Babylon upon a Hill?
Religious thinkers debate how America should use its unrivaled influence
Douglas LeBlanc | posted 5/01/2003 12:00AM
Spiritual Perspectives on America's Role as Superpower
The Editors at SkyLight Paths
SkyLight Paths Publishing, 229 pages, $16.95
More than anything since the blessed collapse of the Soviet Union, the Iraq War has highlighted America's role as the world's lone superpower. In a recent Wall Street Journal, columnist Daniel Henninger explored how America rose to this role.
"Yes, the military inventory and tactical skills on display for all the world to see right now are one reason the U.S. has sole claim to the title of superpower, but that stuff's just one piece of it," Henninger wrote. "It's a social and political system rooted in mavericks, innovation, risk-taking, open intellectual argument, impatience, creative change, failure, the frontier spirit, competition, and a compulsion to get ahead."
Dennis Prager, an observant Jew and one of the few conservatives in Spiritual Perspectives on America's Role as Superpower, suggests a more spiritual reason: "There are, and have been, many Christian countries. There are many secular countries. But only America is Judeo-Christian, and it has always seen itself as such."
Others see this nation's superpower status in gloomy terms, and they protest the war as a manifestation of arrogance. Whatever Christians think about America, we face this reality: America's power is not merely a question of economic or military dominance, but also of its moral and spiritual health.
Some of the 16 contributors to this volume cite John Winthrop's concept of America as a city upon a hill, and many cite Jesus' principle that much will be required from those who have received abundantly. That principle leaves many people concerned for America's future. It's easy to find American examples of cultural self-indulgence and the intoxicating powers of an empire, and empires do not fare well in God's economy.
As Sufi sheik Kabir Helminski writes, "If the world were reduced to the scale of a neighborhood, a third of the neighborhood would be without safe drinking water, sufficient food, and adequate shelter. The United States would be an expensive apartment building with a sophisticated alarm system and armed guards."
Compared to our global neighbors, few Americans must think about whether our children will reach adulthood or whether we will become martyrs. We are more likely concerned about which restaurant to visit or what to do for weekend entertainment.
Discuss Among Yourselves
The editors at SkyLight Paths have designed this book for small groups, offering a few questions about each brief essay. The volume overly favors the cultural left, with very few of its contributors showing openness even to the concept of just war—much less to whether the Iraq War qualifies as such.
"No blood for oil" is a cheap slogan about the Iraq War, but it could be a valid concern, if worded with greater care. Francis Schaeffer once worried that Americans would readily choose authoritarianism to preserve their personal peace and affluence.
Some contributors to this volume clearly believe that the Iraq War is strictly a matter of American self-interest. Contributors furthest to the political left deliver predictable finger-shakings in the face of the Evil Other (which, for them, means America's Republican President rather than Iraq's Republican Guard).
Rosemary Radford Ruether of Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary blasts a "new alliance of the Christian right, with its wars on gays, feminists, and reproductive rights, with national security and free trade neoconservatives," which contributed to "the nonelection of George W. Bush in 2000." She is displeased by "hard-right ideologues" because they see the world through a lens of good versus evil.