Justifying Advocacy - Speaking Truth to Power
Monday, 17 October 2011
| Andrew Sloane
The John Saunders Lecture seeks to address contemporary social and
ethical issues in Australia from a scholarly evangelical perspective.
The annual lecture was first held in 2008 and is sponsored by the Social
Issues Committee of the Baptist Churches of NSW & ACT. The first
official Baptist minister in NSW, Rev John Saunders was an evangelical
with a missionary heart, a keen intellect, a gift for public speaking,
and a passion for Christian social responsibility. He is best known for
his work to reduce alcohol abuse and his advocacy of justice for
Indigenous Australians.
Born in Scotland, Andrew was raised in the western suburbs of Sydney. He
initially trained in medicine, before studying at Morling College,
graduating in 1990. Andrew ministered in Baptist churches in Sydney and
Newcastle, and then joined the faculty at Ridley (Anglican) College in
Melbourne in 1996. In 2002 he joined the faculty of Morling College as
Lecturer in Old Testament and Christian Thought. Andrew’s academic
interests include Old Testament interpretation and ethics, and he is
actively involved in the Micah Challenge program here and overseas.
Andrew’s latest book At Home in a Strange Land looks at issues relating to using the Old Testament in Christian ethics.
Justifying Advocacy
A biblical and theological rationale
for speaking the truth to power
on behalf of the vulnerable
The John Saunders Lecture 2011
19 October 2011
Introduction—on justifying advocacy
Giving
the John Saunders lecture is something of a daunting
privilege—particularly given that I want to speak about advocacy,
something for which he is justly renowned. Indeed, many early advocates
for the humane treatment of indigenous Australians and of their rights
came from the ranks of evangelical Christians such as John Saunders
(1806-1859) and Lancelot Edward Threlkeld (1788-1859), a tradition
maintained in Peter Adams’ 2009 Saunders lecture.[1]
This tradition of evangelical Christian action in advocacy on behalf of
the poor and disadvantaged is one to which I am committed, largely
through the Micah Challenge campaign which has given a voice to many of
us who’ve been committed to engaging with the ‘powers that be’ on behalf
of the poor.[2]
Given
this tradition, my commitment to it and my interest in thinking
theologically, it seemed only reasonable to sketch a theological
rationale for advocacy: especially given that most of the rationales for
advocacy have not been theological, but focused on the practical value of advocacy for bringing about sustainable transformation for poor and oppressed communities;[3] and most of the theological rationales have been broadly focused on social engagement (assuming the legitimacy of advocacy as one strategy amongst many) rather than looking at advocacy per se.[4] Hence my desire to present a theological account of advocacy.
But there are challenges that must be addressed especially for those,
like me, who are committed to the task for broadly theological reasons.
Critics to the left of me, critics to the right
There are those who question the theological legitimacy of the whole enterprise—something of a problem for theologically justifying
advocacy. From the theological right, the claim is made that our
mission is the gospel—especially the verbal proclamation of the
gospel—and that justice and advocacy are other people’s business. These
were, in fact, almost the very words used to me by a Christian worker on
university campuses. All sorts of people, they said, are concerned
about justice; only Christians care about the gospel, and so while being
kind to the poor is a valuable mark of Christian discipleship, the
proclamation of the gospel so as to call people to faith in Jesus should
be our (sole) priority in mission.[5]
From
the left, perhaps surprisingly, there are also those who question the
theological legitimacy of the whole enterprise. Their concerns are, of
course, quite different. For them the issue is power—the illegitimacy of
Christians using power in God’s name. These were, in fact, almost the
very words used to me at a conference I attended by a Christian worker
in an urban slum. Christians are called in imitation of Christ, they
said, to incarnational identification with the poor in their weakness
and vulnerability. Such a gospel commitment eschews the top-down
exercise of power for the bottom-up service of weakness so as to bring
about transformation by and through and for the poor and their
communities.
