Theology in the Public Sphere: Public Theology as a Catalyst for Open Debate
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Theology in the Public Sphere - Sebastian Kim
Theology in the Public Sphere
Sebastian C. H. Kim
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© Sebastian C. H. Kim 2011
Published in 2011 by SCM Press
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Contents
Preface
Part 1: Exploring Public Theology
1. Introduction: Theology and the Public Sphere
2. The Bible as a Public Book: Perspectives from Global Christianity
3. Doing Public Theology: The Example of Eco-Theology
Part 2: Public Theology in Global Contexts
4. The Church as a Public Body: Exclusion and the Quest for Authentic Community in India
5. Socio-Political Reconciliation: Struggles against Injustice and Division in Korea
6. Global Economic Justice: Latin American Initiatives to Overcome Inequalities
7. Peace-Building: The Response of the Western Churches to the Iraq War
Part 3: Public Theology in Europe
8. Interactive Pluralism in a Multicultural Society: Rowan Williams’ Lecture on Sharia Law
9. Freedom of Expression Versus Respect for Faith: The Danish Cartoon Controversy
10. Community Identity and Critical Dialogue: The Racial and Religious Hatred Bill
Epilogue
Bibliography
Preface
‘The time has come. The moment of truth has arrived!’ says the Kairos Document. At the height of the Apartheid oppression in South Africa, the Kairos Document was signed by 156 church leaders and theologians in the town of Soweto in September 1985. This is a highly significant document that challenged not only the Apartheid regime but also the churches in South Africa. The signatories questioned what they called ‘state theology’, which endorsed the status quo. Instead, they advocated ‘prophetic theology’, which urged Christians to act to bring hope for the nation. The legacy of this ‘Kairos’ movement continued when the post-Apartheid South African government set up the Truth and Reconciliation Commission led by Archbishop Desmond Tutu, which made a significant contribution to healing the wounds of the nation.
During the 1970s and 1980s, South Korea went through a time of crisis as the vast majority of company workers were exploited by the jaebul – family-run mega-companies. Minjung theologians challenged the modern capitalist market economy of the jaebul and the unjust operation of the military-backed government. Minjung theologians captured people’s imagination and brought the issue of poverty and injustice into the Church. They also encouraged the workers by showing that they should not be the objects of exploitation and that their protest was a legitimate one. Minjung theology made a vital contribution to modern Korean history by bringing the biblical concept of justice into the Korean political arena and by standing side by side with the people who are suffering.
On 2 July 2005 in Edinburgh, against the background of the Castle and Mound, Princes Street was thronged with people wearing white T-shirts and holding placards with slogans as they participated in the Make Poverty History campaign. Indeed, it was the largest demonstration Scotland had ever witnessed; an estimated 225,000 people from all over Britain. The Jubilee 2000 campaign and later the Make Poverty History campaign were, by and large, initiated and carried out by Christian churches and organizations. Christians took one of the most pertinent (and yet perhaps least implemented) symbols of justice from the Hebrew Bible and applied it to the contemporary context of global injustice. The campaign influenced political leaders to listen to the voice of people. It is indeed the demonstration of a mature society, where people are concerned not only for their immediate family, relatives or friends but for those of other continents, nations and cultures.
The above examples are some well-known cases of how Christian theology has shaped and challenged the course of societies in various ways, and illustrate how the Church can be involved in socio-political and economic life.
Public theology is not a new concept; Christian theology has always tried to be relevant to the context and society. Now, with the privatization of Christian faith, public theology has emerged in theological discourse. As the South African theologian John de Gruchy points out, theologians tend to fall into one of two extremes: either believing that theology makes more of a contribution and a difference than it actually does, or underestimating the significance of its public role.¹ This is due to the fact that the language and audience of Christian theology has been largely confined within church circles. Public theology is to do with seeking to engage in dialogue with those outside Christian circles on various issues and urging Christians to participate in the public domain. It seeks to converse with citizens on issues wider than religious matters.
