Bin Laden's Death Discomfits Religious Left

Posted By Mark D. Tooley On May 9, 2011 

>From the safety of his London palace, the Church of England's Archbishop of
Canterbury is questioning whether the U.S. Navy Seals' killing of Osama Bin
Laden exemplified "justice."

"The killing of an unarmed man is always going to leave a very uncomfortable
feeling because it doesn't look as if justice is seen to be done," Rowan
Williams told a press conference at Lambeth Palace.  "I don't know full
details any more than anyone else does. But I do believe that in such
circumstances when we are faced with someone who was manifestly a war
criminal, in terms of the atrocities inflicted, it is important that justice
is seen to be observed."

Presumably, the Archbishop discerns "justice" in a decades-long captivity
for Bin Laden, which may or may not have involved a billion dollar show
trial, and endless controversy over the trial's and the incarceration's
location, not to mention reams of endless global publicity for Bin Laden's
genocidal version of Islamism.

Williams' concerns were echoed by fellow Anglican Bishop of Winchester
Michael Scott-Joynt, who criticized Bin Laden's killing as "an act of
vengeance" that might provoke reprisals against Christians.  When St. Paul
wrote that that civil "rulers" are the "ministers of God" who "beareth not
the sword in vain" and who are a "revenger to execute wrath upon him that
doeth evil," was the Apostle advocating "vengeance?"  Of a sorts, yes, since
he declared that rulers, when performing properly, are divine instruments
for God's legitimate vengeance upon evil doing.  But religious leftists are
uncomfortable about talk of human evil, preferring to spin their utopians
dreams from ecclesial palaces, seminary campuses, and insulated, endowed
pulpits.

In some contrast to the British bishops, U.S., religious leftists, so far,
mostly have demurred from directly criticizing the U.S. strike against the
terrorist mastermind.  Instead, they have fretted over the supposedly
frightful crowds of young celebrants who rejoiced over bin Laden's demise
outside the White House, in New York's Times Square, and in Harvard Yard.

Himself visiting in Britain when Bin Laden died, Emergent Church guru Brian
McLaren tut-tutted over disturbing scenes of "American college students
reveling outside the White House, shouting, chanting 'USA' and spilling
beer."  He shared his embarrassment as an American, since "this image does
not reflect well on my country, especially in contrast to the images that
have been so strong here in recent days . revelers celebrating a wedding."
And he further intoned:  "Joyfully celebrating the killing of a killer who
joyfully celebrated killing carries an irony that I hope will not be lost on
us. Are we learning anything, or simply spinning harder in the cycle of
violence?"

>From the Religious/Evangelical Left's pacifist perspective, a lawful
government's execution of a mass murderer who had slain thousands of its
citizens only contributes to the "cycle of violence."  And presumably
McLaren would have preferred that the college students who waved the flag
for a few hours in the streets on Sunday evening should instead have
penitently withdrawn into prayer closets, to lash themselves for complicity
in American imperialism. 

Evangelical Left activist and Sojourners chief Jim Wallis, who cherishes his
ties to the Obama White House, was more careful in his public angst.
"Pumping our fists in victory or celebrating in the streets is probably not
the best Christian response to anyone's death, even the death of a dangerous
and violent enemy," he wrote for CNN's religion blog.  "The chants of 'USA,
USA, USA' are also not the best mantra for believers who should know that
they are meant to be Christians first and Americans second."  So is any
exuberant expression of patriotic joy by definition an idolatrous exaltation
of nation over God?  For religious leftists like Wallis, the answer is
likely yes.  Wallis also complained that U.S. Christians have valued
innocent American lives "more than the innocents who were in the way of our
wars in response to the attacks against us."   Certainly Christians esteem
all human life as sacred to God.  But just as parents have special
responsibility for their own children, even while wishing well to everyone's
children, do not nations, especially governments, have a special
responsibility for the people over which Providence has assigned them unique
authority?  This point eludes trans-nationalists like Wallis.

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Also implying moral equivalence, Wallis decried that the "violence of
terrorism, the violence of war, and even the violent reprisal against Osama
bin Laden on Sunday should all push us to deeper reflection, and even
repentance, for how we have allowed the seeds of such destruction to take
root and grow in our hearts and in our world."  Wallis is a pacifist though
he usually avoids full disclosure, lest he lose political viability.  But
ultimately, because he rejects all force, he cannot ethically distinguish
between armed rescuers, armed victims, and armed victimizers, because all
are somehow equally guilty of violating an imaginary pacifist ideal.

In a woeful vein similar to Wallis, United Church of Christ President
Geoffery Black, in a typically detached fashion, lamented that "there were
those in this country who felt a need for revenge that could only be
satisfied by bringing bin Laden to justice, which in the minds of many meant
killing him."  He further complained that while "many celebrate this event
and feel that it has provided the nation with a fitting response to the
horrific and brutal attack on citizens of the United States, there are
others who see no reason to rejoice and instead feel a deep sense of
disquiet and unease." For more spiritually enlightened souls like the Rev.
Black, "there is no joy in this moment for us, because first and foremost we
understand ourselves to be the disciples of Jesus," who "calls us in his
teachings to do the difficult thing of loving our enemies and praying for
those who persecute us."  Does "loving our enemies" demand allowing them to
continue mass murder?  Is it not a mercy, not only to future victims, but
also even to the killers themselves, including Bin Laden, to destroy them
before they murder again, for which they will be held accountable before
God?

More opaquely than Rev. Black, the National Council of Churches declared:
"Just as Christians must condemn the violence of terrorism, let us be clear
that we do not celebrate loss of life under any circumstances," since the
"ultimate justice for this man's soul - or any soul - is in the hands of
God."  The NCC urged:  "Let us turn to a future that embraces God's call to
be peacemakers, pursuers of justice and loving neighbors to all people."
There was nothing from the church council about the justice of ending Bin
Laden's decades of slaughter, which begs the question of what exactly these
nearly two dozen bishops and other prelates who endorsed the church
council's declaration meant exactly by "love" and justice."

The Religious Left disbelieves or is profoundly uncomfortable with the
teachings of their own Jewish and Christian tradition, which declare that
there is human evil and that God ordained civil governments to repress evil
where possible in a fallen world.  Commonly the Religious Left confuses the
church's role, which is to offer grace and forgiveness, with the role of
temporal authorities, which is to punish and deter wrongdoing.  Adding to
its confusion, the Religious Left disapproves of national loyalties,
especially to the hegemonic United States, and instead dreams of a utopian
world government that supposedly would better model God's Kingdom.
Naturally, the Religious Left rejects any pleasure over evil's defeat,
however imperfect, despite countless biblical celebrations, such as Miriam's
joyful song over the drowning of Pharaoh's army during their pursuit of
escaping Hebrews.  And finally, the Religious Left is smugly elitist and
remarkably stews over even the fleeting patriotic display of mostly liberal
college students in Washington, D.C., New York, and Cambridge.

Elitist obscurantists like the Archbishop of Canterbury will continue to
count imagined angels on needle-heads.  But Religious Leftists' inability to
confront even an obvious evil like Bin Laden illustrates their moral
inconsequentiality.

*

To get the whole story on why leftists are unhappy when Islamo-fascists like
bin Laden get killed, read Jamie Glazov's critically-acclaimed, United in
Hate: The Left
<http://www.amazon.com/United-Hate-Romance-Tyranny-Terror/dp/1935071602> 's
Romance with Tyranny and Terror.

 

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Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com

URL to article:
http://frontpagemag.com/2011/05/09/bin-laden%e2%80%99s-death-discomfits-reli
gious-left/

 



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