And
so with critics to the left of me and critics to the right, I seem to
be stuck in the middle. And that, theologically, can be a fairly barren
place to be stuck. Most of the biblical justifications I have seen have
been thin and fragmentary. A matter of scooping up a few textual gems
without regard to their context—such as Micah 6:8, or Proverbs 31, or
Matthew 23—or grabbing a few textual threads from the books of Esther or
James and tossing them together as a biblical justification.[6]
Some,
indeed, have been misguided. I’m not, for instance, convinced that
Esther is a good place to go to justify advocacy. Apart from issues
relating to the violence of both the threat and Esther’s response,
Esther does not address the kind of advocacy I’m seeking to justify.
Esther speaks as a Jew—admittedly one with a position of power and
privilege—on behalf of her own people—admittedly in a context of
marginalisation and powerlessness. Nonetheless, she advocates on behalf
of her own people, those who share ethnic and religious and even
geographical ties with her as an exiled Jew. And there is, of course, a
place for that—say, expatriate Tibetans speaking about the plight of
their country under Chinese rule, or expatriate Karens or Chins (or
Congolese, or Somalis, or…) speaking about the plight of their country
under domestic rule, or the Voice of the Martyrs speaking on behalf of
persecuted Christians across the world. There is a place for that kind
of lobbying, [7] but that is not what I want to examine in this address.
What
I want to examine is the role of the Church as representatives of God
and God’s mission in the world ‘speaking the truth to power’ on behalf
of the poor. And I want to do a bit better than a bit of piecemeal
proof-texting or exegetical special pleading, and I believe there are
biblical and theological resources for doing so. After all, a mission
focused on the Kingdom of God, one reflecting God’s own mission in the
world and agenda for it, necessitates the gospel—a gospel in all its
fullness which means, of course, it being good news for the poor.
Further, while costly identification with the marginalised (what is often called ‘incarnational’ ministry[8])
is a legitimate form of mission there are others; for the gospel of
both the Old and New Testaments, I will claim, calls for the just and
responsible use of power. This may, indeed, mean its renunciation, but
not always. So let me attempt to move beyond fragments and threads to
develop a coherent biblical framework that justifies advocacy.[9]
Framework not fragments
My
plan is to outline a biblical-theological framework which aims to
justify advocacy as calling on power to be used justly for the poor, one
in which many of the threads and fragments of the usual piecemeal
approaches find their setting. This will involve, in the first instance,
reminding ourselves of God’s passion for the poor and God’s passion to
see justice done. As such, I will aim to show that God is both the chief
advocate for the poor and the chief one we address when we
advocate on their behalf: praise (Pss 97, 146) and prayer (Luke 18:1–8)
are key elements in this framework.
Second,
I will seek to (briefly) articulate a theology of (political) power and
authority, in which power is seen as a gift given to a community through a person of power for
those without it. As such I will aim to show that power, while it can
be abused, can also be used on behalf of the poor, and that we therefore
have a responsibility to hold the wielders of power accountable to
those for whose sake they have been given it (Psalm 72).
Third,
I aim to show that our voice is a God-given gift and responsibility—an
expression of power, really—which we must use for God’s glory and in
service of the poor (James 5:1–6).
God and advocacy
Let
me begin where any Christian theology ought to begin: the God whom we
know and worship through Jesus Christ. It is clear from the opening
chapters of Scripture that God is committed to a world of justice and
delight and that this is reflected in God’s design for creation, God’s
work in judging human sin and seeking to redeem a broken world and
broken humanity, in God’s design for a renewed humanity, first in
Israel, then in Jesus and through him and his Spirit in the Church as a
(broken but real) sign of the coming kingdom in which God’s design will
be fully realised. But that is a tale well told elsewhere; and here my
focus is on the question of advocacy. And so my concern is for us
to think about how the practices of praise and prayer as exemplified,
say, in Psalm 146 and Luke 18 contribute to our understanding of
advocacy.
I
would like to look at two texts that illustrate this—not as fragments
arbitrarily grabbed for a rhetorical purpose, but as indicators of God’s
role in the story as the one who addresses us and is addressed by us in
advocacy for the poor in the context of praise and petition. For
central to the praise of God is God’s commitment to speak and act
for the victims of injustice, as is seen in one of the oldest known
songs in Scripture the ‘Song of the Sea’ in Exodus 15, Hannah’s famous
song in 1 Samuel 2 (and its even more famous echo in Mary’s Magnificat
in Luke 2), through to some of the last songs sung in Scripture in
Revelation 7:15–17 and Revelation 19:1–2.
