Tuesday, August 23, 2016

The Liberation of Puerto Rico-The Role of Scripture, History, and Praxis

One must have a knowledge of the role of Scripture, history, and praxis in order to have a better understanding of Liberation Theology.  The theologians of Liberation indicate what that role is.  I will again refer to Bonino, Segundo, and Assmann.  Their statements and positions will help clarify what that role is.

Bonino questions what he calls the classical conception of truth.  He describes this conception as follows.  "Truth belongs, for this view, to a world of truth, a universe complete in itself, which is copied or reproduced in 'correct' propositions, in a theory which corresponds to this truth.  Then, in a second moment, as a later step, comes the application in a particular historical situation.  Truth is therefore preexistent to and independent of its historical effectiveness.  Its legitimacy has to be tested in relation to this abstract "heaven of truth,' quite apart from its historicization (Bonino in Gibellini, p. 88)."

Bonino is critical of that view as one can see from his reaction to it.  He says "Whatever corrections may be needed, there is scarcely any doubt that God's Word is not understood in the Old Testament as a conceptual communication, but as a creative event.  Its trust does not consist in carrying out God's promise or fulfilling His judgment.  Correspondingly, what is required of Israel is not an ethical inference, but an obedient participating--whether in action or in suffering-- in God's active righteousness and mercy.  Faith is always a concrete obedience which relies on God's promises and is vindicated in the act of obedience: Abraham offering his only son, Moses stepping into the Red Sea.  There is no question of arriving at or possessing previously some theoretical clue. There is no name of God to call for--or to exegete--except as He Himself is present in all His power (i.e. His powerful acts).  Again the faith of Israel is consistently portrayed not as a gnosis, but as a way, a particular way of acting, of relating inside and outside the nation, of ordering life at every conceivable level, which corresponds to God's own way with Israel.  This background, so well attested in the Psalms, for instance, may explain Jesus's use of the word "way" to refer to Himself.  The motif, on the other hand, appears in parenetic  contexts in Pauline literature.  Faith is a 'walking.' It is unnecessary to point out that even the idea of knowledge and knowing has this active and participatory content (Bonino in Gibellini, p. 89)."

Bonino believes that this classical conception of truth is both faulty and unbiblical. According to Bonino, "It seems clear enough that the classical conception can claim no biblical basis for its conceptual understanding of truth and a practical application of it.  Correct knowledge is contingent on right doing.  The knowledge is disclosed in the doing.  Wrongdoing is ignorance.  But, on the other hand, we can also ask whether this classical distinction is phenomenologically true?  Is there there, in fact, a theoretical knowledge prior to its application?  It seems that both Scripture and social analysis yield the same answer: there is no such neutral knowledge.  The sociology of knowledge makes abundantly clear that we think always out of a definite context of relations and action, out of a given praxis (Bonino in Gibellini, p. 90)."

Bonino believes that there should be a direct link between the interpretation of the texts and the praxis out of which this interpretation comes.  In other words we should not accept the truth uncritically.

"Every interpretation of the texts which is offered to us (whether as exegesis or as systematic or as ethical interpretation), must be investigated in relation to the praxis out of which it comes.  Very concretely, we cannot receive the theological interpretation coming from the rich world without suspecting it and, therefore, asking what kind of praxis it supports, reflects, or legitimizes (Bonino in Gibellini, pp. 90-91)."

What is the role of history in theological reflection?  This question merits our consideration since theological reflection does not take place in a vacuum.  Bonino's answer is that: "We are not concerned with establishing through deduction the consequence of conceptual truths but with analysing a historical praxis which claims to be Christian.  This critical analysis includes a number of operations, which are totally unknown to classical theology.  Historical praxis overflows the area of the subjective and private.  If we are dealing with acts and not merely ideas, feelings, or intentions, we plunge immediately into the area of politics, understood now in its broad sense of public or social .  Billy Graham, the South African Reformed Church, Martin Luther King, or 'Christians for socialism' do not confront us primarily as a system of ideas or a theological position, but as historical agents in certain directions, and with certain effects which are objectively possible to determine. The area of research is the total society in which these agents are performing; economic, political, and cultural facts are as relevant to a knowledge of these praxes as the exegesis of the pronouncements and publications.  Their Christianity must be verified in relation to such questions as imperialism, apartheid, integration, self-determination, and many other socio-political magnitudes (Bonino in Gibellini, p. 91)."

