Editor's Preface
Willie Young, Loyola College in Maryland
This issue of the Journal of Scriptural Reasoning
takes as its focus the Biblical and Qur'anic narratives of Abraham and the
visitors at Mamre. It is a story of seeing God in the flesh. As Elliot Wolfson
describes below, Abraham sees God in his circumcision; he also sees God in the
three visitors, in the promise of Isaac, and he even sees the foreign, sinful
city of Sodom as included in God's promise, interceding on its behalf and
praying for justice. These visions of
God are also receptions of God and others, and thus are at their root gestures
of hospitality. Abraham is hospitable in receiving God in unexpected ways, as
the promises of the spirit are embodied around him, even coursing into and
transforming his and Sarah's names (from Abram and Sarai to Abraham and Sarah).
Abraham receives the unexpected: what did he see in the
three men, when he saw God? Did he see that his intercession on behalf of Sodom
would lead to a rabbinic connection between circumcision and the responsibility
for justice, both for one's family and for all nations, as Elliot Wolfson
describes below? Did he see that Christians would receive this story as a story
of divine incarnation, a representation of the Trinity, or the virtues of
hospitality, as Francis Watson discusses in his essay? Did he see that his act
would found a Muslim practice of hospitality and a concern for justice
impartial to genealogy, as a sign of one's friendship with God, as Basit Koshul
writes?
[1]
In receiving these visitors, did he see how the three traditions and
communities gathered under the banner of the SSR would receive his act of
hospitality?
From these three traditions, and in response to modernity,
contemporary religious thought continues to find fecundity in Abraham and
Sarah's hospitality. How they would laugh to know they are still having
children! Over against the limited hospitality of Kantian politics, or the
restricted immigration policies of nation-states, or other restrictions
of the
duty to be hospitable, thinkers such as Massignon, Levinas, and Derrida turn to
the story of Abraham (and Sarah) to rethink responsibility and obligation.
[2]
In a different context, Miroslav Volf turns to the theme of "embrace" as a
gesture of hospitality that founds an alternative politics and pursues justice
in the face of ethnic conflict, a theological reflection that clearly resonates
with Abraham's hospitality in Genesis 18 and 19.
[3]
Together, both the traditions of commentary and the contemporary approaches
suggest that Genesis 18-19 is a generative passage, depicting a complex
constellation of gestures of hospitality that is rich and polyvalent in
significance.
This brief sketch outlines the place hospitality occupies in
contemporary thought, which can help us to see the distinctiveness of the
hospitality enacted within the Society for Scriptural Reasoning. In welcoming
the three visitors, could Abraham have imagined that the three traditions that
see him as their father, who have received his hospitality, would learn to be
hospitable to one another? In reading scripture together, studying and writing
together, the SSR is a new form of hospitality: not divorced from the
particularities of the three traditions, but a mutual welcoming. Together, in
their specificity and difference, these plural manifestations of hospitality
unfold multiple dimensions of Abrahamic hospitality. As Kris Lindbeck writes in
her concluding essay, the SSR enacts a response to the concern for repairing
suffering, by bringing these communities together to practice hospitality
toward one another. In the attention
that they pay to particularity, the essays below enact this welcome of the
three traditions in their differences, allowing the three communities to join
together while disagreeing, and even in opposition to one another. The share
identity of the society thus
establishes a space within which participants can sustain disagreement.
A "hospitality of scriptural reasoning," then, consists in welcoming the
particularities of the three traditions, while bringing them into conversation
with and understanding of one another.
In his commentary, Brantley Craig suggests that the three
visitors are, in fact, us. To build or play on that suggestion, perhaps it is
when the three communities are together, welcoming one another, that one can
see God in the flesh. In the act of receiving one another, even in the
differences and particularities that estrange us, we receive Abraham's
hospitality anew, and give Abraham new children. Before these texts and before
one another, we are both host and guest.
And Sarah? Would there be "Abrahamic" hospitality without
her? Her reactions to the visitors in the biblical and Qur'anic narratives
indicate the complex, embodied dimensions of hospitality. In his notes for a
recent seminar, Derrida analyzes the place of laughter in hospitality: to
welcome the other without laughing, without joy, would be
inhospitable.
[4]
Sarah's laughter at the announcement of Isaac, then, may be central to the
Genesis
18-19 story, as a joyous welcoming of the other. Alternatively, one
could argue
that hospitality that happily expects the other, and thus bears no cost or
expects no change on the part of the host, is inhospitable. The other who is
welcomed may be hostile, or may bring news that is tragic or painful. In Surah
51 of the Qur'an, Abraham's wife (not named in the English translation) cries
at the news of an unexpected son; the welcome of the other is not simply
joyous, as the opening of new worlds and relations involves danger and risk as
well as hope. Hospitality, in these narratives, involves either laughter or
crying, and in both cases it includes an embodied receptivity.
These complex or conflicting responses of Sarah represent
the situation and task for scriptural reasoners today. A number of serious
concerns surround contemporary scriptural reasoning: hostility after
September
11th, including the military actions in
Afghanistan
deterioration of the Israeli-Palestinian situation, and the
India-Pakistan
conflict, to name just a few in the political realm. Any one of these would be
enough to make one cry. However, even while writing in times of crisis, several
commentators turned to humor (see Pecknold, Elkins, and Lindbeck's discussion
of their essays). To remember humor,
and to hope for unexpected joy even in the midst of tragedy or crisis, may be
necessary to remember Sarah's role in Abrahamic hospitality. Crying, laughter,
embodied hospitality: do our diverse, finite welcomes of the divine
make space
for welcoming one another, through which we may more fully welcome the divine
into our midst? Such, it seems to me, is the wager of scriptural
reasoning: the
multiplicity of our embodied reactions, and the variety of our methods of
reasoning and interpretation, together testify to the divine hospitality in
which we live, move, and have our being.
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