Thursday Theology #575
June 18, 2009
Topic: Crossing the Kidney Market -- With Law and Promise
Colleagues,
I recently sent on to you Paul Tambyah's request for Crossings counsel on
new legislation in Singapore that seeks to regulate the sale of human body
parts. Nine of you have already responded, all of it good stuff. So I'm
going to pick and choose for today's ThTh posting the one that explicitly takes
Tambyah's issue through the classic Crossings paradigm. Jeff Anderson takes
the standard six steps of diagnosis and prognosis and at each step follows
John 8:1-11 as his GROUNDING text. Then he does a super analysis in
TRACKING the reality of human organs as a marketable commodity, and then concludes
with CROSSING the Biblical text and the body-parts "text" with each other.
I've already sent this on to Paul, and now it comes to you.
When I asked him for permission to pass it on to you, he not only said Yes
but added this "very Lutheran" sentence: "I tried (without saying it
explicitly) to lay out the difference between our hunger for a Lutheran 'Ethic'
and the authentic Lutheran contribution of an 'Ethos.'"
That may sound like "insider trading" among egghead theologians. It is,
however, linked to the Augsburg Aha! about Christian ethics. What sinners
need is not rules and regulations on how to "do the right thing," but how to
become "right" people. That means the quality of our life (that's what ethos
means) needs to be changed by the gospel of forgiveness. When our ethos is
"right," then our actions (ethics) come out "right" too. Jesus said it more
simply: A good tree brings forth good fruit. The gospel is all about
creating good trees. And their fruits will follow.
Peace & Joy!
Ed Schroeder
Dear Ed,
Paul Tambyah's "mine field" could be crossed with John 8:1-11 to make it a
"fertile field" for Christian Ethics. Here are some thoughts:
When I considered the "selling of body parts" I thought immediately of
Jesus and the woman "taken in adultery" in the Gospel of John. Although it is
not clear from the text, I have always understood her to be a prostitute,
that is, one who sells her body, or parts of it, for cash.
In both scenarios, folks turn to the legal system (Mosaic Law or Singapore
Law) to solve the problem. Perhaps by crossing Jesus' encounter in John 8
with Paul Tambyah's encounter in Singapore, we can find a field, fertile with
real Law and, hence, real Good News.
Jeff Anderson
BODY PARTS FOR SALE.
Step 1. For Sale, Body Parts - At Odds with One's Self. "...a woman taken
in adultery."
My first reaction is: ""How terrible." To sell your body (the
prostitute), or a part of your body (the Singapore poor) is a sign of inner
disintegration. The seller is destroying her own self.
An enlightened observer would add: "How terrible also for the
buyer." The buyers are corrupting their own humanity and demeaning themselves by
grasping for transient straws of life by using the other's body/body parts
as an object for their own satisfaction.
Step 2. For Sale, Body Parts - At Odds with One's Community. "THEY
brought to him ..."
The deeper problem indicts the community (i.e. THEY). THEY, the
community, have rules permitting and regulating the traffic in human flesh.
THEY believe that "the law of Singapore" like "the law of Moses" can manage
this class of mercantile transactions. How kosher!
But beyond the legal issue, a sensitive observer might raise other
diagnostic questions: Why is the seller selling his own body in the first
place? Is it to have the cash to live another day? Or to put food on the
table for her child? Or to buy a few sticks to burn and keep warm? Here we
observe a wrenching breakdown of the core "body" in society, the family. Why
hasn't the seller's family taken her in and warmed and fed her? Why haven't
friends helped her with her dear child?
The tragedy of selling bodies and body parts comes about because
the basic societal bodies, community and family, have abandoned their brother
and sister. So each is reduced to selling his or her own body or body-parts.
Can our predicament be any worse than that? Yes, it can. Perhaps
that is why Jesus doodles in the sand. I think he is giving the body of
critics some space to do some theological thinking, and perhaps to come to
their senses. They don't.