Kenneth S. Latourette, in his monumental work A History of the Expansion of Christianity, explained the way he interpreted the expansion of Christianity in three perspectives: geographical expansion (according to the numbers of Christians and churches); the vigour of Christianity in any given era (according to new movements and denominations); and the effect of Christianity upon humankind.² Most studies – even, I would say, Latourette’s work itself – are done from the first two perspectives, and the last perspective is very difficult to assess indeed, if not impossible. However, the question of how we assess Christianity in a given context needs to include more than its numerical strength and the study of the ways and means of its expansion. I will argue that evaluating the strength of Christianity in any society has more to do with the integrity of the Christian Church, and this has to be constantly reassessed, however difficult it may be.
In plural societies, Christians do not have a monopoly on public space – they may even be a small minority – but this does not necessarily diminish the public significance of the Christian message. When we discuss the situation of the Church in a particular region, nation or continent, people often talk about the numbers of churches or Christians as if that is the measurement of the public significance of Christianity there. Yes, statistics may give a general picture of the situation, but they don’t provide an accurate understanding of the role and impact of the Christian gospel on that society. As I have argued elsewhere,³ many churches around the world, in spite of their small numbers, have made significant contributions to the society and nation, not just protecting their own immediate concerns or those about the numbers of congregations, but seeking the public good.
There are three main arguments in this book. First, that in the contexts of postmodern and pluralist societies, for reasons of justice, the Church should oppose any monopoly on power – political, economic, social and religious – and support the creation of a public sphere with open access and public debate. Second, that the Church should actively engage in the public sphere, and so needs to develop a ‘public theology’ in order to play an appropriate and prophetic role in the wider society. This endeavour is not in order to formulate a set methodology but rather utilizes a variety of theological approaches to deal with complex issues. And third, doing public theology should be the outcome of interaction in the hermeneutical circle of theory and practice so that the task involves the whole Christian community – theologians, church leaders and ordinary congregations – by actively interacting with other religious communities, NGOs and the wider society.
According to Harold Breitenberg, there are three types of literature on public theology: writings about particular ‘public theologians’ and what they understand public theology to be; discussion of what public theology is and how it should be carried out; and the ‘constructive public theology’, which means ‘theologically grounded and informed interpretations of and guidance for institutions, interactions, events, circumstances, policies, and practices, both within and outside the church’.⁴ The first two are more to do with developing public theology as a discourse, whereas the last category is to do with the practical application of theology in the public square. I would place this monograph in the last category of constructive public theology.
Because the practical application of theology is always contextual, instead of presenting a systematic and comprehensive account of public theology ‘from above’ as a worked-out programme applicable to every situation, I will provide selected historical and contemporary examples of doing public theology so that readers will appreciate the public issues faced by Christian communities in various contexts and the different theological approaches they have developed to deal with them. I have deliberately included cases from global contexts partly because they are less well known to wider theological circles and also to show that there are many creative public theological explorations taking place. Towards the end of each chapter, I will draw out some methodological points pertinent to other contexts and common to the public engagement of theology in contemporary societies. In other words, I will work ‘from below’, using concrete examples, to distinguish public theology as a theological approach while also recognizing its diversity on the ground.
In Part 1, I will first give a brief survey of the development, rationale and methodologies of public theology. I shall then examine how the Bible has been utilized in forming various distinctive Christian perspectives, and more importantly how the various interpretations helped Christian communities to meet challenging situations. I will also discuss different approaches to constructing eco-theology as an example of doing public theology in ways that reinterpret traditional theology to meet the contemporary ecological crisis. In Part 2, I shall discuss four different public theological discourses in the global contexts of India, Korea, Latin America, the UK and the USA. These deal respectively with the issues of the relationship between the Christian community and wider communities, socio-political reconciliation, global inequalities and peace-building. The chapters in this Part will demonstrate some of the critical challenges churches have faced and their theological and practical responses to them. They demonstrate that Christians have not shied away from the difficulties but have actively participated, risking their security and moving out from their comfort zones. The chapters in Part 3 focus on issues in contemporary Europe – Archbishop Rowan Williams’ lecture on sharia law, the Danish cartoons controversy, and the UK Racial and Religious Hatred Bill – in order to demonstrate some of the challenges faced in Europe. These are identified as the role of secular values and religious faiths in legal systems, freedom of expression and respect for faith, and identity and critical dialogue for a healthy engagement of religious communities in the modern, postmodern, and supposedly secular societies of Europe.
