papermind
  • home
  • my story
  • campus ministry
Home » Reading Scripture » The gift of an Enemy
May30 0

The gift of an Enemy

Themes: Reading Scripture, Selections

Consider my enemies; they are numerous,
and they hate me violently. Psalm 25:19

But my enemies are vigorous and powerful;
many hate me for no reason. Psalm 38:19

One of the most strange and estranging experiences of life in our age is the absence of enemies. At least, I think that it must be so. I don’t feel like I have any, and I feel strange…

Maybe ‘absence’ is a little strong. There is a certain stream of political rhetoric in our society that still uses enemy-type language (although rarely the word). Currently it is largely employed for shadowy paramilitary opponents with beards and kaftans. Enemies have been etherealised.
These political enemies (necessary for the functioning of a state) are carefully prevented from becoming personal enemies. We are opposed to evil ideologies, to life-denying movements, but not to individual enemies.

The fact is that the Gulf neowar led to the emergence of a problem that was absolutely new, not only to the logic and dynamics of paleowar but also to its governing psychology. The aim of paleowarfare was to destroy as many of the enemy as possible, accepting that many of one’s own men had to die too. After a victory, the great military leaders of the past would pass by night through battlefields sown with thousands and thousands of dead, and they weren’t surprised that half of them were their own soldiers. The commemoration with medals and moving ceremonies of the death of one’s own soldiers gave rise to the cult of the hero. The death of the others was publicised and gloried in, and civilians at home were expected to rejoice at their elimination.
The Gulf war established two principles: (1) none of our men should die and (2) as few enemies as possible should be killed.
(Umberto Eco, “Some Reflections on War and Peace” in Turning Back the Clock,15)

Don’t get me wrong, of course it is good that we seem less likely to go around killing each other.
But the change in how we regard our enemies cannot fail to have implications for our self-understanding. If you read back into history, even only back to the World Wars, everyone had enemies, they were an important part of identifying yourself properly, of understanding your place in society and the world. Have you ever felt a sense of embarrassment at how elderly veterans speak of those against whom they fought? Or blushed at old news footage?
Once you get back into Biblical history the embarrassment becomes so acute that we tend to suppress it altogether. It’s most troubling in the Psalms. A whopping great chunk of the Biblical references to ‘enemies’ come in the context of Israelite prayers: “please God, smash them.”
Take the most graphic example:

Daughter Babylon, doomed to destruction, happy is the one who pays you back what you have done to us. Happy is he who takes your little ones and dashes them against the rocks. (Psalms 137:8-9 HCSB)

How do you accept those words as your own divinely inspired response to God? How can you speak them aloud in a congregation as your corporate act of prayer?

Modern theology has made much of the idea of a relational ontology, but in practice we are far more likely to be practical essentialists than our forebears. Interestingly, the commencement of hostilities in the Bible comes from an unexpected source:

Then the Lord God said to the serpent:
Because you have done this, you are cursed more than any livestock and more than any wild animal. You will move on your belly and eat dust all the days of your life. I will put hostility between you and the woman, and between your seed and her seed. He will strike your head, and you will strike his heel. (Genesis 3:14-15 HCSB)

You read that carefully right? Who put the hostility between the snake and the woman?
Yep, The L-G.

Blake - Milton's Paradise Lost - Temptation of EveBut consider the alternative for a moment: what would have been the consequence if the Lord God had not put hostility between the Serpent and the Woman? What if he had acquiesced in her decision to be a friend to the enemy of his purposes? What if God had abandoned humanity to its unholy alliance against him, leaving them at peace with evil, plunging unperturbed into the abyss?

Commentators have often referred to Genesis 3:14-15 as a proto-euangelium (the first announcement of the good news). They pick up on the idea that the descendant of Eve will crush the Serpent. Personally I think I think the arguments for this idea are rubbish. But there is good news in these verses. It is in that promise of hostility.

It’s easy for us to forget that there are times and places in which nothing could be more evil than to be a friend to those whom are properly your enemies. It is a terrible forgetting of yourself, a lack of proper regard for your neighbour, a rejection of your identity.

In the recent Bushfires in Victoria it was reported that arsonists were deliberately lighting fires during the peak of the fire danger period. There was public outrage in the news media. Volunteer fire-fighters from around the country were risking their lives to save people and property and these deviants were deliberately undermining their effort. That outrage was a proper moral sentiment drawing upon the hostility we should feel toward those who are the friends of our enemies (even if that enemy is a force of nature).
How much more terrible for our Grandparents, those who lost so many people they loved in the World Wars.

