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Fleming Rutledge is a preacher and teacher known throughout the mainline Protestant denominations of the US, Canada and parts of the UK. She is the author of six books and has received a grant from the Louisville Foundation to complete a book about the meaning of the Crucifixion.
One of the first women to be ordained to the priesthood of the Episcopal Church, she served for fourteen years on the clergy staff at Grace Church on Lower Broadway at Tenth Street, New York City. A native of Franklin, Virginia, Mrs. Rutledge has been married for forty-five years and has two daughters and two grandchildren.
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The Justice and Righteousness of GodTHE JUSTICE AND
RIGHTEOUSNESS OF GOD by
Fleming Rutledge for 30 Good Minutes Many polls have shown that an overwhelming percentage of
the American public believes in God. But what sort of God? If the average
American believer is asked to describe God, he or she will almost certainly say
that God is loving. God is also commonly described as compassionate,
welcoming, forgiving, accepting, merciful, and inclusive. Very few white
Americans will volunteer that God is just. African-American
Christians are much more likely to speak of a just God because their forebears
were slaves, and because they still experience injustice at many levels of our
society. Poor and marginalized people all over the globe do not have leisure to
watch television programs discussing injustice; they know about it first hand.
Therefore the news that God is just means a great deal to them. It
is a different story with comfortable middle-class American Christians, who are
not much interested in hearing about the righteous judgment of God. The whole
idea of judgment sounds cold and forbidding to us. If we use the word judgmental
to describe someone, it is not a compliment. It is typical of our day and time
to price tolerance more than discernment. It is characteristic of us to say
that people should be able to do whatever they want to do. We dont really mean
that, of coursewe all have limits as to what we toleratebut our cultural
resistance to the idea of God as a righteous Judge is very strong. This resistance has a lot to do with the common tendency
to divide the Old Testament from the New. Churchgoing people frequently speak
of the judgmental God of the Old Testament and the loving God of the New.
This is not only ignorant, it is dangerous, because it can lead to forms of
anti-Judaism. Lets
take another look. I heard a preacher on the radio say that the New Testament
tells us almost nothing about what went on in the mind of Jesus. That got my
attention, because its true. Then he said a very striking thing. He said, If
you want to know what went on in Jesus mind, read the Old Testament [read the
Hebrew Scriptures]. That is a dazzlingly simple way of stating the matter. We
tend to forget that what we call the Old Testament was the only Bible that
Jesus and the first Christians had. Not only so, but those Hebrew Scriptures were
known to them by heart in a fashion that we today can scarcely imagine.
There are many things that we do not know about Jesus, but we can be sure of
this: his whole being was shaped by intimate, continuous interaction with the Torah,
the Psalms, the Prophets and the other Scriptures of Israel. In
those Hebrew Scriptures, there are a few ideas that predominate, and of these
themes, there is none more central than that of the justice of God, also called
his righteousness. God is righteous,
just, holy: these words are used interchangeably with his name. the prophet
Isaiah says, The Lord of hosts is exalted in justice, and the Holy God shows
himself holy in righteousness. Wherever justice is administered, the Lord
himself is present: When the king appointed judges in The
administration of justice brings a person, or a people, close to the very heart
of God. Through his prophet Jeremiah, God says: For if you trulyexecute
justice if
you do not oppress the alien, the fatherless or the widow, or shed innocent
blood in this place, and if you do not go after other gods to your own hurt, then
I will let you dwell...in the land that I gave of old to your fathers for ever
(Jeremiah 7:5-7). One of the best-known passages in the Old Testament reminds
us that justice is an indispensable aspect of a godly life: He has shown you,
O man, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice,
and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God? (Micah 6:8) In this
famous text, justice and mercy are brought together as equals, with no
suggestion that they are in opposition. Here
is the point. Justice and mercy are two foundational aspects of Gods
character. Working out the relation between the two is an essential task for
Jews as well as Christians. In our own time this has become a particularly
pressing imperative as we debate such things as capital punishment and
international codes of justice. There is a widespread impression in The
question of forgiveness really should not be discussed apart from the question
of justice. When a terrible wrong has been committed and an apology is offered,
the person or persons wronged may be justified in feeling that too much is
being asked of them. If the impression is given that the wronged parties are
simply supposed to forgive and forget, the wrong will linger under the
surface and cause further harm. Forgiving is hard work. It takes time, and involves
pain Many
people believe that forgiveness in and of itself is the essence of
Christianity, but this is not the case. Forgiveness must be understood in its
relationship to the righteousness of God. The place to look for this is in the
letters of the apostle Paul. It is significant that Paul virtually never uses
the word forgiveness. He focuses on what God has done, and his word for what
God does is not forgiveness but justification. This is a
reinterpretation of the Old Testament witness to the righteousness of God.. Heres
the basic premise: in our world, something is terribly wrong and must be put
right. If our blood does not
boil at some point, we have not yet understood God. It depends, though, on what
outrages us. To be outraged on behalf of oneself or ones own group is to be
human, but it is not to participate in Christ. To be outraged on behalf of the defenseless and oppressed,
however, is to do the work of God. Paul
recast the whole concept of righteousness and justice in light of the Cross of
Christ. Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who was the chairman of the South African
Truth and Reconciliation Commission, summarizes the matter this way: Forgiveness
is not cheap. It is not facile. It is costly. Reconciliation is not an easy
option. It cost God the death of his Son.[1] In
the Cross we see how justice and mercy come together in the being of God. The
Judge of all things has put himself in the place of those who are guilty. In
doing this, he has not simply declared a general amnesty. The mystery of the
Crucifixion is that in Christ, God is giving himself up to utmost degradation
in order to reorient the world to himself and to declare that all things will
be made right in the Kingdom of God. Related: |
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