Of course, as we think about God, justice and praise, the logical place to turn is the book of Psalms, specifically, Psalm 146.[10]
As is clear from the opening and closing verses of this Psalm, this is a
Psalm of praise, a hymn that identifies key qualities of God that show
that God is worthy of our praise. More than that, it is strategically
located towards the end of the book of Psalms, helping to shape the
climax of the book’s journey from obedience to praise. It is the first
of five great ‘hallel’ Psalms which end with the exultant cry ‘let
everything that has breath praise Yahweh’—and helps us to see why we
should join in this praise. For in the face of the frailties and
failures of human power (Ps 146:3–4), Yahweh is the one whose power is
limitless and indefatigable, whose kingdom will rule forever and in whom
we can safely trust (5–6, 10).
But Yahweh is more than the wielder of superior and trustworthy power; Yahweh is the wielder of a superior kind
of power, a power to which we should willingly and joyfully submit, a
power we can freely and fully trust. For the God we praise—the (only)
God worthy of praise, is the God who works justice forever; the one who
cares for the weak and the vulnerable (v.7). This God, contrary
to all our expectations of the exercise of earthly power, uses God’s
uncontainable power for those who stand to benefit from it, those in
greatest need of aid. This God releases exiled Israel and cares for the
socially, geographically, economically displaced and vulnerable (aliens,
widows and orphans). This is the God who acts for the poor and whose
word—even the word of praise—speaks on their behalf.[11] This vision of God shapes our praise, brings us to the climax of the journey of faith and shapes our wanderings on the way.
It also, of course, shapes our prayer. God’s concern for justice is equally central to the way Scripture shapes petition
to God. This is clear in one of the oldest recorded prayers in
Scripture, that of Abraham in Genesis 19 (shall not the judge of all the
earth do what is right/just?); it is reflected in the cries of Israel
that prompt God to act in the Exodus; the same cries of the poor that
prompt God’s judgement in Israel’s history and which shape so many of
the (lament) Psalms (7, 10 and 12, to take three early examples). It is
echoed in one of the last petitions recorded in Scripture, the cry of
the martyrs under the throne in Revelation 6 (and even in the very last,
Maranatha, which is, I would suggest, a longing cry for the judge of
all the earth to finally do what is right). Our advocacy for the poor is
first addressed to God before it is addressed on God’s behalf to those in power.[12]
There
are many texts about prayer that I could look at in this regard. Psalm
82 would be fascinating example, consisting as it does of an accusation
brought by God against the ‘powers’ (be they understood as pseudo-divine
rivals in the heavenly assembly or powerful humans in the earthly one)
and their unjust abuses (vv.1–7), followed by a petition that God so act
now (v.8). My focus, however, will be on Jesus’ teaching his
disciples to always pray and not give up in Luke 18:1–8. Luke’s gospel,
as is well known, has a sustained interest in the poor and Jesus’ words
and actions on their behalf—it is Luke’s gospel that presents Jesus’
kingdom program, after all, as proclaiming good news to the poor and in
which Jesus pronounces a blessing on the poor. What is often missed is
that this interest is sustained in Jesus’ teaching on perseverance in
prayer here in chapter 18.[13]
It
is worth noting the way that this is surrounded by passages that
reflect Luke’s emphasis on Jesus’ ministry to seek and save (the least
and) the lost (the parables in Luke 15; the parable of the rich man and
Lazarus in 16; the parable of Pharisee and the tax collector, the
blessing of children, the confrontation with the rich ruler in 18 and,
of course, the saving of Zacchaeus in 19). But the immediate context is
Jesus’ warning in 17:20–37 of the inevitability of final judgement and
the need for the disciples to be found alert and faithful when it comes.
His teaching on prayer, then, aims to encourage that faithfulness as
they wait for the end—a faithful trust in God that, in Jesus’ view, is
seen most clearly in our continuing to cry out for God to fulfil God’s
kingly purposes, rather than giving in to a cynical despair that says
‘as was, so is now and ever shall be’.