These statements serve to underscore Bonino's conviction that praxis cannot be divorced from history.  He indicates that Christian faith and practice are to be measured largely by one's attitude toward the issues which he raises.

Juan Luis Segundo is well known in the world of theology for what he calls the "hermeneutical circle."  This hermeneutical circle is an approach that Segundo believes will enable one to relate past and present in dealing with the Word of God.  Segundo believes that each new reality obliges us to interpret the Word of God afresh, to change reality accordingly, and then to go back and reinterpret the Word of God again.

It is important to note Segundo's two preconditions that have to be met if there is to be a hermeneutical circle in theology.  The first condition is that: "the questions rising out of the present be rich enough, general enough, and basic enough to force us to change our customary conceptions of life, death, knowledge, society, politics, and the world in general.  Only a change of this sort, or at the very least, a pervasive suspicion about our ideas and value judgments concerning those things, will enable us to reach the theological level and force theology to come back down to reality and ask itself new questions (Juan Luis Segundo, Liberation of Theology. Maryknoll: Orbis Books, 1976, p. 8)."

One can note that there is an element of subjectivism expressed through the first pre-condition.  I am referring to the fact that Segundo does not identify who or what determines which questions are important enough to force us to change our customary conceptions.

"The second precondition is intimately bound up with the first.  If theology somehow assumes that it can respond to the new questions without changing its customary interpretation of Scriptures, that immediately terminates the hermeneutical circle.  Moreover, if our interpretation of Scripture does not change along with the problems, then the latter will go unanswered; or worse, they will receive old, conservative, and unserviceable answers (Segundo, p. 9)."

One can easily note that Segundo is not willing to settle for anything less than a new hermeneutic.  He contends that the old or traditional way of interpreting the Scriptures does not provide any solutions to the problem of applying theology to the reality of everyday life.

Hugo Assmann, links the Scriptures, history, and praxis.  This linkage is an essential feature of his "practical theology of liberation."  He stress the importance of practice as the starting-point for the theology of liberation.  He says: " In the Bible, on the other hand, words have meaning only as the expression of a deed, and theory has meaning only as the expression of practice.  Events form the structural centre of this biblical language.  Not the causal events of the world of nature, but the human events of history.  The historic dimension of events dominates the biblical outlook to such an extent that, in this pre-technical world, even the facts of nature came to be taken as a point of spontaneous interaction between God and humans, which would be impossible for us today.  'Liberation,' is necessarily linked to effective action (Assmann in Gibellini, p. 75)."

As one call tell from reading Assmann's book, "Practical Theology of Liberation," this "praxis"  takes place in the world of history.  In other words, Assmann clearly identifies the need for the practice of biblical understanding to be intimately connected to the issues that are raised and to the events that take place in history.  This is especially noted when he states that " The theology of liberation insists even more on the strong historical basis of faith, including the notion of effective historical action in its very vision of what constitutes faith.  Faith can only be historically true when it becomes truth; when it is historically effective in the liberation of humanity.  Hence the 'truth' dimension of faith becomes closely linked to its ethical and political dimensions (Assmann in Gibellini, p.75).

I would like to conclude this chapter by briefly underscoring what I believe to be the canonical status of Scripture in relation to Latin American Liberation Theology.  I have indicated that the Scriptures are the primary source of faith and practice for the Christian.  From the Scriptures we derive the truths that we need in order to function in this world.  Since the Scriptures are not the mere product of human thinking, the message contained in them is applicable to the world of today.
Liberation Theology seeks to take the message in the Scriptures and apply it to the present reality.  It is a "rereading of the Word of God."  Liberation Theology seeks to reinterpret the Bible in the light of modern events.  The accent of Liberation Theology is on the "oppressed and dominated peoples" in Latin America. Liberation Theology draws on biblical themes such as "liberation" for its reflection.

In the light of what I have stated, Liberation Theology is a secondary source for theological reflection and action in today's world.  To the extent that it builds on Scripture, it is a source of faith and practice.  I do not make any claim  that Liberation Theology is "divinely inspired."  It, nevertheless, brings us back to the fountain of inspired truth which can be found in the Scriptures.  Because that, Liberation Theology is the secondary authority on which my arguments for the independence of Puerto Rico rests.

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