This week I’m laying out a case for Christians not participating in war nor in the military. I had laid out the basic reasons a couple of weeks ago and am now analyzing the four principal ones that I mentioned.
One big reason I see for not participating in war is the deceit that surrounds it. Wars are complex things with multiple causes and myriad effects. There’s hardly anyone that fully understands all the reasons for a war when that war begins. Even when leaders have nefarious goals in view, they always present their wars as justified reactions to some wrong. Every nation is waging a just war; every country has God on their side; every arm fights for the side of justice.
Talking about this point is always a bit delicate, because we prefer the edited-for-public-consumption view of history. We want to look back at history in simple terms, like the inspiring stories taught to school children. Any attempts to pull back the curtain on the ruse is quickly labeled as “America bashing.” But we need to be able to discuss realities, not just popular lore.
Almost every war that the United States has been involved in has had a dark side to it. (I say almost because I’m not knowledgeable enough to speak of all of them.) People manipulated that conflict for their own ends. Soldiers were sent to fight based on a misconception. These men responded with courage and sacrifice. Most of them joined for honorable reasons and honor marked their time of service. It’s not the common soldier that is to blame.
It’s not always the leaders, either. They can also be duped into believing falsehoods regarding a war. The U.S. government was fooled into thinking Iraq had weapons of mass destruction, for example. But I’m cynical enough about government to think that those moments are the exception. Too many times, wars are fought for political or economic gain, and the leaders are well aware of that. It’s the general public and the common soldier that gets manipulated into thinking the fighting is for a higher cause.
It’s amazing to me how Americans can distrust their political system on so many levels, yet place blind faith in the very same leaders when it comes to sending our young people to kill and be killed. Just as the powers seek their own ends, so the servants of those powers become a part of the system, justifying the deaths of innocents for the “greater good” of the preservation of the machinery.
The United States is not unique in this. This country is no worse than other nations of this world. We just need to drop the myth that we are somehow exempt from the ills that plague the others. We need to accept the fact that our nation seeks its own good above all, and the leaders of our nation sometimes act seeking their own goals. Politics, personal ambition and the quest for pre-eminence in this world; all these things play a part in the decisions made to unleash the horrors of war.
I don’t want to be a part of it. I don’t want my children to be sucked into that. I don’t want to see the church saddled with the weight of using valuable resources to support a web of deceit and lies. We are the church, and when we give our young people to the military, when we support the military system, we take from the Kingdom of God and give to the kingdoms of this world.
It’s time to say: no more.