Category Archives: Government

Deceit, lies and waterboarding

water_cure

During the Spanish-American War, a U.S. soldier, Major Edwin Glenn, was suspended from command for one month and fined $50 for using “the water cure.” In his review, the Army judge advocate said the charges constituted “resort to torture with a view to extort a confession.” He recommended disapproval because “the United States cannot afford to sanction the addition of torture.”

Stephen Rickard, Washington director of the Open Society Institute, says that throughout the centuries, the justifications for using waterboarding have been remarkably consistent. “Almost every time this comes along, people say, ‘This is a new enemy, a new kind of war, and it requires new techniques,'” he says. “And there are always assurances that it is carefully regulated.”

(excerpts from Waterboarding: A Tortured History)

 

It’s been said that waterboarding created quick, effective results after 9/11. That turned out to be a lie, an oft-repeated lie, but a lie nonetheless. The specific case mentioned was that of Abu Zubaydah. Problem is, interrogators had already gotten excellent, actionable information from Mr. Zubaydah, including the identification of José Padilla, the dirty bomber. That information was not obtained by torture, it was obtained through traditional methods. (Zubaydah provided this information between March and June of 2002; waterboarding was authorized in August of that year) In addition, recently declassified memos show that Zubaydah was waterboarded “at least 83 times,” [Ed.—or 83 pours, as noted in the comments below] not the 30-35 seconds that Rush Limbaugh and others like to talk about.

I could go on and on, but plenty has been written about the foolishness of using torture techniques that have been proven historically to provide false confessions, much has been reported following the declassification of the memos about torture. What is important for us to remember, though, is that we were deceived. Again. We put our trust in politicians and professional soldiers to give us reliable information about what they were doing and why. As the people of God, we cannot place ourselves blindly in the hands of ungodly people, letting them make decisions about whom we should hate, whom we should kill, whom we should torture and what is right and what is not. The kingdoms of this world, all of them, promote their own interests. They do not put God’s kingdom first. They will lie to us to get us to do what they want. They will hide information from us, distort the facts, and present partial truths. A quick look at history confirms this fact. Monarchs and revolutionaries, Democrats and Republicans, capitalists and communists, … we dare not let them make our moral decisions. They will promote their own interests by any means necessary.

Our government will never do that, for our king cannot lie.

Shifting sands

sandOne reason I brought up the subject of torture yesterday is that I wanted to remind us how culture shifts in its definition of morality, especially regarding warfare. The torture techniques, the “enhanced interrogation” if you speak NewSpeak, these were the very things that we found outrageous when they were practiced on American soldiers during the Korean War, Vietnam War, etc. Waterboarding, for example, was one of the main accusations against a Japanese officer tried for war crimes after World War II. American soldiers were court-martialed for performing “the water cure” during the Spanish-American war. It’s been considered something morally repugnant. Until it became “necessary.”

To be honest, there is no reason for a nation of this world to not embrace these things. Nations aren’t Christian; people are Christian. However, dare we Christians go along for the ride as our country’s morality changes? I wrote before about the bombing of cities becoming acceptable. Now we’re talking about torturing prisoners. Each of these things become acceptable out of pragmatism: they work, they save lives, etc.

Terrorism works as well. When the governments to whom we blindly pledge our allegiance accept the use of suicide bombers, will Christians do the same? History says yes. And that’s really sad.

Governments: The natural outgrowth of cities

When men banded together in cities, they found it necessary to have an increasingly formal social structure. Before there were nations, there were city states, with each city having its own king. Some strongmen, like Nimrod in Genesis 10, came to rule over several such cities, but the original organization in the ancient world was the city. Later nations like Egypt were formed, groups of cities and their outlying areas that joined together for mutual protection and cultural advancement. Abraham and his family lived apart from such kings (Lot being the exception, choosing to live in Sodom). They had dealings with kings like the Pharaoh, Abimelech, etc., but God’s people were organized by families and clans. It wasn’t until they were led to Egypt for their 400 years of slavery that God’s people came under the authority of a human king.
In a discussion on another blog, someone commented that God invented government. I disagreed then and still do. I think that human government grew up out of man’s rebelliousness, his desire to rely on men instead of God. God would eventually permit his people to have a king, but that wasn’t his desire nor his plan. God has used human governments for his ends, but his plan for mankind was other. God wanted to be king and will be king; he sent his Son to usher his kingdom into this world. The rebellious sinful kingdoms of this world will eventually be absorbed into this kingdom, as announced in Revelation: “The seventh angel sounded his trumpet, and there were loud voices in heaven, which said: “The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he will reign for ever and ever.”” (Revelation 11:15) Satan has been at work in the nations, deceiving them (Rev. 12:9; 20:3, 8, 10). But God’s kingdom has erupted in this world and is displacing those nations and their deceiver.

Christlike = Christian

I’m still reading in The Myth of a Christian Nation by Gregory Boyd. One of his basic premises is that for something to be Christian, it has to be Christlike. That is inherent in the meaning of the word Christian. And he argues that a government of this world cannot act in a Christlike fashion and still promote its interests.
Some people might be put off by the title of the book, so it’s important to see that Boyd’s argument isn’t that the United States isn’t Christian; his point is that no nation can act in a truly Christlike fashion and continue to exist. And history shows us that when the church tries to run a worldly kingdom, it soon begins to use worldly methods.
In the end, it comes back to a personal level, and that’s where it’s hardest for me. It’s about living like Christ. Living out the teachings of Christ, like I talked about in the last post. Here’s a great quote from Boyd about how the church should live: “What if the energy and resources used to preserve and tweak the civil religion was (sic) rather spent feeding the hungry, housing the homeless, befriending the drug addict, and visiting the prisoner? … In other words, what if we individually and collectively committed ourselves to the one thing that is needful—to replicating the loving sacrifice of Calvary to all people, at all times, in all places, regardless of their circumstance or merit? what if we just did the kingdom?” (Boyd, pp. 115-16, emphasis his)
I need to be Christlike. Our churches need to be Christlike. More than knowing the right doctrine, we need to live the right life.

Was Satan telling the truth?

Satan is the father of liars, according to the Bible. Yet we can also see that he is the master of the half-truth and the misapplied truth. When tempting Jesus in the wilderness, Satan even quoted Scripture.
Satan said something interesting during the temptation sequence. Let’s read from Luke’s account: “The devil led him up to a high place and showed him in an instant all the kingdoms of the world. And he said to him, “I will give you all their authority and splendor, for it has been given to me, and I can give it to anyone I want to. So if you worship me, it will all be yours.” ” (Luke 4:5-7)
Satan claimed to have been given the authority over the kingdoms of this world. Jesus repeatedly called Satan “the prince of this world.” (John 12:31; 14:30; 16:11) Paul spoke of “the god of this world” (2 Corinthians 4:4) and John wrote “We know that we are children of God, and that the whole world is under the control of the evil one.” (1 John 5:19) [You can also consider Ephesians 2:2 and Ephesians 6:12, among others]
What do you think? Was Satan telling the truth? Does he hold authority over the kingdoms of this world?