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What IS a Christian?

2-22-16

Some of the most pleasant travel experiences of my life have been atop the ancient wall surrounding the small city of Lucca in Tuscany. I have stayed in the Medieval town a number of times in my life, perhaps a dozen Autumns. High, thick walls once surrounded many Italian city-states. Built for safety, as boundaries, some even encasing apartments; today many are gone or survive as random portions, as relics of previous times and expired functions. But Lucca has Italy’s only complete and intact ancient wall.

On its top, it is wide enough for several lanes of traffic, but it strictly is for pedestrians, who encounter cobblestones and bricks, with many old trees and inviting benches. A favored restaurant is built into the wall at one of its road-portals – La Mura (“The Wall”). On many Autumnal mornings I betake myself to the wall’s long, circumferential boulevard – “Passegiata della Mura” – and jog. More often, stroll. Invariably, see the mists rise from plowed fields as the morning sun kisses them; listen to the city of red-tiled roofs come to life; smell the stoking fireplaces of wood and chestnut shells.

Such thoughts came back to me recently with the latest chapter of the controversy over a possible wall to be built, or not, along America’s southern border. On the endless carousel of debaters, the surprise figure on the horse this week was none other than Pope Francis.

He issued a version of President Reagan’s eloquent defiance of Communism in Berlin (however, before a structure scarcely begun): “Mr Trump, tear down that wall!”

While we are paraphrasing, I will borrow from Gertrude Stein and suggest that “a wall is a wall is wall.” And just as Theodore Roosevelt said that a vote is just like a rifle – that its usefulness depends on the character of the user – we surely can say that walls, throughout history, are functional, of course, but are totally neutral apart from their architectural purpose… which can be transformed anyway, as Lucca’s wall has been.

So, Lucca’s wall, once a standard architectural defense, then a symbol of independence in more political and trade-oriented times, is now a tourist attraction. The Great Wall of China, a Wonder of the Old World and a rare man-made structure that can be seen from outer space, likewise now attracts more photographers than invaders. On the other hand, the Berlin Wall, mentioned above, was a literal city-wide outdoor prison wall, trapping a population in Communist East Berlin. And seldom spoken about in America is Israel’s crude, and effective, cement curtain that cuts through the West Bank.

American objections to porous borders and uncountable illegals incited a papal protest that presumably was metaphorical (walls of separation in our hearts vs. bridges of understanding); presumably. The Pope did not mention Donald Trump by name, but said that “any man” who would propose such walls “is not a Christian.”

Many Christians and conservatives rushed to document the 50-foot high walls that surround the Vatican, which is, though small, a city-state, an independent country. Surrounded by a wall, and with some of the toughest citizenship requirements in the world. And the same folks scurried to Bible concordances and found examples of God sanctioning, even commanding, construction of walls.

Throughout the Bible: walls for defense; walls as parts of temples; walls to interrupt migrations and preserve spaces. Not much different from the sweep of history’s other religions, societies, cultures. So this sudden turn in the immigration debate directs us to far more logical place… and a far more pertinent question than Francis asked.

The Pope declared that people who “build walls and not bridges” are not Christians. No one, least of all Francis, is talking about the essential issue, the real offense. The Jesuit pope should understand, and emphasize, that what makes someone a Christian is belief in Jesus Christ as the Son of God. Since he addressed the theological aspect.

What makes someone “not a Christian” is rejection of Christ’s incarnation, substitutionary death, Resurrection, and Ascension. NOT somebody’s opinions on immigration laws, walls on the US border (or the Vatican’s), or other political issues.

With all due respect, one can be a Christian and have bad ideas, Francis. I believe it is your dogma that having “good” (?) ideas, doing good deeds, yet not professing Christ is yet a pathway to salvation, according to recent press reports. But it is not the Bible’s teaching. The Church, by such statements, is opening itself up to charges of asserting the Works Doctrine. Is approval of a California border fence enough to qualify to “be a Christian”?

Aside from, excuse me, anti- or extra-biblical theology, there are practical questions. If the Pope is concerned about conditions in Mexico, so horrible that millions flee northward in desperation, would not the better act as a Church be to help alleviate poverty and misery in Mexico? There are few Catholic countries with more extreme anti-clerical histories, aside from the excesses of the French Revolution. Insurgents blamed centuries of Church corruption and oppression.

