Archive for Guns

Christianity and Repealing the Second Amendment

Posted in America Magazine, Social Justice, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , on February 22, 2013 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

gun_violenceIt is quite astonishing how some of the most radical and justice-based ideas of the last two-and-a-half centuries have elicited some of the most vitriolic responses imaginable. That no human beings should be treated as chattel, to be owned and sold, abused and dehumanized. That women should have the right to vote and participate in society as full citizens. And now, that private gun ownership should be prohibited apart from a few reasonable exceptions for hunting and certain sporting activities.

Each of these things sought to be overturned were previously enshrined in the Constitution of the United States: Slavery was legal; women could not vote; private citizens had the right to not have their ownership of firearms infringed. That last one is, of course, in order to keep a “well regulated militia” and the type of “arms” that were described muskets and not semi-automatic handguns, but that’s getting ahead of myself.

Last week the editors of America magazine published a bold editorial titled, “Repeal the Second Amendment.” In it they unmask a number of unsightly truths that gun-ownership advocates wish to ignore or deny. One is the (il)logic of popular constitutional and social perception, which leads to a circular sense of problem-solution responses summarized by the editors in the following way:

 The culture of violence in America has spawned a deadly syllogism: Guns solve problems; we have problems; therefore, we need guns. Yet consider the tragedy in Aurora. Imagine if just 10 other people in that movie theater had been carrying guns. In the confusion of the onslaught, would fewer people or more people have died when those 10 other people opened fire in the dark? More important, is this really the kind of world we want to live in, a world in which lethal power can be unleashed at any moment at any corner, in any home, in any school?

They continue from this point, after already laying out other statistical evidence that begs our need to question the maintenance of outmoded and, frankly, dangerous right that I personally associated with the “right to own slave” and the “right of only men to vote.” Gun ownership made sense in a seventeenth-century milieu at a time when this fledgling colonial rebellion was reacting to threats that can never be the concern of the only imperial superpower currently present on this planet.

The editors summarize their proposal here:

Both Australia and Britain, for example, experienced gun massacres in 1996 and subsequently enacted stricter gun control laws. Their murder rates dropped. Yet in the United States, the birthplace of pragmatism, our fundamental law proscribes practical, potentially life-saving measures.

Americans must ask: Is it prudent to retain a constitutionally guaranteed right to bear arms when it compels our judges to strike down reasonable, popularly supported gun regulations? Is it moral to inhibit in this way the power of the country’s elected representatives to provide for the public safety? Does the threat of tyranny, a legitimate 18th-century concern but an increasingly remote, fanciful possibility in the contemporary United States, trump the grisly, daily reality of gun violence? The answer to each of these questions is no. It is time to face reality. If the American people are to confront this scourge in any meaningful way, then they must change. The Constitution must change. The American people should repeal the Second Amendment.

I agree entirely.

By way of full disclosure I should acknowledge that I am a staff columnist for America magazine, however I am not an editor nor on the editorial board, so I first read this editorial when everybody else had occasion to do so. Not everything expressed in the magazine’s editorials always reflect my personal opinion, just as not everything I write reflects that of the editorial board’s opinion. Nevertheless, on this point I’m in full agreement!

The editorial brings up very good points as far as constitutional law and the history of amendment and repeal are concerned. For example, the editors, having acknowledged the gravity of their proposition, explain:

The Bill of Rights enumerates our most cherished freedoms. Any proposal to change the nation’s fundamental law is a very serious matter. We do not propose this course of action in a desultory manner, nor for light or transient reasons. We also acknowledge that repeal faces serious, substantial political obstacles and will prove deeply unpopular with many Americans. Nevertheless, we believe that repeal is necessary and that it is worthy of serious consideration.

Our proposal is in keeping, moreover, with the spirit in which the Constitution was drafted. The Bill of Rights belongs to a document that was designed to be changed; indeed, it was part of the genius of our founders to allow for a process of amendment. The process is appropriately cumbersome, but it is not impossible. Since its adoption in 1787, the American people have chosen to amend the Constitution 27 times. A century ago, leaders like Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson raised serious questions about the Consti-tution. Amendments soon followed, including provisions for a federal income tax, the direct election of U.S. senators, women’s suffrage and the prohibition of alcohol. The 21st Amendment, which repealed prohibition, established the precedent for our proposal.

Yet, despite their absolutely legitimate point about the possibility of such repeal, albeit a far chance in our contemporary political and social climate, what I find most convincing is the truth that I have often times reflected on here on this very blog: Whether or not all people can agree in a pluralist democratic society to repeal the second amendment (or at least pass stricter gun-control laws), Christians have no choice in the matter — to be Christian is to be nonviolent and that Gospel commitment to nonviolence bears certain practical implications that we must peacefully pursue.

