Recovering Christendom
Gilbert Meilaender
Copyright
(c) 1997 First Things 77 (November 1997):
36-42.
The Desire of the Nations:
Rediscovering the Roots of Political Theology. By
Oliver O’Donovan. Cambridge University Press. 304 pp.
$68.50.
Granting, of course, that there are countless books I have
not read, and with apologies in particular to the friends
whose books I have read, The Desire of the Nations is
as significant a work of theology as I can recall reading in
the last twenty years. It is also, alas, a very difficult (and
very expensive) book.
In the Preface to the first edition of his Critique of
Pure Reason, Kant noted that his work, even when set forth
in "purely scholastic fashion," was already quite
large. He therefore deemed it "inadvisable to enlarge it yet
further through examples and illustrations. These are
necessary only from a popular point of view; and this
work can never be made suitable for popular consumption. Such
assistance is not required by genuine students of the
science."
I recalled this passage as I worked my way through The
Desire of the Nations, more than once wondering whether to
number myself among the "genuine students of the science" or
among those in need of more "assistance." O’Donovan’s style is
dense, elliptical, architectonic—but also enormously learned
in ways one hardly ever encounters in contemporary theological
writing. Many books are worth reading; this book is
important.
What makes it important? Chiefly, I believe, two things.
The book is, first, a reading of Scripture as a coherent whole
and continuous narrative. This reading is genuinely historical
in the sense that it makes place for change and development
within the biblical narrative. It is very far removed from any
ahistorical proof-texting; yet the entire story is told from
the standpoint of the Church’s witness to the resurrection of
Jesus. It is the story of God’s triumph in Christ, the desire
of the nations. And second, the book is a powerful defense of
Christendom—not as a present reality, of course, since
O’Donovan knows that we no longer live in such times, but as a
necessary feature of the Church’s mission.
Complicated as the book is, it is nevertheless carefully
plotted. In this review I will try, first, briefly to place
the book in terms of some contemporary theological
concerns—and in terms of Augustine and Barth, on both of whom
O’Donovan draws heavily. Second, and at much greater length, I
aim to summarize the argument of the book—tracing its account
of political rule from ancient Israel, through the revelation
of the kingdom of God in Jesus and the rule of the exalted
Christ in the Church, to the Church’s mission which
anticipates the obedience of political authorities and the
transformation of societies. And third, I will step back and
ask what, if anything, the argument lacks. In particular, I
will ponder the fact that it makes power, rather than love,
the central theme of biblical narrative.
If we try to locate O’Donovan’s project theologically, we
might first recall his description of Barth’s political
theology as a "magnificent, but incomplete, beckoning
movement." Barth, of course, came at political questions from
a variety of perspectives at different points in his life, but
O’Donovan notes in particular the never–completed volume IV/4
of the Church Dogmatics, in which Barth approached
politics "solely from the point of view of the Church’s
mission." It would not be entirely mistaken to read The
Desire of the Nations as the completion of that project.
It is not only that, however, for it is also a City of God
for our time, an account of the history of that city of
which glorious things are spoken. And O’Donovan calls Barth
and Augustine unmistakably to mind when—in a passage that I
shall come around to questioning—he writes that "no destiny
can possibly be conceived in the world, or even out of it,
other than that of a city."
Although I will not be able to do O’Donovan’s discussion
justice, I intend to summarize it at length, if only in order
to encourage other readers to enter into it themselves and
probe its complexities. Hans Frei once described Barth’s
theological writing as having the "peculiar character of being
at once accessible and yet so difficult to do justice to in
exposition and commentary." Something similar is true of
The Desire of the Nations, and Frei’s description of
Barth’s project is not a bad description of what O’Donovan is
doing:
Barth was about the business of conceptual description:
He took the classical themes of communal Christian language
molded by the Bible, tradition, and constant usage in
worship, practice, instruction, and controversy, and he
restated or redescribed them, rather than evolving arguments
on their behalf. It was of the utmost importance to him that
this communal language . . . had an integrity of its own: It
was irreducible. But in that case its lengthy, even
leisurely unfolding was equally indispensable. For he was
restating or reusing a language that had once been
accustomed talk, both in first-order use in ordinary or real
life, and in second-order technical theological reflection,
but had now for a long time, perhaps more than 250 years,
been receding from natural familiarity, certainly in
theological discourse. So Barth had as it were to recreate a
universe of discourse, and he had to put the reader in the
middle of that world, instructing him in the use of that
language by showing him how.
