Response to American Academy of Religion session
on "Scripture and Democracy"
Nick Adams,
University of Edinburgh
I have two points. The first is that these papers
are instructively not about democracy. The
second is that they exemplify a practice of making
their traditions' deep reasonings public.
1: How these papers are not yet about
democracy.
Randi Rashkover's paper is about land and
holdings, and she warns us that reasonings from
Isaiah 61 and Luke 4 risk masking the crucial theme
of land. The argument is not that one needs to pay
attention to scriptures which treat the question of
land. The argument is more radical: land is
significant for worship, which means it is bound up
with the very identity of Israel as a worshipping
people. This is dangerous territory in a conversation
between members of the three Abrahamic traditions.
Almost, but not quite, irresponsible. What makes it
not irresponsible? Professor Rashkover raises the
possibility that it should be equally significant for
Christians, who too easily forget the land. And not
only Christians, but Muslims too. Professor
Rashkover's reasonings lead to a renewed
attentiveness to scriptures in all three traditions
that treat questions of holdings and what she calls
their 'doxological significance': their centrality to
worship and relation to God.
But it is not about democracy. Not yet. At this
early stage of reasoning from scripture it is about
holdings, and the ways in which land is shared. If we
are led deeper into Leviticus by Professor
Rashkover's paper we will discover all sorts of
things about strangers, orphans, slaves, debtors and
all in relation to the land. This, many of us might
think, is a good way to start thinking about the
kinds of theme that will eventually be more
explicitly about democracy.
Mohammad Azadpur's paper is about unity and
difference. It is about judging between peoples
concerning 'the Book' (Sura two) and about confirming
'the scripture that came before it' in other
traditions (Sura five). Professor Azadpur propels us
deeper into the Qur'anic text to discover what kind
of wisdom this is. What is the significance of the
multiple messengers in verse 213 of Sura two? What
are we to make of the fact that in this very passage,
often seen as a sign of intolerance, Allah sent not
merely warnings but glad tidings to other nations? If
there was something, anything, to be glad about in
these nations, then this is a strange sign of
intolerance. In Sura five, what is the relation
between law and scripture? Why is it an Open Way? Why
is it a race? Is it the same kind of race as Paul
describes in 1 Corinthians 9, or the 'straining
forward' of Philippians 3? Here the Qur'an propels
one not only deeper into itself, but invites all the
traditions to investigate what their scriptures have
to say about competition.
But it's not about democracy. It's about a race,
perhaps competition, unity and difference. Again:
this is a good way to start thinking about democracy,
without knowing in advance what one should think.
Chad Pecknold's paper reasons from Genesis with
the help of Augustine. He draws attention to the
relationship between freedom and humility and the
ways in which this generates a certain understanding
of politics. Of the three papers it is the most
emphatic about reading scripture through the
tradition of commentary. But it is also the paper
that is least about democracy, in a way. It does not
rush to 'apply' its insights in any hasty overcooked
way. It reasons in an exemplary fashion from the
texts, and we are drawn to reason further from the
texts. Might an attentiveness to humility and freedom
lead to reflections on democracy? Of course, but in
the paper: not yet. There is a fascinating reserve
here.
So: none of the papers is about democracy. And
this is instructive for how we reason from scripture
in contexts where crises are real. And the crisis
over democracy is certainly real. Why is it such a
slow process?
2. How these papers make their traditions' deep
reasonings public.
The traditions — Judaism, Christianity and Islam —
are not only forbiddingly complex, filling many
libraries with their histories. They are diverse and
are changing under our very noses. Getting to know
each other's traditions in the public sphere and in
an intelligible way is a vital task. These papers
exemplify a process of making deep reasonings public.
It is a process. And it is only possible through
attentive conversation. It seems very well served by
attentiveness to scripture, and the
reasoning-conversations that emerge. By reasoning
from Leviticus, Suras two and five, and Genesis, in
public, interesting relations are formed. There is a
transmission of information too, of course. But the
nature of the relations is explicitly part of the
process, and that may be as significant as the
information content. Making deep reasonings public is
just as much about relations as it is about
facts.
In one way this is quite an unusual format for
AAR/SBL. There's something slightly counter-intuitive
about three papers whose job is not to invite
discussion about themselves, but to propel
participants deeper into their own traditions, in a
forum in which they are invited to be more public
about them than they normally are.
But in another way, this is the consummation of
the format of AAR/SBL. It happens from time to time,
in some sessions, that in the discussion after some
papers, one dreads the question session after the
papers have been delivered. Some questioners find it
most difficult to ask questions about the papers, but
instead wish to pose different questions, pointing to
different avenues of exploration, often entirely
ignoring the initial presentations.
And in scriptural reasoning that's exactly what
needs to happen. We have the texts from Leviticus,
Genesis and Suras two and five before us. Precisely
what our excellent papers invite us to do is join in
with our reasoning from these texts, differently, and
in ways that might well strongly contradict what our
three generous speakers have claimed. In the AAR that
can sometimes be evidence of compulsive egotism
mingled with guilt. Here, it is evidence of the
texts' compelling attractiveness, mingled with joy at
discovering each others' traditions' deep reasonings.
We may not get to democracy, but the practice itself,
if we do it well, seems to model something remarkably
like it.
So here is a little question. Which should we
prefer? To be given a ringing endorsement of
democracy by powerful people whom you may not have
elected, and to whom you cannot answer back? Or to be
told — rather shown — that democracy is not easily
reasoned from scriptures, yet in a forum where even
the most timid and seemingly marginal voice is
crucial, and which may utterly transform our
imaginations about how these ancient texts may speak
to us in our current political difficulties?
Title Page |
Archive
© 2006, Society for Scriptural
Reasoning
|