Recently I received an unexpected email from Rev. Dr.
Christopher Schelin, Dean of Students at Starr King School for the Ministry in
Oakland, California. Starr King is a Unitarian Universalist seminary, a member
of the Graduate Theological Union, affiliated with the University of
California, Berkeley. Dr. Schelin also holds the positions of Director of
Contextual Education and Assistant Professor of Practical and Political
Theologies.
He wrote to inform me that he had written a research paper entitled
“Compassionate Resistance: Opposing
Trumpism in the Nondual Political Theology of Marshall Davis.” This month he presented it to the Annual
Meeting of the Western Region American Academy of Religion. For those who are
interested in reading the paper, it can be found at academia.edu.
I was surprised – but pleased - at his announcement. Even
though I had corresponded with him previously, I did not know he was
researching my work. I certainly did not consider my work worthy of an academic
paper. Furthermore I have never thought of myself as a political theologian. Yet
… come to think of it … of course I have a political theology! All people who intentionally
seek to live out their faith in the public arena are political theologians!
Mine just happens to be more public than most.
First of all, Dr. Schelin did an excellent job in his
research. He understands my approach better than most people, who know only bits
and pieces of my writings. I also like his choice of the term “compassionate
resistance” to describe my approach. I have
compassion toward those who disagree with me on political and social issues. I try to
enter into the hearts and minds of those who hold views different than my own.
The key factor of this approach is the spiritual teaching to
love one’s enemies. That is the essence of both the Apostle Paul’s and the Lord
Jesus’ social engagement. This is what is missing in secular politics,
especially the extremist forms gaining popularity today. Both the Right and the
Left are afraid that listening to and understanding their enemies will undermine
their position. Without someone to fear and hate, they think the motivation for
their position will dissipate.
Fear and anger are the twin engines of politics these days. They
are sources of disinformation and misinformation. One must demonize one’s enemy
in order to justify them being enemies. If we turn our enemies into devils, it is easier to justify our own cause as righteous. So the facts become
distorted in order to confirm our fears. In time we start to believe our own rhetoric.
The truth is that our enemy is more like us than we wish to
believe. Enemies are mirror images of ourselves. They are us. As the comic sage
Pogo famously said, “We have met the enemy and he is us.” That is why we fear
them. That is why they stir such anger in us. They expose our true selves.
There is nothing we hate more than seeing what we really are. We will do almost
anything to prevent ourselves from acknowledging that painful truth.
When we love our enemies, we recognize our enemies as
neighbors. Jesus taught us to love our neighbors as ourselves. We love our neighbors
when we realize that at a deep level they are ourselves. We are one. Jesus said
that the commandment to love our neighbor is “like unto” the command to love
God. When we love our enemies we see God in them.
Loving our enemies tears down the “dividing wall of
hostility.” That is how the apostle Paul described Jesus’ sacrificial love. Love
destroys our enemies by turning them into brothers and sisters. As Abraham
Lincoln said, “The best way to destroy an enemy is to make him a friend.”
This does not mean that we give up on the political process.
It means that we engage in political thinking and action out of compassion and
love - not from fear and anger. We do it from a position of unity rather than
division. We are one. As a country we are the United States of America. When we
forget the “united” part, we have lost before we begin. When we keep the union
front and center, all things are possible.
That is nondual Christian politics. That is compassionate resistance.