theologians call sin.” [1] 4448
We are not only relational and political creatures, but also earth creatures. In the words of a second-century theological guide, Irenaeus of Lyons, we are “mud creatures”—in Hebrew, ha adam—crafted from adamah (“dust of the earth, topsoil”). Humans are made from humus. That is, we are made of the very elements that existed with the big bang some 13.7 billion years ago and that comprise the soil. We are not above and outside of nature. We are of the animal kingdom, the phylum chordata, the genus homo, and the species homo sapiens. As mud creatures, our God-given task in relationship to the rest of nature at this point in history may be to re-see and re-situate ourselves within rather than above Earth’s web of life. As relational beings, political beings, and earthlings, we are also inherently economic beings. That is, our life together requires the use of material things and thus their distribution among us. An ethic of love in the contemporary context must be adequate for human creatures who are by nature not only relational and and political beings, but also economic and ecological beings. From a theological and biological perspective, such an ethic of love holds that we: are “mud creatures,” made of soil that is made of “star dust”; are an integral and utterly dependent species in Earth’s tapestry of life; share origins, body matter, and ultimate salvation with the Earth community; live within a polis and economia that are planetary if not cosmic;[3] need, in order to survive, the material goods that other humans and other-than-human parts of the planetary polis also require and, thus, must, in some way, distribute those goods; are charged with seeking the widespread good, not merely the good of ourselves and our own; are embedded in systemic evil that is enormously adept at parading as good, inevitable, natural, fate, or social necessity; are beloved by a love that will not cease to love us, is more powerful than any force on Earth or beyond, and loves also the entirety of creation; are bearers of that divine and indomitable love; are players in a story of hope; may be part of a vast global body of people committed to forging more just and sustainable ways of being human on Earth. These are the creatures called to love neighbor as self. Any theology and ethic of neighbor-love will be tested by its power to move these “mud creatures” toward lives that serve the widespread good. I contend that we, the uncreators, will live that love into the world to the extent that we reconceptualize the Christian moral norm of “neighbor-love” from being primarily an interpersonal vocation to being also an economic-ecological vocation. Neighbor-Love in and for the Household of Earth 4467
An elegant international appeal to situate human activity—including economic activity—within the limits of nature was crafted by the United Nations in 1982 in its “World Charter for Nature.”[13] To the contrary, however, classical and neoclassical economic theory and the capitalist economies they rationalize have treated human economies as entirely separate from Earth’s economy. So doing portrays the world falsely and promotes the widely held false assumption that human economic activity is not contingent upon the Earth’s physical limits. 4570
That is, growth-producing policies and practices must: (1) be ecologically sustainable; (2) reduce the wealth gap; (3) produce long-term, adequately compensated jobs open to unionization; and (4) bolster rather than undermine local communities and cultures.”[21] 4601
Here we note three overarching reorientations for corporate policy: replacing the financial bottom line with a triple bottom line of ecological sustainability, financial viability, and social impact; internalizing social and ecological costs that currently are externalized;[22] measuring profit and loss not only by the quarter, but by the long-term future. Steps toward economies based on renewable energy sources are being debated and enacted in varied venues. These changes will occur on a widespread basis only when mandated by public policy and promoted by a degree of public will. Therefore, political will and moral courage may be the most crucial ingredients of all. 4607
Disposable goods will give way to enduring, repaired, and reused goods. Long-distance travel will dim in value. 4617
It is said that a forkful of produce travels an average of 1300 to 2000 miles to reach an American plate.[24]According to Anna Lappé in Diet for a Hot Planet, food transport and food production both contribute significantly to the emission of carbon dioxide and other gases that cause global warming. 4626
This includes everything from emissions related to transferring food from farm to store, to emissions from transporting inputs to our food (feed from Brazil or ammonia from Morocco).[25]A study comparing foods that are imported into California with foods produced there revealed a forty-five-fold increase in emissions from the imported foods, and five hundred times more emissions for those foods brought in through air freight.[26]The amount of fuel required to transport one year’s worth of tomatoes to the state of New Jersey would power an eighteen-wheeler to drive around the globe 249 times.[27] 4629
Concentrated unaccountable economic power threatens the common good. The economic crisis culminating in 2009 is a prime example. Economic power was amassed in the hands of a very few: the high-level management of enormous finance and banking corporations. A sequence of historic developments has rendered economic power in the United States progressively more exempt from democratic accountability. They began with the aforementioned 1886 Supreme Court decision that corporations are legally persons and have the legal rights of persons. The ruling enables corporations to strike down regulatory attempts by cities and states, by claiming that those regulations are violations of the corporation’s human rights. Most recently the corporate front group Citizens United won a lawsuit against campaign finance laws, dismantling campaign finance regulation at the federal level. This “freed” corporations for unlimited spending to influence elections. Corporate personhood shifts the balance in power from the (real) people through their governments to economic entities bent on profit that may in fact damage “the people,” their businesses, and their environments. The second development was the gradual uprooting of corporations and financial institutions in the United States in the twentieth century. This entailed a shift from local operations to regional, then national, then international, and finally transnational operations. Links of accountability to local communities were severed. New Deal legislation, intended to keep banks servicing and accountable to their own communities, was defeated in this shift. Next was the gradual wearing down of state charter restrictions and federal regulations regarding corporate operations. Eroded too was the enforcement of those restrictions, standards, and regulations. Corporations exist only as chartered by states. Centuries ago, state charters contained substantial restrictions aimed in part at holding the corporation accountable to the public good. Corporations throughout the decades have whittled away at these until little remains and what does is largely ineffective. Because state and federal political figures are often financially beholden to corporations, they are reluctant to sanction them. Fourth was the progressive deregulation and “reregulation”[83] of banking and other financial services, largely achieved by the 1980s, either by law or by creative corporate arrangements such as holding companies and mergers. The result was financial services institutions operating not only across geographic boundaries, but also across service and institutional boundaries. One company, operating around the globe, could provide multiple financial services. Undone here was New Deal legislation intended to prevent the domination of financial markets by single institutions, and to prevent commercial banks from risking investors’ money in the stock market. In a word, a constellation of legislation “freed” finance markets, including banking, from accountability for anything other than maximizing profits. As noted in chapter 2, this development, referred to as “financialization,” is a central feature of neoliberal economic globalization.[84] A Canadian documentary film, The Corporation, argues that the large business corporation, assessed as a “person” (that legally it is), behaves like a psychopath. “To assess the ‘personality’ of the corporate ‘person,’ a checklist was employed, using diagnostic criteria of the World Health Organization. . . . The operational principles of the corporation give it a highly anti-social ‘personality’: it is self-interested, inherently amoral, callous and deceitful; it breaches social and legal standards to get its way; it does not suffer from guilt, yet it can mimic the human qualities of empathy, caring and altruism.”[85] The study delivered a disturbing diagnosis: the institutional embodiment of laissez-faire capitalism fully meets the diagnostic criteria of a “psychopath.” The problem of concentrated corporate power explodes with… 5059
The term “economic democracy” refers less to an endpoint than to a process of piece-by-piece conversion from centralized economic power to more shared and publicly accountable economic institutions and practices, and the values and public policies that support them. In different terms, economic democracy describes situations in which people and communities have a role in the economic decisions that shape their lives. A variety of undertakings move toward economic democracy. They include: popular movements and projects to build more democratic economic alternatives from the ground up; public policy change toward economic democracy; legal and constitutional changes in the rights of the corporation; and changes in values, especially regarding the purpose and role of economic activity. Popular movements and projects to build economic alternatives include consumer cooperatives, worker-owned or -managed businesses, producer-consumer co-ops, publicly accountable local or regional banks, fair trade, community-supported small-scale farms, publicly owned energy companies, community-based land trusts, and more. They serve as experimental workshops and leaven for a more just economy. The “Local Living Economies” network demonstrates the creativity and potential in this grassroots movement. The consistent factor is some form of business governance and ownership that involves a broader spectrum of stakeholders, rather than a small group of corporate executives and major shareholders. A prominent example of wide-reaching public policy changetoward economic democracy is the movement to curtail “free trade agreements” 5127