The first task of political theology is to give an account
of what we mean by political authority or rule (the
esse of politics)—the notion of a political act. A
further task will be to unfold the bene esse of
politics, the proper use of political action. O’Donovan’s
description of political authority begins with the vocabulary
used in the Bible to describe the reign of Yahweh over Israel.
The political tradition of Israel—read as a history that
develops over time, in which each development "has to be
weighed and interpreted in the light of what preceded and what
followed it"—is normative, and its character can be roughly
summarized in four affirmations.
The Lord’s reign is, first, an exercise of power that gives
Israel victory or salvation; it is, second, the execution of
judgment or justice within Israel; and it is, third, the
establishment of Israel’s communal identity as a people
existing over time (an identity connected at first with the
land and, later, with possession of the law). These three
affirmations summarize what it means to say that the Lord
rules as king in Israel, and, if the features that constitute
Israel as a people are normative, what it means to speak of
any political authority.
These three—power, execution of right, and perpetuation of
communal identity—constitute Yahweh’s rule in Israel, but to
them a fourth affirmation must be added. The Lord’s rule is
acknowledged—though not established—in the praise Israel, as a
worshiping community, offers. "Shall we conclude, then, that
within every political society there occurs, implicitly, an
act of worship of divine rule? I think we may even venture as
far as that." This may strike a contemporary reader as
bizarre, but it helps us understand why idolatry always lies
near at hand in politics when the divine authority that
establishes government is ignored or forgotten. At any rate,
we do not create political authority; we acknowledge it and
thereby acknowledge our existence as a political community.
"The doctrine that we set up political authority, as a
device to secure our own essentially private, local, and
unpolitical purposes, has left the Western democracies in a
state of pervasive moral debilitation, which, from time to
time, inevitably throws up idolatrous and authoritarian
reactions." Here we see O’Donovan at his most antiliberal,
attacking (on the basis of Israel’s normative tradition) the
idea that government exists chiefly to foster the pursuit of
private aims and interests. That tendency in his thought will,
however, be sharply qualified before he is finished.
The story of Israel does not end with the establishment of
Yahweh’s rule through power, judgment, and establishment of
communal identity. This rule must now be mediated to the
people, and the nature of that mediation changes over time.
Moses is himself a unitary mediator—carrying out all three
functions as military deliverer, judge, and one who in the law
gives the pattern of communal life. Kings in Israel also
claimed to exercise all three functions in an undivided
sovereignty that provided a unitary representation of God’s
rule. Such an arrangement, always controversial in Israel, was
a constant temptation to make more of the monarch than he was,
to see in the king an image of Israel’s God.
To avoid such danger Israel turned not to a notion of
"separation of powers" (which notion cannot therefore be quite
as politically essential as we sometimes suppose) but,
instead, to prophets. The law of the Lord had an independent
voice within Israelite society through the prophets, and,
thus, every political authority must understand that it is not
the sole mediator of divine authority, that it is itself
subject to the community’s own independent witness to God’s
will (which witness could, for example, take the form of a
theory of "natural law" that transcends and judges positive
law). This independent witness may even become, as it did
later in Israel’s history when the mediating institutions of
government had collapsed, the voice of a single individual
(such as Jeremiah) that preserves the community’s memory of
its own identity and reaches out toward its
reconstitution.
This depiction of political rule, drawn from the history of
Israel, can also be applied to other nations, for Israel’s God
was not locally confined. "Out of the self-possession of this
people in their relation to God springs the possibility of
other peoples’ possessing themselves in God." To put the point
a little differently, but in a way whose relevance to
continuing disputes in the Middle East may be apparent, the
God who providentially elects Israel as his chosen people is
ready to protect the communal identity of other peoples as
well. What Israel’s tradition does not authorize, however, is
any single mediator of divine rule at the international
level. There is no single world order or empire. Yahweh’s
world is "plurally constituted." He could make his name known
to the nations through Israel, and his law could bind the
nations universally, but there is no universal mediator of his
rule. Hence, in relations among nations the rule of law can be
invoked but not the commanding rule of a single
government.