But in the midst of all the humour and obscurity of elements of this parable, please note the content of both the widow’s petition to the unjust judge and ours to the just Judge of all the earth: these are pleas for justice.
Jesus tells us that what ought to sustain our prayer is a confident
trust that the divine judge will work justice for those who trust the
judge’s justice. The sting at the end of his parable is, of course, the
question of whether we will be found exercising faith in God’s justice,
or whether we have given up in a flabby acquiescence to the ways of the
world.
For
Jesus, exercising such faith involves pleading for justice on our own
behalf as well as for others—it is a faith that recognises that the
world is not as God would have it and which calls on God to act to bring
it in line with the coming kingdom of God. The picture that emerges,
then, from the praise and prayer of Scripture is of a God of
inexhaustible power who is the initiator of the cause of justice and the
one who responds to us in it. Which takes us, of course, to a theology
of power.
A theology of power
Power—the
ability to effect change in the (political and communal) world—and its
correlate authority—the right to do so, however and from wherever it is
derived—are fundamental and inescapable features of human life together.[14]
No human communal life is imaginable without some forms of social power
and authority and the institutions and practices that support and are
governed by it. They may be more-or-less egalitarian or authoritarian in
nature, but such patterns of decision making and implementation must
exist for there to be any common life. From a biblical point of view, it
doesn’t seem to matter much what forms they take. From clan to
kingdom to Persian or Roman province to the new (largely urban)
communities of faith of the early church, the common life and social
context of the believing community varies greatly.
What
matters, it seems, is not the form (which seems to range from
patriarchal familial patterns, through complex centralised monarchy to
various forms of ‘diaspora’ community, none of which conform to our late
modern democratic ideals), but the reasons for which power and
authority are given, and the ends to which they are used. And to that,
for all the variety of form of institutional power, the Scriptures seem to give clear and unequivocal witness.
Theologically, (political) power and authority are seen as gifts given to a community through a person of power for
those without it. The primary reason (political) power is given is in
order to establish ordered patterns of life together, in which those who
gain advantages in the system are responsible to use their wealth and
power (the advantages they accrue) for the benefit of those who become
disadvantaged as a result of the operation of those patterns of common
life.
Such an understanding of power is seen in the Torah’s
call to wealthy landowners to leave gleanings for the poor and its call
to administer justice fairly; it is seen in the prophetic indictment of
abuses of power from Elijah (1 Kings 21) through Amos to Zechariah; it
is seen in Job’s self-defence in chapter 31 and Ecclesiastes’ despairing
vision of a broken world; it is seen in Jesus’ condemnation of abusive
power (e.g., Matt 23:23) and even Paul’s much misunderstood call to
submit to the political structures of his day (Romans 13); it is evident
in Revelation’s stinging rebuke of the ‘Babylon’ of John’s day. But
perhaps the clearest articulation of this vision of power is seen in the
‘charter of kingship’ found in Psalm 72, to which I would like us now
to turn, aiming to show that power, while it can be abused, can also be
used on behalf of the poor, and we have a responsibility to hold the
wielders of power accountable to those for whose sake they have been
given it.
This
is the last of a series of ‘David’s prayers’, one which closes Book Two
of the Psalter which focuses on David as man and king.[15]
It sets up for us the ideal of human kingship which, as Psalm 2 notes,
is meant to be an expression in earthly power of the rule of God. It is
no surprise, then, that this ‘job description for the king’ is couched
as a prayer to God, and one in which the king’s exercise of
justice is emphasised as one of the key blessings God can bestow on
God’s people (and the earth) through the human king. Clearly, the Psalm
petitions (or at least expresses a wish for) the blessings of God:
prosperity (lit: shalom, v.3 and also v.7); abundance (v.6,
15–16). But these blessings are tightly connected to the king reflecting
God’s own passion for justice, for using his earthly power for the weak
and the vulnerable (v.2, v.7, 12–14), including dismantling the unjust
powers and systems that oppress and exploit them (v.4b, 14).
