The entire world stands aghast at the cruelty of
Israel’s vicious and illegal collective punishment of Palestinian civilians for
the perceived “crimes” of Hamas – the group of Palestinian resisters committed to the
expulsion of illegal Zionist occupiers from the Palestinian homeland.
Today’s liturgy of the word implores the Zionists
to abandon their butchery.
It also challenges Christians to denounce such
ethnic cleansing and to withdraw the last vestiges of support for a group that
more resembles their former Nazi persecutors than the “People of God”
celebrated in the Hebrew Bible.
At the same time, today’s readings support rabbi Michael
Lerner in cautioning
Hamas against its policy of violent resistance. Though
many of us would agree that Hamas’ tactics are understandable and often
justified by principles of self-defense, today’s Gospel reading identifies them
as counterproductive and ultimately harmful to the very people Hamas seeks to
defend.
Instead, Jesus suggests that violent resistance
should be replaced by greater reliance on more subtle and patient strategies.
Such strategies are reflected in the three basic themes of today’s readings.
They emphasize (1) the power of God expressed in leniency and forgiveness, (2)
the futility of violent response to unwanted foreign presence, and (3)
resistance that takes the form of patient trust that God’s forgiving power will
prevail. In succession, the themes suggest challenges for Jewish Zionists,
Palestinians, and Christians.
Begin with the first reading from the Jewish
Testament’s Book of Wisdom. It is particularly relevant to Zionist Jews. The
reading says explicitly that God’s power is not expressed in violence but in
leniency to all, Jew and non-Jew alike.
That theme is repeated in today’s responsorial
psalm with equal relevance to Zionists. There God is described as belonging to
all nations. The divine Spirit, as Paul insists in today’s second reading, dwells
within all humans regardless of nationality. It is slow to anger, good,
forgiving, abounding in kindness.
From this, Jewish wisdom insists that the “People
of God” must in turn be kind, lenient and forgiving to all – presumably even to
their worst enemies. There is no room here for exceptions involving the
indigenous tribal people of Palestine.
The second theme of today’s liturgy enjoys direct
relevance to contemporary Palestinians. Whether they are Muslims or Christians
(and many are Christians), they also recognize the Bible as the Word of God. I
point to Palestinian relevance because this second theme addresses the question
of resisting illegal occupation.
That is, Jesus’ parable of the weeds planted by
an enemy in a landlord’s field can be read as addressing the Roman occupation
forces encumbering Israel during Jesus’ lifetime. [According to John Dominic
Crossan, Matthew’s allegorizing of Jesus’ parable – making it about the end of
the world – is more reflective of the situation of the Jewish diaspora
(following the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE) than of the actual
revolutionary situation of Jesus’ own day.]
In occupied Israel, the suffocating Roman
presence was as unwelcome, alien, and destructive as weeds in a garden or
field. It was like the presence of basically European Zionist colonizers who
have encumbered Palestinian land since their colonial invasion in 1948.
The question was how to deal with such odious
foreign presence. Zealot
revolutionaries had their answer: Uproot
the weeds here and now. Take up arms; assassinate Romans and their
collaborators; drive them out mercilessly. Be as cruel and vicious as the
Romans.
Jesus’ response was different. As a non-violent
revolutionary, he could surely understand the more apocalyptic strategy. After
all, much of his teaching expressed sympathy to the Zealot cause which included
land reform, debt forgiveness, and expulsion of the hated Roman occupation
forces. Many scripture scholars even identify possibly five members of Jesus’
inner circle as Zealots themselves.
But Jesus’ Parable of the Weeds is more prudent
and sensitive to civilian casualties than the strategy of the impatient Zealots
– or that of Hamas.
When the landlord’s workers ask, “Should we
uproot the weeds?” Jesus’ landlord answers: “No, if you pull up the weeds you
might uproot the wheat along with them.”
In other words, Jesus agrees with El Salvador’s Oscar
Romero and with Brazil’s Dom
Helder Camara that revolutionary violence, though
understandable (and justifiable on the grounds of just war theory), is
imprudent at the very least.