This says something about the limits of our collective
identities. To be a human being at all is to participate in
one or more collective identities. But there is no
collective identity so over arching and all-encompassing
that no human beings are left outside it. In that sense it
is true that to speak of "humanity" is to speak of an
abstraction. Only in that sense, for in fact "humanity" has
a perfectly conceivable referent, and we should not hesitate
to say that "humanity" is real. But it is not a reality that
we can command politically. We do not meet it in any
community, however great, of which we could assume the
leadership. We meet it only in the face of Christ, who
presents himself as our leader and commander.
With this essence of political authority as drawn from the
history of Yahweh’s reign in Israel, O’Donovan can turn to the
bene esse, the proper use of political action. To
describe that, we must sketch the manner in which the rule of
God, established in Israel’s communal existence, is brought to
its completion in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus.
Only then will we have an evangelical political theology.
The same categories that emerge from an examination of
God’s rule in Israel can be used to set forth the revelation
of the kingdom of God in Jesus. He does mighty works of power
that bring salvation; he proclaims the judgment of Israel; he
reforms the understanding of the law upon which the identity
of a restored Israel is based. The praise that acknowledges
God’s rule corresponds now to faith that recognizes the reign
of God in Jesus. Much that passes for political theology (what
O’Donovan terms "Jesuology") might stop here, focusing on
Jesus’ announcement of the dawning of a new age of liberation.
Such an approach "could encourage hope for new acts of divine
creativity. But it could not speak meaningfully of the defeat
of Jesus’ program, nor of its vindication." A better political
theology "must base itself on ‘the hidden counsel of God’
which worked also through Caiaphas and Pilate." It must, that
is, be grounded not in "Jesuology" but in Christology. The
starting point for this Christology is the classical "two
natures" teaching, which captures well the manner in which
Jesus fills the two roles we have seen within Israel’s
story—the mediator of God’s rule, and the representative
individual who carries the identity of the people and reaches
out toward its reconstitution.
O’Donovan traces the chief "moments" of the Christ-event in
a fourfold pattern that coheres with the account of political
rule derived from Israel’s history. These moments are (1) the
advent of Christ to save; (2) the passion of Christ in which
the judgment of the world is given; (3) the restoration of
Christ, which affirms Israel’s new identity in its
representative; and (4) the exaltation of Christ, the
coronation of the one who has triumphed over the powers that
oppose God’s rule.
Present in his absence until the Parousia, the exalted
Christ rules in the Church, whose life participates in the
four moments of the Christ-event. Marked by the sign of
baptism, the Church now gathers to herself those who
acknowledge Jesus as Lord. Marked by the sign of the
Eucharist, the Church now suffers—paradigmatically in her
martyrs, but in countless other ways as well. Marked by the
sign of her keeping of the Lord’s day as a little Easter, the
Church now rejoices in the restoration of the creation. Marked
by the sign of the laying on of hands, the Church now speaks
God’s word in prophecy and prayer (which is speech addressed
to the God from whom it comes). The churches have often been
tempted to understand themselves in terms of one of these
"moments" alone—as marked by mission alone, by suffering
alone, by triumph alone, or by social responsibility alone.
But such truncated understandings cannot recapitulate the
narrative coherence of the moments in the story of Christ.
The salvation that Christ brings always remains political
in nature. To be sure, the inward obedience of faith is
given a new and striking centrality, as St. Paul makes clear,
but Paul also testifies to the necessity of the continuing
existence of Israel (with its public, political tradition).
Israel too, of course, must take account of what has happened
in the Christ. As it once had moved from conceiving its
identity in terms of possession of the land to conceiving it
in terms of possession of the law, so now it is called to see
that possession of the law as fullfilled in Christ. But that
does not nullify the continuing importance of its normative
political tradition. "So until the last reconciliation the two
communities must coexist, the one with the witness of its
public institutions, the other with a witness founded on and
attesting faith." The structure of public, political life
remains an important concern even in the age of the
Church.