Such
an exercise of power, interestingly, will culminate in God fulfilling
those promises originally given to Abraham and tied to God’s purposes
for Israel: the establishing of a great name, the gift of offspring and
the abundance which characterises shalom, and the blessing of the nations through the blessing of God’s chosen one. This is
what power is for in God’s economy: the bringing of blessing to the
community for whom it is to be exercised through the establishing of
justice, through the use of power to establish, restore and maintain
right relationships in the community. This is how we are to use our
power; this is the pattern by which all users of earthly power are held
accountable by God.
But,
you might say, when we come to the NT we do not see a call to
responsible exercise of power, but its renunciation in costly, suffering
service. Does that not undercut all this OT stuff? Let me be clear:
Jesus’ understanding of his identity and mission is driven by the OT,
including its picture of power and its use. Indeed, that is one thing
that shapes his characteristic emphasis on power and position as
opportunities for service (for, as we’ve seen, power in the OT is given to the community through
those in authority; Jesus reinforces that). In my view this means that,
while at times the NT overturns a basic pattern of OT faith (e.g., the
way that purity or Temple and sacrifice work) we need to be very careful
before we jettison the OT and its concerns and should only do so for
very good reason.[16]
There
is, in fact, very good reason to see the NT as endorsing the basic
understanding of power I’ve outlined. John the Baptist, for instance,
calls on those with economic and military power to use it well, not to
renounce it (Luke 3:10–14); the leaders of the early Church exercised
their power, or authority if you will, for the benefit of the community
both socially (Acts 6) and theologically (Acts 15). Indeed, while there
is a clear call in the NT to renounce power for suffering service, I
would suggest such renunciation is because some ends for the poor can
only be achieved through powerlessness; but that is not a
universal phenomenon. Indeed, a failure to embrace the responsibilities
of power can be an act of infidelity both to the God who gave it and the
poor for whose benefit it was given.
Perhaps here The Lord of the Rings
might give us useful parallels. The power of the Ring must be
surrendered, as Boromir tragically failed to see; but the power of the
king must be embraced in costly service, as Aragorn recognises. Indeed,
Jesus’ call for those in power to love in service is a call to the
proper Christomorphic use of power: not for one’s one benefit,
but for that of the weakest and the least—the very reason power was
given in the first place.[17] The renunciation of power, then, is one pattern we find in the NT; it is not the only one—witness James’ advocacy for poor labourers to which we now turn.
The power of a voice
So
finally we turn to what may have seemed like an obvious starting point
(well, to anyone but an [OT] theologian anyway): the concern we find in
Scripture that we use our voice in line with God’s purposes—especially
God’s commitment to justice. This theme, too, runs right through
Scripture, if we know where (and how) to look. It is, perhaps, most
obvious in the great prophets of the Eighth Century BC, who were
commissioned by God to voice God’s revulsion at and rejection of Israel
and Judah’s sin and injustice. They, clearly, were authorised advocates
of God’s concern for the poor. But it is a concern that reaches back
long before the corruption of the divided kingdom, and stretches out
long after it: the torah’s passion for justice entails speaking
the truth on behalf of the poor; prophets like Jeremiah and Ezekiel and
Zechariah advocate (on God’s behalf) for the poor, as does Nehemiah.
Micah 6:6–8 is not, it would seem, a text chosen at random, a scattered
gem grabbed out of the wreckage to justify our concern for advocacy, but
a crystallisation of this great OT witness to the power and
responsibility of the people of God using their voice on behalf of the
poor.
But
it is to the NT I would like us to turn—a portion of the Bible often
seen to have a muted witness at best to the cause of advocacy, a
perception that is frequently used to suggest that advocacy is no longer
a legitimate Christian concern, even if it had been one for (some in) Israel. James 5:1–6, I would suggest, gives the lie to that claim.[18]
The context of the letter shows us James’ concern with faith and its
outworking in the concrete life of the community and with true wisdom
which is grounded in a proper fear of Yahweh. All of this is addressed
to a community facing the reality of struggle and persecution, calling
them to persevere in light of the coming Day of Yahweh (see 5:7ff). The
passage directly addresses the rich. It is probable that, in light of
James 2:1ff (and our knowledge of early Christian sociology) the rich
are those outside the community of faith, in which case the struggling
community rather than their rich oppressors would be the primary hearers
of this text. The main ‘rhetorical aim’, then, would be to comfort
suffering Christians and call them to faithful perseverance; but that,
in turn, must be rooted in the actuality of the condemnation of the
unjustly wealthy.
