
Augustine Refuting Heretic
ELEVENTH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST
Prayer of the Day: O God, eternal goodness, immeasurable love, you place your gifts before us; we eat and are satisfied. Fill us and this world in all its need with the life that comes only from you, through Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord.
“There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called to the one hope of your calling, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is above all and through all and in all.” Ephesians 4:4-6.
“We must no longer be children, tossed to and fro and blown about by every wind of doctrine, by people’s trickery, by their craftiness in deceitful scheming.” Ephesians 4:14.
More than a decade ago now an acquaintance of mine, a colleague ordained as a pastor in the United Methodist Church, informed me that she was converting to Roman Catholicism. I was flabbergasted. “Why are you doing this,” I asked incredulously. “Your ordination will not be recognized. You will not be able to preach or preside at worship. Your views on women’s rights and the gifts they have to offer will not be welcome.” “I know that,” she replied. “But as I see it, the greatest threat to human wellbeing and the health of our planet is nationalism that places the gods of country, blood and soil dividing humanity into armed camps. That is what drives the nations of the world into ever more bloody conflicts and prevents us collectively from addressing the ecological threat to our planet. If we do not disarm these demons, the rest of the issues won’t matter. As I see it, the Roman Catholic Church, for all its corruption, faults and shortcomings, bears the clearest witness to the oneness of God, the oneness of the human family and the catholicity of the church which transcends humanly concocted national boundaries and loyalties. For that, I am willing put some of my issues, important as they are, on the back burner.”
You may agree or disagree with my friend’s assessment of the Roman Catholic Church and her decision to join it, but I think the point she makes is valid. As Paul explains, unity of the human family is a direct and necessary corollary of the oneness of God who is “through all and in all-” even those who call upon God by different names or do not call upon God at all. Paul is merely repeating the truth expressed in the Hebrew creation narratives when in his sermon on the Areopagus in Athens he tells his audience that God made “from one ancestor all nations.” Acts 17:26. It is no overstatement, then, to say that the ideologies supporting American exceptionalism and white supremacy, whether political or religious, are heretical. They are, to use Paul’s terminology, doctrines concocted “by people’s trickery, by their craftiness in deceitful scheming.” Bishops, pastors, teachers of the church ought to be saying so in no uncertain terms.
Heresy is a word we so-called progressive protestants tend to avoid. It conjures up violent images of the crusades, the inquisition and the burning of witches. Accusations of heresy have been employed throughout the church’s history to silence voices of dissent, marginalize women and exclude sexual minorities. The result of all this has been to cement the church’s decision making power in the hands of a relatively few who think alike. Here the old adage holds true: where everyone thinks alike nobody thinks at all. That goes a long way toward explaining why the church, which was called to follow Jesus into God’s future, has often had to be dragged there kicking and screaming out of the past.
That said, I believe it matters what we say and what we believe about who God is and what God requires of us. After all, we have seen unspeakable acts of violence committed against LGBTQ+ folk, attacks on women’s health clinics and suicide bombers killing scores of people along with themselves, all in what they believe to have been in the service of God. Heresy kills. The church was right to reject the various Arian teachings that created a hierarchy within the Godhead mirroring the hierarchical machinery of empire. The church was right to reject Marcion’s effort to sever the gospel of Jesus Christ from its Jewish roots in the Hebrew scriptures. The church was right to reject gnostic teachings that denigrated the physical world and rejected the Incarnation. We could wish that the church had done so with more civility, more inclusiveness and without resort to violence. Yet however flawed the process, the outcome was, I believe, correct.
I also believe the churches that have opened the way for ordination, ministry and full participation to women in the life of the church are correct. That brings me to another important point. Heresy does not always manifest as a novel teaching. Sometimes it comes in the form of traditional orthodox teachings time, experience and deeper reflection on the scriptures has shown to be incorrect, but to which the church or some within it continue to hang on. Orthodoxy, which means “right teaching,” is not a static set of dogmas written in stone and immune from growth, change and modification. It has less to do with consistency than with seeking to move ever closer to what is true, beautiful and good by building on, enhancing and reinterpreting what has been established and passed down throughout the church’s history. One does not avoid heresy by standing firmly on what has been established in the past, nor does one necessarily fall into heresy by introducing new perspectives and novel ideas.
Since the conversation I had with my colleague over a decade ago, the drum beat of nationalistic populism and the hateful ideologies it promotes has grown louder, angrier and increasingly menacing. Rev. Dr. Martin Junge’s[1] preface to the recent statement, Resisting Exclusion, produced byThe Lutheran World Federation (LWF) notes that:
“Public discourse has become significantly more aggressive and divisive, as ethno-nationalist populist movements have gained traction. Political agitation and hate speech have led to hate crimes, especially against vulnerable groups like refugees and migrants. There is a tangible negative impact on the cohesion of societies and the infringement on the rights and freedoms of diverse groups of people.”
