August 2000 Question
What is the cutting edge of your thought at present?
Dr. Cobb's Response
Nelson Stringer has suggested that I answer the question: What is the cutting edge of my own thought at present? That should be fun -- trying to figure out how my concerns fit together and where they are headed.
I suppose my overriding concern is with where
the world is heading. I'm
convinced that present policies are leading us to destruction.
So one
"cutting edge" is pointing that out and proposing alternatives.
They
include policies in the fields of agriculture, forestry, city
building,
and, of course, ecology. But for some time now, I've been convinced
that
economic theories and the policies that stem from them are of
dominant
importance.
That might seem to have little to do with theology or the church, but I have come to a quite different conclusion. The destructive policies I oppose have assumptions about the nature of the world and human beings and even about God. It is important to make them explicit and critique them from a Christian perspective. Of course, in my case it is from a process theological perspective, but most of the criticisms can be shared with Christians who are not consciously committed to process philosophy. (For the Common Good, Sustainability, Sustaining the Common Good, and The Earthist Challenge to Economism are books dealing with these issues.)
Just now I am focusing on the fact that current policies systematically enrich the rich with little of no benefit to the poor. Actually, in my view, the poor both in this country and globally are losing ground. Recent statistics indicate that the poorest 40% of the American population has lost over 70% of its assets in the past twenty years! The poor really are getting poorer -- much poorer -- while the rich are getting richer -- much richer. This is not as clear when attention is directed to income instead of assets. By working longer hours, families are managing to keep their income up. (I am currently planning a conference for the Center for Process Studies on "the economics of poverty.")
Of course, I have not lost concern about the
fact that the same policies
are hastening both pollution and the exhaustion of the earth's
resources. It is hard to know whether the most catastrophic results will
be
environmental or social. In all probability the two will feed
on each other.
What has this to do with the church? Again,
a great deal, I think. The
church as a whole over centuries has been the chief way in which
young
people have been persuaded that life should be lived with concern
for
others, and that among the others about whom one should be particularly
concerned, the poor are prominent. Obviously, not all have taken
this
lesson to heart, and their have been other features of church
teaching that
have justified terrible things. But the basic teaching of love
for the
neighbor and Jesus answer to the question: Who is my neighbor?
have had
their effect.
Today, large portion of the population of the North Atlantic countries are growing up with negligible influence from the church. The idea that one should be concerned about others, and especially the poor, is by no means self-evident. The goal of personal success in the competition with others is quite unashamedly adopted on a large scale. It makes the economist's model of the world increasingly realistic. The result is that the impoverishment of the poor is a fact like any other to be taken account of in one's battle to the top.
If the decline in the oldline churches is offset
by growth in the
conservative ones, one might think that there should be no overall
change
in basic attitudes. There are two reasons that this does not work
out. First, those who cease to be influenced by Christian teaching
tend to be
disproportionately represented among the opinion and decision
makers.
Second, the churches that are growing are less likely to encourage
systemic
thinking about public policies.
Unfortunately, it seems that as the oldline
churches decline in numbers
and status, they also are less likely to encourage systemic thinking. Indeed, there is less effort to bring the faith to bear on the
issues of
the day. Like the more conservative churches they attend chiefly
to the
personal and familial needs of their members. Concern for the
poor in both
types of churches is expressed largely in personal charity.
Even so, there are strong elements in the oldline
churches that keep alive
a more systemic concern for public issues. This can be grounded
in serious
biblical scholarship and in the tradition. It gets a great deal
of support
from many of the seminaries of the oldline churches. It seems
to be of
great importance to reenliven this type of churchmanship and draw
into it
more younger people. (Lay Theology, Becoming
a Thinking Christian, and
Reclaiming the Church are books that indicate my concerns about
the church. I have also co-founded with George Regas the Mobilization
for the Human
Family and continue to devote a good deal of time to it. I
edited a book
of the position papers of the Mobilization, just published, entitled
Speaking of Religion and Politics.)
There are many obstacles to moving in this
direction. Some of them are
focused on belief in God. The intellectual climate of our time
makes a
realistic view of God difficult. Many theologians urge us to abandon
all
"metaphysical" teachings, which means all teachings
about what God is like
apart from our ideas. Some of those who continue to affirm the
reality of
God understand God in ways that have few practical implications
for how
public policies should be framed. Without strong, clear convictions
about
God, the church has little possibility of a revival of vitality
and
willingness to give itself to the service of the world. I remain
convinced
that process theology helps when it is seriously tried and that
it could
help a great deal more! (A Center for Process Studies conference
with evangelical theologians has resulted in a book, Searching for
an Adequate
God. Clark Pinnock did the real editing, but I get too much credit.
On a
back burner is my own book on God.)
A contributor to loss of Christian conviction in the oldline churches is the awareness of religious pluralism. This awareness is a gain, but the widespread relativistic response is not. If the church can encompass a deep appreciation of other religious traditions and an openness to learning from them in a Christocentric context, some of its needed conviction about its own distinctive mission can be restored. (My most recent book is on this topic: Transforming Christianity and the World.)
I'm not sure that this gives much coherence to my fragmented efforts, but it is the best I can do.
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