Another example is popular protest against Memorandums of Agreement or Memorandums of Understanding between governments and global corporations. These are agreements giving the latter the right to the lands, seed supplies, and other resources of impoverished people in host countries. Legal and constitutional changes in the rights of the limited-liability corporation are a third piece in the puzzle of the emerging impulse toward economic democracy. Earlier we noted four features of corporate structure that enable profit maximization over all other concerns. These features also grant the corporation freedom from accountability to the broader society. These factors are joined by another—the corporate lobby—that consolidates corporate power over democratic governance at local, state, or national levels.[89] Legal and constitutional changes to strengthen democracy relative to the corporation include: rescinding corporate personhood and the rights of the person that accompany it. mandating accountability for social and ecological bottom line as well as financial bottom line. limiting corporate campaign funding and corporate lobbying.[90] rescinding the legal requirement that the corporation pursue its self-interest and maximum profit for shareholders above all other concerns.[91] Efforts are underway in all of these directions.[92] These moves would radically alter who has the power to make many of society’s life-shaping decisions, including decisions influencing whether or not people will lose homes and jobs, and who has access to water and food. In a democracy, such things must not be determined by a few very wealthy people who will not experience the long-term consequences of their decisions. 5140
The future of economic democracy is “yet to be written.”[94] That future will take forms distinct from its historical precedents, and holds possibilities heretofore nonexistent precisely because the context is unprecedented. Never before has this set of conditions pertained: (1) Earth’s limits require limits to growth; (2) humankind has the technological and material resources to end abject poverty; (3) economic wealth and power are so keenly concentrated; and 4) a worldwide multifaceted movement against concentrated economic power exists. 5162
Economic life will: operate within Earth’s economy (ecologically sustainable); heed environmental space and ecological debt (environmentally equitable); prioritize meeting human needs and Earth’s needs over maximizing profit and accumulating wealth (economically equitable); challenge concentrated economic power and seek distributed and accountable economic power (democratic). 5172
Together they challenge lynchpins of economic life as we know it—the right to accumulate as much as possible within legal constraints, the value of doing so, and the right to do what I wish with what I own. The “I” here is both the individual and the corporation. In concert, these four principles for a moral economy change the assumed purpose of an economy. According to classical economic theory (the philosophy originally undergirding capitalism) the purpose of the economy was to maximize the production of goods and services. In advanced global capitalism, arguably the purpose is to maximize wealth accumulation, under the claim that the wealth generated will trickle down. The economy for a sustainable and more just society will have a different purpose. It is the threefold agenda of production, relatively equitable distribution of goods and their costs, and ecological regenerativity.[95] 5176
Moral agency, I now teach, is not the power to move to, but rather the power to move toward a more just, sustainable, and compassionate world. 5193
Michael Northcott, A Moral Climate: The Ethics of Global Warming (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 2007), 16. ↵ 5196
Thomas Berry, The Great Work (New York: Harmony/Bell Tower, 2000). ↵ The Charter was approved by the General Assembly. One hundred eleven nations approved it. One, the United States, voted against. ↵ The term “sustainability” bears some problems. It has been co-opted as a marketing tool by many ecologically unsustainable corporations. It may be inadequate; given the extent of ecological damage already done, “regenerativity” may be the more adequate norm. Often used to modify “development,” sustainability suggests that development as economic growth can proceed if it meets environmental criteria. However, the usefulness of the term outweighs these problems. ↵ IPCC, Special Report on Renewable Energy Sources and Climate Change Mitigation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011), 3. GHG has two major forms: increases in carbon dioxide, due primarily to fossil fuel use, and increases of methane and nitrous oxide due primarily to agriculture. ↵ 5212
Moe-Lobeda and Daniel Spencer, “Free Trade Agreements and the Neo-Liberal Economic Paradigm,” Journal of Political Theology 10, no. 4 (2009): 685–716. ↵ For example, a factory would factor into the bottom line the cost of keeping water clean, replacing cropland, maintaining carbon neutrality, and so on. ↵ John Cobb and Herman Daly provide an early and excellent blueprint for economies situated within Earth’s economy. They base it on their detailed account of the disastrous consequences of growth-oriented economies. See John B. Cobb Jr. and Herman E. Daly, For the Common Good: Redirecting the Economy Toward Community, the Environment, and a Sustainable Future (Boston: Beacon, 1989). ↵ National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service website “Reducing Food Miles.” ↵ Anna Lappé, Diet for a Hot Planet: The Climate Crisis at the End of Your Fork and What You Can Do about It (New York: Bloomsbury, 2010), 220. ↵ Ibid., n32. ↵ Ibid., n82. ↵ 5227
and the Triple Bottom Line,” http://www.zipcon.net/~laura/laws.htm. ↵ Ibid. ↵ For concise accounts of “ecological debt” and “environmental space,” see Karen Mickelson, “Leading toward a Level Playing Field, Repaying Ecological Debt, or Making Environmental Space,” Osgoode Hall Law Journal 43, no. 1/2 (2005): 138–70; and Duncan McLaren, “Environmental Space, Equity and the Ecological Debt,” in Julian Agyeman, Robert Bullard, and Bob Evans, eds., Just Sustainabilities: Development in an Unequal World (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003), 19–37. ↵ Press release from the University of California: “Rich Nations’ Environmental Footprint Falls on Poor,” January 22, 2008. ↵ U. Thara Srinivasan et al., “The debt of nations and the distribution of ecological impacts from human activities,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Science 105, no. 5 (February 5, 2008): 1763–73. ↵ UC Press Release (see n50). ↵ The concept of “ecological debt” entered the international discourse with the 1992 United Nations Conference at Rio de Janeiro, where it was introduced by Latin American NGOs. For more on “ecological debt, see websites of: Southern People’s Ecological Debt Creditor Alliance (SPEDCA), European Network for the Recognition of Ecological Debt (ENRED), Ecuador’s Acción Ecológica, England’s Christian Aid, Friends of the Earth International, and WCC. See also Athena K. Peralta, ed., Ecological Debt: The Peoples of the South Are Creditors: Cases from Ecuador, Mozambique, Brazil and India (Quezon City, Philippines: WCC, 2004); WCC Central Committee, “Statement on ecological justice and ecological debt,” 2009; Andrew Simms, Ecological Debt: The Health of the Planet and the Wealth of Nations (London: Pluto Press, 2005); and ecologicaldebt.org. ↵ Three such organizations are SPEDCA, ENRED, and Acción Ecológica.↵ LWF and WCC delegations to COP16 in Cancun, “Why Are the Churches at the UN Conference on Climate Change in Cancun?,” December 13, 2010. COP refers to Conference of Parties (nations) signing the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). ↵ 5240
Richard Grossman and Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund, The Daniel Penncock Democracy School Curriculum (Chambersburg, PA: CELDF, 2009), 243–45. ↵ 5282
Joel Bakan, The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power (New York: Free Press, 2004), 36–37. ↵ Dr. Janis Sarra in an interview with Joel Baken, cited by him, ibid., 176–77. She goes on to say, “The way in which corporate law is currently structured requires directors and officers to justify any socially responsible actions under the guise of, or the aim of, either short-term or long-term shareholder wealth maximization.” ↵ 5283
Green America’s Responsible Shopper page,” Coca-Cola.” http://www.greenamerica.org/programs/responsibleshopper/company.cfm?id=204. ↵ 5297
Michele Simon, “Can Food Companies Be Trusted to Self-Regulate: An Analysis of Corporate Lobbying and Deception to Undermine Children’s Health,” Loyola Law Review 39, no 1 (2006): 169. ↵ 5301
Western liberal societies tend to conflate democratic theory with liberal theory despite their fundamental distinctions. In their early modern forms, liberal theory and democratic theory were opposed in this sense: Locke’s theory of liberalism held that humanity’s original state of nature included the natural rights to life, liberty, and property. In contrast, Rousseau, founder of modern democratic theory, held that in humanity’s original state there was no private property, and that only in staking out private property did humans develop inequality, domination, and the need for politically organized community. Liberal theory defended the natural right to private property while democratic theory saw it as source of inequality and domination requiring the constraint of political community. ↵ The theory that capitalism and democracy are antagonistic: The capitalist norm of wealth concentration works against the democratic norm of relatively equal political power, and the capitalist principle of excluding economic power from democratic accountability works against the democratic norm of accountable power. This argument is articulated by Harry Ward, and by Eileen Meiksins Wood. She argues that the notion of capitalist democracy that developed in the United States gave formal political powers (eventually) to all, but retained the power of control through capital in the hands of the propertied elite. Thus, formal democracy could coexist with power inequality intact. ↵ Dahl, Democracy, 65–66. ↵ Ibid., 52–83. ↵ The quotations in this paragraph are from Dahl, Democracy, 324–26. ↵ Wood, in Democracy against Capitalism, contends that defendants of the capitalism-democracy inseparability argue the opposite. “The characteristic way that capitalist democracy deals with [the economic] sphere of power is not to check it but to liberate it . . . in fact not recognizing it as a sphere of power . . . at all. This is, of course, especially true of the market, which is . . . conceived of as a sphere of freedom” (234). See Rose and Milton Friedman, The Right to Choose (New York: Avon, 1979), xvii. They state that, “The free market provides an offset to whatever concentration of political power may arise.” See also Milton Friedman, Capitalism and Freedom (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1962), 16. Occupied with the threat of concentrated state power, this argument ignores the 5313
George Zachariah’s terms, “uprooted from life”?[9] How am I to learn from people whose lives are threatened by mine when I do not even know who most of them are? How do I “learn from” people without repeating the colonizing assumption that “I” have the right to possess what is theirs, in this case knowledge? These are the questions of economic-ecological literacy raised earlier. This shift in the grounds of knowledge does not come easily. Pathways for making it are not clear. Therefore, here we explore a few practical steps toward hearing and privileging perspectives of people on the losing end of the economic and ecological violence that buys our wealth. These steps are illustrative, meant to engender awareness of others. 5459
