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"Living
the Peace of Jesus in a Time of War"
The Parmelee Room
With
the dedication of the new Todd M. Beamer student center
Speakers
included:
Ashley Woodiwiss, Ph. D.m Politics and
Int'l Relations Department
Edee Schulze, Ph. D. Dean of Student Life
Gary Burge, Ph. D. BTAWR Department
James C Kielsmeier '65, Vietnam Era
Veteran
John David Borgman '64, Vietnam Veteran
Tegan Strickland '05, ROTC, Int'l Relations
Major
Claire Johnson '05, Bible, Theology Major
Moderated by Kenneth Chase, Ph. D.
CACE Director, Communications Department
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CACE
co-sponsored a Homecoming Weekend event with the Alumni Association
and the friends of Jim Parmelee.
We
inaugurated the use of the Jim Parmelee Room in the Todd Beamer
Center by hosting a worship-based discussion on the theme: "Living
the Peace of Jesus in a Time of War."
This
meeting featured a thoughtful, impassioned, and challenging reflection
by James David Borgman, '64, on living fully in the peace of Jesus
and in resistance to the fears and hatreds characterizing much
of geopolitical discourse and activities today. We have placed
a statement he made at an antiwar rally in 1980 here.
In
addition to James David's extended reflection, we also heard brief
statements from two faculty, two students, and another alumnus,
James Kielsmeier, '65. Jim was the organizing
force behind the events dedicating the Parmelee Room during Homecoming.
The
student reflections on the worship theme are brief and thoughtful.
They are posted here.
The
longer statements by the faculty and by Jim can be found here.
CACE
is grateful to the Alumni Association and the friends of Jim Parmelee
for providing this sacred space for a discussion central to the
moral growth of Christians in today's world.
This
worship discussion was part of CACE's ongoing commitment to the
Moral Formation of Wheaton students.
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James
C Kielsmeier and Dr. Gary Burge at the sunday service
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Dr.
Edee Schulze has served at Wheaton College for 17 years in various
positions in Student Development and is currently the Dean of
Student Life. Her responsibilities include working with the Directors
of Residence Life, the Counseling Center and Student Activities,
as well as caring for female undergraduate students. Edee has
held many ministry positions at her church and has a heart for
children at risk, particularly in Latin America. Edee works for
spiritual and emotional peace for students who are hurting, for
peace within the church community and for the "shalom" wellbeing
for kids who deserve a chance to live in a world not marred by
war, poverty, or pain.
"Dr.
Ashley Woodiwiss has been on Wheaton's faculty since 1989 teaching
political science. His interests include the integration of theology
with political issues with a focus on democratic thought and practice
and the role of the Church in both. Ashley grew up in a military
family, with a father who is a WWII veteran and a brother who
was in the Navy during Vietnam."
"Dr.
Gary Burge has been on Wheaton's faculty since 1992 teaching New
Testament theology. His interests include the integration of theology
with political issues and this has been applied most directly
with American foreign policy in the Middle East. From 1987 to
1996 he was with the U.S. Navy Reserve as a chaplain, serving
both in the Marines and the Navy. He retired in 1996 as Lieutenant
Commander."
Jim
Kielsmeier A four year varsity letter winner and captain of the
football team, Jim earned a BS in Zoology and US Army commission
from Wheaton in 1965. Following Infantry Officer, Ranger and paratrooper
training in the apartheid American South, he was assigned to the
DMZ in South Korea. After four months as a platoon leader he was
asked to create a human relations program for the 10,000 member
2nd Infantry Division - an experience that fundamentally changed
his life. Returning to civilian life questions concerning American
involvement in East Asia and human rights issues became the core
of a masters degree in International Relations and later PhD in
Education. Work Outward Bound, high school and university teaching,
a stint with Young Life and the founding of the National Youth
Leadership Council - a 21 year old service-learning organization
- have been the venues where he has pursued many of the questions
raised as a 20 something in Korea. God's faithfulness has been
manifested throughout Jim's life - particularly through the gift
of marriage to Rev Deb Kielsmeier and daughters Lauren, Sarah'04
and Stina'06.
Tegan
Strickland is a junior ROTC and International Relations student
at Wheaton College. She has written articles for the Wheaton College
newspaper regarding attitudes towards Christians in the military,
and will serve a 4-year active duty assignment after graduation
in 2006.
