Tag: Moral Theology

  • Individual & Collective Sin – Principles for Action

    Individual & Collective Sin – Principles for Action


    _____

    by Rev Chris Borah

    How should we balance personal (individual) moral responsibility with collective (group) moral responsibility?

    Holy Scripture is replete with examples of individuals transgressing God’s law and destroying themselves and others. The law of Moses has many provisions for individuals to bring sacrifice to atone for individual sins. There are also countless examples of people, tribes, nations, collective groups of individuals altogether sinning against God and neighbor. The law of Moses has many provisions for collections of people to bring sacrifice, for one man to intercede for another man, to atone for collective sins. Individual people are torn apart by sin. But tribes are also torn apart, entire nations are destroyed. To read the story of the Bible is to read an intricate dance between individual and collective wickedness crumbling to the ground from Genesis 11 (Babel) to Revelation 18 (Babylon).

    You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother’s eye.

    Matthew 7:5

    Individually and collectively, the principle of judgment is the same: first, deal with your own personal, internal wickedness. Then you may well be on the path towards possessing the holy and humble posture necessary to see your neighbors folly and bring life.

    One humble and devoted person can hold a household together. The principle expands, but always stays the same. One holy family to bless all families. One nation devoted to the Lord in order that they would adopt all nations into the kingdom, all kinds of people united together in humble submission to the King of heaven and earth.

    This is not simply a biblical principle. Behavioral psychologists concur. Get your own self in order first. First, order your own room, your own family, your own neighborhood, your own city, your own state, your own nation (I think you get the point); get those things closest to you in order first, so that you might bring life to the larger and wider circles in which you live.

    For it is time for judgment to begin at the household of God

    1 Peter 4:17a

    Still, it is a perennial challenge in every age to balance individual and collective moral responsibility. In present American moment, both Christians and CINOs (over-)emphasize individual moral responsibility. We rightly emphasize the need for personal responsibility, but we forget that collective judgment runs through the whole narrative of the Bible and human history. Our salvation is only possible by our union with Christ, our collective redemption in Him. You cannot have one without the other. All of us together, either collectively in rebellion against God, or collectively righteous together in Christ.

    You are Wretched; You are Great

    Writing in the mid-seventeenth century, Blaise Pascal wrestled with both the wretchedness and greatness of human beings. People, every person is profoundly wretched. And at the same time, every person is inconceivably great, reflecting the glory of God in innumerable ways. Pascal wrestled with both the broad category of “humanity” and his deeply affectionate and personal struggle to reconcile his own sin with his own greatness.

    In seasons of large scale, national, and societal conflict, whether in wartime or civil disobedience (just or unjust), we tend to think in broad categories (“humanity,” “national sin,” us, them). This wide-angle perspective is good to have, but it can also be a diversion. We confess “our” sins, while my sin is never confessed. And we are happy to do just that.

    “We are not satisfied with the life we have in ourselves and our own being. We want to lead an imaginary life in the eyes of others, and so we try to make an impression. We strive constantly to embellish and preserve our imaginary being, and neglect the real one. And if we are calm, or generous, or loyal, we are anxious to have it known so that we can attach these virtues to our other existence; we prefer to detach them from our real self so as to unite them with the other. We would cheerfully be cowards if that would acquire us a reputation for bravery. How clear a sign of the nullity of our own being!”

    Pensée #806, Peter Kreeft’s Christianity for Modern Pagans, p. 79, emphasis added

    We distract ourselves in collective shame so that we don’t have to think of our own sin. Diversion takes many forms and it is always a great danger to us. Know yourself first. Acknowledge your sin first. Then what? How can we begin to personalize our own wretchedness, and, at the same time, act out our own greatness in love and responsibility towards our neighbors?

    A Grand Principle & Great Temptation

    In C.S. Lewis’ The Screwtape Letters, letter number six, Uncle Screwtape writes to his apprentice demon with a grand principle, a great temptation that cuts through every age–in Pascal’s 1600’s, in Lewis’ war torn 1940’s, and in our contemporary age–it cuts through every human soul, especially in seasons of great unrest. Screwtape opines:

    “The great thing is to direct the malice to his immediate neighbours whom he meets every day and to thrust his benevolence out to the remote circumference, to people he does not know. The malice thus becomes wholly real and the benevolence largely imaginary.”

    C.S. Lewis, The Screwtape Letters, chapter 6.

    We distance our good deeds from our everyday life (making public stands alone). I post wonderful quotes that I read online, and then I let my impatience towards my children go unconfessed. We make “public” stands on social media, and then we grumble all day long in our homes. We are all very good at judging others before we judge ourselves, and even more insidiously, we are all very good at abstracting our righteousness, distancing righteous actions to ideas, groups, society, and the internet, all the while cultivating sinful, soul-crushing and relationship-destroying habits in everyday life. We are personally wicked, but we make ourselves feel better by posts on social media, sending money to poor nations, or forgiving people far from us who have never in any meaningful sense sinned against us.

    So what should we actually do?

