Anabaptist Theological Perspectives
Jerry Eicher of Anabaptist Theological Perspectives reacts to the Supreme Court’s 5–4 decision on birthright citizenship, focusing on Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s surprising vote and Justice Kavanaugh’s different reasoning. He explains the legal stakes of the 14th Amendment debate — jus soli versus textualist readings like “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” — and what the ruling could mean politically. From there Eicher broadens the conversation to a cultural and theological critique: he argues that Barrett’s emphasis on rejecting bloodline-based citizenship reflects a wider pattern in which women in positions of authority approach justice differently — more emotionally and mercifully — than men. He illustrates this with a personal courtroom anecdote about his daughter’s J6 sentencing to show how perceived sympathy or identification can affect outcomes. The episode also examines the MeToo-era dynamics in churches and Christian organizations, warning against mob-like, emotion-driven punishments that seek organizational destruction rather than restoration. Drawing on biblical language from Micah and Amos, Eicher calls for dispassionate, scripture-rooted justice and urges listeners to resist what he sees as a problematic shift in judicial, political, and ecclesial leadership.
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