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Just peacemaking

NewsReligious Herald  |  January 18, 2005

Analysis for Jan. 20, 2005

By Alexandra Alter

Almost two years have passed since the start of the Iraq war, but on the eve of President Bush's inaugural and elections in the still volatile Middle East nation, the issues of war, peace and nation-building still dominate much of the debate among Christian ethicists.

In a significant shift, a number of scholars are looking at taking a proactive approach to peacemaking rather than merely shunning war.

At the 2003 meeting of the Society of Christian Ethics, just two months prior to the U.S. invasion of Iraq, most criticized the impending conflict either by arguing that a pre-emptive invasion did not meet standards of Christian just-war theory or by advocating pacifism.

At their 46th annual gathering on Jan. 7-9, some members of the society proposed what they say is a potentially powerful third alternative: the application of “just-peacemaking theory” as a method of diffusing current conflicts and preventing future wars.

“When we debated the Iraq war in this society two years ago, it was based on just-war theory,” said Glen Stassen, a professor of Christian ethics at the evangelical Fuller Theological Seminary and author of Just Peacemaking: Ten Practices for Abolishing War.

“What's happening in the society today is an increasing adoption of just-peacemaking theory.”

Arguing that conflicts can be best resolved-and ultimately avoided-through international treaties, economic development and a greater push for human rights, Stassen and other scholars said pacifists had failed to offer the American public an alternative to the war in Iraq.

“Just saying no doesn't work; you've got to state clearly the alternative, which was, ‘Let the inspections work,' ” Stassen said.

Just-war theory claims violence is justifiable in the defense of innocent people, but only when formally declared by a legitimate government that has exhausted all diplomatic alternatives.

Just-peacemaking theory pushes for advance diplomatic engagement while allowing for military action where appropriate.

The theory was first presented as an alternative to pacifism during a panel at the 1995 meeting of the Society of Christian Ethics, a nondenominational association of 950 scholars and theologians primarily from the United States, Canada and Europe.

A decade later, the idea has proven increasingly appealing to Christian thinkers struggling to develop appropriate responses to the threat of terrorism, genocide and inter-religious conflict.

But not everyone agreed that just-peacemaking theory can serve as a stand-in for pacifism.

Scott Davis, a professor of religion and ethics from the University of Richmond who presented a paper at the Miami meeting on comparative religious ethics and war, noted that just peacemaking, unlike pacifism, presupposes the necessity of war.

“Just peacemaking amounts to not much more than the exhortation to take seriously a better peace as the proper object of any just war,” Davis wrote in an email message.

Much of the debate over the role of Christian ethics in foreign policy centered on the Iraq war as scholars discussed the best way to achieve stability.

While criticism of U.S. military policy in Iraq echoed in conversations throughout the conference, several panelists voiced support for an extended American military presence in Iraq and called for more troops.

Religion News Service

Alexandra Alter writes for Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly. This article was distributed by Religion News Service.

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