    We must lament, grieve, and repent of my personal sins and our collective sins.

    The big question is still: How? Which sins and who says?

    Whether we are repenting the collective sin of my family, my church, or my nation, they must be our sin. It is hard for a family to see their collective sin. It is hard for a church to see their sin. We need outside perspective. But even as we need outside perspective, no one but God alone can look into my wicked heart. We need the Spirit of Christ, we must beg God to look in and expose our sins.

    “The communal sins which they should be told to repent are those of their own age and class–its contempt for the uneducated, its readiness to suspect evil, its self-righteous provocations [and strong public criticisms], its breaches of the Fifth Commandment. Of these sins I have heard nothing among them. Till I do, I must think their candour towards the [collective] enemy a rather inexpensive virtue.”

    C.S. Lewis, God in the Docks, p. 191

    As we turn to matters of collective moral responsibility, it is no good (on both an individual and collective level) to repent of sins that are not our own. Not merely our own personally, but also those sins that collectively plague us. They must be our sins. And we need outside perspective to see clearly, both the perspective of people, but chiefly the perspective of white hot presence of the Spirit of Christ.

    “The first and fatal charm of [collective] repentance is… the encouragement it gives us to turn from the bitter task of repenting our own sins to the congenial one of bewailing–but, first, of denouncing–the conduct of others.”

    Our first point of action is to repent of my and our sin(s). We need outside perspective, whether that be another brother, another culture, or another time period (read old books!). But chiefly, we need the Spirit to cut deeply into our hearts. So we repent first. Then, in the place of humility before God and man, you might be in the proper place to point out someone else’s sin (whether an individual or a group: family, church, nation, etc). With much trembling and with great humility…

    Whatever we do, we must not enjoy the rebuke.

    With the amount of time we have devoted to digital displays of collective repentance, you might think that we rather enjoy the exercise. At the very least, we enjoy the distraction it gives us from seeing and mortifying our own sin.

    “Beware of practicing your righteousness before other people in order to be seen by them, for then you will have no reward from your Father who is in heaven.

    Matthew 6:1

    Individual or corporate rebuke, to point out the sin of a person or a collective group can only be “profitably discharged” if it is done with reluctance. (C.S. Lewis, Ibid., p. 192)

    It should be painful to deny or rebuke someone whom you love deeply. There is a feeling of deep loss when we forsake all of our idols–our family, our class, our race, our nation–those things which we so often love more than Jesus.

    Take our present debate as an example. If you worship the United States of America or a fanciful virtuous nation in our past; then you must repent, you must hate your country and follow Jesus. If you have distrusted the government your whole life, then you are far from idolizing this country. The sin of nationalism is not your sin. This wickedness is not the sin that you must mortify.

    Imagine a son, who deeply loves his mother, through tears, he comes to her and he tells her of her sin. Now imagine a son who despises his mother doing the same thing. If we enjoy the rebuke, then our display of public rebuke is “disgusting,” like a son who enjoys rebuking his own mother. (C.S. Lewis, Ibid., p. 192) We must not enjoy the rebuke.

    We must quickly forgive and continually receive forgiveness.

    But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin. If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.

    1 John 1:7–8

    In recent years, the “light” of social media, the “light” of body cams, this technology has exposed the darkest parts of our personal and collective lives. As followers of the Light of the world, we must walk in the light, our darkness must be exposed. Individual and collective confession of sin is not optional, both spontaneously and personally, both liturgically and corporately.

    But Facebook confession is easy. Twitter outrage is cheap. Deep confession, personal mortification is hard. Approaching your brother, or your wife, or your bishop with a lump in your throat to confess your sin… that approach is hard, because our sin actually causes pain and broken relationships. But hiding sin in order to “not hurt someone” doesn’t work.

    The “light,” the exposure of social media is good, but it is superficial. And it rarely leads to forgiveness. In the light of the gospel, bringing our sin into the light of Christ will be painful, but it is not shameful, and only there is forgiveness found.

    In the presence of the Light of the world, all of our darkness is exposed. Public display of confession on social media is not the “bringing to light” that we need.

    Our personal wretchedness, our collective sins have been clearly seen in the last few weeks. Even if someone has falsely accused you of sin, slander all too often exposes my sin, my quickness to return reviling for reviling. We cannot hide our sins in protest marches or in staying at home and condemning protest marches. It’s all fig leaves. We cannot hide our sins.

    By God’s grace, we are being made acutely aware of many personal and collective sins. Collectively, the Church has sinned. Collectively, majority ethnicities have sinned. Collectively, minority ethnicities have sinned. Beware of diversions. Beware of indifference. Twitter confessional and Facebook righteousness are dangerous diversions. Dopamine hits instead of broken hearts.

    Our personal and collective sins are before our faces, and we are exposed. True repentance feels like raw skin exposed underneath the scales torn away. But in that place of exposure, in the presence of our holy and merciful King, this is the only place that forgiveness is found, sin is exposed, sinners are washed, and raised to walk in newness of life.