“U.S. citizens,” she responded, “who want to support our struggles for justice should get to know us and our social movements.” Her statement was wise. Few things have more power to spawn moral agency than witnessing the courage and fierce tenacity of people’s resistance to structural violence. Mercy’s suggestion—getting to know people on the underside of the global economy and their social movements toward justice—is a step into the mutuality discussed in chapter 7 as a “feature of love.” 5467
One is to uncover and build on connections that already exist, that may be unknown to us or untapped. Transnational civil society has strengthened greatly in recent decades in the traditional realms of religious, labor, and other activist communities and through web-based connections between social movements. For instance, what if Lutherans in the United States were to listen regularly to Lutherans of the continent to our south? 5473
moral vision—conscious or not—tells us what is good, right, and true. By “economic moral vision,” I refer to the vision of what would be good, right, and true for economic life. Moral vision shapes how people live. An economic moral vision in which people are affirmed or rewarded for accumulating wealth to the extent that they are able within the boundaries of legality, encourages people to do so. If, in contrast, according to the prevailing moral vision, wealth accumulation beyond a certain point was considered morally repugnant, people would be far less likely to pursue it. Larry Rasmussen and Bruce Birch (discussing not economic moral vision but moral vision in a general sense) note that a changed moral vision affects all elements of the moral life. When what is considered in a particular society to be moral becomes seen as immoral, human behaviors, policies, and institutions change. Institutionalized race-based segregation moved from being considered moral to immoral in the span of a few decades. It was a shift in moral vision resulting in changed behavior, public policies, institutions, and norms for marriage and other human relationships. As with an overall moral vision, so too with the vision of a moral economy: with a changed economic moral vision come changed behaviors, public policies, institutions, cultural norms, standards of achievement, goals, and more. The film “I Am” includes a brief provocative animation. The character inhabits a world in which it is considered insane to accumulate more than what is needed for a healthy happy life. The animation—only moments long—swept across my mind with the power of the boy who revealed that “the emperor has no clothes.” It disclosed our accumulation and consumption-based economic vision as the social construct that it is.[17] When moral vision changes, what is perceived as possible also changes. A few centuries ago in many Western societies the legal equality of women and their legal right to freedom from nonconsensual sex would not have been seen as possible. The moral vision shifted and with it the seemingly impossible became possible. It is wise to be aware of what economic moral vision is guiding a society, an individual life, a family, or other group. 5530
An account of a young Cherokee boy growing up in the early twentieth century described the hunting philosophy of the boy’s people. As the boy’s grandfather explained, they were to hunt only the animals that they needed for food. He was describing a lived economic vision. It contrasted starkly with the prevailing economic vision of his day, and it shaped a way of living. The advocates of a particular economic moral vision had best be clear about what is at stake in it. For an economy as powerful as that of the United States, moral vision can determine life or death for millions. The economic moral vision suggested herein is of economies in which all people have the necessities required for a healthy life, Earth’s life-systems are sustained and regenerated, and none accumulate vast wealth at the cost of impoverishing others or Earth’s life-support systems. 5553
ecological sustainability, environmental equity, economic equity, and democracy where democracy implies relatively distributed and accountable economic power. 5562
Goals along the way to a more sustainable, environmentally and economically equitable, and democratic economic order include the following. They pertain to the high-consuming world. I am not proposing goals for the Global South. This account is illustrative rather than comprehensive. Vastly reduced energy use through energy efficiency and reduced consumption, especially consumption that degrades people or environments. Conversion to renewable nonpolluting energy for that portion of current fossil fuel use that can be converted. (This may be expressed as a shift from a carbon-based economy to renewable energy economy.) Far higher percentage of businesses being locally owned, accountable to stakeholders, and not “too big to fail.” Far higher percentage of businesses—including large corporate business—operating with a triple bottom line. Primarily (but not exclusively) local and regional food production and consumption loops; prioritizing agriculture for local and regional consumption. Primarily small-holder agriculture. Agriculture that prioritizes long-term sustainability of the soil and is in line with the ecosystems of bioregions, rather than use of agro-chemicals and monocropping. Reduced influence of wealth in legislative and electoral processes, international trade treaty formulation, and other public policy–related mechanisms. Control and regulation of global financial markets.[18] (That is, constrained speculative investment and constrained international mobility of finance capital.) Increased citizen control (public accountability) over what is now the limited liability, publicly traded global corporation. International trade agreements and trade relations that favor “fair” over “free” trade.[19] Cancelation of the debt of the highly indebted and highly impoverished nations; responsible and accountable lending. Taxation that favors wealth distribution over wealth concentration.[20] Some form of accountability for the “ecological debt.” These goals counter the power imbalances at the heart of structural violence. With significant movement toward these goals, the world’s trade in seeds would not be controlled by a few mega-corporations. The children of indebted poor countries would not see their food and healthcare disappear down the drain of insurmountable and illegitimate debt payments. Robin and others like her would not be forced into homelessness while working for people receiving 400 times what she makes. We would not fill our plates consistently with food that is trucked to us over hundreds of miles by carbon-spewing vehicles, and that is grown on land desperately needed by impoverished people to produce their own food. Our clothing would not be produced in sweatshops. Nor would hundreds of thousands of Americans lose their savings and livelihoods to speculative investors. The crucial point, the transformative reality, is this: While for many of these goals, fulfillment is a long a way down the road, they are attainable. These goals may be achieved through the commitments, decisions, and actions of human beings working together. Moreover, people around the globe are working avidly toward each one of them. Policies and Practices to Realize the Goals A moral vision and the goals for reaching it ultimately depend upon people putting them into practice. Vision, principles, and goals must be lived. The next steps in a moral framework leading from an economic moral vision toward its realization are public policies consistent with the goals, and then “practices” related to those policies. By “practices” I mean what individuals, organizations, corporations, governing bodies, and other units of society do on an ongoing basis. They are the actions or behaviors that give shape to life in the home, workplace, school, place of worship, and the other venues in which daily life unfolds. “Practices” may be intentional or they may be rote. “Public policy” refers to laws and regulations established by people through their governing bodies, be they local, state, provincial, or national…. 5581
The channels of impact are psychological, political, economic, and cultural: Practicing more just and ecologically sound alternatives is an example to others. People learn by modeling. 5716
Individuals’ actions influence the public moral climate, paving the way for policy change and institutional change. Not two years later, a student movement was afoot to ban the sale of bottled water on the Seattle University campus. It succeeded. Practicing justice-making and Earth-care actively counters powerlessness, denial, and despair for oneself and for others who see that practice. Citizens around the globe who took part in the Jubilee Campaign to cancel the debt of highly impoverished countries proved that people working together can influence some of the world’s most powerful institutions in the name of justice. Individuals’ practices reveal that opposition exists. The farm workers’ union would not have made the gains it made for migrant laborers had not protesters and boycotters countrywide proved to exploitative employers that opposition was strong. Practicing alternatives reveals to the world that alternatives are possible. Taking one’s money out of Bank of America opens that door for others who did not realize that alternative banking was alive and well. What people do influences policy. Civil rights legislation required a groundswell of people resisting segregation and practicing desegregation in their daily lifestyles. 5720
The Enough Project 5764
an audit system the Enough Project has produced. It ranks electronic companies on their progress toward responsible sourcing of conflict minerals. I’ll urge everyone to buy only conflict-free electronics, or, if that’s not possible, to buy from the companies with the highest rankings. Well, I guess I’ll also urge them—and myself—to buy less electronics altogether. ********************************** Moral Formation Moral formation is the elephant in the room of social change. How do we become “the people that we need”? 5766
identify requisite shifts in values. Foremost among them are sufficiency over endless acquisition, economic justice over concentrated wealth, meeting needs over material accumulation, collaboration and community over privatized living, well-being over growth, service and empathy over blind pursuit of individual gain.[31] A theme emerges. It is the problem of valuing wealth too much. Kenneth Sayre puts it simply: “Return to environmental health requires diminishing society’s high regard for wealth . . . this will involve curtailing both society’s general endorsement of wealth as a personal goal and establishing countervailing values that forbid accumulation of excessive wealth . . . equity is a normative value that might be effective in this countervailing role.”[32] Particularly toxic is the extraordinary valuation of wealth as criterion of success. Had ours been a society in which equity was highly valued, and excessive wealth accumulation was widely considered a vice, the world would be radically different. 5777