And
James pulls no punches. He fiercely denounces careless, selfish, unjust
luxury, both in light of the coming final judgement (vv.4–6) and the
folly of such useless hoarding (v.2): the rotting of their riches
probably speaks, not of the final judgement in which such wealth counts
for nought; rather it speaks of the way unjust hoarding of wealth rather
than just using it for the benefit of others and the community leads to
its decay, being useful for nothing (dare one speak of the hoarding of
shares and property and our intermittent financial crises?). This
wealth, hoarded rather than distributed to those whose labour earned it,
‘cries out’ in language reminiscent of the cries of Israel in Egypt and
comes to the ears of the Lord of Hosts, the God of battle who acts in
history in judgement and salvation. This is a denunciation, not a call
to repent (either because such a call is implicit or because it’s seen
as pointless in light the obvious gross wickedness of these people). The
picture is of the fires of the last judgement licking through the
cracks of reality, a warning of coming wrath. And it is a horrible fate:
James speaks of ‘miseries’ (v.1), a rot which will ‘eat your flesh like
fire’ (v.3), being fattened for a ‘day of slaughter’ (v.5—which is a
clever, if brutal, use of irony, being both a description of rich
self-indulgence and its reversal in eschatological judgement).
James
is clear: Yahweh still acts in judgement against injustice—and will do
so on the last day. And please note that there is nothing in the text to
indicate that either the oppressed poor or the rich oppressors are Christian.
James here seems to speak (on behalf of God) about a general pattern of
injustice and abuse, not one confined to the ‘people of God’.
Furthermore, while the main rhetorical function of this stinging
condemnation is the consolation of those within the community who are
suffering and oppressed, chapter 2 suggests that such rich people may at
times be present in the congregation, and so they are also directly
addressed by this word of advocacy. Nonetheless, I do need to
acknowledge that, in the main, the hearers of the NT did not have the
kind of political power we take for granted in late modern democracies.
It is all the more remarkable that we find as much there as we do; and
it is clear that words such as James 5 tell us what we as Christian would or should say were we to have the kind of influence over policy and policy makers that we have today.
Our
voice, then, is a God-given gift and responsibility—an expression of
power, really—which we must use for God’s glory and in service of the
poor. But I should note, in passing, that there are other modes of
speech that we can address to those in power. There are fiery words of
judgement such as in James; but there is also Philemon, a gentle word to
a fellow believer with power over another that anticipates compliance
and so evokes it. And the fiery, combative words may be addressed to
unbelievers (as in James) or believers (as in Isaiah); and the
invitation may be spoken to believers (as in Philemon) or unbelievers
(as in Nehemiah 2); and in between there is a combination of rebuke and
encouragement (as in Luke 3 and John’s shaping of repentance).
There
are also different horizons we may have in view in both judgement and
salvation, the ultimate and the more immediate (as we see combined, for
instance, in James). And there is a variety of tactics we can adopt that
have theological legitimacy. We can seek to persuade those in power,
projecting a moral vision they ought to adopt; we can warn them about
consequences and warnings, speaking of the electoral consequences or
regional security implications should they fail to act. In all of that
we must remember that God is still the one who speaks, through the
people of God, to those in power, calling them to account and to use
their power for the purposes for which it was given.