Losing sight of the Enemy has tragic consequences for how we understand ourselves. It plays a large part in why we struggle to understand the proper hostility of God. It is not moral to have no enemies if the price of that peace is betrayal of those who are properly your friends.
That is cheap grace, the cheapest of reconciliations.

My enemy is God’s gift to me. My enemy teaches me who I am; what I believe strongly enough to fight for; who I belong to. He forges new bonds of kinship; he trains me in endurance; he crushes me so that I might learn not to count on my own strength. And at the end, my enemy will be at my side when he helps me to lay down my life so that I might follow my Lord into the greater life beyond.
A kind enemy.
Is it any wonder we are told to love and pray for him?

In God’s astonishing grace, even in the moment of the Fall, he has blessed us with hostility toward evil, he has made evil hostile toward us. And in God’s astonishing wisdom – the wisdom of the One who through death dealt death to Death – he uses even our Enemy to serve our good. So that, “all things work together for the good of those who love God: those who are called according to His purpose.” (Rom 8:28)

The gospel in the garden is the gift of an enemy

  • Share:

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Recently

  • On the Gradual Production of Thoughts Whilst Speaking
  • Meditations on a Tackle Box
  • The Philosopher at 90
  • The Bells
  • Elegy to a Beard
  • All who have departed – William Saumarez Smith
  • Friendship and Asymmetry
  • In defence of the proximate.
  • Communicating God: Doctrine of Scripture 3
  • How to apply the Old Testament: New Testament Contexts

Selections

  • 29 years, 373 days…
  • Allegorical Interpretation
  • Easter Saturday, the endless ‘Today’ of this time between times…
  • Elegy to a Beard
  • Everything he touches comes alive
  • Grief, Expectation, Comfort
  • Grieving the Future
  • Love in Inconstant Times
  • Meditations on a Tackle Box
  • On Weariness
  • Reading with the family
  • Seasonal Variations
  • The Ariadne of Darlington
  • The Bells
  • The gift of an Enemy
  • The God of Hell

Other minds

  • Icon With Meagre Powers

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Will God keep gumtrees?

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Three Stranded

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Thirst for Shalom

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Theological Theology

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon The Reader

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon The One and the Many

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon The Interpreter

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon The Catechist

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon The Box Pop » Church and [the first] state – a guide to democracy for NSW Christians. Part 4

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon The Blogging Parson

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon standing and waiting

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon St-Eutychus

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Southern Tablelands History

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon something this foggy day

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Shored Fragments

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Reflections in Exile

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Read Better, Preach Better

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Per∙Crucem∙ad∙Lucem

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon nothing new under the sun...

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Moore College » Thinktank

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Mindset of the Spirit Blog

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Make Whimsy not War

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Joined-up Life

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon In Focus

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon I'm ramblin' again

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Helm's Deep

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Gold, silver, precious stones?

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Goannatree

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Full Tilt

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Fors Clavigera

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon First Blog on the Moon

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Faith and Theology

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Euangelion

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Embracing Earth

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Dead Flies and Perfume

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Cruciformity

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Cross Talk ~ crux probat omnia

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Collins Go Kenya

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon CMS Landscape

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon CASE

    Close preview

    Loading...
  • Icon Canterbury Church Plant

    Close preview

    Loading...

Recent Comments

  • papermind on On the Gradual Production of Thoughts Whilst Speaking
  • Chris on On the Gradual Production of Thoughts Whilst Speaking
  • papermind on Elegy to a Beard
  • papermind on On the Gradual Production of Thoughts Whilst Speaking

Recommended Reading

  • Secularism and Its Discontents : The New Yorker
  • How Dutch women got to be the happiest in the world - World - Macleans.ca
  • The Botany of Desire: Based on the book by Michael Pollan | PBS
  • Friday poetry – Plath « Bookish
  • The revolutionary wave disc generator combustion engine

Themes:

Scripture Poetry Personal Sin Canberra Ethics Moore College Reading Scripture Philosophy On Knowing God Selections Critique Prayer Apologetics History On Language Random Friends Society On Power

Archive

© 2011 papermind

loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.