These are values such as compassion, justice, service, empathy, love, and sacrifice for the sake of life. The pivotal question becomes: How are we to become people who bring into public life the values we treasure in our interpersonal relationships? How do we form ourselves and others for practicing these values as members of social systems that have life-and-death impact on millions of people? Here we view clues emerging from the morally formative power of what people do (our practices), first considering practices in general and then practices of worship. 5789
structural evil hides. Where hidden, it is not resisted. Compassion, generosity, and justice may be nurtured to reign strong in the personal lives of people who nevertheless are unknowingly killing others through economic and ecological violence. Therefore, the “practice of moral goodness”—if it is to shape people for challenging the structural violence in which they swim—must be informed by critical awareness of that violence. Moral formation calls for “seeing” structural evil and its persistent ability to hide. Thus, critical vision is a central ingredient of moral formation for justice-making and earth-keeping in the context of structural evil. The tools for developing critical vision, discussed throughout the volume, take on added importance. 5806
Contemporary theorists in multiple disciplines argue that human identity, subjectivity, and action are shaped by the narratives that we experience and the rituals that reinforce them. Liturgical theology concurs. The practice of worship shapes people by enacting a vision of the world, and by telling an epic story in which the worshiping community is a player.[38] The vision and story teach the people how to live and empower them for that life. Martin Luther, speaking of the Eucharist, describes this influence: “The sacrament . . . so changes a person that he is made one with the others.” “Thus by means of this sacrament, all self-seeking love is rooted out and gives place to that which seeks the common good of all.”[39] 5819
To speak of worship forming humans for the work of love appears as the height of theological hubris and self-deception, unless we acknowledge the overriding reality of our participation in structural sin. Sri Lankan theologian Tissa Balasuriya poses the contradiction starkly: “Why is it that in spite of hundreds of thousands of Eucharistic celebrations, Christians . . . who proclaim Eucharistic love and sharing deprive the poor people of the world of food, capital, employment, and even land . . . inequities grow . . . [and] the rich live like Dives in the Gospel story?”[40] 5831
Perhaps worship will better form the people for love as an economic-ecological calling if worship enacts an alternative “vision of the world” in which humans are creatures with all the other creatures, dependent, for example, upon millions of microbes inhabiting our bodies enabling us to sing and taste the bread and wine. Or what if the alternative vision of the world enacted in worship portrayed water, trees, and bodies—rather than buildings—as sacred abode of God? What if the vision enacted in worship portrayed not only all people with enough, but the overconsumers no longer having too much? What if the vision foretold the “uncreators” forsaking the curse of uncreating, and instead honoring the original charge given to us by God, to “keep and till” God’s garden Earth? Where would worship enacting such “visions of the world” take place? What would it look like? The questions thickens. Whose “vision of the world” is to be told? Is it “ours”? Or is it an alternative vision of the world as told, for example, by indigenous Americans whose great grandparents were pushed out of their homes, cultures, and livelihoods by the descendants of the tribes of Europe? 5846
Whose interpretation of scripture and of God will ground the vision of the world enacted in “our” worship? If the moral life of worshipers is formed also by an epic story told through the process of worship, then what epic story is “told” matters. What if the story told in the sermon, songs, chanting, sacraments, and art highlighted the Christian heritage of resistance to systemic domination? What if the practice of worship taught our children that they stand in a long line of courageous resisters who stood up against structural evil even at cost of life: the daring midwives who rescued Moses from the Pharaoh’s deadly hand, Jesus who refused to comply with the ways of empire, the early martyrs who resisted imperial demands, the abolitionists, the “righteous gentiles” who defied Hitler’s death machine, the Huguenots in the village of Le Chambon-sur-Lignon whose quiet resistance saved four thousand Jews even while occupied by fascist forces? What if our children frequently heard sermons such as that preached by one of my pastors: “I could empathize with Paul in prison,” she declared, “because last time I was in prison, I too was in solitary confinement.” She had been jailed many times for protesting the Trident nuclear submarines stationed near Seattle. What if our congregations were morally formed to see themselves as walking in the footsteps of fiercely loving resisters? What if the story told, including us as characters, truly honored our rich heritage of resistance to dominant powers where they demanded that people transgress God’s commandment to love? Telling this story would not be too strange, for that heritage is at the heart of Christian and Hebrew scriptures. Were the story told in worship, might we be more fertile ground for love that defies economic and ecological violence? Communal Lament In a powerful sermon on the book of Joel, Christian womanist ethicist Emilie Townes claims that, for people living in covenant relationship with God, social healing begins with communal lament. Lament was integral to the ancient Hebrews’ covenant relationship with God, suggests Townes, drawing on the work of Walter Brueggemann. A loss of lament meant “also a loss of genuine covenant interaction with God.”[44] Where the assembly praises God but does not lament, “covenant is a practice of denial and pretense.”[45] Communal lament, as Townes explains it, is the assembly crying out in distress to the God in whom it trusts. It is a cry of sorrow by the people gathered, a cry of grief and repentance and a plea for help in the midst of social affliction. Deep and sincere “communal lament . . . names problems, seeks justice, and hopes for God’s deliverance.” Lament, as seen in the book of Joel, she says, forms people; it requires them to give name and words to suffering. “[W]hen Israel used lament as rite and worship on a regular basis, it kept the question of justice visible and legitimate.”[46] Perhaps for us too, lament is integral to social restoration. Could it be that worship that empowers the people of God for social and ecological healing will include profound lament for the ways in which our lives unwittingly endanger Earth’s life-systems and vulnerable neighbors far and near? Imagine churches offering space for “public lament” about the fact that we have allowed hundreds of thousands of children, women, and men to go homeless in our land. Worship may remind the people why they can lament without drowning in despair. Sacred Power for healing this beautiful and broken world is present with, among, and within the stuff of Earth. That saving presence flows instinctively to life’s broken places. There it nurtures power for love, including the love that reforms society. School for Seeing According to a longstanding Christian claim, God comes to and within the worshiping community through the sacraments. The Latin, “sacramentum,” was used in early Christianity to translate the Greek, “mysterion.” The mysterion of God, at least in the apostle Paul’s work, “are the… 5855
Proposals include taxes on speculative investment, carbon, and other pollution taxes on large companies, progressive income taxes, and so on. For multiple proposals, see Chuck Collins and Felice Yeskel, Economic Apartheid in America: A Primer on Economic Inequality and Insecurity (New York: New Press, 2000) ↵ 5997
“Blood in the Mobile” won the 2011 Cinema for Peace Justice Award in Berlin. 6011
Kenneth Sayre, Unearthed: The Economic Roots of Our Environmental Crisis (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2010), 337. ↵ 6013
Gordon W. Lathrop, Holy People: A Liturgical Ecclesiology (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1999), 227. ↵ Don Saliers, “Liturgy and Ethics: Some New Beginnings,” in Liturgy and the Moral Self, ed. E. Byron Anderson and Bruce T. Morrill (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical, 1998), 174. ↵ Saliers, “Liturgy and Ethics: Some New Beginnings,” Journal of Religious Ethics 7, no. 1 (Fall 1979): 16. ↵ Martin Luther, “The Blessed Sacrament of the Holy and True Body and Blood of Christ, and the Brotherhoods,” in Theology of Martin Luther, ed. Timothy Lull, 251, 260. ↵ Tissa Balasuriya, The Eucharist and Human Liberation (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1979), xi–xii. ↵ Wayne Meeks in The Origins of Christian Morality: The First Two Centuries (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1993). ↵ Bruce T. Morrill, Anamnesisas Dangerous Memory: Political and Liturgical Theology in Dialogue (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical, 2000), 64. ↵ Johann Baptist Metz, in Morrill, Anamnesis. ↵ Emilie M. Townes, 6017
See, for starters, the resources offered at http://www.earthministry.org, http://www.webofcreation.org, nccecojustice.org, seasonofcreation.com. 6042
Love in Action: Resistance and Rebuilding “It is a complex journey from consciousness to the concrete politics of empowerment, and one which is, by definition, full of contradictions and detours. It is perhaps most important, individually and collectively, simply to stay on the right road.” Patricia Hill Collins[1] ♦ “I cannot do everything, but I can do something. And I will not let what I cannot do interfere with what I can.” Edward Everett Hale 6046