Indeed, the exalted Christ rules not only in the Church but
also in political life. After all, the powers have been
disarmed by Christ, who has triumphed over them and who is the
desire of the nations. Of course, that triumph remains hidden
until the end of the age. Hence, we must both assert the rule
of Christ and simultaneously acknowledge that it is not yet
fully apparent. "Within the framework of those two assertions
there opens up an account of secular authority which presumes
neither that the Christ-event never occurred nor that the
sovereignty of Christ is now transparent and uncontested." It
is fair to say, however, that O’Donovan’s discussion
emphasizes the disarming and the rule more than the
eschatological reservation and the hiddenness.
How, in fact, should political authority survive at all as
a bearer of collective identity once membership in the Church
has emerged as the new center of identity? To be sure, power
and communal identity remain aspects of any account of the
esse of political authority, but the "desacralization"
of politics by the Christ-event provides a new understanding
of the bene esse—the proper use of political action.
(It also provides a setting in which the powers of this world
might attempt one last desperate act of self-assertion—might,
that is, become the Antichrist.) The point of politics must be
rethought, for it exists now to serve the advancement of the
Gospel. It exists, that is, chiefly to provide the execution
of right, the just judgment that preserves the social order
toward the further spread of the Christian mission. "The
accumulation of power and the maintenance of community
identity cease to be self-evident goods; they have to be
justified at every point by their contribution to the judicial
function. The responsible state is therefore minimally
coercive and minimally representative." This should make clear
that, whatever the other tendencies in O’Donovan’s thought, he
holds that the political doctrine arising from the
desacralization of politics can, broadly speaking, be
characterized as the classical tradition of political
liberalism.
In the time and space provided by secular government the
Church is in mission, securing the identity of Israel on the
one hand, securing for the sake of Israel the obedience of the
Gentile nations on the other—until the day when Yahweh gathers
both Israel and the nations and Christ delivers the kingdom to
his Father. "Nations shall come to your light, and kings to
the brightness of your rising," the prophet says, articulating
thereby the twofold focus of the Church’s mission: to society
and to political authorities. The aim of the mission is
different in the two cases. Society must be transformed only
in accord with the purposes of God revealed in Christ. Rulers
must disappear, relinquishing their sovereignty now that the
stronger one has appeared.
O’Donovan takes up "the obedience of the rulers" in chapter
six, perhaps the richest chapter in the book, containing his
treatment (and, in some respects, defense) of the idea of
Christendom—that is, the idea of a political order secular but
nonetheless professedly Christian. That this seems to us
almost a contradiction in terms demonstrates what has happened
to the meaning of "secular" in our world. For Christian
political thought, O’Donovan suggests, the alternative to
"secular" should be not "religious" but "eternal." Secular
government is "secular" not in the sense that it is
irreligious but in the sense that its role is confined only to
this age (the saeculum) that is passing away. It does
not and cannot in any way represent the promise of the new age
that comes in Christ. "Applied to political authorities, the
term ‘secular’ should tell us that they are not agents of
Christ, but are marked for displacement when the rule of God
in Christ is finally disclosed. They are Christ’s conquered
enemies; yet they have an indirect testimony to give. . . .
Like the surface of a planet pocked with craters by the
bombardment it receives from space, the governments of the
passing age show the impact of Christ’s dawning glory." What
Christendom attempts, therefore, is to reconceive government
in such a way that it bears witness to the triumph of Christ
while also recognizing itself as belonging only to the age
that is passing away.
O’Donovan is emphatic, however, that the creation of such a
political order is not the project of the Church’s
mission. That mission is to announce the rule of God in
Christ, the desire of the nations. Christendom is simply a
result of the Church’s mission and—here is the crucial
claim—"a sign that God has blessed it." Suggesting that we
might usefully date the time of Christendom as lying between
313 (the Edict of Milan) and 1791 (the adoption of the First
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution), O’Donovan traces its
history and development in nineteen densely packed and richly
learned pages on "the doctrine of the Two." Because the old
age of the principalities and powers that have been disarmed
by Christ overlaps with the coming age of God’s kingdom,
Christians had to explore the meaning of living within two
societies. The movement of that exploration was roughly from a
struggle between two societies (in the patristic period), to a
vision of a single society with two foci of authority (in the
medieval period), to a distinction between an inner self and
its external roles in society (in the thought of Luther).