A gospel-driven pattern for advocacy
So
we see, then, that advocacy is justified: it arises out of our praise
and prayer to God; it reflects God’s purpose for power; it echoes the
advocacy of God and God’s people which resounds through Scripture. Now I
would be the first to admit that this is framework is anything but
comprehensive. Indeed, if what I’ve outlined is true, then everything
that demonstrates God’s concern for the poor and marginalised and our
responsibility to act on their behalf feeds into justifying advocacy:
the character of God; the shape of the story of God and the world; the
nature of our creation in God’s image and our growing into the image of
the Son which the Spirit shapes in us as we struggle for justice and the
gospel; the shape of community formed by God’s saving and transforming
grace; the new future towards which we head and which God seeks to form
in us and through us by the power of the Spirit; the instructions that
shape our view of the world and our living in it.[19]
This
is advocacy grounded in the gospel—both in its form and content; this
is advocacy which is justified theologically and which works by
identification with the poor, carefully listening to their concerns and
seeking to articulate them to the ‘powers’. Such a use of our voice can
be both a legitimate expression of the gospel, and a costly embodiment
of it.[20]
[1] See John
Saunders, ‘"Claims of the Aborigines": a sermon preached by the Rev
John Saunders, Bathurst Street Baptist Church, Sydney, 14 October 1838’,
The Colonist, 17, 20, 24 October 1838; Henry Reynolds, This Whispering in our Hearts (St Leonards: Allen & Unwin, 1998): esp. Chs.2-3.
[3] So, for instance, Jayakumar Christian, ‘The Nature of Poverty and Development’ in Another Way to Love, ed. T. Costello and R. Yule (Brunswick East: Acorn, 2009): 23-34; Gary A. Haugen, ‘Integral Mission and Advocacy’ in Justice, Mercy and Humility: The papers of the Micah Network International Consultation on Integral Mission and the Poor (2001), ed. T. Chester (Carlisle: Paternoster, 2002): 187-200; Robert Davis, ‘What about justice? Toward an Evangelical perspective on advocacy in development’, Transformation 26 (2009): 89-103. For an interesting analysis of the use of Scripture in two advocacy organisations, see David
McIlroy, ‘The Use of the Bible by the Christian Human Rights
Organizations Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW) and International
Justice Mission (IJM)’, Political Theology 11 (2010): 466-78.
[4] See Con Apokis et al., Christians: Catalysts for Change (Brunswick East: Acorn, nd [1994?]); Tim Chester, Good News to the Poor: Sharing the gospel through social involvement (Leicester: IVP, 2004); Tim Costello and Rod Yule, ed., Another Way to Love (Brunswick East: Acorn, 2009); Graham Gordon, What if you got involved? Taking a stand against social injustice (Carlisle: Paternoster, 2003); Jamie A. Grant and Dewi A. Hughes, ed., Transforming the World? The gospel and social responsibility (Nottingham: Apollos, 2009); Dewi A. Hughes and Matthew Bennet, God of the Poor: A Biblical Vision of God's Present Rule (Carlisle: OM Publishing, 1998); Dewi A. Hughes, Power and Poverty: Divine and human rule in a world of need (Nottingham: IVP, 2008); Robert A. Kelly, ‘The theology of the cross and social ministry’, Currents in Theology and Mission 10 (1983): 95-99; Charles Ringma, ‘Holistic ministry and mission: a call for reconceptualization’, Missiology 32 (2004): 431-48; Christopher J H Wright, The Mission of God: Unlocking the Bible's grand narrative (Nottingham: IVP, 2006); and on political engagement more generally, see Luke Bretherton, Christianity and Contemporary Politics: The Conditions and Possibilities of Faithful Witness (Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010).
[5] So also Jim Harries, ‘'Material Provision' or Preaching the Gospel: Reconsidering 'Holistic' (Integral) Mission’, Evangelical Review of Theology 32 (2008): 257-70; David J. Hesselgrave, Paradigms in Conflict: 10 Key Questions in Christian Missions Today (Grand Rapids: Kregel, 2005): 117-39.
[6] See, for instance, Leslie Nathaniel, ‘Church and Advocacy’ in Gospel and Globalisation, ed. A. Watkins and L. Nathaniel (Delhi: ISPCK, 2006): 69-74
[7] For the distinction between lobbying and advocacy, see Con Apokis et al., Christians: Catalysts for Change (Brunswick East: Acorn, nd): 1-3.
[9] For a helpful articulation of the ‘political hermeneutics’ at work in my discussion, see Richard Bauckham, The Bible in Politics: How to read the Bible politically (London: SPCK, 1989); also my earlier work on ethics, Andrew Sloane, At Home in a Strange Land: Using the Old Testament in Christian Ethics (Peabody: Hendrickson, 2008).