With the growth of civil society and the increase in secularism, there is both an invitation and also an urgent need for Christian theology to be actively engaged in conversation on public issues. Of course, Christian theology does not have all the answers to these issues but, among other voices, it can put forward moral, ethical and spiritual insights that make a vital contribution to addressing problems and promoting the common good in modern societies.
I would like to express my appreciation to the various people who have made valuable contributions and have supported me in this project: Dr Natalie Watson and her team at SCM Press, my colleagues at the Faculty of Education and Theology at York St John University, the members of the Global Network for Public Theology, the Editorial Board members of the International Journal of Public Theology, and to my family, Kirsteen, Jonathan and Lydia.
Notes
1 John de Gruchy, ‘From Political to Public Theologies: The Role of Theology in Public Life in South Africa’, in William Storrar and Andrew Morton (eds), Public Theology for the 21st Century (London and New York: T & T Clark, 2004), pp. 45–62.
2 Kenneth S. Latourette, A History of the Expansion of Christianity, vol. 7 (New York: Harper & Row, 1971), pp. 416–18.
3 Sebastian C. H. Kim and Kirsteen Kim, Christianity as a World Religion (London: Continuum, 2008).
4 E. Harold Breitenberg, ‘To tell the Truth: Will the Real Public Theology Please Stand Up?’, Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 23/2 (2003), pp. 55–96 at 64.
Part 1: Exploring Public Theology
1. Introduction: Theology and the Public Sphere
As the theology of God’s kingdom, theology has to be public theology: public, critical and prophetic complaint to God – public, critical and prophetic hope in God.⁵
Public theology is Christians engaging in dialogue with those outside church circles on various issues of common interest. It involves urging Christians to take the opportunity to participate in the public domain in modern secular democracies and to converse with other citizens on issues wider than religious matters. There is an urgent need for Christian theology to be actively engaged in conversation on public issues with the understanding that it can offer complementary or supplementary approaches, and even alternative solutions, to the very complex issues facing society today. The key word for public theology is public conversation, contributing to the formation of personal decisions and collective policy-making in economic, political, religious and social realms. In many ways public theology shares some characteristics of different theological discourses such as political theology, social ethics and liberation theology but, as I will show, it has also established its own distinctive ways to engage in public issues.
The development of public theology
The term ‘public theology’ was introduced by Martin Marty in his attempt to distinguish it from the ‘civil religion’ discussed by Robert Bellah in commenting on American public life in the 1960s.⁶ While both concepts overlap considerably, civil religion emphasizes the place and role of religion (and Christianity in particular) in relation to the nation and its people in their public life and social responsibilities, whereas public theology starts from the religious community and considers its contributions to the society and nation. Discussions of the difference between civil religion and public theology, and the marginalization of Christian theology in the context of America, were ongoing in the 1970s and 1980s in theological circles in the USA, led by John Courtney Murray,⁷ David Hollenbach,⁸ David Tracy,⁹ Richard John Neuhaus,¹⁰ Max Stackhouse,¹¹ Linell Cady¹² and Ronald F. Thiemann,¹³ among others.
