Monday, November 9, 2015

Why Remembrance Day in the Church is u̶n̶B̶a̶r̶t̶h̶i̶a̶n̶ unChristian

Karl Barth's most important contribution to the church is not this or that doctrine, but a way of doing theology. This way begins with the being and action of God as revealed by the person of Christ. This being and action of God is what is really real. Human being and action is only real to the extent that it corresponds to the divine. So, for example, we do not know what a father is, and then understand God in the light of our experience or practice of fatherhood. Rather, we know God as Father, and human fatherhood or lack thereof can only be seen in this light. Human fatherhood is first of all judged and then redeemed by the Fatherhood of God. Or better, first of all redeemed, and then judged.

One of Remembrance Day's effects on the church is the undoing of Karl Barth's contribution. On Remembrance Day we begin with a human understanding of sacrifice, and in the light of this we understand "the greatest sacrifice" offered by Christ. In churches up and down the UK, the relationship between Christ as Lord and the church as servant is reversed. We remember our deeds and judge Him on their terms, when we should be remembering His deeds and opening ourselves up to His gracious judgement. On this day of reversal we forget that Christ was the collateral damage of a foreign occupation conducted in the name of peace, and that he suffered at the hands of those who sacrificed their lives (and the lives of their enemies) for the empire.

One does not need to be a pacifist, then, to oppose the "celebration" of Remembrance Day within the church. One only needs to pay attention to the proper logic of Christian talk about God: a logic based on the truth that when we talk about God we are not talking about a greater version of ourselves.


3 comments:

  1. Point of fact. Remembrance day is increasingly being celebrated up and down Ireland as well. CofI churches in particular but a number of the Presbyterian churches do aswell. Its not the all encompassing thing it can be in the UK but its there. I don't know if you have ever been into the CofI St Patricks cathedral, if you haven't you should at least look at some online pics, what you'll see is a heap of regimental flags from the first world war. In the last few years their remembrance days are getting bigger and bigger, this year the sinn fein Lord Mayor of dublin even attended it.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Point of fact. Remembrance day is increasingly being celebrated up and down Ireland as well. CofI churches in particular but a number of the Presbyterian churches do aswell. Its not the all encompassing thing it can be in the UK but its there, often as a 5 minute thing before the service proper. I don't know if you have ever been into the CofI St Patricks cathedral, if you haven't you should at least look at some online pics, what you'll see is a heap of regimental flags from the first world war. In the last few years their remembrance days are getting bigger and bigger, this year the sinn fein Lord Mayor of dublin even attended it.

    ReplyDelete
  3. http://www.stpatrickscathedral.ie/Virtual-Tour.aspx

    ReplyDelete