Recognizing that we no longer live within the time of
Christendom, O’Donovan is nonetheless unwilling to brand it a
mistaken turn in the road. "The Church is not at liberty to
withdraw from mission; nor may it undertake its mission
without confident hope of success."
The core of the idea of Christendom is that each of the two
authorities—which we can here call simply the Church and the
state—is to render service to the other "predicated on the
difference and the balance of their roles." The state serves
the Church by making possible its mission; the Church serves
the state by instructing it in what it means to be a "humble
state." The esse of political authority still
characterizes the humble state; it exercises power and
sustains the identity of a community. But now that the new age
has dawned in Christ, we can be clearer about the bene
esse—the proper action—of political authority. Now the
exercise of power and the preservation of communal identity
give way somewhat to the execution of right and justice. Power
is now exercised under law, never as if it were the
ultimate source of justice and right. "The responsible state
is therefore minimally coercive and minimally representative.
. . . This is not a restraint imposed by the nature of
political authority as such, which can thrive on excesses of
traditional legitimation and on splendid displays of force; it
is imposed by the limits conceded to secular authority by
Christ’s Kingdom."
Once again, therefore, the antiliberal strain in
O’Donovan’s thought is qualified. The "legal-constitutional
conception," the limited state, becomes part of the wisdom the
Church has to recommend to rulers of this world. Indeed, the
Church may over time have learned a good bit of such worldly
wisdom, which has become part of the Christian political
tradition, and which may be shared with many who do not
consider themselves Christian. The temptation in such
circumstances is to offer for public consumption the political
doctrine "as a substitute for proclaiming Christ." This is, in
fact, an apt characterization of much that is currently called
"public theology." What public theology has come to mean quite
often is that Christian and non-Christian endorse similar
political views while (privately) offering different reasons
for those views. But that, O’Donovan perceptively suggests, is
to withdraw from mission. "Granted, the Church may always make
the best of any coincidence of political doctrine between
Christians and non-Christians that it lights upon; but ‘making
the best’ means making the evangelical content of the doctrine
clear, not veiling it in embarrassment."
If the Church serves the state by helping it to be the
humble state, it in turn serves the Church by creating space
in which the latter’s mission may be carried out. In part it
accomplishes this simply by being the responsible state that
understands the limits to which the dawning of God’s kingdom
now makes it subject. It may do this unwittingly, but it may
also do it quite consciously, recognizing the Church and
acknowledging its mission—and a reader should not permit the
boldness of that claim to be lost in the complexities of
O’Donovan’s prose. The most truly Christian state will echo
John the Baptist: "He must increase; I must decrease."
Not all states are likely to be so humble, of course. And
part of the Church’s mission is to recognize the Antichrist
(who claims to unite "earthly political rule and heavenly
soteriological mediation" in one agent) when he makes his
appearance. In the face of the Antichrist the Church will have
to be prepared for the possibility of martyrdom, but she
should also confidently anticipate that the witness of her
martyrs will be powerful. Hence, "the Church must be prepared
to welcome the homage of the kings when it is offered to the
Lord of the martyrs. . . . No honor is paid to martyrs if they
are presented as mere dissidents, whose sole glory was to
refuse the cultural order that was on offer to them. Martyrdom
is, as the word itself indicates, witness, pointing to an
alternative offer." And that alternative offer is
Christendom—the humble state that knows it is destined to pass
away and that, in the meantime, helps to make the Church’s
mission possible.
Must not such a state be coercive—at least from the
perspective of those not inclined to welcome the Church’s
mission? To the degree that the state seeks to make possible
the Church’s mission, must not some members of the society
feel themselves to be "outsiders," in it but not of it? It all
depends. If the Church’s mission has successfully taken root
in the lives of many people within a society, it is quite
right, O’Donovan suggests, that their deep agreements should
be reflected in their government. He argues persuasively that
nothing in the classical tradition of political liberalism
requires otherwise. That tradition encouraged the shared
pursuit of truth, and "one cannot approve the common quest for
truth without approving the hope that common persuasions may
emerge from it."