Claire
Johnson is a senior at Wheaton studying Bible and Theology. She
is the president of Students for Biblical Equality and a member
of Social Justice Coalition. Her interest lies in exploring social
justice in the context of gender relationships, as well as examining
the pragmatics of theology as it applies to both the church and
the individual.
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Statement
by Claire Johnson ('05):
Habakkuk
1: 1-4
1
The oracle that Habakkuk the prophet received.
2 How long, O LORD , must I call for help,
but you do not listen?
Or cry out to you, "Violence!"
but you do not save?
3 Why do you make me look at injustice?
Why do you tolerate wrong?
Destruction and violence are before me;
there is strife, and conflict abounds.
4 Therefore the law is paralyzed,
and justice never prevails.
The wicked hem in the righteous,
so that justice is perverted.
Social
Justice Coalition meetings wear me out. After spending an hour
and a half discussing and praying about injustice in the world
and the ways in which a small Christian college can even begin
to be a part of the fight against it, I begin feel despair's insidious
fog creeping into my thoughts. Are a few blankets sent to Sudan
or school kits to Iraq really part of a cosmic war in which my
side has the winning team? When John the Baptist began to succumb
to despair in prison, Jesus did not send the good news that thirty
more people had accepted him into their hearts. Rather he reported
that the blind receive sight, the lame walk, the dead are raised
and good news is preached to the poor. For the kingdom about which
Isaiah prophesied is a kingdom in which the power of God wars
against the power of Satan, and human suffering is eased. Jesus'
life, death and resurrection has called us to radically alter
our notions of who our enemies are. No longer can our nation's
enemies be our enemies, for we have been taught that the Samaritan,
or shall we say the Arab Muslim, is our neighbor. Blankets and
school kits many times still seem insignificant to me as I hear
of the magnitude of global suffering, but they are an entry into
my responsibilities as a citizen of heaven and a realigning of
my allegiance to my enemies, who have become my neighbors.
Habakkuk
3:17-19
17
Though the fig tree does not bud
and there are no grapes on the vines,
though the olive crop fails
and the fields produce no food,
though there are no sheep in the pen
and no cattle in the stalls,
18 yet I will rejoice in the LORD,
I will be joyful in God my Savior.
19 The Sovereign LORD is my strength;
he makes my feet like the feet of a deer,
he enables me to go on the heights.
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Statement
by Tegan Strickland ('05)
We call Christ the Prince of Peace, and in the Evangelical subculture
we live in, I know personally how we have subverted this term
to refer to "inner peace" and made it a "spiritual" term. Who
can blame us? This is a world where neighbors are hacked to death
with machetes and nations go to war for resources. But the Prince
of Peace did not suffer and die merely to put souls at rest for
the hereafter.
I am a realist. The fact of conflict is seared into my brain in
all its illogic. But I am a Christian, and I believe that He who
suffered and died continues to work in and through His people
to redeem what sin has broken. And in light of this redeeming
work, I understand that someday God will set all things right
again. So we should rejoice in the hope of the Glory of God.
Revelation
21:1-7 Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first
heaven and the first earth had passed away… And I heard a loud
voice from the throne saying, "Now the dwelling of God is with
men, and he will live with them. They will be his people, and
God himself will be with them and be theirr God. He will wipe
every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning
or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away."
He who was seated on the throne said, "I am making everything
new!" Then he said to me… "It is done. I am the Alpha and the
Omega, the Beginning and the End. To him who is thirsty I will
give to drink without cost from the spring of the water of life.
He who overcomes will inherit all this, and I will be his God
and he will be my son."
Statement
by Dr. Gary Burge:
"Living
the Peace of Jesus in a Time of War"
The Parmelee Room Dedication
Beamer Center, Wheaton College
October 3, 2004, G.M. Burge
Christians have often been conflicted about war.
During the first 300 hundred years of the church's life, Christians
were at best marginalized and often persecuted. And participation
in the military - or giving the oath - was one way they could
have shown their allegiance to Rome. But Christian theologians
rejected it. Justin Martyr and Irenaeus each echoed Isaiah and
called all Christians to pound swords into plowshares. Tatian,
writing in about 160, explicitly refused military participation
and compared it with a long list of evils. Instead, with Clement
of Alexandria, he said the Christian's weapon was to be prayer.
He wrote, "For it is not in war, but in peace that we are trained.
Peace and love, those simple and quiet sisters, require no arms."
