Reason, Scripture, and War: Introduction
Brantley Craig and Jacob Goodson
This issue of The Journal of Scriptural
Reasoning is the fruit of the work done by John
Kelsay, Rumee Ahmed, and Martin Kavka for a panel
discussion on "War," sponsored by the Scriptural
Reasoning group, at the 2007 meeting of the American
Academy of Religion in San Diego. We have titled it
"Reason, Scripture, and War" because we hope that it
offers a glimpse for how moral reasoning can be
transformed through careful study of scripture. What
follows are not, in fact, essays "about war." They
are, rather, essays that take us through the process
of moral reasoning informed by scripture-in other
words, essays about reasoning about war. How
does the study of scripture shape the way Muslims,
Christians, and Jews should-and do-think about
warfare? Are those who study scripture assured of
finding clear answers about the theory and practice
of warfare in it? What should we do when we do not
find such answers? How should we seek such answers in
the first place?
War suggests itself as a "test case" for such
questions about scriptural reasoning not just for the
timeliness of the topic, but because questions of war
and peace have troubled faithful reasoners from all
three Abrahamic traditions for centuries. The
questions surrounding warfare-issues of justice, of
the power or right to take life, of how to treat the
other, the neighbor, and the enemy-strike at the
heart of our faiths. These issues also lurk in the
background of all encounters between people of the
three faiths, whether those encounters take place on
the street, on the battlefield, or around a study
table. Inherent in the promise of scriptural
reasoning is the hope for peace-that we can reason,
even about conflict, together, peaceably. And so we
explore here, perhaps, some of the limits of such
reasoning together: can we truly read and reason our
way to peace if we cannot honestly reason together
about war?
As scriptural reasoners, our contention is that it
is in careful study of scripture (and perhaps only
there) that fruitful and good questions concerning
war and peace arise, and not necessarily the other
way around. We should beware those times and places
where our assumptions and preconceptions about war
and peace shape the scriptural texts themselves. For
example, Reinhold Niebuhr's "Christian realism" has
determined and shaped the way that many Protestants
read the Sermon on the Mount. They therefore think
that peace is merely "an impossible possibility," not
because of the words of the Sermon itself but rather
because of the conception of "Christian realism" they
bring to those words. It is with this hope and this
danger in mind that we come together to read and
reason about war and peace, for as we read with
others-and as others read our readings (as our
contributors do for one another)-preconceptions are
challenged and new questions are addressed to both
text and readers. Reading with others, in other
words, keeps us honest-honest to ourselves, and
honest to the texts.
At the heart of this issue is a conversation among
Kelsay, Ahmed, and Kavka concerning three key
scripture passages: Qur'an 4:75, Qur'an 8:1 & 41,
and Deuteronomy 20:5-8. Though these three essays
might best be understood as a kind of "conversation,"
we want to highlight some features of them
individually here. First, Kelsay - who has published
two books on war in Islam[1] - offers ways to
understand how the verses from the Qur'an play a role
in Islamic discussions concerning fighting and war.
Ahmed enters the conversation by focusing on only one
of these verses, arguing that there are at least two
different ways to read this verse: what he calls
"particular" and "universal." Third, Kavka enters the
conversation with a discussion on Deuteronomy 20:5-8.
He contrasts this passage with Kelsay's discussion on
the Qur'anic passages for the purposes of displaying
"the limits of collectivity" found within the
Deuteronomy passages.
The "Reflective Responses" come from Omar
Ha-Redeye, Randi Rashkover, and Peter Dula - all of
whom were in the same group at a three-day Scriptural
Reasoning Education training session at the
University of Virginia this past summer. We invited
these three contributors to respond because of their
familiarity and participation in scriptural
reasoning, and because none of them were a part of
the AAR panel discussion on war. Therefore, we asked
them to provide reflections specifically on the role
of reason and scripture within this conversation on
war rather than on "war" itself. Ha-Redeye offers a
broader understanding of the role of Qur'anic
interpretation for thinking about war and also a
brief discussion on the practice of scriptural
reasoning within Muslim ways of reading and
reasoning. Rashkover provides a very thorough
response to the ins-and-outs of this conversation and
brings in other passages as a way to talk to and with
Kavka's article. Dula makes explicit the difference
the method of scriptural reasoning makes for both
reading scripture and thinking about questions
concerning war. What he finds interesting in the
conversation is more the ways that Ahmed and Kelsay
read these scriptural passages, and less any attempt
to construct some kind of clear and distinct
scriptural "theory" for just war.
The "Postscript" comes as the result of a
conversation with Stanley Hauerwas. Hauerwas is a
Christian theologian who has written more about war
and peace than any other living Christian theologian.
His interest in scriptural reasoning is the result of
his deep friendship with one of the founders of SR:
Peter Ochs. Though this conversation is short,
Hauerwas sounds some alarms concerning the method and
practice of SR for talking and thinking about war. It
serves as a wonderful conclusion to this issue
because it only raises a whole host of questions that
are neither asked nor answered in the issue itself.
Therefore, we hope that this issue on "Reason,
Scripture, and War" serves as an introduction for
further inquiries into the possibility of discussing
war and peace within the context of scriptural
reasoning. It is not meant as the last word (or even,
surely, the last journal issue!) on how we read and
reason about war. It is, rather, a way of starting a
conversation not just about what our three
traditions think about war, but how we think
about it, and about how we might, together, help each
other think more clearly, and peaceably.
ENDNOTES
[1] Islam and War: A Study
in Comparative Ethics, (Louisville, KY: WJK
Press, 1993) & Arguing the Just War in
Islam, (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press,
2007).
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