In his discussion of mainline Protestant, Evangelical and Catholic churches in the USA, Martin Marty suggested that together they form a ‘public Church’, which holds distinctive resources to respond to the challenge of what he identified as a ‘crisis of morale and mission’.¹⁴ He defines the ‘public Church’ as ‘a family of apostolic churches with Jesus Christ at the centre’, which are especially sensitive to the ‘res publica, the public order that surrounds and includes people of faith’. Since it is made up of several different confessions, he also describes ‘the public Church’ as ‘a communion of communions’, distinctive and yet sharing ‘a common Christian vocation’.¹⁵ Marty contrasts his vision of the public Church with other ways in which religions organize themselves: totalist (a theocratic approach); tribalist (exclusive and self-interested approaches); and privatist (an individualistic approach).¹⁶ He derives the word ‘public’ from the ‘public religion’ described by Benjamin Franklin, which he thinks ‘fits the American pluralist pattern better’ than Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s ‘civil religion’. This suggests that these three churches can contribute out of their particular resources to ‘public virtue and the common weal’. Public theology then becomes, in Marty’s view, ‘an effort to interpret the life of a people in the light of a transcendent reference’.¹⁷ Doing public theology or being public Church is to exhibit ‘commitment to relate private faith to public order’.¹⁸ The public Church recognizes that it ‘shares traditions, reasons, aspects of Enlightenment, civic purpose, and transecting philosophies with many of the constituents and collegia in the larger civic order’, but ‘adapting does not mean letting all moorings go’. Although the public Church is in some respects also a political church, and will be seen by some as compromising and unfaithful, it cannot be so or its very existence must be questioned. The public Church contributes to public discourse out of its own particular revelation and the principles it has developed.¹⁹
Although he tends to be over-optimistic about the role of the Church in American public life, Marty’s idea of the public Church and its relationship with politics and society is very helpful and has certainly made a significant impact on the discussion of public theology. He argues historically that each of the three traditions – mainline Protestant, Evangelical and Catholic churches – have inherently public theologies which have influenced US society over several centuries. Although the term was not used explicitly, it has been present in the USA from the time of the Pilgrim Fathers. Public theology was prominent especially in the Evangelical revivals and in the social gospel movement. Since the 1960s especially, public theologies that have been influential globally include Catholic social teaching, statements on social and political issues by the ecumenical movement, and the black theology of the civil rights movement. It has also been prevalent in discussion of religious pluralism, and in the black and feminist theologies of recent years.²⁰ In the 1980s, the publication of the two pastoral letters from the US Conference of Bishops, The Challenge of Peace: God’s Promise and Our Response (1983) and Economic Justice for All (1986), triggered much discussion within the Church and in the academy on the issues of ‘civil discourse’ and the ways and means to engage in public life.²¹ The dominant themes of public theology in the USA in this period were the role of religion in a democratic polity, Christian social vision and political liberalism, the significance of church-related social institutions and the relationship of theological resources to the global economy.²²
In the last decade, there have been relatively fewer writings published in the USA on public theology and instead initiatives have been coming from Europe, South Africa and Australia particularly. Unlike the US situation where individual scholars are leading discussions on the topic, elsewhere centres for public theology have been established within universities and denominations. This development has produced a new vitality in discussing public theology and, as a result, the Global Network for Public Theology (GNPT), with a membership of 25 centres and institutions worldwide, was launched in Edinburgh in 2006 and formally established in Princeton in its second consultation in May 2007. Its aim is to conduct interdisciplinary research in theology and public issues in global and local contexts. At the second consultation, the International Journal of Public Theology (IJPT) was launched to provide a ‘platform for original interdisciplinary research in the field of public theology’ in dialogue with different academic disciplines such as politics, economics, cultural studies and religious studies, as well as with spirituality, globalization and society in general.²³ Within the Network, some major research centres are the Centre for Theology and Public Issues (CTPI) of the University of Edinburgh, the Beyers Naudé Centre for Public Theology, University of Stellenbosch, South Africa, the Public and Contextual Theology Strategic Research Centre, Charles Sturt University, Australia, the Manchester Centre for Public Theology, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer Research Centre for Public Theology, University of Bamberg, Germany. These centres of the Global Network are based in universities and their main concerns are to address particular issues in their local and national contexts, but they are increasingly interested in wider issues such as globalization, climate change, poverty, civil society, human rights, gender and racial equality.
In the UK in recent years, in addition to those mentioned above, a number of other centres have been established within universities and churches: the Institute for Religion and Public Life in the University of Leeds, the Network for Religion and Public Life in the University of Exeter, the McDonald Centre for Theology, Ethics and Public Life in the University of Oxford; the Heythrop Institute for Religion, Ethics and Public Life; the Chair in Theology and Public Life in York St John University; and the Centre for Faiths and Public Policy, University of Chester. There are also independent and church-based centres: Theos: Public Theology Think Tank; the Kirby Laing Institute for Christian Ethics; Jubilee Centre; the prominent ‘public theology’ wing of the ministry of the Evangelical Alliance; and the Board of Mission and Public Affairs of the Church of England. These centres have, by and large, been interested in practical socio-cultural, political and economic issues in their own contexts and have engaged in developing various distinctive approaches and programmes to meet the challenges. In most cases, they work with churches and local communities and disseminate their research findings through them.