Step 3. For Sale, Body Parts - At Odds with God. "Let him who is without
sin among you"
Don't you just wish this were Jesus' clever way to zap the scribes
and Pharisees who had brought the woman to him? So do I. But I think
Jesus' words target a wider audience. Jesus' critique encompasses all four
groups in our little tableau: the sellers of bodies/body-parts, the buyers of
bodies/body-parts, the body of law and its proponents (Singapore and Moses and
the Pharisees), and the silent or absent bodies of community and family.
All four were jockeying for position, trying to turn a practice of human
degradation into something that would give them a little breathing room to live.
But the very debate over these ugly undertakings shows them all (us all) to
be enemies of God. They are on the wrong side of the God of Life.
The individual human bodies of the buyers as well as the bodies of
the sellers were already dying one cell at a time, or one organ at a time,
or one more roll in the hay at a time. The
communities/organizations/families (collective bodies, all) were dying one more argument at a time, or one
more excuse at a time, or one more stoning at a time. Jesus' invitation: "Let
him who is without sin among you ..." unmasks them all. They are as good as
dead under the gaze of God. Those who are clever try to escape the wrath of
God by ducking out quietly. But all of them are withering under God's
curse.
Step 4. A New Body - The Body of Jesus - laid down for you. "Neither do
I condemn you."
A little twist here. Jesus' non-condemnation is different from the
accusers'. The accusers halted their condemnation because they were trembling
before God's wrath. Jesus withholds condemnation because he would lay down
his body, and all its parts, in a holy way, for her. He was on the way to
his glory, being lifted on the cross to endure God's wrath for the sin of the
world. Romans is too good to pass up here: "Therefore," says Paul, "there
is no more condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus." What a
stunningly different way to use one's body/body-parts. No more buying or selling of
body parts, no more stoning or killing or defending of human bodies.
Instead, as Jesus says in the other Gospels: "This is my body, given for you."
This human body, the dying body of God, becomes a gift for the world and
finally stops condemnation in its tracks.
Step 5. A New Body - The Body of Christ in the World - a new community.
"Go."
That is almost too simple: Go! Go and do what? Sin no more? That
is what NOT to do. But what TO DO? Wouldn't it be nice to have some rules
- like Singapore or like Moses - to tell us what to do? Whoops, there we
are, back in the old mode again, looking for relief by concretizing good and
evil in a code.
Part of the diagnosis we saw earlier on was that the buyers and
sellers of bodies were locked out of community; and the communities of family
and the legal body politic were lethally muddled in defensiveness and
self-justification.
Jesus unveils a new community. We call it the body of Christ. It
welcomes all sinners. Yet we ask, what do you do in this new body? What is
your Ethic? "Go," Jesus says. This is not rocket science, but it still
puzzles us anew. Just go, and be what you are. Once you have the God-problem
tended to, the rest flows from your being. Go, be my community. You are
the community befriended and favored by God. Try that on for size. See where
that takes you.
Step 6. A New Body - The Body of Jesus for the World - giving away body
parts. I've seen it!
I have seen the body of Christ, alive in a dying world. I have
seen a community where people with failing body parts could go to be loved and
cherished. I saw this in a beautiful old nunnery, where the aging sisters
took in the suffering and the dying and loved them, and prayed for them, and
fed them, and held them. This kind of Christian community generated what we
know today as the hospice movement. I've seen it with my own eyes: bodies
loved, rather than exploited.
My second vision may be a little crazy. It grows out of our
amazing ability to give dying people new organs. We cringe at a poor man selling
his kidney to get money, but our hearts are warmed by the man who will give
up a kidney to save his twin sister. What if the body of Christ were a
community where members could sign up to donate organs to non-relatives, even to
strangers. Not to sell them, mind you, but to give their body parts as a
gift so that another might live. As I say, that is a little crazy. But it
might just happen in the body of Christ. It is just an inkling of what might
transpire when the fear of death is conquered, and the grasping for more is
sated, and the cloud of wrath is laid to rest. Have you ever had a vision
like that? Tell us about it.