A Political History of the Bible in America

A Political History of the Bible in America

by Paul D. Hanson
A Political History of the Bible in America

A Political History of the Bible in America

by Paul D. Hanson

Paperback(New Edition)

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Overview

"Biblical history, enriched by many religious and cultural traditions, flows into and is intertwined with our nation's epic, both for better and for worse. To ignore that history is to cut ourselves off from our roots and to deny the ancestral experiences that forged our individual and collective identity."
from the prologue

This substantial work explores the interplay of religion and politics throughout the history of the United States. Paul D. Hanson traces American history back to colonial times, paying close attention to the role that biblical tradition has played in shaping the national story of the United States. He then presents a detailed study of politics in the Bible that is framed by the challenges and crises in American history. Students will learn how deeply religion has influenced both domestic and international policy and contributed to the nation's sense of identity and purpose. After laying these biblical-historical foundations, Hanson considers a method of biblical interpretation that can speak to the diverse nation of today. He proposes an inclusive form of public moral discourse that invites full participation by members of all religious and philosophical groups.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780664260392
Publisher: Westminster John Knox Press
Publication date: 08/24/2015
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 694
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.70(h) x 1.70(d)
Age Range: 6 Years

About the Author

Paul D. Hanson is Florence Corliss Lamont Research Professor of Divinity at Harvard Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he has taught since 1971.

Read an Excerpt

From the Prologue

In invoking the metaphor of story, we have begun to build the case for an under- standing of political process that reclaims the historical dimension of nation- hood and the essential role of memory in fostering a vibrant and just society while at the same time taking into full account the modern phenomenon of diversity. When national identity is understood in terms of historical ontology rather than abstract theory, the question of who we are as a people invokes the historical question, where do we come from and what are the narratives and practices that shape our sense of shared goals? When those questions evoke memories of flights from bondage to freedom and an inheritance of copious streams and fecund fields, a sense of pride infuses the national consciousness. But when deeper scrutiny discloses the expropriation of those streams and fields from their native owners, the role of memory in defining national identity tempers national pride with self-critique.

To be sure, many citizens, desirous of an ebullient picture of the past, cultivate a national story that resembles fable more than fact. Patriotism becomes the pretense for bowdlerizing the textbooks teaching American history to the next generation. To pledge allegiance to the flag takes on the aura of worship that categorically erases any sense of regret or need for redress. But as we have learned from Nazi Germany, history teaches a severe lesson: if a sanitized version of the nation’s story becomes official, lies trump hard truths, sanctimoniousness excludes all sense of remorse, and a climate is created in the nation’s citadels of power for combative politics and belligerent foreign policy. A potentially deadly disease invades the heart of the land.

Though less pernicious than the demagogical hijacking of Scripture, another dubious interpretive practice is widespread in the United States. It involves consulting the Bible as one would a recipe book or a repair manual in search of clear answers to complex questions that deserve not facile directives but careful analysis drawing on the profound moral insights of Scripture. Flat-footed proof- texting errs by failing to recognize the subjective aspect of all interpretation. The way forward must be one that courageously and patiently seeks to honor traditions by hearing them in their own voices and then patiently and diligently strives for answers benefiting from the contributions of all participants in a diverse society.

Moving forward in the case of this study has as its goal the formulation of a theopolitical hermeneutic capable of channeling the cacophony of religious beliefs and moral principles that reside in contemporary society into a rich and productive public dialogue. But before we embark on that theological task, our historicist perspective calls for two historically oriented investigations to provide essential background. Both will reflect the concrete cultural location of the author, one his US citizenship, the other his biblically based religious orientation.

In part 1, we shall trace chapters of a story that over the course of several centuries has fashioned the heart of US identity and, in new chapters that continue to be written, unfolds further its open-ended plot. Because of the resiliently religious character of the American people from colonial times to the present, we shall be attentive to the role that biblical tradition has played in shaping the national story. That that role was considerable is understandable in light of a shared quality: the nation’s history and biblical history are both filled with identity-building stories, stories depicting origins, adjustments to new experiences, enrichment through encounters with the alien and the unexpected, and above all, a sense of purpose that asserts the need to make sense of the whole. In the case of ancient Israel, this implied the triumph of epic over myth in the case of the United States, it implied a dynamic notion of risk taking and growth into newness over a static model of eternal order.

The legacy uncovered in part 1 will be a checkered one, ranging from rank exploitation of biblical texts on behalf of national self-interest to instances of exemplary charity and self-sacrifice that bring to light the nation’s potential for promoting equality, justice, and well-being both at home and abroad. But the most ominous discovery to surface will be the arbitrariness characterizing most applications of the Bible to political issues. Repeatedly one detects neither concern for the meaning intrinsic to the scriptural texts in their own setting nor sensitivity to the delicate balance between religion and state established by the First Amendment.

Part 2 in turn will present a detailed study of politics in the Bible, beginning with tribal judges and moving on to kings, priests, prophets, governors, and seers. Framed by the challenges and crises discussed in the survey of American history, its purpose is that of securing a reliable biblical-historical foundation for the constructive task that follows in the epilogue of formulating a theopolitical hermeneutic defining guidelines for the application of scriptural tradition to contemporary issues.