Six “Gateways” Introduced Imagine a world in which global investment firms, mortgage markets, and other globally operating corporations do not have the “freedom” to pursue self-interest regardless of the cost to millions of human beings and their homes, jobs, health, food and water supplies, and communities. The goal of curtailing unaccountable corporate power intends to bring that image into the realm of the real. This goal has a companion goal among those noted in the previous chapter. It is to “control and regulate global financial markets.” These two goals are the antithesis of advanced global capitalism. Its central tenet is the “freedom” of corporations and capital to pursue their interests unencumbered by public accountability. A vibrant, vast, and highly diverse global movement is oriented around these goals. Active the world over, its composition spans the fields of human endeavor and expertise. This movement includes peasants and other farmers, scientists, lawyers, landless and homeless people, religious communities, small businesswomen/businessmen, artists, students, and others. They work not as autonomous individuals but as parts of networks. These actors, while diverse in race/ethnicity, nationality, social class, caste, religion, gender, age, political stance, and more, share three conclusions. The first is that the drive to maximize profit (as opposed to simply make a profit) is the problem. It leads to exploitation of people and environmental devastation. Secondly, corporate and finance control of the global economy tends to hurt small farmers, low-level workers, indigenous peoples, impoverished people, women, and other sectors of society who tend to be marginalized. There are many exceptions to this rule in people who have benefited from the global economy as we know it. However, the damage to the many vastly outweighs the benefits to a relative few. Finally, “there are goals more important than efficiency, growth, and getting the cheapest goods to the consumer or the most profit to the seller.”[2] Here I offer a simple schema that should help ordinary people establish public policies and practices that rein in the power and negative impact of large corporations. Equally important, the examples herein should spur imagining other such policies and practices. The schema entails six “gateways” for redressing the power imbalance between global corporations on the one hand and people and their governments on the other.[3] In the context of this book and its inquiry into the moral norm of neighbor-love, the reason for pursuing these goals takes theological form. “We,” as all people, are called to love neighbor as self and to nurture Earth’s well-being. Yet powerful corporate structures are shaping our relationships with neighbors around the globe and with the Earth. By participation in those structures (as consumers, employees, investors, voters or nonvoters, silent bystanders) we do great damage to people whom we are called to love. Christian traditions throughout history have claimed that where the “powers that be” require people to defy God’s call, then allegiance to God takes precedence; we are to obey God rather than other powers. To do otherwise is to worship other gods.[4] The goal of curtailing unaccountable corporate power may be articulated theologically. It is to reduce the power of large global corporations and finance agencies to determine our relationship with neighbors and the Earth and, thereby, our allegiance to God. Following are six “gateways” to gaining more public power in relationship to corporate power in order to protect workers, communities, and marginalized sectors in them, and ecosystems: Small-scale business alternatives with emphasis on the local and regional, and on reducing consumption. Moral culture within the business corporation. Citizen action / consumer pressure to achieve “voluntary” constraints on corporate conduct. Citizens using governments to achieve publicly mandated (regulatory or legislative) constraints on corporate… 6087
As parts of networks of committed people—including and informed by those who suffer the consequences of the systems that enable life as we live it—we can move mountains. 6135
Basel Ban Amendment. It looks like there was a huge conference in 1995 around the transport, tracking, and minimization of hazardous waste in Basel, Switzerland. The attending countries were trying to address the movement of hazardous waste into developing countries, saying that it could only be imported with ‘prior informed consent’ by the receiving nation. But after the convention some countries and environmental groups said it didn’t really go far enough and they proposed this Basil Ban Amendment.” “Yeah, it says here that Denmark and many nations of the Global North adopted this amendment,” said Jordan, who had found the same page in the textbook and was reading ahead. “It bans the export of hazardous waste, including recycling, from OECD countries to developing countries. It was controversial, of course, and the vote seems to have been messy. It looks like it was technically blocked by some of the wealthier nations and industries, but it’s still considered ‘morally binding’ by the signatories.” 6157
“Several EU countries have made this amendment legally binding under their own countries’ laws, and called it the Waste Shipment Regulation (EWSR). Other countries launched more informal approaches to ensure the sound management of hazardous wastes when they are moved to developing countries. And also, several African nations made a treaty called the Bamako Convention that prohibits importing any hazardous waste.” “So this would probably apply to gateways 3 and 4, right?” asked Cortney, a business major and good friend of Jason’s. “In some cases there are mandatory legislative restraints imposed by the Basel Convention, and then the Amendment invites voluntary self-regulation, or country-specific laws.” The group agreed and kept searching. “There seem to be a decent number of organizations working on the fourth gateway—publicly mandated limitations on corporate conduct,” said Jordan. “I keep coming across examples of activist groups across the globe working for national policy reform around transboundary dumping, trying to pass laws that ban e-waste from landfills, establishing recycling programs at home, and targeting the electronics industry itself.” He looked up. “This is probably the area in which citizens in industrialized nations can really join forces with people in poorer countries. We can support their protests to block transboundary dumping and pass legislation that changes corporate practices.” “But on the other hand, businesses are more likely to respond to an economic incentive than a rule,” said Cortney. “I’m interested in the third gateway, the voluntary limitations on corporate conduct or self-regulation. Any ideas?” The other three scanned books and computer screens for a moment. “Some electronics companies, such as Apple, Dell, and Sony have eliminated or at least reduced a carcinogenic flame-retardant chemical called PBDE,” said Jason. “And Apple will recycle your old laptop in the United States if you buy a new one through them. 6167
“Well here’s a group called Network of Spiritual Progressives that’s organizing to do just that,” offered Yasmin as she checked out the organization’s website. “And here’s another, Move to Amend. They have local groups all around the country. Hey, both of them are working on that Supreme Court decision that we discussed in class.” 6191
‘Citizens in Malaysia protested so vehemently to the construction of a massive e-waste processing plant by Citiraya Industries Inc. that the State rejected the proposal, even though their own Department of the Environment approved the Environmental Impact Assessment.’ And get this,” he read on, “it pertains to us: ‘Environmental Justice activists from several nations helped to locate resource persons to provide expert input on the environmental impact statement and provided comments on the reality of the dirty technology.’ [6] I 6205
Two long-term advocates of “the new economy,” John Cavanaugh and Jerry Mander, write: Transition to more economically democratic structures becomes easier to visualize once we recognize that many human-scale, locally-owned enterprises already exist . . . There are very few of our daily needs that cannot be met by small and medium-sized enterprises operating within a market economy of a kind—but one that is characterized by a multitude of small players rather than a handful of giant, absentee owners. And all of them would operate without the benefits of stock market investing, limited liability, or corporate personhood, so crucial to large corporations. From the point of view of sustainability and democracy, there is no reason why giant transnational corporations are needed to run hamburger stands, produce clothing and toys, publish books and magazines, grow and process and distribute food, make the goods we need, or provide most of the things that contribute to a satisfying existence.[7] 6228
BALLE, the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies. This network of socially responsible businesses is committed to building bottom-up, community-oriented “local living economies” in which “economic power resides locally to the greatest extent possible, sustaining vibrant, livable communities and healthy ecosystems in the process.”[11] BALLE assembles coalitions of community leaders and government officials, social innovators, local and independent business leaders, and economic development professionals who work together to build these “local living economies.” Employers and profit-makers are first and foremost neighbors and community-builders. This kind of economy serves as a powerful challenge to overly concentrated power. It is a significant step toward economic democracy.[12] The new economy includes locally owned banks that emphasize the triple bottom line—financial, social, and environmental goals. Local deposits tend to support businesses and projects in the community, including such things as renewable energy, low-income housing, and green building. Most community banks shun the speculative investment that is so central to the banking industry as we know it. The Fair Trade movement, one aspect of “the new economy,” aims at supporting small-scale producers, and ensuring fair wages and working conditions. Initially known as “Alternative Trade Organizations,” these networks emerged first in Europe in the 1960s, and spread to the United States within a decade, becoming more commonly known as fair trade. The rapidly growing movement now boasts federations or networks in many countries. What qualifies a business as “alternative” or as part of the “new economy movement”? The response must be contextual, varied by industry and locale as well as by mindset and theoretical stance. There is no normative prototype and the movement is marked by diversity and creativity, but across the board there seems to be a general consensus that size, ownership/control, and accountability are primary factors. “Size” refers to small-scale (or small- and medium-scale), but what constitutes small or medium is understood variously. The European Commission defines “small and medium business” as “those with less than 250 employees, annual sales under $35 million, and total assets under $24 million. Even this may seem too large for some, but not by the standards of mega-corporations; total sales of the Forbes Global 500 list of companies for 2002 ranges from a low of $4.9 billion to Citigroup’s $1,051 billion in assets. Still, the category of small and medium can include substantial enough enterprises to be able to produce most essential goods and services efficiently.”[13] To others, “small scale” is much smaller.[14] Most proponents, I believe, would agree that small scale means not large enough to monopolize the market, determine consumer choice on a widespread basis, shape political agendas or international treaties, displace smaller thriving businesses, or “manipulate the symbols of personal identity through mass advertising.”[15] Community-based ownership and control is another key standard. Like size, its interpretations are many, and a variety of ownership and control structures mark the movement.[16] Broadly speaking, in an alternative business, ownership is not in the hands of people thousands of miles away who are largely unaware of or unaffected by the harmful consequences of a company’s actions (loss of water supplies, closure of plants, outsourcing, foreclosures, toxifying the environment, etc.). Rather, control is largely in the hands of or accountable to people who stand to bear the consequences of the company’s decisions.[17] Control shifts from shareholders to stakeholders (of which shareholders may be one element). The “new economy” and alternative business does not mean a full rejection of global business connections or corporations. That idea would be untenable. It does mean prioritizing local business and consumption, and turning to global business where… 6253