It seems the idea of ‘public theology’ or ‘theology in the public sphere’ is quite commonly accepted in theological departments and churches, but the understanding of what it means differs from one to another. In fact, activities and research done by Christian groups on socio-political issues overlap with the work of the institutions mentioned above. So what do we mean by doing theology in the public sphere? How can theology – seemingly the subjective understanding of God, humans and society developed in the Christian community – be applicable to the wider, secular and pluralistic society?
A rationale for doing public theology
Jürgen Moltmann, in his book, God for a Secular Society: The Public Relevance of Theology, asserts that theology must publicly maintain the universal concerns of God’s coming kingdom because ‘there is no Christian identity without public relevance, and no public relevance without theology’s Christian identity’, and ‘as the theology of God’s kingdom, theology has to be public theology’ in the mode of ‘public, critical and prophetic complaint to God – public, critical and prophetic hope in God’.²⁴ Theology, he insists, should exhibit ‘general concern in the light of hope in Christ for the kingdom of God’ by becoming ‘political in the name of the poor and the marginalized in a given society’, by thinking ‘critically about the religious and moral values of the societies in which it exists’, and by presenting ‘its reflections as a reasoned position’. In addition to this, public theology ‘refuses to fall into the modern trap of pluralism, where it is supposed to be reduced to its particular sphere and limited to its own religious society’. For Moltmann, public theology is critical, prophetic, reflective and reasoned engagement of theology in society for the sake of the poor and marginalized to bring the kingdom of God.
Ronald F. Thiemann, in his more pragmatic approach, defines public theology as ‘faith seeking to understand the relation between Christian convictions and the broader social and cultural context within which the Christian community lives’.²⁵ In his emphasis on comparative studies in doing public theology, the goal is not an overarching theory connecting God, Church and the world, but rather ‘to identify the particular places where Christian convictions intersect with the practices that characterize contemporary public life’, such as liberal democracy, a capitalist economy, and a secularized consumer society. He envisages mutual critique between the public and the Church, saying that ‘the goal should not be the simple recommendation of one form of life over the other, but a careful and critical analysis of the variety of ways’. He insists that theology should be communal and a public activity, and that theology should ‘regain its status as a significant critical inquiry’ in various contexts, since he believes that ‘critical inquiry emerging out of deeply held religious convictions can greatly enrich the cultural, intellectual, and spiritual life of our society’.
Similarly, in addressing the question of the acceptance of the discipline of theology in wider public discussion, Linell E. Cady defines public theology as seeking ‘to overcome the cultural marginalization so highly characteristic of contemporary theology’ and ‘to contribute to the upbuilding and critical transformation of our public life’. To achieve this, Cady argues that theology should not only address itself to the wider social and political issues, but it must ‘appropriate a form of argumentation that is genuinely public’. She further argues that to achieve a public form of argumentation, theologians must make changes on two fronts: on the one hand they must ‘unmask the impossible pretensions to neutrality and universality that underlie the Enlightenment understanding of public, and the public exercise of reason’, while on the other hand respecting ‘the Enlightenment distinction between open inquiry and dogmatic citation, and work to combat the authoritarian traces that linger on in contemporary theology’. Drawing on feminist theology, she further argues that public theology should challenge the dichotomy of public and private in modern society:
The problem of a public theology … is not simply securing a greater public role for religion. That way of construing the matter, besides failing to distinguish adequately between religion and theology, takes at face value the prevailing typography of public and private life, and attempts to move religion from the private to the public realm. For both methodological and substantive reasons, theology must resist appropriating the current mapping of public and private. Hence in its endeavour to secure a larger, more appropriate public role, theology should simultaneously work for the reconfiguration of the public realm.²⁶
E. Harold Breitenberg, in his article surveying public theology, finds there are various different understandings among scholars.²⁷ He identifies civil religion (or public religion) and public theology as sharing similarities in that both are concerned with relationship between political authority, government and society, on the one hand, and God and the sacred, on the other. But he also distinguishes the two. In its starting point, civil religion’s main concern is with the nation and its people whereas public theology begins from religious faith and practice. Civil religion emphasizes public life and the social responsibilities of people; in particular, public religion is closely related to civil government and contains both religious and secular proponents. Whereas public theology represents the perspectives of religious communities and particular faith traditions and deals with the ‘public import and explication of theological concepts’, which gives rise to theological reflections often critical of government policies. In this sense, it is similar to political theology, but public theology is dealing not only with politics but with the wider area of public life.
