INTRODUCTION
Poverty and Debt-Release
Rachel Muers
Guest Editor
University of Exeter, UK
This issue of the Journal of Scriptural
Reasoning reflects work undertaken by various
scriptural reasoning groups, at the American Academy
of Religion and elsewhere, over more than a year. The
decision to address questions of debt, indebtedness
and usury, particularly as they relate to wider
questions of poverty and wealth distribution, arose
in part from the conviction that the approach of
scriptural reasoning could discover resources within
the Abrahamic traditions for engagement with issues
of urgent global concern. While it is relatively
easy—and in certain contexts important—to use
proof-texts from scriptures and tradition to outline
some version of "the Muslim position," "the Jewish
position" (and so forth) on questions such as the
cancellation of international debt, it is harder—but,
the papers offered here suggest, equally important—to
express the deeper and more complex understandings of
relations between God, humanity and the world into
which texts "about debt" can lead their readers. The
articles in this issue show the commitment of their
authors to the close reading of scriptural texts, to
traditions of commentary, to engagement with
questions of pressing importance globally and
personally—and, as will become clear, to one
another.
All of the papers concern themselves with the
challenges the scriptural texts studied pose to an
economy based extensively on interest-bearing debt.
The Qur'anic critique of the taking of interest is
well known;
Basit Koshul's paper sets out clearly both
that (not just "interest in general," but) the
details of economic practice are at the heart of the
Qur'an, and why, within the Qur'an's logic,
this should be so.
Robert Gibbs' close reading of Leviticus 25:35ff.
exposes a fundamental concern for the neighbour and
the neighbour's future as freedom to serve God
behind the laws governing interest, release from debt
and debt-slavery. Continuing the theme of the
economic implications of "service of God,"
Daniel Hardy's reading of two New Testament
parables develops a vision of the economics
appropriate to the "kingdom of God" centred on the
manifestation and recognition of divine generosity
and mercy. Responding to these articles (see below),
Laurie Zoloth draws attention to the
transformation of a whole range of economic relations
effected by the primary recognition of the call of
God and the need of the neighbour.
James Fodor draws together texts from all three
Abrahamic traditions in an extended treatment of a
theme also considered by Gibbs—the temporality of
economic relationships and the distortions of
temporal perspective that, according to the texts he
reads, usurious transactions cause.
Willie Young offers a further reflection on how
the scriptural texts, and in particular the reading
of the texts on debt-release can open up new social
possibilities and enable the formation of different
social bonds.
Of course, as Koshul's paper explains, there is or
should be nothing particularly new or surprising
about work that seeks out deep and broad connections
between religion and economics, or, more precisely,
between concrete economic practices and habits on the
one hand and the scriptures and thought of the
Abrahamic traditions on the other. The challenge is
then to articulate these connections in ways that do
full justice to their depth—the conviction reflected
in all the papers that to talk about economics is to
talk about God and the world—without losing a sense
of their breadth—without turning the traditions, or
any academic disciplines, into self-enclosed spheres
of discourse. The claim of scholars engaged in
scriptural reasoning is that their study, together,
of each other's scriptures is what makes this
possible. One of the ongoing challenges facing
participants in scriptural reasoning is that of
translating the work they do in small groups, reading
and reflecting on scriptural texts together, into
forms accessible to a wider academic context, in
which (for example) the single-voiced presentation
followed by questions and answers, or the
single-voiced (even if multi-authored) article
followed by citations and responses, is still the
norm.
James Fodor articulates at the beginning of his
paper his indebtedness to "small-group interaction,
discussion, probings, musings, patient listening and
silences before the texts (and one another) with
other scriptural-reasoners," an indebtedness that is
also apparent in the other contributions to this
issue. The first four papers in this issue are
lightly revised versions of presentations given at
the inaugural session of the Scriptural Reasoning
Group at the American Academy of Religion, in
November 2004 in San Antonio, Texas. The papers by
Basit Koshul, Robert Gibbs and Daniel Hardy were
developed on the basis of conversations between the
participants—conversations to which the shared study
of scriptural texts was fundamental, and in which
Laurie Zoloth, one of the session's respondents, also
took part. A further response was presented by
Stanley Hauerwas. The papers by Fodor, Young and
myself were all written as a result of intensive text
study within the Scriptural Reasoning Theory Group at
its meetings in 2004.
Authors of papers for a journal such as this,
then, owe more than they can repay; or,
perhaps, in the terms discussed in Hardy's paper,
they receive abundant gifts to which the appropriate
(the socially responsible) response is some form of
acknowledgment and reciprocation; or, perhaps, again,
in terms suggested by Gibbs' paper, they need
generous and forgiving loans from others to enable
them to maintain the holdings that are loaned to them
by God. It is worth remembering that academic
institutions and practices are also the loci
of complex "economies," and that one of the ongoing
tasks of scriptural reasoning is to reflect on and
perhaps to reconfigure those economies.
It should also be noted that the whole of this
journal edition invites reflection on the question of
"scriptural reasoning in the public square"—on which
see
Willie Young's editorial introduction and
Randi Rashkover's article in JSR 5.1
(April 2005). As I write this introduction (in
Britain in early July 2005, with the G8 summit
beginning at Gleneagles) worldwide debt and poverty
are being spoken of, shouted about and sung about in
almost every "public square," even if the
particularities of indebtedness and poverty often
remain hidden from public view. Scholars in
scriptural reasoning are caught between the sense of
urgency that the contemporary public square can
generate, on the one hand, and their recognition on
the other hand that the kinds of deep transformation
for which the texts they read appear to call do not
necessarily happen instantly or in public. It is
interesting here to recall that the papers here
speak, inter alia, of the various
articulations of time to be found in the scriptural
texts they read—the immediacy of the need of the
neighbour for whose sake a loan is made (see
especially the papers by Gibbs and Zoloth), the
temporal patterning of creation and of liturgy (see
Zoloth and Fodor), the eschatological orientation of
both the texts and their readers (see especially
Fodor, Hardy, Muers).
Links to the scriptural passages referred to in
several of the articles are provided here. Other
texts are quoted within the articles.
Exodus 22:21-27
Deuteronomy 15:1-18
Deuteronomy 23:16-21
Leviticus 25
Matthew 6:9-15
Matthew 18:23-35
Matthew 20:1-16
Luke 4:16-21
Luke 16:1-13
Qur'an 2:261-281
Qur'an 30:33-39
Qur'an 83:1-6
Qur'an Sura 93
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