This is because when faced with a vicious,
overwhelmingly armed oppressor (like the Zionist state) resistance inevitably
leads to state terrorism – to the war crime of collective punishment impacting
women, children, the elderly and disabled. At the very least, that’s why Jesus
eschews Zealot violence.
How then respond to illegal occupation like
Rome’s in the 1st century or Israel’s over the last more than 60 years?
Jesus’ response? Be like mustard plant, he says.
Be like yeast in flour. Both puzzling recommendations are relevant not only to
Palestinians, but to Christians who wish to help their brothers and sisters in
Palestine against the Zionists-turned-Nazis.
First of all think of the puzzlement that must
have struck Jesus’ listeners. Jews didn’t have much use for yeast. They
preferred unleavened bread. Neither would any farmer sow mustard seeds in her
field or garden. The mustard plant was like kudzu – itself a kind of weed that
eventually can take over entire fields and mountainsides while choking out
other plants weeds or not. The mustard plant was unstoppable.
So Jesus is saying:
ü * The Romans are weeds in your garden.
ü * Don’t try to uproot them.
ü * That will only lead to slaughter of the innocent.
ü * Rather become weeds yourselves – like the mustard plant which is much more powerful than simple Roman (or Zionist) weeds.
ü * Resist the Romans by embodying the Spirit of God that is slow to anger, good, forgiving, abounding in kindness.
ü * Only imitation of Wisdom’s God can defeat the evil of imperialism.
ü * Don’t try to uproot them.
ü * That will only lead to slaughter of the innocent.
ü * Rather become weeds yourselves – like the mustard plant which is much more powerful than simple Roman (or Zionist) weeds.
ü * Resist the Romans by embodying the Spirit of God that is slow to anger, good, forgiving, abounding in kindness.
ü * Only imitation of Wisdom’s God can defeat the evil of imperialism.
What does that mean for Christians wishing to
express solidarity with Palestinians against their cruel oppressors? At least
the following:
ü * Reject U.S. militarism in general as counterproductive,
since fully 90% of the casualties it inflicts in war are civilians.
ü * To bring about change, be instead like the yeast a homemaker puts into 60 pounds of flour, “infecting” the greater culture by non-violent resistance rather than seeking to destroy enemies.
ü * Recognize the Zionists for what they are: an outlaw European “settler society” illegally occupying Palestinian land.
ü * Take sides with Palestine’s indigenous tribal People.
ü * Recognize them for what they are: “the Jews’ Jews” – treated by Zionists in the same way the Nazis treated Jews in Germany.
ü * Petition the U.S. government to withdraw its support of Israel (more than one million dollars per day) unless the Zionists obey UN Resolution 242 and abandon the occupied territory while tearing down the odious Wall of Shame protecting the illegal Zionist settlements.
ü * Support boycotts of Israel’s products by not buying them and by urging our churches and places of business to do the same.
ü * To bring about change, be instead like the yeast a homemaker puts into 60 pounds of flour, “infecting” the greater culture by non-violent resistance rather than seeking to destroy enemies.
ü * Recognize the Zionists for what they are: an outlaw European “settler society” illegally occupying Palestinian land.
ü * Take sides with Palestine’s indigenous tribal People.
ü * Recognize them for what they are: “the Jews’ Jews” – treated by Zionists in the same way the Nazis treated Jews in Germany.
ü * Petition the U.S. government to withdraw its support of Israel (more than one million dollars per day) unless the Zionists obey UN Resolution 242 and abandon the occupied territory while tearing down the odious Wall of Shame protecting the illegal Zionist settlements.
ü * Support boycotts of Israel’s products by not buying them and by urging our churches and places of business to do the same.
Surely Jesus’ Way of non-violent resistance,
forgiveness and love of enemies will strike many (non-believers and believers
alike) as unrealistic. But according to the faith we Christians pretend to
embrace, Jesus’ Way is God’s way.
But then perhaps we think we’re smarter and more
realistic than Jesus -- or God?
- Mike Rivage-Seul
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