For the sake of clarity, we shall now give a more detailed description of the pivotal position held by part 2 within the overall structure of our study. Alexander Pope penned an apt caption for that section: “A little learning is a dan- gerous thing; Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring.” For as noted above, our survey of the relation of Bible and politics in US history unveiled flagrant arbitrariness in the use/abuse of Scripture from colonial times to the present. In the case of a source with such latent power in a highly religious country, “a little learning” is not only dangerous; it is potentially lethal to many defenseless people at home and abroad. Serious learning is urgently called for to liberate the Bible from the control of opportunists and the unscrupulous and to place it in the hands of the meek and the poor and those who seek to restore the dignity and rights of all. Fair-minded people of all persuasions can unite in respecting the Bible as a classical source to be studied for the insights it can provide and to opposing the self-serving exercise of treating Scripture as a mirror to be peered into for the comfort of “discovering” in its pages one’s own ideological views and prejudices!

Specifically regarding the political exploitation of the Bible, one discovery that emerges from a rigorous historical method is that the Bible does not formulate one monolithic, timeless political model ready to be cut out and pasted as a template for contemporary policy, but six distinct models, each the product of a community applying its central beliefs and values to the changing circumstances of its own time and place. Grasping and being tutored by the dynamic that enabled biblical communities to apply core beliefs and moral principles to the challenges raised by the concrete issues with which they contended emerges as the responsible alternative to the mechanistic practice of imposing subjectively formulated (though purportedly inerrant!) “Biblical” truths on the vastly different world of modernity.

The dynamic, historically adaptable character of the Bible that emerges from disciplined research places a solemn responsibility on anyone seeking to present the relevance of Scripture for contemporary politics in a manner both sensitive to the Bible’s historical richness and comprehensible to the modern reader. While attention to historical context and original meaning and function of biblical texts provides a necessary restraint on the temptation to exploit the Bible for ideological purposes, it runs the risk of overwhelming the reader interested in the contemporary political relevance of Scripture with an unfathomable welter of details. While arguing that the Bible is not a timeless manual providing ready- made answers to every contemporary issue, it would be a serious blunder to give the impression that it is a compendium rerum accessible exclusively to archaeologists and antiquarians. What is accordingly called for is an approach capable of re-presenting in terms comprehensible to modern readers the biblical dynamic of fidelity to core beliefs and principles as the basis for applying the Bible to an ever-changing society and world.

Once again we are reminded of the relevance of the lessons we derived from our exploration of the identity-generating function of story for a historical approach to the politics of the Bible. Ancient Scriptures, our nation’s history, and our contemporary personal and political existence constitute the threads from which we weave a sense of meaning and purpose. Attentiveness to those threads reveals the common ground shared between our ancestors, ourselves, and our progeny. The resulting generation-transcending experience fosters a sense of indebtedness to the stories passed on to us for our consciousness of self- hood and community-belonging in the present and of confidence that we are preserving for and handing on to our descendants a story that they will continue to compose.

This sense of in medias res given to us by the metaphor of life as story saves us from the imprisonment of fossilization (we are slaves of our past) and predeterminism (we have no influence on the future). The past that nourishes us and the future we bequeath to the next generation are dynamic in nature, creating a sense of reality that is open though not aimless, affected by events already recorded though not stuck in them. While providing us with a sense of identity and purpose, our story is not exclusive or parochial, but open and hospitable to all who are willing to contribute from the richness of their stories to the com- mon human task of building a just and peaceable world.

This last point invites us to extend the metaphor in the direction of our goal of reclaiming the Bible for political edification: Storytellers share a very large tent. Among those accepting the invitation to participate are Aristotelians seek- ing to guide their society (polis) on the basis of a shared vision of the common good (telos). Joining them are those pious lovers of torah who perform daily acts of kindness (miṣwôt) because their inner being is fashioned by the Seder tale of an ancient act of divine mercy. Hans Georg Gadamer’s disciples join the show, with their sense of the fusion of ancient and modern horizons,25 as do the students of Alasdair MacIntyre with their embrace of narratives pregnant with present- day meaning.26 The guest list goes on, because if your invitation welcomes all who love stories and are willing to share theirs and hear others, walls are converted into bridges and dimly burning wicks turn into torches illuminating the pathway from the events that built community consciousness in antiquity to the groundbreaking experiences of our own forebears as they struggled to build a nation and finally on down to our own involvement in the vital issues of con- temporary existence.

Once we as public-minded citizens have grasped the ongoing, open-ended nature of our individual and communal identities with the aid of the metaphor of story, the contribution of the two diachronic studies constituting parts 1 and 2 to our overarching topic of the Bible and politics becomes evident: biblical history, enriched by many religious and cultural traditions, flows into and is intertwined with our nation’s epic, both for better and for worse. To ignore that history is to cut ourselves off from our roots and to deny the ancestral experiences that forged our individual and collective identity. Expressed in terms of historical ontology, our neglect or forgetfulness of the diachronic dimension of life is tantamount to the refutation of our authenticity and essential being, a refutation that readily leads to uprootedness and alienation.