Enter here the role of society’s morally formative influence. Business schools could play a decisive role in reshaping the forms and roles of business in the world. Imagine business schools teaching Paul Hawken’s call for “a system of commerce and production where each and every act is ecologically sustainable and restorative.”[19] Educators from preschool through graduate school, families, faith communities, and other mentors of the young may be the root of such decisions. Not long ago, an Islamic student who was a graduating senior in my ethics course wrote his paper on a serious moral dilemma that he faced. His major was business and, as a very accomplished student, he had been offered more than one excellent well-paid position in banking. These positions would put him in line for significant advancement. His dilemma was this: according to his scripture, the Koran, charging interest is not acceptable. The student used his ethics paper to deliberate this decision. His conclusion was not to accept any of the banking positions offered to him. Granted, this decision did not change the banking industry, but I have little doubt that this young man—whether he enters some other aspect of the corporate world or not—will be capable of difficult moral decisions that could have sweeping significance. (I recently met this young man again, at a lunch with Cornel West and Tavis Smiley, held for leaders in anti-poverty work in the Seattle area. This former student has become a highly successful leader in the nonprofit world.) Gateway 3: Voluntary Constraints: Corporate Social Responsibility A third approach to limiting corporate 6307
Advocates assert that a public ethos is developing that encourages multiple forms of corporate social responsibility. The Motorola Company declares, “We’re on the threshold of a new era in which all of us—corporations, individuals, government, and other organizations—can join together to cooperate on the healing of our earth. . . . Our challenge for the new millennium is to learn how to live in harmony with the earth.”[26] McDonald’s Social Responsibility Report for 2003 notes, “Social Responsibility . . . has always been a part of who we are and will continue to be the way McDonald’s does business.”[27] According to Ford Motor Company, “A great company . . . offers excellent products and services but also strives to make the world a better place.”[28] The Kellogg company notes that “we hold ourselves accountable for our social responsibility.”[29] Not surprisingly, prominent leaders in corporate social responsibility among relatively smaller corporations express similar sentiments. Jeffrey Hollender, founder of the American Sustainable Business Council and member of the board of directors of Vermont Businesses for Social Responsibility, avers that CSR is “the future of business. It’s what companies have to do to survive and prosper in a world where more and more of their behavior is under a microscope.”[30] Other analysts and concerned citizens argue that while voluntary self-regulation serves some good purposes, it cannot substitute for laws. History, these voices argue, illustrates the importance of law to constrain corporate practice on behalf of the common good. Starting in the late 1900s, the United States saw a trend of corporate mandatory regulation to protect against monopolies, price-fixing, child labor, and other labor abuses. The eight-hour work week and the right to unionize were established and child labor was banned. The mid-1960s saw further legislation to protect against occupational hazards, environmental dangers, unsafe consumer products, and so on. Legally mandated constraints are known in some circles as “corporate social accountability.” 6349
Some corporate signatories of the UN Global Compact (the voluntary code of conduct launched in 2000) turned the Compact into a public relations tool by reporting on and exhibiting their best practices while retaining largely socially and environmentally degrading practices.[33] The World Business Council on Sustainable Development issued a “manifesto” titled “From Challenge to Opportunity,” promising to “seek greater synergy between our goals and those of the society we serve.” This engaging document celebrates the “role of business” in addressing pressing social issues such as poverty and the environment. Co-chaired by BP’s Chief Executive for “Refining and Marketing,” the document emphasizes the “imperative” that business “operate within the carrying capacity of the earth.” Among companies creating “the most strategic options” to “embrace a low-carbon world,” the manifesto notes BP, Shell, and ChevronTexaco. One marvels at the contradictions between this statement and BP’s role in the Gulf oil spill or Shell’s role in the Niger Delta. Cargill Dow is credited for its “commitment to ‘eco-efficiency.’” Not mentioned is the role of Cargill in hundreds of thousands of small farmers going out of business and losing their livelihood. 6372
Even where monitoring and certification are by independent third parties with no vested interest in the company or the assessment’s outcome, the process depends upon internal reporting. “Workers in most developing countries know that they are vulnerable to being fired without cause, and that legal redress, if it is available at all, may take years in the process. Rather than lose their jobs, most individual workers will exercise caution in criticizing their employer or airing their grievances.”[34] Compliance tends to be measured by participation rather than by outcomes, and reporting mechanisms enable corporations to report positive compliance without revealing that it mitigates only a minute fraction of the company’s negative social and environmental impact. The purpose of the “business corporation as currently structured severely limits its capacity to make regulations and apply penalties and fines that are against its own self-interest.”[35] The corporation is mandated to serve the “best interests” (read: economic gain) of shareholders. Thus it is unlikely that the business corporation will take actions in the public interest that might significantly undermine profits. (The tobacco industry, to illustrate, was unlikely to print on cigarette packages the warning that “cigarette smoking may be hazardous to your health,” unless mandated by law to do so.) The demands of Wall Street for short-term profits leave little option for voluntarily sacrificing maximum short-term gains in the name of social responsibility. (Thus, for example, a company would be discouraged from voluntarily internalizing the costs of displaced communities, destroyed rainforests, children poisoned by water, global warming, etc.) A company may put enormous amounts of creative and financial resources into public relations to construct a convincing socially responsible public face regardless of how far it may be from the truth.[36] Highly publicized contributions to important causes such as fighting homelessness or AIDS, also labeled as “corporate social responsibility,” may win a company a good reputation enabling it to escape public censure for its human rights or environmental violations. A Brookings Institute study of “market forces that encourage and limit the practice of corporate social responsibility” concludes that although the CSR movement does “promote social and environmental innovation by business,” the reality that it is voluntary and market-driven means that “companies will engage in CSR only to the extent that it makes business sense for them to do so. . . . Unlike government regulation, it [CSR] cannot force companies to make unprofitable but socially beneficial decisions,” which limits CSR’s functional agency.[37] Another set of case studies on corporate voluntary environmental programs concludes that: “voluntary programs can affect behavior and offer environmental gains but in a limited way. . . . [N]one of the case study authors found truly convincing evidence of dramatic environmental improvements . . . we find it hard to argue for voluntary programs where there is a clear desire for major changes in behavior.”[38] Yet the corporate world continues to promote the adequacy of self-regulation. Questionable effectiveness is not the only problem. Another is the matter of power imbalance discussed throughout this text.[39] Economic and ecological violence are rooted in asymmetrical power relationships. Voluntary self-regulation as a substitute for publicly mandated regulation maintains power in the hands of an infinitesimally small elite subset, corporate management, and out of the hands of the demos. Power here is no small thing; we are talking about the ability to decide who will control and use the world’s water, food supplies, and lands. These may be the means of survival of existing communities who stand to lose them for the sake of corporate profits. “A 1996 study of campaigns [for social responsibility] conducted by European NGOs on transnational corporations . . . cautioned: ‘The… 6386
Legislation mandating internalizing the costs of environmental degradation including greenhouse gas emissions, and legislation mandating labeling the “greenhouse gas content” of products. Legislation that taxes carbon emissions and other forms of environmental destruction. Legislation creating some form of a “financial transaction tax” and calling upon the U.S. government to advocate for internationally established “financial transaction taxes” to curb speculative investment.[49] Fair trade bills[50] and international trade agreements that do not grant corporations power over governments; disadvantage poor countries and sectors; favor investors over wage-earners; allow significant displacement of people; or sacrifice long-term ecological sustainability. Campaign finance reform and other legislation to protect democratic processes from money’s power.[51] Progressive taxation that discourages rather than encourages wealth inequity and income inequity.[52] Legislation mandating that corporations above a particular size account for a triple bottom line (economic and social as well as financial). Equally important are moves at the international level toward legally mandated corporate constraints. Among possible implementing institutions are the United Nations through its various agencies, a reformed IMF and World Bank, and the International Criminal Court. Again, the illustrations below represent policy proposals already under discussion and having a substantive international movement behind them. A global legal framework which demands immediate emissions reductions by nations and by multinational corporations over a specified size. It could be enacted through the UN Framework Convention on Climate change (UNFCCC).