This is something that Roman Catholic bishops have reiterated time and again. The editors remind us that, “In the most comprehensive statement on gun violence to come from the U.S. bishops’ conference, in 1975, a committee identified ‘the easy availability of handguns in our society’ as a major threat to human life and called for ‘effective and courageous action to control handguns, leading to their eventual elimination from our society’ with ‘exceptions…for the police, military, security guards’ and sporting clubs.”

Furthermore, in recent times, prominent Catholic leaders have reiterated this point, as the America editors explain:

In a recent interview, Tommaso Di Ruzza, the expert on disarmament and arms control at the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, explained that an individual does not possess an absolute natural right to own a lethal weapon: “There is a sort of natural right to defend the common interest and the common good” by the limited use of force, but this applies more to nations with an effective rule of law, not armed individuals. In the wake of Newtown, Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan said that “the fight for greater gun control in the country” is a pro-life position. “The unfettered access to assault weapons and handguns, along with the glorification of violence in our ‘entertainment’ industry…is really all part of a culture of death,” Cardinal Dolan said.

I can say a lot more and in the future I have no doubt that I will, here on DatingGod.org and elsewhere. For the time being, I wanted to officially go on the record to offer my support and explicit endorsement of this proposal. I, too, feel that the Second Amendment should be repealed. Those who have already leveled their uncharitable remarks at me for informal allusions to this proposal have, it seems, made the Constitution and the Second Amendment of that document into an idol. They have replaced the right of a nation-state to self-govern with the right to defend one’s self (from what exactly?) at any cost. They have replaced, as Stanley Hauerwas and other theologians have so keenly pointed out, the God of Jesus Christ with the “god of America.”

I worship the God of Jesus Christ, not the god of America. I recognize my baptismal vocation to follow in the footprints of Christ according to the Gospel, not defend outmoded “rights” that cause or world and society to be less-safe, more violent, and increasingly representative of a “culture of death.” I believe that Christians have no other choice but to support such a reasonable, if serious, measure. What Would Jesus Do?

Yes, repeal the Second Amendment.

Photo: Stock

The ‘Feast of Holy Innocents’ Two Weeks After the Newtown Massacre

Posted in Huffington Post with tags , , , , , , on December 28, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

newtown25n-2-webThis reflection originally appeared on The Huffington Post religion page on 28 December 2012.

Exactly two weeks, to the day, after the tragic slaying of twenty schoolchildren and the six adults who sought to protect them, several Christian communities (Roman Catholics, Anglicans, Lutherans) celebrate the annual “Feast of the Holy Innocents,” a memorial which appears on the liturgical calendar each year on December 28. This feast is also celebrated by the Syrian Christian communities (Syriac Orthodox, Syro-Malankara Catholics, Maronites, and Syro-Malabar Catholics) on the December 27, while the Eastern Orthodox Church celebrates this day on December 29.

The feast day is a solemn and challenging liturgical remembrance that calls to mind the command of King Herod of Judea who, as the tradition has it, was infuriated that the magi from the East did not return to him after visiting the infant Jesus to tell him the newborn’s location, and fearing his power was threatened by the birth of this child, “ordered the massacre of all the boys in Bethlehem and its vicinity who were two years old and under” (Matt 2:16).

The day is celebrated as a remembrance of martyrs, and is sometimes viewed as the commemoration of the “first martyrs” for these little babies and toddlers lost their lives, some would say, “for Christ.” Yet, this is not at all a satisfactory explanation.

The senseless murder of children can never be justified, even in an attempt simply to make sense of such a tragedy. This is one of the reasons why this annual memorial is so difficult and challenging, made more incomprehensible in light of the massacre at an elementary school in Newtown, CT two weeks earlier.

My own response to requests for understand and meaning of such tragedies is echoed succinctly in a quote by Rev. Kevin O’Neil, C.S.s.R., one of my former ethics professors, in a New York Times column earlier this week:

I will never satisfactorily answer the question “Why?” because no matter what response I give, it will always fall short. What I do know is that an unconditionally loving presence soothes broken hearts, binds up wounds, and renews us in life. This is a gift that we can all give, particularly to the suffering. When this gift is given, God’s love is present and Christmas happens daily.

This notion of God as the answer to the suffering that is so tragic, so senseless, so unbearable might help us to appreciate better why the Feast of the Holy Innocents occurs three days after Christmas. As I wrote here in The Huffington Post earlier this week, Christmas is more than one day — it is an entire liturgical season that begins at Christmas Eve and continues through the Baptism of the Lord, weeks later.