History in the vast arc of its unfolding over the centuries and millennia is the most reliable tutor available from which to learn from our ancestors the mistakes they made as well as the things they got right. For believers of all types, as well as for historically sensitive secularists and atheists in a richly diverse society, ancient scriptural legacies (including non-Judeo-Christian traditions), as they flow into a nation’s history and finally into the lives of families and individuals, can be treasured as generative chapters enriching our own sense of identity and location within the larger scheme of things.

Having secured in parts 1 and 2 the historical foundation for our theopolitical task, we shall broach in the epilogue the question of the contemporary message of the Bible, keenly mindful of the dynamic phenomenon of story that furnishes the lens through which we can grasp the nature and abiding significance of both national and biblical history. Indeed, the essential lineaments of our theopolitical hermeneutic should arise organically from the two historical surveys. What we shall propose is a manner of public moral discourse that invites full participation by members of all religious and philosophical groups in a robust style of engagement enriched by full expression of the deepest moral insights of each, rather than a tepid exchange of ecumenical platitudes. The universal harmony envisioned by rationalism will be eschewed in favor of the inevitable messiness of genuine debate among adherents of distinct systems of belief and morals that resists meltdown into a single mold. Deeply rooted convictions will not be checked at the door like so many colorful umbrellas, for the invitation will stipulate for open conversation respectful of the distinctiveness of each group and appreciative of the fact that values are not the products of dispassionate rational deliberations, but rather are expressions of the identities shaped by specific narrative traditions and practices. In terms introduced earlier in this chapter, beliefs, ethical principles, and the identities they shape are the products of the particular historical ontology and distinctive paradigms embedded in a given community’s story.

In the public forum that we envision, fear of conflict arising from divergent perspectives is not the driving factor, but rather the appeal of substantive moral inquiry that benefits from the mix of insights found where participants grant to others the same right of expression that they enjoy themselves. The challenge is of such complexity as to be eschewed by those who persist in pursuit of an imaginary neutral ground productive of universal principles, as well as by those dedicated to the triumph of their purported superior systems of belief and morals over all other inferior systems and wont to withdraw bitterly from public engagement when denied that triumph.

The more difficult path of discourse predicated on diversity represents in itself a rigorous moral test, since participation must extend beyond persons viewing all religious/philosophical differences from a relativistic perspective. To have any social traction, the path into the future must include those who hold a deep commitment to the truthfulness of their beliefs, values, and moral principles, while at the same time acknowledging that since no human is omniscient, enrichment from other perspectives is beneficial. Add to this the pragmatic consideration that the path of inclusive participation is the only peaceable way for- ward for a diverse society and one has laid the foundation for a promising model of productive public discourse. If we succeed in our investigation, we shall have demonstrated that an important aspect of that discourse revolves around the politics of the Bible.

Table of Contents

Preface

Prologue: Story, Identity, and Making Sense of the Bible

PART 1: A HISTORICAL RETROSPECTIVE ON THE RELATION BETWEEN THE BIBLE AND POLITICS IN THE UNITED STATES

Introduction

1 The Theocratic Model of the Puritans

2 The Challenge of the Prophetic-Dialectical Model

3 The Revolutionary Period and the Lure of the Apocalyptic Model

4 Church and State in the Founding Documents

5 The Church-State Partnership of the Antebellum Years

6 The Gilded Age: The Gospel of Wealth and the Social Gospel

7 Twentieth-Century Challenges

8 The Twenty-First Century's Perilous Debut

PART 2: POLITICS IN THE BIBLE

9 Defining a Suitable Interpretive Method

10 Charismatic Rule: Israel's First Polity

11 Monarchy: "Like the Other Nations"

12 Prophetic Politics

13 The Politics of Amos: Idolatrous Nationalism and the Collapse of Moral Leadership

14 The Politics of Hosea: Moral Bankruptcy and Civil Chaos

15 Isaiah: The Majesty of the Holy One as the Nation's Sole Foundation

16 Jeremiah: The Suffering Prophet

17 Ezekiel: Calamity, Ritual Cleansing, and Restoration

18 Isaiah 40-55: Exile and the Renewal of Hope

19 Haggai and Zechariah: A Temple-Centered Vision of Restoration

20 The Jewish Commonwealth and a Politics of Accommodation

21 Isaiah 24-27, 56-66; Ezekiel 38-39; Zechariah 9-14; Malachi: Dissent and the Dawning of Apocalyptic Politics

22 Sapiential Politics in Proverbs, Sirach, Job, and Ecclesiastes

23 The Apocalyptic Politics of the Book of Daniel and the Dead Sea Scrolls

24 Roman Occupation and Jewish Political Responses

25 The Politics of the New Testament

26 The Politics of Jesus

27 The Politics of the Apostle Paul

28 The Church Accommodates Itself to a World Not About to End

29 The Book of Revelation: A Persecuted Community Seeks Shelter in an Apocalyptic Vision

30 The Politics of the Four Gospels and Acts of the Apostles

Epilogue: What Is the Bible's Message for Today?

Index of Scripture and Other Ancient Sources

Index of Subjects

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