[53] A global legal framework disallowing corporate relocating within certain time-frames to nations with lower environmental standards and labor standards. A “financial transaction tax” in order to minimize capital flight and discourage speculative investment. The idea has been discussed seriously at least since proposed by Nobel prize–winning economist James Tobin in 1972. Originally proposed as a tax on foreign exchange transactions, some versions now include speculative investment in food and other survival commodities. Some versions propose that revenue be used to finance sustainable development in the Global South, and some advocate this as partial payment for the ecological debt.[54] “Public mechanisms of price stabilization” to “eradicate speculation on [food] commodities.”[55] (Incidentally, Martin Luther, half a millennium ago, theologically denounced speculation on food commodities on the same grounds for which they are opposed today: the danger they pose to impoverished people.) Cancelation of the illegitimate debt owed by highly impoverished nations to wealthy countries and their banks, and prohibition of predatory lending. Some advocates of legal constraints at the international level work from a different angle. It is to redefine certain essential goods as belonging to the “public commons” and as unavailable for full-fledged privatization and commodification. These include water, seeds, food staples, and some pharmaceuticals such as HIV/AIDs drugs. The rapidly growing “right to food” and “right to water” movements exemplify these efforts, as does the fierce opposition to Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs), one of the most intensely opposed aspects of the World Trade Organization.[56] These movements seek internationally established prohibitions on corporate ownership of goods redefined as belonging to the “public commons.” Publicly mandated corporate constraint is, then, a fourth gateway or approach to regaining a degree of democratic control over large corporations, and particularly to hold them accountable for their impacts on human beings, society as a whole, and Earth’s life-systems. 6473
58] The advocates argue, along with Supreme Court Justice Stevens in his dissent to the 2010 ruling, that “corporations have no consciences, no beliefs, no feelings, no thoughts, no desires. Corporations . . . are not themselves members of ‘We the People’ by whom and for whom our Constitution was established.” 6522
6: Expelling or Prohibiting Unwanted Corporations Activists in many communities and countries have organized to expel corporations that are putting small local businesses out of business, displacing communities, usurping their water supplies, poisoning their air or water, or destroying their food supplies. Other threatened people have organized at an earlier phase to preclude a corporation from establishing itself in a community in the first place. These two recourses comprise the sixth gateway to constraining corporate power. It was seen in the story of Ravi and Monsanto in India and in the story of Robin and campaigns against Walmart. Many cities or towns in the United States have successfully prevented Walmart from locating in their areas. In some parts of the world, the effort to expel or preclude a corporate presence is motivated by the near impossibility of holding global corporations accountable when human rights or other abuses occur. Essentially, the corporate entity can “get away with anything” because a nation’s legal and governance systems cannot or will not prevent it. A 2011 report by the International Commission of Jurists notes: “The complex corporate structure of the multinational, with networks of subsidiaries and divisions, makes it exceedingly difficult or even impossible to pinpoint responsibility for the damage caused by the enterprise. . . . Persons harmed by the acts of a multinational corporation are not in a position to isolate which unit of the enterprise caused the harm.”[59] The moral framework developed in the previous chapter began by noting two streams of action toward social change: resistance and rebuilding. Preventing or curtailing corporate activity where the citizenry finds that such activity would damage the community’s well-being is a form of resistance. In some, cases people resort to this form of resistance at grave risk to their safety or lives. The resistance to bauxite mining in India portrayed in chapter 2 illustrates both the action and the danger. So too does the Monsanto Quit India Campaign noted in the story of farmer suicides in India. In Sum The previous chapter sketched a moral framework for movement toward a moral economy. It is an economy grounded in the principles of ecological sustainability, environmental equity, economic equity, and economic democracy. The framework included a set of midway goals that direct the way toward realizing these principles. Our aim in this chapter was to illustrate the viability of these mid-way goals by examining one that seems least possible, and teasing out the kinds of public policies and practices that could achieve it. It is the goal of increased citizen control over transnational business corporations and finance institutions in order to protect workers, communities, marginalized sectors in them, ecosystems, and democracy. 6524
An indispensable point emerged: All of these gateways to reining in corporate power rest ultimately on citizen action, be it direct action or action through governance. Tenacious informed people’s action through organized public networks—transnational where appropriate—may be the most important factor in constraining socially and environmentally destructive corporate power. Judith Richter, following her extensive analysis of corporate social responsibility and accountability, concludes, “The most crucial ingredients in any attempt to curb corporate power . . . are lucid analysis, principled and concerted action, and the courage and stamina to continue raising controversial issues if the public interest so requires.”[60] These are keys to achieving the moral vision of a more equitable, democratic, and sustainable world. Democracy—people power to shape the terms of their life together—requires citizen action. Morality in the context of economic and ecological violence requires citizen action. Neighbor-love toward people whose lives or livelihoods are being destroyed by corporations that provide our food, toys, metals, electronics, clothing, vacations, and household goods requires our action. To be sure, we have illustrated only one of the nearly fifteen goals identified in the previous chapter. The transition to a more equitable, ecologically sustainable, and democratic society entails movement toward all of them. Some—such as “vastly reducing energy use” and “conversion to renewable nonpolluting energy”—are quite different from the one illustrated herein. All will require some degree of increased citizen power relative to corporate power. And all depend upon “tenacious informed people’s action through organized public networks.” My hope is that conceptualizing these gateways to change and how they facilitate each other will generate faith that this goal and the others noted are far from impossible. Significant movement toward them is underway and clamors for the engagement of additional concerned, courageous, ordinary people. Glimpsing the practices and policies in this chapter also should catalyze the creative thinking needed to generate others. Efforts such as these, where aimed at claiming and creating ways of life that enable all people to have the necessities for life with dignity, and that enable Earth to flourish, enact neighbor-love as an ecological-economic vocation. 6555
Many proposals for limiting the power of global corporations focus on one or more of these “gateways” but do not use that term. For proposal, see James Gustave Speth, The Bridge at the Edge of the World: Capitalism, the Environment, and Crossing from Crisis to Sustainability (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009); David Korton, The Post-Corporate World: Life after Capitalism (San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler, 1999); The New Economy Working Group at http://www.neweconomyworkinggroup.org; Allen L. White, “Transforming the Corporation,” GTI Paper Series: Frontiers of a Great Transition (Boston: Tellus Institute, 2006); Broad, Global Backlash.↵ Even Martin Luther, renowned for his allegiance to civil authorities, insisted that where the civil authorities call for actions that disobey God, Christians are to obey God. ↵ See Philip Kotler and Nancy Lee, Corporate Social Responsibility: Doing the Most Good for Your Company and Your Cause (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2005), 3. ↵ Sangaralingam, cited by David Pellow in Resisting Global Toxics: Transnational Movements for Environmental Justice (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2007), 213–14. ↵ John Cavanagh and Jerry Mander, eds., Alternatives to Economic Globalization (San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler, 2002), 144–45. ↵ “By 1990, there were between 12,000 and 15,000 self-managed companies in Germany with around 1,000,000 workers.” Ulrich Duchrow, Alternatives to Global Capitalism (Utrecht: International, 1995), 254. ↵ The movement includes alternative schools of business, centers theorizing alternative economic models, organizing networks, and consumers as well as small-scale or local businesses. Helpful “centers” include the New Economics Foundation (London), New Economy Working Group of the Institute for Policy Studies (Washington, DC), Institute for Local Self-Reliance, Rocky Mountain Institute, and E. F. Schumacher Society. ↵ Bill McKibben’s idea of the “new economy,” described in Deep Economy: The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future (New York: St. Martin’s Griffin, 2008), calls for building local economies, which yield fewer goods but richer relationships. Ulrich Duchrow offers a theological vision for a new economy, economic theory to match it, and examples. Cavanaugh and Mander demonstrate the viability of small-scale alternatives for four key “economic operating systems”: energy, agriculture, transportation, and manufacturing (151–207). They provide a general blueprint for a shift from “factory-farming” to “small-scale, diversified . . . agricultural systems” (172). Gary Dorrien provides a descriptive and normative account of economic democracy in Economy, Difference, Empire (New York: Columbia University Press, 2010), 168. Michael Shuman, in TheSmall-Mart Revolution (San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler, 2006), 9–10, and Going Local (New York: Free Press, 1998), articulates how localities may “reinvigorate their economies by ‘going local.’” The “NGO Forum Treaty on Alternative Economic Models” produced by the NGO forum at the “Earth Summit” in Rio includes a set of principles elaborating a “vision of alternatives to the current economic models.” Ekins and Max-Neef offer critique, theory, and practical examples of the “new economy.” ↵ 6578
See the BALLE website at: http://www.livingeconomies.org. ↵ Localized democratically operated economic alternatives have flourished for decades: for example, Seikatsu Club Consumers’ Co-operative Union (SCCU), a Japanese federation of twenty-nine consumer cooperatives; Mondragon cooperative system in the Basque region of Spain; Co-op Atlantic in Canada. ↵ 6604