Everything changed in the 4th century with the conversion of Constantine.
The historian Eusebius showed his accommodation to war by telling
a story about the 12th Roman Legion, the Thundering Legion [or
Fulminata]. In about A.D. 173 in a war in Germany the prayers
of Armenian Christian soldiers led to a divinely guided victory.
It is in the 4th century that Christians for the first time had
to make some accommodation to the state because it now might stand
not as the church's opponent, but as its protector and aid. And
if this were true, full participation with the state - even in
the military - was a possibility. But Eusebius went on to say
even more. The military successes of the empire against barbarians
was evidence of God's hand on Constantine's rule.
The dangers of this sort of thought were not missed by Augustine.
And it is no doubt to him that we look for the notion of a "just
war" that is so prevalent in conversations today. He wrote a series
of rules to regulate violence and permit believers to fight for
the empire. These rules are well-known and it would serve us well
to review them regularly. Legitimate war must have a just cause,
stem from a legitimate authority, have a good intention, hold
a reasonable chance of success, limit violence (the rule of proportionality),
and be used as a last resort.
What Augustine failed to do was diagnose the political atmosphere
in which Christians should be alarmed; where patriotism and piety
merge to form a dangerous national militancy.
This is precisely what happened during the crusades. A report
from the 11th century describeed it nicely,
"We attacked the city of Jerusalem from all sides, day and night…
But before we attacked the city, the bishops and priests, by preaching
and exhortation, ordered everyone to hold a procession in honor
of God all around the city and arranged for prayers, almsgiving
and fasting. At dawn our men went up to the roof of the Temple
and attacked the Muslim men and women, beheading them with naked
swords…" July 17, 1099. Guibert, Abbot of Nogent
When I was a reserve chaplain during the Gulf War, I served in
both Navy and Marine units. And one message came clearly from
commanders: the role of the chaplain should be to endorse the
mission and comfort the soldier. Thoughtful chaplains rejected
such advice.
The church must always protect its prophetic voice and never confuse
its mission with that of the state. And when called upon to fight,
the Christian soldier must do so with caution and sorrow, always
asking questions about a war's just cause, holding conscience
fast at all costs, and being ready to refuse the one order that
will cost him his soul.
The church must be ready to sound the alarm when patriotism is
labeled a Christian duty; when fear is used as a call to arms
and a catalyst for military action. The church must claim its
prophetic voice when enemies are stereotyped and dishonored, when
they are attacked without posing a threat, when even their dead
are not counted. The wedding of patriotism and piety is perhaps
the church's most dangerous temptation. And at no time is that
temptation more real than in a time of war.
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John
Borgman's Anti-war letter- 1980
i
am john david borgman (usmcr 089559 inactive). i.am the seventh
son in a family of ten. i served for 10 1/2 months in Vietnam
in 1967 and flew 181 missions as a pilot of an f-8 with the rank
of captain. my father's death of a heart attack brought me home
early. when i was an officer in the marines, i believed in what
i was doing and gave myself to my responsibilities with all my
body, mind, and spirit. i come to the pentagon today as the culmination
of thirteen years of deep soul searching which ends in my public
act of repentance today. i have come to see that I violated God's
law to "love God with all your heart and soul and love your neighbor
as yourself." i am forgiven by God's grace through Jesus when
he said "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they are
doing." i have come today to break my thirteen years of silence.
i
have come for public confession and repentance. i am burning my
captain's uniform as a visible end to the john david borgman of
this uniform. God's call to this government and military is to
an act of repentance. from the beginning as a nation, we have,
in the name of God, killed native americans, enslaved african
people, exploited the peoples of the third world countries to
satisfy our greed and our lust for power. as a nation we remain
unrepentant for sins in vietnam, our sins in iran, the philippines,
and wherever we have served economic power rather than serving
fellow human beings. we have the material desires of our hearts,
but our souls are lean.
my
act of today is to break with this system which pertetuates fear
and violence. i do not act out of hatred for individuals in the
military, government, or big business. i act out of a deep love
for my beautiful wife and our two children and for the future
generation of human beings. i am proclaiming an end to my allegiance
to this particular government and announcing my place in the kingdom
of God. i aspire to be a non-violent citizen of this planet. all
people are my sisters and my brothers (including those who could
arrest me). i am a child of God with allegiance to him alone.
thanks be to God. all glory and honor to him.
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