Monday, November 30, 2009

Is the Manhattan Declaration ECT redux?

1.At the textual level, the answer is no. You only have to compare the text of ECT with the text of the Manhattan Declaration to see the difference.

2.There is, however, a subtextual argument. Did the framers have an ulterior, interfaith agenda?

To my knowledge, Robert George is an observant Catholic, so I assume he’s ecumenical to the extent that the Vatican is ecumenical.

I don’t know that this amounts to an agenda on his part. I assume his primary contribution to the document lay in drafting the sanctity-of-life provisions. He’s a bioethicist. That’s his field.

To my knowledge, Timothy George and Chuck Colson are fairly aggressive ecumenists. So it’s quite possible–maybe probable–that they used this document as a pretext to further their ecumenical aims.

3.In that respect, the document suffers from a conflicting agenda. And that, in my opinion, is one of its principal weaknesses.

4.At the same time, we need to draw a rudimentary, but often overlooked, distinction between the intent of the framers and the intent of the signatories.

Objections to the Manhattan Declaration frequently parallel debates within the religious right every election cycle.

The assumption seems to be that signing the document constitutes a wholesale endorsement of the document. But that’s rather naïve.

It’s like saying a registered Republican must swear by every plank in the party platform. But of course, that’s not how it works in real life. A voter can be quite selective.

Signatories may have different intentions than framers. Likewise, one signatory may have different intentions than another signatory.

A signatory isn't bound by the intentions of the framers. This is not a contract. Likewise, the same document may be put to more than one use.

Of course, a document may be so flawed or skewed that it’s fairly useless. In my opinion, the Manhattan Declaration is too muddled and obsequious to be very useful. It’s at cross-purposes with itself. In that respect, the framers, if they did have an ulterior agenda, unwittingly sabotaged their own efforts.

5.Two final points:

i) It’s not enough to simply attack the document. One should also present an alternative. And that needs to be done by contributors who are at least as prominent as the contributors to the Manhattan Declaration.

ii) Of course, there’s also the question of whether issuing a piece of paper is the most efficient use of our time. Perhaps we need fewer words and more deeds.

For example, signatories to the Manhattan Declaration include representatives of the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox denominations. Yet both those institutions are long on words, but short on actions–starting with church discipline.

9 comments:

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  2. I agree with Sandlin on social ethics.

    However, Catholicism teaches elements of the gospel, while adding to the gospel, as well as subtracting from the gospel. So what you're left with is a gospel-plus/gospel-minus pastiche. Priestcraft, hocus pocus, and works-righteousness.

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  4. I agree with Andrew Sandlin that many Evangelicals haven't acknowledged the full implications of Jesus' lordship over the state, and I agree that there's some significant overlap among Catholics, Orthodox, and Evangelicals on matters pertaining to what Sandlin calls the accomplishment of the gospel. But even when a Catholic and Evangelical agree that Jesus died for our sins, for example, they aren't necessarily defining that concept the same way. And, as Sandlin acknowledges, the disagreement over the application of the gospel remains. Scripture defines that issue of application as a foundational issue, as we see in Paul's disputes with the Judaizers. See my comments in posts # 94 and # 99 in the Challies thread here. The Manhattan Declaration, when read in the most natural way it could be read, affirms the orthodoxy of groups that are wrong on that foundational issue.

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  5. TUAD,

    1. I agree with most of Sandlin's excerpt.

    2. I don't agree with him that the Gospel is not the most important message of the Bible. And I wouldn't rank the sovereignty of God above the Gospel. Indeed, that's an odd disjunction. A sovereignless Gospel is no better than a Gospelless sovereignty. The two are interrelated.

    3. Ironically, the way in which Sandlin tries to defend the MD corroborates the objections of its critics.

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  9. TU&D: Just a reminder - still waiting for you to give a straight answer to this question (link).

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