*The American Empire
And The Commonwealth Of God*

*By Jim Miles*

05 October, 2007
*Countercurrents.org*

*Book Review: The American Empire and the Commonwealth of God – A Political,
Economic, Religious Statement. John Cobb, Richard Falk, David Griffin and
Catherine Keller. Westminster John Knox Press, Louisville, Kentucky, 2006. *

*B*ased solely on the title, this book appeared to be something that could
have some strong revelations on the nature of the American Empire and its
relationship with religion. Having read several books from the religious
right, including the first volume of the "Left Behind" series (summed up as
a compilation of Star Wars, Harlequin Romance, and end of times theology), I
thought this volume might have a more rational approach than the fear
mongering and devilish rhetoric that saturates the right wing material.

Surprisingly, The American Empire and the Commonwealth of God is quite full
of what for many are very common sense observations concerning the nature of
the empire. It is not until three-quarters of the way through the volume
that religious issues are addressed, and it is definitely not supportive of
the evangelical end of times demonizing rants against the evil arising in
Iraq and Iran. The four authors (three of whom are professors of theology)
have, as would be expected, very similar viewpoints and understanding of the
empire, and more surprisingly, have a strong similarity stylistically with
their writing such that the reader can hardly tell which author is writing
what without referring to the table of contents. That makes for a very clear
and coherent read overall, with the work divided into three broad sections:
The Nature of the American Empire, Alternatives to the American Empire, and
finally, Religious Reflections.

The book starts with a religious conviction, that "We oppose the American
empire on the basis of what we believe to be the sacred divinely rooted
moral law of the universe" a statement that needs to be juxtaposed against
the "universal values" so broadly declared by the empire's leaders. Given
that the "dominant image of the Divine Reality has been easily used to
support empire, this image is profoundly wrong, even idolatrous." From that
strongly worded contradiction of the evangelical right, its end of times
prophecies, and complicity in the Israeli Zionist project, the authors
settle into a fully secular argument.

Quite straightforwardly the authors state "the United States has long been
working toward the goal of exercising unchallenged and exploitative control
of the planet," based on the apologists argument that it is an empire
"dedicated to the spread of democracy." In counter-argument, the authors
"find nothing in the history of U.S. foreign policy in general or that of
the Bush-Cheney administration in particular to lend credibility to this
conceit." The replacement of the present global order, "which is based on
violence and other modes of coercion, with a world based on democratic
principles will be a shift of enormous magnitude," but that for this shift,
"a threefold vision already exists."

The first argument presents ideas against the dual beliefs that the empire
is both "accidental" and "benign". The main sources of information here are
Andrew J. Bacevich's American Empire and Chalmers Johnson's Sorrows of
Empire, both of which highlight the purposeful and harmful direction the
empire has always had. One item that stood out is the significant amount of
money used for the military, estimated at over $760 billion dollars, which
amounts to "not one-fifth of federal spending but two thirds of it." This is
a much more realistic comparison of military spending than the artificial
comparison to the GDP of which it comprises about five per cent. The GDP is
wealth created in all forms in a year; the budget reflects how much the
government has to spend yearly on health, education…and the military, a more
appropriate comparison.

"Imperialism in American Economic Policy" examines the idea that the economy
"is the overall context" of society rather than being only part of a broader
society such that education, government and sometimes religion are in the
service of the economy. Summaries of the economic development through the
post war years follows the now standard reductionist view of an imperial
economy that "largely speaks for the transnational corporations," using the
standard examples of economic failure as created by the World Bank, IMF, and
WTO. Overall, as with Stiglitz, Chua, and Johnson, the author notes "to this
date, not a single country has successfully developed on neoliberal
principles," but to the contrary the successful ones have "taken place on
the principles of national economy." Finally, the economy, currently based
on deficit financing, and the foreign ownership of U.S. debt, leads to the
simple conclusion, "we are going to be in trouble."

