Who controls the divine?
God has been used to justify war, empire, and oppression. So what happens when people claim divine authority to legitimize their actions? In this episode, we wrestle with a tension that sits at the center of faith, power, and justice:
If the divine can be invoked to justify anything… who holds that accountable?
WHAT WE EXPLORE
* Why invoking God can create unquestionable authority
* How power “wraps itself in the divine” to control narratives
* The problem of accountability when authority is tied to God
* The tension between faith as motivation vs faith as justification
Justice has been built by people both with and without faith. Invoking God can inspire meaningful action, but it can also erase the contributions of real people and centralize power in dangerous ways. So the real question isn’t who controls God, it’s what we’re actually building together.
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RESOURCES/REFERENCES/TEXTS/ETC.
A Radical Guide https://www.radical-guide.com/ [https://www.radical-guide.com/]
Bonhoeffer, Ethics
Walter Bruegemann, A Prophetic Imagination
Emma Goldman, Anarchism and Other Essays,
Jürgen Habermas, Awareness of What is Missing: Faith and Reason in a Post-Secular Age
Søren Kierkegaard, Fear and Trembling
Thomas Merton, Peace in a Post-Christian Era
James Cone, A Theology of Liberation
Alystair McIntyre, After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory
Karen Armstrong, Fields of Blood
Biblical Narratives: Numbers 16; Exodus narrative; teachings of Jesus on love, nonviolence, and discipleship