Breitenberg defines public theology as ‘religiously informed discourse that intends to be intelligible and convincing to adherents within its own religious tradition while at the same time being comprehensible and possibly persuasive to those outside it’. It addresses issues that are of concern to a religious community as well as to the larger society, and furthermore, its resources, language and methods of argument are ‘open to all’. It is ‘theologically informed public discourse about public issues’, addressed to religious communities as well as the general public, ‘argued in ways that can be evaluated and judged by, and possibly be persuasive to, society at large’. Public theology, for him, is about ‘how Christian belief and practices bear … on public life and the common good’ and ‘in so doing possibly persuade and move to action both Christians and non-Christians’.²⁸
Reflecting on the arguments presented by those who are interested in public theology,²⁹ I would like to draw out the following points for a rationale for doing public theology. First, theology is inherently public. In other words, the enquiry and findings are applicable to a wider audience beyond the Christian community because of the evaluative and critical nature of theology and also because its context is not confined to the Church but relates to the kingdom of God. Indeed, as Duncan Forrester comments, ‘to withdraw … from public debate would result in [theology’s] serious impoverishment’.³⁰ Second, the fact that theology is not ‘neutral’ does not disqualify it from participation in public discussion; on the contrary, because of its distinctive perspective, theological findings can make an effective contribution to public issues. Third, the dichotomy of ‘public’ and ‘private’ is not helpful in defining public theology. Public theology should not be understood as interested only in public issues in contrast to domestic or private matters. ‘Public’ does not refer to the place of doing theology but to the openness of theology for any party to engage in debate: it is to do with universal access and open debate for all the members of the society. Fourth, in order to establish a healthy development of public theology, theologians need to convince the Christian community of the public relevance of theology and, at the same time, persuade the general public of the necessity of utilizing theological insights in public discussion. Fifth, for the authentic and sustainable engagement of the Church in the public sphere, the Church needs to guard against the temptation to take pragmatic approaches and to measure the result of ministries in numbers or external appearances, and to develop a public theology suited to the issues and relevant to the context.
Doing public theology
If we agree with some of the above rationale for doing theology in the public sphere, the natural question should follow: how does theology engage in public issues in an appropriate manner? In order to answer this, I would like to examine the nature of the public sphere, the method of public theology, and compare public theology with political theology and liberation theology.
The nature of the public sphere
The idea of the ‘public sphere’ was first articulated by Jürgen Habermas in his classic, The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere.³¹ Habermas regarded the ‘public sphere’ as an open forum that emerged in modern western societies in the situation where the state and the market economy predominated in daily life. It evolved in the ‘field between state and society’,³² protecting individuals and their families from both tyranny by the state and from the predations of the market. The public sphere was created by the recognition of three sets of rights: first, the right of radical–critical debate and political representation – freedom of speech and opinion, the free press, freedom of assembly, and so on; second, the right to personal freedom and the inviolability of the home; and third, the right of private ownership, which required equality before the law. The public sphere depended on the principle of universal access, without which it could not be public.³³ Habermas’s initial theoretical framework was based on emerging male bourgeois societies, and was therefore heavily criticized by feminist theorists, and many of his ideas need to be revised to meet the demand of the contemporary complex situation of plural societies.³⁴ In view of the dichotomy between the public and domestic spheres in patriarchal societies, the term ‘public’ could be problematic, but in so far as his theory of the ‘public sphere’ can be characterized as upholding the principles of universal access and open debate, it is very significant for our discussion.
Taking account of proposals put forward by the above scholars, we can identify some of the main players in the public sphere: the state, the market, the media, the academy, civil society and religious communities. Although there is a danger of oversimplification of the