The Notebooks of Schubert Ogden

You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

Version 1 Next »

SCANNED PDF

I have argued that "no interpretation of the christological assertion can be complete without its political interpretation." But what, exactly, does this Inean? I have proposed in defining it as action "to establish justice not only in the state and government but also throughout the whole social and cultural order-
Incnnely, by either maintaining or transforming alI of the basic structures of this order so that each person is equally free with every other to be the active subject

of his or her own self-creation, instead of being merely the passive object of the self-creations of others"(PC: 95)? I

governmental, or statutory. But they are also cal1ed to concern themselves with all other structures of order throughout society and culture-and that likewise at both levels.

To Jove is, first of a11, to listen. But to listen is always todo not doubt that it was this broader sense of "politics" I had in mind in arguing that interpretation of the christological assertion without its political interpretation is insofar incomplete. But, then, my difference from Gamwell (as well as others whose use of "politics" is stricter) is in no way a rejection of what he argues for in insisting that "politics is a Christian vocation," but only the contention that Christians are called to indefinitely 1110re than his understanding of the term al10ws for. They are indeed called to democratic participation at both levels of the state and government-constituent, or constitutional, as well as listen, not lea~t to the structures by which the situation is ordered, which, in the case of human beings, always include the structures of society and culture. And here, as in face 2of all other structures, one must pray for wisdom to distinguish between the ones that cannot be changed and that, therefore, must be accepted with serenity, and the others that should be changed and that, therefore, can be changed, if onJy with courage.

16 Decelnber 2009

What it means depends, obviously, on what is understood by "politics" and its cognates. SpecificaJly, is "politics" to be understood formally with Gamwell (and perhaps most others) simply in its usual stricter sense as "the activities of the state and the process by which these activities are decided or determined" ("the state," being understood as "that association whose identifying purpose is to order or govern the pursuit of purposes in the community and ... , therefore, the one association in any society to which all individuals in the society must belong")? Or is "politics" to be understood formally in the broader sense

  • No labels