
Here’s a few gems from Stanley Hauerwas’ interview on his new book, “Performing the Faith: Bonhoeffer and the Practice of Nonviolence.
I have argued that Christians’ first political responsibility is to be the church, and by being the church they should understand that their first political loyalty is to God, and the God we worship as Christians, in a manner that understands that we are not first and foremost about making democracy work, but about the truthful worship of the true God.
This is a deep misunderstanding about how Christianity works. Of course we believe that God is God and we are not and that God is Father, Son and Holy Spirit but that this is not a set of propositions — but is rather embedded in a community of practices that make those beliefs themselves work and give us a community by which we are shaped. Religious belief is not just some kind of primitive metaphysics, but in fact it is a performance just like you’d perform Lear. What people think Christianity is, is that it’s like the text of Lear, rather than the actual production of Lear. It has to be performed for you to understand what Lear is — a drama. You can read it, but unfortunately Christians so often want to make Christianity a text rather than a performance.
HAUERWAS: The difficulty about becoming a public official in America is that the training necessary for being a politician makes you the kind of person that can’t distinguish a lie from the truth anymore.
HOMILETICS: So politicians should not go to law school, they should go through seminary.
HAUERWAS: That would be a really good idea — a way of formation. But then, you see, one of the things that bothers me deeply about the situation we’re in is how seldom preachers tell their congregations the truth! That’s where you’ve got to start in a genuine politics.
Explanations are attempts to domesticate the wildness of God’s Spirit in a cause-and-effect model. You can’t explain God. If you think an explanation is possible, then you think that there’s some principle that is more determinative than God to explain God. One way to put it: People say, “Well how do I know that Jesus was raised from the dead?” I say, “If you need a theory of truth to explain that Jesus was raised from the dead, worship that theory, don’t worship Jesus!”
Read the whole thing here and be sure to check out the book as well.
Abbie said...
1Thanks for reading this quote Monday night- it is a good illustration of the difference between simply knowing what you believe and living what you believe. Because really, true belief translates into action!
11/12/08 6:33 AM | Comment Link
jrrozko said...
2Way to find the blog Abbie, and thanks for the comment. If you appreciated any of those quotes by Hauerwas and haven't read him, I would highly recommend either "Community of Character," or "Resident Aliens." While I think he would agree with what you said, he would probably also be quick to say that action also results in the formation of our beliefs. Great to have met you, all the best.
11/12/08 8:24 AM | Comment Link
Random Acts of Linkage #86 : Subversive Influence said...
3[...] Hauerwas around his new book, Performing the Faith: Bonhoeffer and the Practice of Nonviolence (via) He calls himself “a reluctant [...]
11/15/08 6:08 AM | Comment Link