The Feast of the Holy Innocents is a Christmas memorial, a moment to pause amid the ostensible joy and cheer of the season of the birth of the child who is Emmanuel to recall the death of children whose lives were senselessly taken away.

One way to look at this feast day is to consider how, by its placement on the calendar and its proximity to the celebration of the coming of Christ, it is as an opportunity to reflect on the way in which God is not absent from the tragedies of suffering and death in our world. As Christians, we believe that God became human like us and lived among us. Over the course of Jesus’s life, he laughed and cried, he celebrated and mourned, and he understood what it meant to suffer. Crying at the death of a friend and embracing the voiceless, the marginalized, and the poor throughout his earthly life, Jesus Christ knew as well as any of us what it means to suffer and to lose.

But Jesus Christ, the Emmanuel (God-with-us) is also the sign, not just of God’s empathetic experience of suffering and loss in our world, but of the answer and model for response. As Fr. O’Neil also said in that Times column: “One true thing is this: Faith is lived in family and community, and God is experienced in family and community. We need one another to be God’s presence.”

Amid the suffering and loss in our world, it is you and I who, like Jesus Christ before us, offer both the empathetic tears of sincere compassion and the loving embrace and support for neighbor that God calls us to offer. As St. Teresa of Avila famously put it another way:

Christ has no body now on earth but yours, no hands but yours, no feet but yours, yours are the eyes through which Christ’s compassion is to look out to the earth, yours are the feet by which He is to go about doing good and yours are the hands by which He is to bless us now.

It falls to us to be “instruments of God’s peace,” as the famous prayer attributed to St. Francis’s memory reminds us. But being the hands and feet of Christ to those who suffer or are mourning cannot just be limited to our immediate communities.

What happened two weeks ago in Newtown, CT was particularly shocking to a world that considered such locations – an elementary school in an affluent Connecticut town (according to US Census data, the median income is over $100,000 and the poverty rate is under 3.0%) – to be safe and secure. However, the slaughtering of innocent children occurs everyday in neighborhoods and in cities all over the United States. I only have to think of a few of the cities in which I’ve lived in the last ten years (The Bronx, Wilmington, DE, Washington DC, for example) to recall how gun-related violence scars the lives of children and families on a daily basis.

The slaughtering of holy innocents occurs in so many other places throughout our world, every minute of every day: the children in Afghanistan and Iraq that have suffered the effects of war, oftentimes because of the United States’s interventions; the children of Pakistan, whose lives are shrouded by the fear of silent and lethal drones that fly overheard; the children of Syria, whose world is currently punctuated by a civil war; the children of Uganda, who were forced to be instruments of violence as child soldiers; and the hundreds of other places in our world where the Feast of Holy Innocents reflects the dark reality that so infrequently makes the headlines or the cable-news reports.

This is not to undermine or attempt to mitigate the true suffering and horror of the massacre in Newtown, but rather a call to get us to think about how the meaning of a Christian feast day, macabre though it may appear, might provide us with the opportunity to reevaluate our lives, our laws, and the way we strive to be Christ for others.

Our hearts continue to ache at the thought of young lives taken away, of futures extinguished. Yet, our hope rests in the truth that God is not absent or disinterested in our suffering, our loss, and our mourning. God looks to us to be the instruments of divine peace in this world, the hands and feet, the hearts and voices of the Prince of Peace who invites us to follow Him.

Christmas, the celebration of God-with-us, does indeed continue amid the tragedies of our world, but only insofar as we are able to open our eyes to see the suffering and murder of the holy innocents all over our world, and do something about it.

To view more of Daniel P. Horan, OFM’s Huffington Post articles, visit his author page here.

Photo: Rueters

Another Post (sort of) on Guns and Christianity

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , on February 22, 2011 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

Just when you thought you have heard the last from me on the subject of guns and Christianity, I come back with yet another post. Ok, this isn’t quite “my”post, but it is instead a reference to another post that has recently come to my attention on precisely this issue.

I should warn you, the post is slightly more polemical and provocative than what I’ve been offering here by way of commentary, but the sentiment and hermeneutic lens is the same. Bottom line: individual ownership of firearms is simply not compatible with the Gospel. One may chose to sidestep that dimension of Christian life, but that is something that needs to be acknowledged as a personal choice to do one’s own thing (free will is a kicker, huh?) without claiming that “Jesus would say it’s ok.”

