[Mb-civic] Iraq and the legacy of Abraham - James Carroll - Boston Globe Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Mon Apr 10 04:08:23 PDT 2006
Iraq and the legacy of Abraham
By James Carroll | April 10, 2006 | The Boston Globe
JUDAISM, Christianity, and Islam are referred to as Abrahamic religions,
a description aiming to head off the clash of civilizations by
emphasizing a common connection to the patriarch whose name means
''father of multitudes."
Yet Jews, Christians, and Muslims are more than mere cousins. The
imaginative breakthrough represented in the story of Abraham offers a
first measure of the meaning of human existence. If his descendants were
more fully in touch with that meaning, Iraq would be a different place
today, and the religions would not be on the cusp of war.
Abraham's story comes to us from Genesis. What makes it important is all
that precedes it. The Bible begins as a set of creation myths,
narratives about Adam, Eve, Cain, Abel, Noah, the Flood, the tower of
Babel -- anecdotes that few contemporary readers take in any literal
sense. They are stories from the era of ''once upon a time," and they
define the concern of the Creator as extending to the entire scope of
creation.
But at the end of the 11th chapter of Genesis, something new happens, a
shift from the universal to the specific, from timelessness to ''that
time then"; from never-never land to a particular locale -- a bridge of
land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. One day on our calendar, a
specific individual, whom scholars believe actually to have existed,
became the subject of the biblical text. That was the true beginning of
the world-view we take for granted.
''Leave your country, your family, and your father's house for the land
I will show you," God said to this person. ''I will make you a great
nation. I will bless you and make your name famous, so it will be used
as a blessing."
The call of Abraham marks the beginning of human historical
consciousness, a direct consequence of the revolutionary affirmation
that God meets human beings by meeting one human being at one time, and
at one place. The God who addresses Abraham in effect orders him to
leave the realm of the purely mythical for ''the land I will show you."
Here is the difference between Abraham's God and the gods of Ur or
Egypt: This God acts not out of time, but in it; not in the other world,
but in this one; not in heaven, but on earth. This Creator is invested
in creation not in general, but in particular. Therefore history -- what
happens here and now -- is of ultimate significance. This means that the
value of mere abstractions must be measured against the real-world
consequences of their implementation.
The war in Iraq today was launched without regard for such consequences,
and we see the result. The genius insight of Genesis is that when God is
understood as the God of history, then history -- what happens in time
among human beings -- takes on absolute value. The ideal, therefore,
must always be measured against the real.
The death of each man, woman, and child who has died in Iraq across the
last three years equals, in the eyes of the God who called Abraham by
name, the death of all that exists. Each person is of infinite worth. If
war makers had calculated their decisions on this scale, they would have
found another way to proceed. War must be a last resort, not a first
reaction.
But the story of Abraham makes another point. In addition to being the
God of history, this God is the God of freedom. Not freedom in the
shallow rhetoric of American politics, but freedom that defines each
human choice as having as much significance as the very acts of God.
Abraham's call, with the fate of multitudes at stake, meant nothing
until Abraham said yes to it. But the possibility of that yes presumed
the possibility of its opposite. God, in freedom, initiates. Abraham, in
freedom, responds. But as subsequent verses of Genesis make clear,
Abraham's will and God's are not identical, and that is the way this God
wants things to be.
A God of freedom invites a response, but does not coerce it. Why?
Because in this way the God of history makes humans responsible for history.
Jews, Christians, and Muslims bear the weight of this precious legacy,
embodied in our common ancestor. History matters absolutely. So does
each human life. And so does every human choice. Absolute responsibility
follows. That this wisdom first showed itself in the landscape across
which war now rages is another reason to end it.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2006/04/10/iraq_and_the_legacy_of_abraham/
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