Getting Beyond Bainton


Published July 21, 2010

Roland Bainton, who died in 1984, was a fixture at the Yale Divinity School for more than four decades and remained an influential Church historian over during two decades of retirement. His most popular book was Here I Stand: A Life of Martin Luther; but Luther scholarship has gone far beyond Bainton since Here I Stand was published in 1950. Bainton's Christian Attitudes Toward War and Peace, however, which was first published in 1960, continues to exert a significant influence on Christian thought today. The question is whether that influence is helpful, or baleful.

According to Bainton, there are “three Christian positions with regard to war,” which evolved in “chronological sequence, moving from pacifism to the just war to the Crusade.” This evolution, Bainton suggested, was really a devolution or deterioration, reflecting an abandonment of primitive Christian purity and an untoward alliance with the state: after Constantine, the Church cut itself off from the moral purity of the evangelical counsels and the Sermon on the Mount and began, in Stanley Hauerwas's memorable phrase, to “do ethics for Caesar.” A truly reformed Christianity – a Christianity true to its origins and to its Founder – is thus, necessarily, a Christianity that embraces pacifism.

That this historical schema is firmly fixed in many minds is self-evident to anyone who's been involved in Christian debates over war and peace since Vietnam. That the prescription attached to the schema – a return to the purity of primitive Christian pacifism – has had a deep effect on the Catholic Church (which had long resisted Bainton's understanding of the history of Christian thought thought on this point) is also obvious. Thus many Catholics who hold to some version of the just-war tradition now smuggle into it a pacifist premise: the just-war tradition, they argue, begins with a “presumption against war,” a “presumption” that goes far beyond the obvious moral truism that nonviolent problem-solving is preferable to problem-solving through war. That even Catholics who subscribe to this revised just war tradition feel somewhat guilty about doing so – and feel guilty on the ground defined by Bainton – is also obvious from the tenor of the Catholic debate before the Gulf War and the Iraq War.

Thus Bainton has cast a long shadow. But did he get the history right? Does his simple, straightline schema – from pacifism to just war to Crusade – stand up to the best of contemporary scholarship?

In any important article in the spring 2010 issue of Logos, the quarterly published by the Catholic Studies Program of the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota, theologian J. Daryl Charles argues that Bainton got it wrong, by failing to give an “accurate accounting of the complexity and diversity of pre-Constantinian Christian attitudes toward the military.” Drawing on the last half-century of historical study of the early Church, Charles reminds us that, while there were indeed early Christian pacifists who took their moral cues for thinking about war and peace from the Sermon on the Mount, there were also Christians in Roman military service long before to the Constantinian settlement in the early fourth century.

Moreover, following the researches of James Turner Johnson, Charles suggests that whatever difficulties military service posed for Christians in, say, the second century a.d. had to do with state-enforced idolatry rather than with soldiering per se. The early Church, as Charles puts it, lived with “divergent strands of thinking” on war and peace and the ethics of Christian participation in the military, a plurality of thought that “does not require” the assumption of a “universal or uniform conviction” that pacifism was the only imaginable Christian position, on the Bainton schema. Things were more complicated – and more interesting – than that.

The world being what it is – the Korean peninsula, the Middle East, Iran, jihadism and its lodgments in failed or dysfunctional states – the debate over the morally legitimate use of armed force is not going away; rather, it is going to intensify. Christians will best engage in those debates if they liberate themselves intellectually from the simplistic and inaccurate schema that Roland Bainton taught us fifty years ago.

George Weigel is Distinguished Senior Fellow and William E. Simon Chair in Catholic Studies at the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D.C.


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