I am still waiting for someone to offer a compelling and theologically grounded argument to support this claim of compatibility. Most of the negative comments posted in response to Ben Witherington’s post are simply angry diatribes with little substance beyond expressing one’s personal frustration at the possibility of having his or her guns taken away.

Here is a snippet from Ben Witherington’s post on his regular blog at Beliefnet.com, titled: “Guns and Religion — Enough is Quite Enough.” Witherington, I should add, is a professor of New Testament for Doctoral Studies at Asbury Theological Seminary and on the doctoral faculty at St. Andrews University in Scotland. So, presumably, he knows a thing or two about Scripture.

To my fellow Christians that like to think guns and Christianity go well together—  enough is more than enough.  You are living in denial of the Gospel, and its time to grow up.  ‘Thou shalt not kill’  does not have a codicil of addendum to it which reads ‘except in self-defense’ or the like.   But let’s deal with the gun issue itself.    We need to clear away some of the ridiculous rhetoric of the gun lobbyists.

To read the full blog post (which has more than 100 comments already) go to: http://blog.beliefnet.com/bibleandculture/2011/01/guns-and-religion—-enough-is-quite-enough.html

Christians and Guns: Where Do You Stand?

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , on February 12, 2011 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

This is a theme I’ve addressed elsewhere in another blog post shortly after the tragic shooting in Tucson last month. It is a topic I have returned to because of a Catholic News Service article that was published today bearing the title, “In Gun Control Debate, Catholic Position Elusive.” The subheading of the story reads, “One gun-carrying priest: ‘I tell people all life is sacred, including mine.’” That should give you a sense of why this is a matter worth discussing again.

The February 11th CNS article begins:

Avid outdoorsman and hunter Fr. Joe Classen, associate pastor at Holy Spirit Parish in Maryland Heights, Mo., has a permit to carry a concealed weapon.

“I rarely ever conceal and carry, but sometimes if I’m in a very bad area, I do take protection,” he said. “I tell people all life is sacred, including mine.”

A few states away, Fr. Theodore Parker said he knows he has the constitutional right to own a gun, but can’t see any reason why he would. The pastor of two inner-city Detroit parishes said, “The real purpose of a gun in our culture is violence.” And there’s just too much of that, he contends.

As readers of this blog know, I agree with the position of the second interviewed priest, Fr. Parker, and take it a step further — a step that, according to a January 14 CNS article titled, “Gun control: Church firmly, quietly opposes firearms for civilians,” is clearly in line with the Church’s teaching, no matter how “elusive” it may appear to Fr. Classen and others.

Guns are designed to do one thing: kill. Granted, there are instances such as hunting at which times civilians might justifiably use a firearm to gather food. However, there are other ways one can find nourishment today and some people would even suggest that one need not even hunt to eat healthily, just ask a vegetarian or vegan. Apart from hunting animals for food, the only thing guns are good for are killing human beings.

Fr. Classen defends his ownership, concealment and carrying of a firearm in “very bad areas” for “protection.” In what way does he intend to use the firearm for protection? The most obvious answer is to kill or harm another human being before that person could ostensibly attempt to harm him. How is that OK? Especially for a priest?

All life is sacred. Period. And to be truly prolife means that one’s life is not worth more than another, not even a priest’s over an alleged criminal’s.

I understand that the issue of self-defense is a complicated and contentious one, where people otherwise committed to nonviolence find examples worthy of exemption. However, when we really turn to the Gospel for guidance in the matter of violence and the role of Christians, can we ever justify the use of violence? Jesus Christ himself submitted, innocent as he was, to the violence of the state and individuals. In the case of self-defense, Jesus chastised his own Apostles for trying to defend him with violence. Jesus did NOT see self-defense as a legitimate reason for violence.

I find it particularly upsetting when priests publicly defend the carrying of weapons. It seems like something that stands in stark contrast to what Christian life is all about. When it comes to guns of any sort, we know What Jesus Would Do.

The world will only be transformed by love, not violence. Maybe instead of carrying a tool of death into “very bad areas,” Fr. Classen could carry a spirit of openness and peace, meeting the people he is scared of with the compassion of Christ and not the violence the Lord condemns. This is especially important if gun-carrying priests like to see themselves as in persona Christi.

Jesus wouldn’t defend guns, why would you?

Catholic Church on Gun Control: No Firearms for Civilians!

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , on January 16, 2011 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

This reflection is now available in Daniel P. Horan, OFM’s book Franciscan Spirituality for the 21st Century: Selected Reflections from the Dating God Blog and Other Essays, Volume One (Koinonia Press, 2013).

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 396 other followers

%d bloggers like this: