HOW SHORT DO WE FALL?
“In every major city, the homeless sit hungry at the doorsteps of greatest wealth. Many of the children of privilege find their existence so unbearable that they seek self-destructive escape through drugs. We finance the maiming of children by various semisecret operatives in far-off countries in pursuit of goals no one can quite explain. Other societies in the modern world, to be sure, are just as bad, and some are a great deal worse—we should never lose sight of that. Still, measured by the standard of the gospel, we fall desperately short.”
William C. Placher. Unapologetic Theology. 1989
COMMENT
I do not do justice to Placher’s book, Unapologetic Theology: A Christian Voice in a Pluralistic Conversation, through this short quotation, which comes at the very end of a meticulously well-reasoned work of scholarship and insight. Nonetheless, his historical perspective and his prescience come through in that brief passage. Today a pluralistic conversation has become even more difficult. In this most religious of nations, why do we fail to live the message delivered by the one whose cross graces the skyline of every hamlet and metropolis? Does our inability to hold constructive conversations stem from our willful ignorance of the life and work of the Christ? Or are those still seeking to converse simply giving away the game? Both, I’d say. The intolerant consume the tolerant who, in the name of tolerance, allow intolerance to thrive.
CS
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