The view of America as approaching a "Fascist World Order" is argued next
with the most "inflammatory" imperial behaviour being how the "United
Nations has been used and abused in the Palestine-Israel conflict" because
"if the American leadership genuinely wanted to give priority to the
challenge of global terrorism, overcoming the Palestinian ordeal by
realizing the national rights of the Palestinians would be at the very top
of Washington's policy agenda." From a religious point of view, even though
it is not argued as such at this point, this is in stark contrast to the
religious right's view of the necessity of a unified Eretz Israel over all
the lands of Palestine. On further discussion of the double standards
towards nuclear proliferation, the author identifies the "maddening
arrogance" that "evades the awkward reality that Israel has secretly
developed such weapons," communicating to others "the harsh degree to which
American pretensions …on the issue of nonproliferation are geopolitically
motivated, self-serving, and abusive with respect to the aspirations of many
of the peoples of the world."

In Part II, "Alternatives to the American Empire", the authors start with an
argument concerning renouncing wars of choice. As a philosophical statement
it is strongly idealistic, with the challenge taking "the form of a radical
attack on the role of violence as the foundation of global security and the
maintenance of the inequality of material conditions." Underlying this must
be the establishment of "a serious and concerted pedagogy of peace within
our institutions of learning," otherwise "it is increasingly difficult to be
hopeful about the future."

While discussing "Global Democracy", the authors wisely see that reforming
the WTO, the IMF and the World Bank as recently argued by Stiglitz is not
the way to go. Rather, the "war system" and its sustenance of "anarchy" will
face an "inevitable" collapse, comprising both economic and ecological
disaster, along with the end of the "idolatry of economic growth." The
solution lies in decentralization, putting decisions into the hands of
smaller communities of peoples, then building communities of communities.
While not mentioning the UN per se, the descriptions of "moral" NGOs and
religions uniting for a cause lead to my considering how this institution
can be revitalized to play the role it should serve, as a federated global
governance institute. Unfortunately the authors do not postulate any
particular institute or organization to lead this unitary cause.

With their turn towards the religious side of the question, the authors
discuss the "overt legitimacy" offered to the empire by Christianity, with
the "global hegemony" drawing "its aura of sacrality not only from the
warring apocalyptic extremities it provokes," but also requiring "wave after
wave of conquest for Christ." This leads to the demonizing of the 'other',
the creation of an 'axis of evil' (following on Reagan's "evil empire' of
the 1980s). The "potent merger of elitist idealism with conservative
Christian populism has provided the overarching legitimation of our empire,"
justifying and legitimating ultimately the right of preemptive and
preventative war.

As this work is ultimately designed for arguments concerning a Christian
perspective on the empire, the final discussion on a Social Gospel and
Liberation Theology leads to a profound anti-empirical statement. As the
ideals of Jesus were distinctly anti-imperial vis a vis the Roman
conquerors, and it was initially recognized as such and persecuted before it
was pre-empted by the Roman state, a renewal of this original viewpoint is
expressed very strongly: "Jesus' teaching of the commonwealth of God…is the
deepest grounds for opposition to the American empire," as those who are
Christians "are called to fan the sparks of the message into a flame that
can help reverse the headlong plunge of our nation into the lust for world
domination." Perhaps even more strongly worded "the combination of economic
and, increasingly, military power to bring the whole world under U.S.
control" is a project "like the Nazi project – as antithetical to Christian
faith."

I found The American Empire and the Commonwealth of God very refreshing
after reading so much from the apocalyptic right and seeing and hearing so
much of the vanity of invoking 'God' and the name of Jesus while killing,
torturing, terrorizing, and generally subjugating the global population to
the dictates of the American empire. Another strength along this line is the
lack of discussion of 'just war' rhetoric that only justifies and creates
apologetics to sanctify war (as supported by Canada's 'just warrior' Michael
Ignatieff). While this work relies on other common secular works that argue
against empire, it is a worthwhile read to understand that Christianity has
strong currents opposed to the imperial project. Hopefully that view,
combined with the secular views against the empire that support their views,
will one day prove successful, both requiring "courage" to "denounce and
work against the American empire."


*Jim Miles* is a Canadian educator and a regular contributor/columnist of
opinion pieces and book reviews to Palestine Chronicles. His interest in
this topic stems originally from an environmental perspective, which
encompasses the militarization and economic subjugation of the global
community and its commodification by corporate governance and by the
American government.

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
 To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to