Duchrow, Economy, Difference, Empire, 264. ↵ Paul Hawken, Ecology of Commerce: A Declaration of Sustainability (New York: Harper Business, 1993), xiv. ↵ 6612
Judith Richter, Holding Corporations Accountable (London: Zed, 2001), 28–43, analyzes the debate. ↵ Motorola’s “Environmental Vision Statement” cited in Kolter and Lee, Corporate Social Responsibility, 207. ↵ CSRwire, Oak Brook, “McDonald’s Social Responsibility Report: One-Year Global Update” (2 May 2003). Cited in Kotler and Lee, Corporate Social Responsibility, 7. ↵ Telephone interview with Andy Acho, worldwide director, Environmental Outreach & Strategy, Ford Motor Company, April 13, 2004. Cited in Kotler and Lee, Corporate Social Responsibility, 6. ↵ Carlos M. Gutierrez, “Corporate Citizenship,” Kellogg Company. Cited in ibid., 6. ↵ Jeffrey Hollender and Stephen Fenichell, What Matters Most: How a Small Group of Pioneers Is Teaching Social Responsibility to Big Business and Why Big Business Is Listening (New York: Basic Books, 2004), dust jacket. ↵ Richter writes: “Through the end of the 1960s corporate regulation was seen as a matter of democratic control over corporations . . . it was understood that firm rules were needed to ensure both optimal operation of markets and the prevention of . . . abuses of power and corporate neglect of responsibility” (17). See Richter (6–27) for a historical account of the regulation of transnational corporations and the ensuing deregulation movement. One of the most vociferous attacks on the idea of “regulation” was from the Chicago School of Economics. ↵ Richter, Holding Corporations Accountable, 6–26. ↵ Two were Nike and Rio Tinto. ↵ Pharis Harvey, Terry Collingsworth, and Bama Athreya, “Developing Effective Mechanisms for Implementing Labor Rights in the Global Economy,” in Lance Compa and Maria Cook, eds., Workers in the Global Economy: Project Papers and Workshop Reports (Cornell University, International Labor Rights Fund, Institute for Policy Studies, and Economic Policy Institute, January 2001), 42–49, cited in Broad, Global Backlash, 231. ↵ Harris Gleckman and Riva Krut, The Social Benefits of Regulating International Business (Geneva: UNRISD, 1994), 8–9, cited in Richter, Holding Corporations Accountable, 41. ↵ The process whereby toxic “sludge” was renamed “biosolid” and reassigned from “hazardous waste” status to “class A fertilizer” exemplifies the power of corporate PR to avoid regulation by manipulating public perception. In the early 1990s, the sewage industry, faced with limited locales for storing “sludge” contaminated by industrial waste, enlisted its PR organization to orchestrate a name change and pave the way for sludge to become a fertilizer. The Name Change Task Force landed on “biosolids,” and the EPA modified its standards regulating the application of sludge to farm lands; “sludge” (biosolids) became a “Class A” fertilizer for use on food crops. The EPA enlisted a PF firm to educate the public regarding benefits of sludge as a fertilizer. It remained toxic. See John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton, “A R.O.S.E. by Any Other Name,” PR Watch 2, no. 3 (Third Quarter 1995). ↵ David Vogel, The Market for Virtue (Washington, DC: Brookings, 2005), 3, 4. ↵ Morgenstern and Pizer, Reality Check, 184. 6624
Richter goes on to propose a number of “ways of limiting and offsetting the power of [transnational corporations]” (208–9). ↵ M. Vander Stichele and P. Pennartz, Making It Our Business: European NGO Campaigns on Transnational Corporations (London: Catholic Institute for International Relations, 1996), 47, cited in Richter, 192. ↵ Bill McKibben, “Hype vs. Hope: Is Corporate Do-Goodery for Real?” Mother Jones, November–December 2006, 52. ↵ Chuck Collins and Felice Yeskel, Economic Apartheid in America: A Primer on Economic Inequality and Insecurity (New York: New Press, 2000), propose multiple legislative moves to rein in corporate power and decrease the income gap and wealth gap in America. ↵ Robert Kuttner, editor of The American Prospect, cited in Collins and Yeskel, Economic Apartheid in America, 182. ↵ Collins and Yeskel, Economic Apartheid in America, 189, using data from the Living Wage Resource Center. ↵ Paul Cienfuegos, “The Arcata Initiative on Democracy and Corporations,” Synthesis/Regeneration 17 (Fall 1998). ↵ Introduced in 2001 and 2006, the bill was referred to committee and did not come to a vote. ↵ Summary of bill at http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h112-382&tab=summary. ↵ Collins and Yeskel, Economic Apartheid in America, 184–85. ↵ See Robert Pollin, “Applying a Securities Transactions Tax to the United States: Design Issues, Market Impact, and Revenue Estimates,” in Gerald Epstein, Financialization and the World Economy (Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2005), 409–25 for a rather conservative proposal. ↵ Numerous campaigns exist at state and national levels. See for example the New England Fair Trade Campaign. ↵ Political theorist Robert Dahl suggests “campaign finance reform” as one of seven “reforms to increase political equality in the United States.” Robert Dahl, On Political Equality (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2006), 100–103. Collins and Yeskel, in Economic Apartheid in America, propose fifteen “rule changes that would create a more equitable system of financing elections” (152–56). ↵ See Collins and Yeskel, Economic Apartheid in America, 204–10. ↵ Michael Northcott, A Moral Climate (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 2007), 284. ↵ A Tobin-like tax is more widely discussed in Europe and Canada than the United States. ↵ WCC testimony. ↵ TRIPS agreements—pushed through largely by the United States and huge agribusiness corporations—allow seeds to be patented by companies, effectively denying peasant farmers the right to save seed for replanting. These agreements figured in the story of Ravi and cotton seeds in chapter 7. ↵ In 2002, the township of Porter, Pennsylvania passed “the first ordinance in the nation declaring that corporations are not people.” See “Township Ordinance Attracts National Attention,” Clarion News (5 February 2003). Section 5 of the Ordinance states that “corporations shall not be considered to be ‘persons’ protected by the Constitution of the United States . . . within the township of Porter, Clarion County, Pennsylvania.” Subsequently similar ordinances were passed in other municipalities. See Community Environmental Legal Defense fund and Richard Grossman, The Daniel Penncock Democracy School Curriculum (Chambersburg, PA: CELDF, 2009), 229–334. ↵ They include: the Program on Corporations, Law, and Democracy (POCLAD), Network of Spiritual Progressives, Alliance for Democracy, Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund, Reclaimdemocracy.org, and the U.S. branch of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, among others. ↵ Union of India v. Union Carbide, before the District Court, Bhopal, 6, cited in International Commission of Jurists, “Access to Justice: Human Rights Abuses Involving Corporations—India” (Geneva: International Commission of Jurists, 2011), 62. ↵ Richter, Holding Corporations Accountable, 5. ↵ 6653
The great Spirit, hovering over her creation, exclaims in delight and love, “Oh this is so very tov.” It is good, a good that generates life. Planet Home brings forth life out of death. There is hope for the “uncreators.” We may accept resurrection from the death of “uncreating.” Reborn we may be, reborn as “keepers and tillers” of this magnificent fecund garden, Earth. Created in the image of the God of love—created, that is, to be lovers—we may claim that destiny, seeking ever more fully to love God, self, and neighbor, especially neighbors far and near who now are damaged or destroyed by how we live. The reader has mustered moral courage. It is the courage to face squarely the structural evil that inhabits our lives, not because we intend it but because of the social structures (policies, habits, assumptions, and institutions) that shape our lives. Faith in the God whom Jesus loved calls forth this courage, because to repent of such evil requires recognizing it. Doing so is dangerous. It can break one’s heart. A student of mine once said that her education at Seattle University had broken her heart. I gasped. I did not want her to leave with a broken heart. “And,” she went on, “my time here also put my heart back together again, much bigger, much stronger.” While here, she explained, her eyes had been opened to the agonizing suffering wrought by economic injustice, ecological destruction, and other forms of structural sin. Yet her eyes were opened also to the worldwide quest for justice and the power of the Sacred in it. Daring—as an ongoing practice of morality—to see the devastating impact of economic life as we live it is far less perilous if simultaneously we use a second and a third form of vision. The second is seeing “what could and should be”—that is, more just, compassionate, and ecologically sound ways of living. The third kind of vision is seeing ever more fully the life-giving, life-saving Mystery that is God flowing and pouring through all of creation, and working there toward creation’s flourishing. This, we have called “mystical seeing.” It is down-to-earth, practical. Christian ethics is charged with helping people meet the moral challenges of each new time and place, guided by the resources of Christian traditions in dialogue with other bodies of knowledge. In the case of this book the moral challenge at hand is a dramatic reorientation, the likes of which the world has never before known: high-consuming people moving from exploitative relationships with Earth and with huge sectors of the human family, to sustainable Earth-human relations marked by steadily diminishing levels of social injustice. A moral framework emerged herein. The beauty of a moral framework is its capacity to lay hold of a moral challenge that seems impossible and reveal it as possible by shining a light into the foggy mess and discovering paths through it. The light illumines also where those paths intersect and where they already are being trod by people the world over. These people are at work bringing the seemingly impossible into being. Christian ethics, I have claimed, is the art of coming to know ever more fully both God and the historical realities of life on Earth, and holding them in one breath, so that we may respond to the latter in light of the former. Where the forces that mask systemic injustice cloud our vision of God or of life’s realities, a task of Christian ethics is to enable seeing more clearly. My hope is that the journey of this book has, to some small degree, done just that. The corporate- and finance-driven global economy will change. Earth no longer can support it, and the human urge toward compassion cannot tolerate it. In what direction it changes is up to human beings. God’s ancient call to love neighbor as self may help us to direct that change toward social justice and Earth’s well-being. Words from the opening serve well in parting: “This book is one tiny part of a much larger human endeavor, the seeming impossibility of which should dissuade… 6692