But what some of our contemporaries have now in fact begun
to believe is that any deep social agreement is itself
inherently coercive and potentially oppressive. If we
acquiesce in that claim, however, the social agreements that
constitute the Church would also be undercut. "If there is no
religious test on the right to vote, or to have access to
education or medical care, why should there be one on
attending Mass and receiving communion, which is, after all, a
source of satisfaction to religious temperaments and an
important means of social participation?" That is where an
unqualified liberal individualism lands us, and that it should
find any societal consensus threatening is unsurprising. But
if such a view undergirds the critique of Christendom, then,
O’Donovan is suggesting, one must say a good word on behalf of
Christendom. Of course, the time of Christendom is for the
moment gone, but it was not wrong—and we would not be wrong—to
hope that kings might come to the brightness of
Christ’s rising.
Nor wrong to hope that nations would come to his
light. This directs us to the other focus of the Church’s
mission: not only political authorities, but also societies.
If the former must ultimately disappear, the latter must be
transformed. The distinctive features of liberal society in
the West have, in fact, been shaped to some degree by the four
moments that make up the narrative structure of the dawning of
the kingdom in Christ and the narrative structure of the
Church’s life. Hence, O’Donovan thinks of the needed social
transformation as having taken place, at least in part, when
modernity brought to fruition and gave social shape to central
Christian beliefs. But he also suggests that modern society
has taken those beliefs and subverted them by losing the
context which alone enables them to enhance human life. Thus,
modern society both fulfills and subverts Christian teaching.
We can briefly sketch this "pair of counterinterpretations" of
modernity in terms of the same fourfold structure at work
throughout the book.
Christ comes in power to save, the Church gathers his
disciples through baptism in a manner that transgresses all
given communal boundaries—and liberal society has its
beginning in this discovery of freedom. "A society founded in
conversion and baptism is a society unlike all others."
Because no human authority can now be understood as ultimate,
space is created for personal freedom. This is not, however,
an assertion of individual freedom; rather, it is the freedom
that emerges from a new community whose Lord sets it free from
all other lords. If, however, individuals become nothing more
than freedom, nothing other than abstract will set over
against an inert nature, and if consent becomes the only moral
language we know, freedom subverts the natural communities and
structures of life that are required for us to learn how
rightly to exercise that freedom.
Christ endures a suffering in which the judgment of the
world is revealed, the Church, sharing through the eucharist
in his broken body, shares also in his suffering in the
world—and liberal society gradually learns the meaning of
sympathy for sufferers, learns that, though judgment remains
necessary, mercy in judgment is now essential. But once
freedom becomes its own ground and whatever we do not will
seems unintelligible, suffering can no longer be accepted.
Compassion—basing itself on "the rejection of suffering rather
than the acceptance of it"—replaces sympathy. Hesitation to
pass judgment upon those who suffer remains, but now it is a
hesi tation grounded in moral insecurity rather than in
religious humility.
Christ is raised to a new life as the representative of
Israel’s new identity, the Church, celebrating on each Lord’s
Day the joy of that resurrection, rejoices at the restoration
of the creation—and liberal society gradually develops a
concept of natural right, of a humane social order in which
both the equal dignity of every human being and the importance
of distinctions that make natural communities possible are
affirmed. But when freedom becomes its own ground, natural
right becomes simply an interest in self-preservation, and
equality can no longer make room for the nonreciprocal roles
that important forms of human community (such as the family)
require.
The risen Christ is exalted to rule, the Church, empowered
through the laying on of hands, raises up its prophetic voice
in society and speaks—and liberal society gradually is
instructed in an openness to speech. Rulers learn that they
must be responsive to the public deliberations of the entire
community. But when freedom becomes its own ground, speech
becomes mere assertion of self and finally loses its
point.
Thus far O’Donovan’s rediscovery of the roots of our
political theology, making clear that we now find ourselves in
a society that in some respects fulfills the Church’s mission
and in other respects subverts it. This pair of
counterinterpretations of modernity serves "to sharpen our
understanding of the decisions we now face; to interpret the
two loves which made two cities in a form appropriate to our
historical situation." What we are, politically and socially,
bears the unmistakable imprint of Christian thought and
action. The inextricable intermingling of the two cities in
human history is, by God’s providence, directed toward the
eternal unveiling of the Church as the city for which we hope.
But in the meantime, in earthly history, the mission of the
Church is to disclose to human eyes the true meaning of a city
"through the prism of the Church." That is the purpose of
political theology.
