Title: Confronting Evil Today
1Confronting Evil Today
- A Response to Evil
- St. Jeromes Lectures in Catholic Experience
- January 30, 2009
- David Seljak, St. Jeromes University
2Confronting Evil Today
- This lecture is dedicated to Carol Persindear
friend and work partner for seven years. - You are the salt of the earth. Matthew 530
3Understanding Evil
- The Sociological Imagination
- The Social Construction of Reality
- Social Sin
- Evil in the Modern World
- The Revolutionary Society
- The Role of Ideology
4Dimensions of Sin
- Traditional concepts of sin
- Individual sin
- Cosmological e.g. Satan, demons, etc.
- Communitarian e.g. Israel, the nations, etc.
- The social dimension of sin
- Linked to sociological imagination
5The Social Dimension of Evil
- The social construction of reality.
- We live in a world.
- We act according to our conception of the world,
not as it actually is.
World
6SOCIAL SIN
- i) subject is collectivity
- ii) no sense of guilt
- iii) false consciousness
- iv) institutions that dehumanize
7BAUM FOUR LEVELS OF SOCIAL SIN
- Injustices and dehumanizing trends built into
various institutions - Cultural and religious symbols which legitimate
unjust institutions - False consciousness created by these institutions
and ideologies - Collective decisions generated by the false
consciousness - From Gregory Baums chapter Critical Theology
in Religion and Alienation, 2nd ed. Ottawa
Novalis 2006.
8The Social Dimension of Evil
3. World
4. Decisions
9What is evil?
- Each individual and each society has a different
conceptualization of evil based on different
patterns of socialization. - Cultural relativism?
- Relativism and Absolutism
10Against relativism social sin and the eclipse
of the Other
- From Enrique Dussel, Ethics and Community,
Maryknoll, NY Orbis Books, 1988.
11Enrique Dussel Social Sin and the Eclipse of the
Other
- Evil occurs when we define someone as other,
that is, not fully human. - We then feel that it is legitimate to dominate,
exploit or even kill them. - The dominant culture (including religion) assures
us that this is natural, good, and/or necessary.
12The Reign of God
- Why did God create us?
- Image and likeness of God (Imago dei)
- Community and the individual
- Love and freedom
- Martin Buber the I-Thou relationship
- I and Thou (New York Scribner, 1923 1958
Second edition)
13Evil and Death
God
- Destruction of community negation of the dignity
of the human person of the "other"
Self
Neighbour
14Evil and Death
- Domination and despoilation
- domination enslavement and control
- despoilation taking what the other needs in
order to live and reproduce life
15Evil and Death
- Instrumentalization of the other
- The other becomes a tool, an instrument, a
means for our ends - Martin Buber I-Thou relationship becomes an I-It
relationship
16Evil and Death
- Idolatry totalization of the self and its needs
- In our actions, our needs become absolute, i.e.
more important than the divine command to love. - The I-Thou relationship is shattered.
17Evil and Death
- Social sin institutionalization of evil
- This relationship is reproduced in social forms
outside the control of any one individual. - They become part of our very social structures
and institutions. - They appear natural, that is, as common
sense.
18Evil is an order
- The systemic rejection of the "other" slavery,
racism, sexism, exploitation, etc. - It is an order that serves death.
- It harms both master and slave, that is
dominant and victim groups.
19Goodness and Life
- Goodness comes through the restoration of the
I-Thou relationship - Goodness serves justice
- Goodness serves life
20Goodness and Life
- i) the other as the breach in the system
- Interaction of culture and structures form a
world - Recognition of the other as human shatters that
world.
Other
21Liberation theology
- The preferential option for the poor"
- theory see the world from the position of the
poor not our friends and associates - praxis solidarity with the poor and struggle for
justice poor are to be agents of their own
liberation Church must support them.
22Jesus and the poor
- Luke 4
- 17 The scroll of the prophet Isaiah was handed
to him. Unrolling it, he found the place where it
is written 18 "The Spirit of the Lord is on
me, because he has anointed me to
preach good news to the poor. He has sent me
to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and
recovery of sight for the blind, to release
the oppressed, 19 to proclaim the year of
the Lord's favor." - 20 Then he rolled up the scroll, gave it back to
the attendant and sat down. The eyes of everyone
in the synagogue were fastened on him, 21 and he
began by saying to them, "Today this scripture is
fulfilled in your hearing."
23John Paul II and Globalization of solidarity
- Our Jubilee, 2,000 years after Christ's birth,
must also bear this sign of universal
brotherhood. It represents a message that is
addressed not only to believers, but to all
people of good will, so that they will be
resolved, in their economic decisions, to abandon
the logic of sheer advantage and combine
legitimate "profit" with the value and practice
of solidarity. As I have said on other occasions,
we need a globalization of solidarity, which in
turn presupposes a "culture of solidarity" that
must flourish in every heart. - Pope John Paul II, Earth is Entrusted to Man's
Use, Not Abuse, - 11 November 2000
24POPE JOHN PAUL II, WORLD DAY OF PEACE, 1 JANUARY
1999
- The history of our time has shown in a tragic way
the danger which results from forgetting the
truth about the human person. Before our eyes we
have the results of ideologies such as Marxism,
Nazism and Fascism, and also of myths like racial
superiority, nationalism and ethnic exclusivism.
25POPE JOHN PAUL II, WORLD DAY OF PEACE, 1 JANUARY
1999
- No less pernicious, though not always as obvious,
are the effects of materialistic consumerism, in
which the exaltation of the individual and the
selfish satisfaction of personal aspirations
become the ultimate goal of life.
26POPE JOHN PAUL II, WORLD DAY OF PEACE, 1 JANUARY
1999
- In this outlook, the negative effects on others
are considered completely irrelevant. Instead it
must be said again that no affront to human
dignity can be ignored, whatever its source,
whatever actual form it takes and wherever it
occurs.
27IDOLATRY, DEATH AND EVIL
- Idolatry cognitive dimension
- traditional definition worship of false gods
- Gutièrrez acceptance of something finite as
absoluteGustavo Gutiérrez, The God of Life,
(Maryknoll, N.Y. Orbis, 1989)
28IDOLATRY, DEATH AND EVIL
- Idolatry practical dimension
- i) trust and submission
- ii) work of our hands
- iii) demand for human victims
29Evil and absolutization
- Evil comes from the absolutization of something
that is finite, conditional, and partial (the
self, state, party, revolution, nation, church,
etc.).
30Evil and absolutization
- All institutions and systems are distorted by
self-interest and partial knowledge. They are
products of ideologies.
31Evil and absolutization
- All ideologies are
- partial (rooted in one particular groups
experience) - distorted by self-interest and
- potentially dangerous (if applied universally and
uncritically).
32The God of Life
- Deuteronomy 3019- 20 This day I call heaven
and earth as witnesses against you that I have
set before you life and death, blessings and
curses. Now choose life, so that you and your
children may live and that you may love the LORD
your God, listen to his voice, and hold fast to
him.
33Confronting evil
- Therefore, we have to remain vigilant.
- What evil do I participate in without knowing
it? - Who is suffering?
- Who are the victims of OUR system?
34There are things you can do
- www.kairoscanada.org
- www.inebnetwork.org/web/
- www.tikkun.org
- www.nrpe.org
- http//www.cfore.ca/
35Thanks so much!
- dseljak_at_uwaterloo.ca
- David Seljak
- St. Jeromes University
- 290 Westmount Road N.
- Waterloo ON N2L 3G3
- 519-884-8111, ext. 28232