ATLANTA (ABP) — Concern about human rights means biblically grounded compassion for oppressed people — not a selfish desire to protect one’s own property or prestige, Baptist ethicist Glen Stassen told a recent meeting of religious leaders concerned about torture.
“It has been the defenders of the unjust status quo and unequal privileges who have said: ‘Christians should not push for human rights. Human rights are selfish,’” he told the interfaith conference. It was held on Mercer University’s Atlanta campus Sept. 11-12.
“My theme is that human rights are about caring for those who can be victimized by the more powerful,” he noted.
He urged churches — particularly those in the free-church Baptist tradition — to recover their history and reclaim their heritage. “Human rights are our baby, coming from the struggle for the right to religious liberty — well before the Enlightenment,” he said.
Historically, Richard Overton — an early Baptist, alongside John Smyth and Thomas Helwys — articulated a call for human rights during the free-church struggle for religious liberty in Puritan England, Stassen noted. Overton advocated human rights in writing dating to 1645, drawing support for his position from the New Testament, natural law and historical experience.
Overton urged full religious liberty for all people, economic justice for the poor and expansion of civil liberties, including “the right not to be arbitrarily arrested nor forced to incriminate oneself; the right to speedy trial; the right to understand the law in one’s own language; equality before the law; and the right of prisoners not to be starved, tortured or extorted,” Stassen noted.
Christians care about human rights because it is a teaching grounded in the Gospels. Jesus cared about people, Stassen insisted.
“He cared for people with so much compassion that he confronted the authorities over the wrongs they were doing,” he said. “Many people miss this. They think the authorities were the Romans. But the day-by-day authorities were the high priests and the wealthy and the Sadducees, and their somewhat-supporters, the Pharisees and Scribes who taught and enforced the moral codes.”
Jesus confronted religious authorities over four types of injustice, Stassen noted:
— Greed: “Human rights emphasize the positive right to life as having the basics needed to pursue a life’s calling.”
— Exclusion: “Human rights emphasize the human right to community.”
— Domination: “Human rights emphasize the rights to liberty and to the means to check and balance unjust authority.”
— Violence: “Human rights emphasize the right to life.”
“They are not four arbitrary types of injustice; they are deeply grounded in the prophetic tradition of God’s own caring for the powerless and the deprived and the oppressed,” Stassen added.
“They are based in God’s caring, and in God’s own realism about who needs standing up for in a world of greed, oppression, domination, exclusion, violence — a world of sin.”
And nations are as prone to sin as are individuals, he insisted.
“The temptation to sin is greater the more powerful you are, and our nation is very powerful. So, we badly need the check and balance of humility enough to listen to other nations, to restore international cooperation, to respect international law,” Stassen said.
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