In discussing this phenomenon in the United States, contributor to that work, Rev. Dr. Linda E. Thomas,[2] explains that “one of the reasons that the polarizing populism in the United States has developed is that for many years there has been a disregard for those in underserved communities, those left out because of elitism and alienation across socioeconomic classes. This alienation of the white poor and working class has often led to blaming and attacking black and brown people as the cause of their poverty.” This inbred bigotry is currently being exploited by powerful political and commercial interests for their own purposes. Thomas goes on to point out that “[w]hat we call the right-wing populist narrative in the United States is led by the white elite, making it a populist movement. There is an underclass of white people in the United States who have been trained to believe that their ‘whiteness’ elevates them over black and brown people.” The late former president Lyndon B. Johnson understood this dynamic well. When asked how poor white people can be induced to vote against their own economic interests, he replied “If you can convince the lowest white man he’s better than the best colored man, he won’t notice you’re picking his pocket. Hell, give him somebody to look down on, and he’ll empty his pockets for you.” That is why working class white people, blinded by racist hate, consistently vote for candidates who promise to gut the safety net on which they will likely need to depend at some point if they are not already dependent upon it.
Paul calls or, rather, pleads with the church in Ephesus to “lead a life worthy of the calling to which you have been called.” The church is to embody within itself and so witness to the oneness of humanity that Christ Jesus lived, died and was raised again to restore. To that end, the church is endowed with gifts enabling “some [to] be apostles, some prophets, some evangelists, some pastors and teachers, to equip the saints for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ, until all of us come to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to maturity, to the measure of the full stature of Christ.” The church is a work in progress. Its members are called out from under the dominion of empire where the weak and vulnerable serve the mighty into the communion of saints were all alike employ their unique gifts to serve one another. The primary job of the church is be a community in which disciples of Jesus can be formed, where people learn the art of living under God’s reign within the midst of an empire that claims sole jurisdiction. “Speaking the truth in love, we must grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ, from whom the whole body, joined and knitted together by every ligament with which it is equipped, as each part is working properly, promotes the body’s growth in building itself up in love.”
The stark contrast between the religion, values and power structures of the Roman Empire under which the New Testament church existed and the life to which Jesus calls his disciples was all too evident for Paul and his congregations. By contrast, I believe American Christians are, on the whole, nearly blind to any distinction between the civil piety of United States citizenship and the obedience called for in their baptismal vows. We lionize military veterans while praying to the Prince of Peace who chose death over taking up the sword in defense of his life. We recite creeds in which we affirm our belief in the one holy catholic church made up of people of every nation, tribe and tongue while pledging our allegiance to the American flag and uttering slogans like “America First.” We get into heated arguments over what America should look like rather than focusing on what the reign of God does look like and growing up into Jesus Christ so that we can better live under it. As much as we so-called progressive Christians abhor the Christian nationalism of the religious right, we are in many respects captives to the same false national mythologies and blind to the idolatries into which they have led us.
The good news Paul proclaims in his letter to the Ephesians is that the walls dividing the human family cannot stand. Gated communities, segregated neighborhoods, heavily guarded national boundaries and the humanly designed class distinctions we make on the basis of race, wealth, citizenship, gender and religion are destined to fall. Those who are frantically trying to prop them up are on the losing side of history. The need for witnessing to that liberating good news has never been more urgent.
Here is a poem by Simon J. Ortiz reflecting the struggle of becoming genuinely human in overlapping cultures. I believe it also reflects the struggle to which disciples of Jesus are called.
Becoming Human
We are given permission
by the responsibility we accept
and carry out. Nothing more,
nothing less.
People are not born.
They are made when they become
human beings within ritual,
tradition, purpose, responsibility.
Therefore, as humans, this we do:
Sun Father begins red
in the east.
Stand and be humble.
Red through trees,
moments changing each instant
into the next change,
each change tied to the next.
To be human is to have
a sense of being within self.
Sun. Red. Trees.
Our hearts’ eyes seeing
inward and outward, accepting:
Stand and be humble.
The more names you have the more of a person you become. That’s what I’ve heard. I was telling Tom yesterday afternoon. Values, education, social change, cultural corruption, what is and what isn’t. I have to dispute him at moments. I tell him, The knowledge we derive from the education we get is our own. Knowledge is determined by our cultural, spiritual, linguistic, political environment. The knowledge from the community and context here cannot be anything but the people’s own. This is not Chicago, St. Louis, Dallas, or Rapid City. This is Rosebud, the Lakota homeland.
Our names are both Indian and American. We have so many names now we don’t know them all. In a sense, we have become more of a people than ever before.
Source: After and Before the Lightning (c. Simon Ortiz; pub. by University of Arizona Press). Simon J. Ortiz (born 1941) is a Native American writer, poet, and member of the Pueblo of Acoma. He is one of the key figures in the second wave of what has been called the Native American Renaissance, a period marking the significant increase in production of literary works by Native Americans in the United States in the late 1960s. Ortiz is commited to preserving and expanding the literary and oral histories of the Acoma Pueblo. That commitment is reflected in many of the themes and techniques that compose his work. You can read more about Simon Ortiz and sample more of his poetry at the Poetry Foundation website.
[1] Rev. Dr. Martin Junge served as General Secretary of the Lutheran World Federation from 2010-2021.
[2] Rev. Dr. Linda E. Thomas is a professor of theology and anthropology at the Lutheran School of Theology, Chicago, IL