1. Reflections on the Lectionary: Did Jesus
Come for Peace?
2. The Week’s Sermon from Rev. Frank and
Mary Hoffman
3. This Month’s Issue of The Peaceable Table
4. New All-Creatures.org Facebook Page
1. Reflections on the Lectionary: Did Jesus Come
for Peace?
August 15 – Luke 12:49-56
This reading includes Jesus declaring, “Do you think that I have
come to give peace on earth? No, I tell you, but rather division;
for henceforth in one house there will five divided, three against
two and two against three; they will be divided, father against son
and son against father, mother against daughter and daughter against
her mother…”
Jesus frequently talked about peace and peacemaking, and indeed
Jesus declared in the Sermon on the Mount, “Blessed are
peacemakers.” How do we reconcile those teachings with this week’s
passage? I think in Luke 12:49-56 Jesus was making a statement of
fact, not a statement of preference. He recognized that his ministry
would divide people, but that did not stop him from spreading his
radical message.
The specifics of the passage lend insight. In the scapegoating
process, which I have discussed extensively in previous essays, it
is all-against-one. With Jesus undermining scapegoating by
demonstrating that it is illicit and immoral, people could no longer
come together by their common contempt and hatred for scapegoating
victims. This would lead to divisions of three against two rather
than four against one.
Most remarkably, it would divide father and son, mother and
daughter. All hierarchies are grounded in the scapegoating process,
including the hierarchy that places parents over children. Young
children must respect and obey their parents for their own welfare.
However, once children are grown, they are adults who should not be
compelled to obey their parents. Forced obeisance always reflects a
hierarchy, and structural hierarchies always contain injustices
grounded in the scapegoating process. Jesus’ undermining the
scapegoating process would invariably lead to conflicts between
parents and their children, yet Jesus would not countenance the
greater evil of unjust oppression.
When there is scapegoating, there is the appearance of peace, but
there is no real peace. I think Jeremiah recognized this when he
declared, “They have healed the wound of my people lightly, saying,
'Peace, peace,' when there is no peace” (8:11). Currently,
scapegoating animals brings people together, and examples include
the holiday meal with an animal corpse as the centerpiece and the
camaraderie that often accompanies hunting. But, as I’ve argued in
past essays, humanity’s war with animals is destroying human
civilization. As people go about their daily lives and appear to
live contented, peaceful lives, there is a thin veneer of peace that
barely obscures the massive violence against animals. The threat to
humanity, though somewhat less obvious, seems clear to me. Essential
natural resources are rapidly declining and the environment and
rapidly changing in ways that will destabilize human civilization.
It seems to me that our only hope is divine intervention, and
countless civilizations have hoped in vain for divine rescue. Would
a just God spare a human civilization that, merely to please the
senses, systematically tortures and murders tens of billions of
God’s animals each year? I’ll explore some biblical perspectives on
this question next week.
Stephen R. Kaufman, M.D.
2. The Week’s Sermon from Rev. Frank and Mary
Hoffman
Daniel, God’s Man in the Field (Part IV)
http://www.all-creatures.org/sermons97/s23jul89.html
3. This Month’s Issue of The Peaceable Table
Contents Include
* "Gandhi and Vegetarianism," guest editorial by Steve Kretzmann,
founder of the Friends Vegetarian Society of North America, cites
the Mahatma's reflections on nonviolent diet and spiritual
evolution.
* Advocating for animals is often a somber business, but the
Unset Gem for this month presents the obvious in a way likely to
raise a welcome chuckle.
* Good tidings from Spain in one of our NewsNotes: a ban on
bull"fighting" has been passed in the province of Catalonia!
* Pioneer woman theologian Elizabeth Farians, staunch opponent of
oppression in its many guises, narrates highlights from her thirty-
plus years of advocating for animals.
* You will enjoy a cool summer dinner entree made from Angela
Suarez'
savory Sesame Noodle recipe.
To read this issue, go to http://www.vegetarianfriends.net/issue68.html
Toward the Peaceable Kingdom,
Gracia Fay Ellwood,
Editor
4. New All-Creatures.org Facebook Page
It’s
http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/pages/all-creaturesorg/133489503327777?ref=ts.
Please visit and share with family and friends..