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Reepicheep's avatar

Just finished reading "Till we have faces" for the first time, alongside my high school frosh, to accompany her on a school assignment. Brilliant work; I'll be cogitating on it a while. So many jewels to mine.

"we must think from the positions within which we find ourselves, rather than imposing ill-suited ideals considered purely in the abstract upon our societies in radical moves."

I've been thinking on this a lot recently, particularly in the context of how abolition of chattel slavery took so long in Christendom. I believe the abolition was firmly taught in the fulfillment of the land laws by Christ; yet, for some reason, we were blind to it for centuries, until the great enrichment revolutionized how we think about economics. Suddenly the enslavement of our neighbor became clearly stupid and against our economic interest, something which Adam Smith argued, with some opposition. It's to our shame we didn't realize it from scripture sooner, but it's to the grace of God that he finally taught us the lesson in a seemingly perverse way... by gobsmackingly blessing the West long before we'd abolished slavery. (enough to, somewhat understandably, mislead certain operators to argue that it's slavery which made us rich). "His kindness is meant to lead you to repentance."

Those instances of radical repentance in the Kingdoms always fascinated me, e.g. the putting away of foreign wives. Its seems that radical moves are possible, but lamentably rare. Of course, the topsy-turvy thing is that going farther from the radix is the way to die... going closer to it is the way to live. “You and I have need of the strongest spell that can be found to wake us from the evil enchantment of worldliness”

Reepicheep's avatar

Man is prone to citing Reason as an authority, and downplaying how scripture should inform his reason. Example: primogeniture. Seems like a reasonable law, right? But the Christians in Hooker's time knew full well that in Israel, the firstborn son was limited to a double portion of his father's inheritance, whereas English primogeniture flouted that.

Was that statute merely a land or seed law which had been fulfilled, having no more claim on Englishmen's legal imagination? Or, was it continually binding? Or, was it, as a third option, designed to do a very certain thing in Israel that would, if applied faithfully even in gentile kingdoms, also accomplish something equally important in those kingdoms, despite them being different than Israel?

Painting such pushback as Biblicist, overzealous, and the like simply won't do. Christians should be curious about why God designed laws a certain way, and should be leery about civil authorities designing them in other ways and claiming that any disagreement is disorder. Authorities are responsible for maintaining order, but their decrees can't be construed as achieving that, ipso facto. Quite often they are framing injustice by statute, or saying in arrogancy "we have conducted a diligent search for injustice" (Psalm 64) Christians are called to endure plenty of foolishness from their authorities without giving them what they deserve, because that's what love does. It does not pay back every slight, as unfortunately happened in Hooker's tumultuous time. But Christians are also called to prophesy to their authorities, because that's what love does.

What's your take on the Bloody Code?

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