I have indulged myself in this lengthy summary of
O’Donovan’s argument not because it can substitute for the
book itself but in order to offer some account of the scope
and structure of his undertaking. Moreover, if O’Donovan’s
project is what I suggested at the outset, conceptual
redescription of the world narrated by Scripture, one must
first try to live within the world so narrated and see what
one makes of it. Nothing is easier than to suggest what an
author might have done but did not, and I do not want to
engage in that kind of critique. But it may be useful to ask
whether anything is missing from O’Donovan’s account and, if
so, what difference it might make.
One thing that is missing is the primeval history of
Genesis 1-11, the backdrop against which the story of Israel,
Jesus, and the Church is played out. And whatever else we make
of that primeval history, it seems to teach us that the work
of God in history for our salvation takes place within certain
limits, the most fundamental of which is: no return to
paradise is possible. The angel with the burning brand is
placed east of Eden; Cain, first to found a city, is also
author of the first fratricide; the covenant made with Noah
recognizes the sad fact that within history community will
always be sustained through the use of force; the scattering
of the peoples at Babel makes clear that we should not hope
for a single, harmonious human community.
Now, of course, O’Donovan is not wrong to see in the
triumph of Christ the restoration of creation, and in the
Church a community built upon trust into which all peoples are
invited. But if we read that story against the backdrop of
these opening chapters of the Bible, our reading may be more
cautious than O’Donovan’s. We will then anticipate that
Christ’s triumph must remain hidden under the cross, and we
will be less certain that we can trace that triumph through
history. We will be less eager to have the force of even a
humble state joined too closely to the mission of the
church.
Is this to take the triumph less seriously? Not really to
treat it as a triumph? I think not. It is only to emphasize
that the triumph is more evident to faith than to sight. It is
only to take seriously the eschatological reservation that St.
Paul himself articulates, for example, in Romans 6. The Paul
who writes there that "you who were once slaves of sin have
become obedient from the heart . . . and . . . have become
slaves of righteousness" is the same Paul who gives the new
creation a decisively future orientation. "For if we have been
united with him in a death like his, we shall certainly be
united with him in a resurrection like his." To take that
eschatological reservation seriously, one need not question
the basic contours of the story O’Donovan tells, but one may
simply emphasize that the bene esse of political action
will not replace its esse (the use of force).
All that, however, is only a qualification. Something else
is missing, though, from O’Donovan’s account that may make a
still greater difference. "No destiny can possibly be
conceived in the world, or even out of it," he writes, "other
than that of a city." It is not surprising, therefore, that,
in his account, when we gaze upon the face of Christ we look
at one who is "our leader and commander." What if we were to
think of the God whose face is revealed in Christ not first as
one who commands but as one who loves? Perhaps such a move
would not be as conducive to political theology, but it might
alert us to overlooked possibilities.
Can we really conceive of no destiny in this world or
another than that of a city? When in Revelation 21, in a
passage that plays an important role in O’Donovan’s account,
the holy city, the new Jerusalem, comes down from heaven, the
seer’s metaphor is a decidedly mixed one. For the holy city is
described in the nonpolitical imagery of marriage—as "a bride
adorned for her husband." And the holy city Jerusalem that is
revealed is "the Bride, the wife of the Lamb." We should not
too readily assume that the holy city is chiefly an image of
political rule; perhaps, rather, it images a communion in
which each participant is loved personally and intimately.
We might try to retell the story O’Donovan has told from
this perspective—as the story of Yahweh’s wooing of his bride
Israel and the marriage of Christ and his Church. Not
politics, then, but marriage would be the sign of God’s
ultimate, redeeming intention for the creation. Not command
but love would be the dominant motif. The point of politics
would be to make possible such private bonds of love. And the
promises to Israel would point not toward a redeemed public
realm but toward a hope that lies, finally, beyond that
realm.
But all that is only the sketch of a story someone else
might try to tell. O’Donovan has told his in a book that
deserves to be widely read and discussed. We shall know the
full truth of these matters only in the new Jerusalem, where,
we may hope, such discussion will be a part of the praise of
God. To work one’s way through The Desire of the
Nations may, therefore, be good preparation for
heaven.
Gilbert Meilaender holds the Board of Directors Chair in
Theological Ethics at Valparaiso University.

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