[10] For more on the Psalter and Psalm 146 in particular, see Walter Brueggemann, The Message of the Psalms (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1984); Craig G. Broyles, Psalms (Peabody: Hendrickson, 1999); Geoffrey W. Grogan, Psalms (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2008); John Goldingay, Psalms 1-41 (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2006); Psalms 42-89 (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2007); Psalms 90-150 (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2008); Philip S. Johnston and David G. Firth, ed., Interpreting the Psalms: Issues and Approaches (Leicester: Apollos, 2005); James C. McCann, ‘Psalms’ in The New Interpreter’s Bible, vol. 4, ed. L. E. Keck (Nashville: Abingdon, 1996): 639-1280; James Mays, L, Psalms (Louisville: W/JKP, 1994).
[11]
A word here on the way in which praise is both God’s word and ours is
in order here. Praise is, in the first instance, human words addressed
to God—as is true also of prayer and other Scriptural words by which the
people of God address God. The praises (and prayers, etc) we find in
the Psalms, however, are part of the canon of Scripture, and so are
included in the words God gives to us. They are, I would suggest, now
divinely endorsed and appropriated as ways God addresses us as people of
faith, instructing us in how we can appropriately relate to (and so
speak with) God. In this sense they are both human words addressing God
and divine words addressing us. For a useful discussion of this which,
however, fails to understand Psalms as words given by God to us as
authorised forms of address directed to God see Nicholas Wolterstorff, Divine Discourse: Philosophical reflections on the claim that God speaks (Cambridge: CUP, 1995).
[12] For fascinating reflections on suffering, injustice, prayer and liturgy, see ‘Liturgy, justice, and tears’, Worship 62 (1988): 386-403; and for specific reflections on Psalms 10 and 126, see Bauckham, The Bible in Politics: 53-72.
[13] The concern for justice is missed by a number of commentators, for which see, Darrell L Bock, Luke (NIV Application Commentary; Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1996); C. A. Evans, Luke (Peabody: Hendrickson, 1990). Others, however, recognise it and the role it plays in Jesus’ eschatological concerns, for which see, Joel B. Green, The Gospel of Luke (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1997); I.H. Marshall, The Gospel of Luke: A Commentary on the Greek Text (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1978); John Nolland, Luke 9:21-18:34 (Dallas: Word, 1993).
[14] For this and much of the following argument, see Bauckham, The Bible in Politics: 41-52; Hughes and Bennet, God of the Poor: Ch.8.
[15] For more on Psalm 72, see references cited earlier, as well as Marvin E. Tate, Psalms 51-100 (Dallas: Word, 1990).
[16] I discuss this at length elsewhere, for which see Sloane, At Home in a Strange Land
[17]
In this regard it is important to remember that we are not to play God
in the lives of poor communities, paternalistically determining the ways
our power should be used on their behalf, but listen to the poor,
giving them the power to determine how that power entrusted to us for
their good ought to be used. On this see particularly, Jayakumar Christian, God of the Empty-Handed: Poverty, Power and the Kingdom of God (Monrovia, CAL: MARC, 1999): esp. Chs10-11; Christian, ‘The Nature of Poverty and Development’: 24-26.
I should note, however, that (as I have made clear) I think he is
mistaken to see Jesus as exercising a different kind of power to that of
the OT.
[18] For more on James, including explicit rejections of Luther’s (in)famous rejection of it as an ‘epistle of straw’, see Craig Blomberg and Mariam J. Kamell, James (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2008); Daniel M. Doriani, James (Phillipsburg: Presbyterian & Reformed, 2007); Scot McKnight, The Letter of James (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2011); Douglas J. Moo, The Letter of James (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2000); David P. Nystrom, James (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1997); Jim Reiher, James: Peace activist and advocate for the poor (Dandenong: UNOH, 2009).
[20]
I would like to thank my colleagues David Starling, Phill Marshall and
Rod Benson for comments on this paper—and the Baptist Churches of NSW
& ACT Social Issues Committee for the invitation to give this
address.