Make things right WITHIN Mexico! So that people will want to stay in places where they were born… and the Church can fulfill its mission… and the US not be threatened and burdened. I have also been to the Vatican many times; the immense wall is about the ONLY thing there that is not opulent, extravagant, even gaudy. There are funds available, I am sure, in the Vatican Bank.

Back, however, to the main point, of pivotal importance: “The man who says such a thing is not a Christian.”

The man who said THAT clearly places his politically correct definition of good deeds ahead of what Jesus and the Disciples and the Holy Bible say about the requirements for salvation. Did the Pope mean, “That’s not how Jesus would act”? or even “That man is a bad Christian”? Very different matters. The Pope usually is aware of his words even when not Ex Cathedra or Infallible. The border towns that suffer violations, the victims of financial burdens and crimes in America – I used to live in San Diego; ask me about them – are they to be defined as “not Christians” when they resist invasions of their neighborhoods and homes?

This Pope did not recognize the metaphorical wall built around the island of Cuba when he hugged its leaders and ignored the Christians in Cuban jails. Or when he was on US soil and was quieter about the issue of the proposed border fence. And he somehow missed the opportunity to scold political leaders he met here about the ongoing horror of abortions, the killing of babies. Mother Teresa had done so… right to the faces of Clinton and Gore, when they were in office and they met her.

Or was Mother Teresa “not a Christian”?

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Category: Christianity, Government, Politics

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11 Responses

  1. Carol says:

    You rock, Rick!

  2. Well said, Rick. I agree with your criticism of the Pope’s definition of Christianity and the evils he/the Vatican could relieve if they would send help to Mexico. However, I look at Trump, the person he was criticizing, and say that the Pope’s observation of the man’s character was true – and not based on the proposed wall. The man is the antithesis of Christianity. We might as well be running the devil for President of the United States. Greed, lust, full of anger, desirous of personal power, megalomania, pro-Planned Parenthood – and the evangelicals are voting for him???? Really???? God have mercy on those who choose this man for president!
    Sheri

  3. cken says:

    I agree with the author. I would add bridges can only be successfully built after boundaries and commonly accepted rules are clearly established.

  4. Norm says:

    Maybe he needs a visit to Derry to see how successful the British were with building walls 300 years ago around the city to keep indigenous Catholics out.
    Could Donald be planning tourism revenue this early? Wow.
    N

  5. Thank you! That’s RIGHT! The rest of Europe is full of walls. And — I should have described them — the walls around Londonderry (whoops, Derry) are still there, still pretty impressive. They help tourists who walk, but make driving (and parking) inconvenient. And then, on their tops, cannons and such. Silent illustrations of turbulent history. (“Ha” about Trump’s tourism plans! — anything is possible!) And then you bring to mind, not walls but fortress-towers along the Irish Sea coast down in Skerries, north of Dublin — ancient relics of Oliver Cromwell, if I recall.

  6. Bridgette Ehly says:

    The Pope is a global socialist, so his remarks don’t come as a surprise. The Bible contains the stories of countless sinners and screwups that God uses for His purposes. We can only hope and pray that Donald Trump might be one of these.

  7. Well, some readers would think in this case, by your characterization, He is two-thirds there…!

  8. John Hutchinson says:

    “The Pope declared that people who ‘build walls and not bridges’ are not Christians.”

    In having some general sense of who you are, I could not and will not accuse you of serpentine deceit (2nd Temptation of Christ). However , the excerpted quote that you cite is journalistically unfair. For the pontiff declared that people who “only build walls and not bridges are not Christians,” the operative word being “only.”

    As to the main gist of your argument; while it is true that Justification is by faith on the merits of Christ in the Atonement alone, Scriptures also states that without the pursuit of peace and holiness, Hebrews 12:14, ” no one will see the Lord.” Please note that the original Greek does not separate both elements (kai). And the commas separating strive for peace and pursuit of holiness are Oxford commas.

    This sets up a conundrum, which has bedeviled Protestant Evangelicalism from its inception. How does the requirements for salvation, which is semantically different from justification, not at the same time become the requirements for justification? And this is discourse which John Piper is currently raising.

  9. Bridgette Ehly says:

    I humbly count myself among the sinners and screwups. Really, aren’t we all in that club? I won’t judge The Donald, and have no doubt he is also God’s child.

  10. Oh, *I* am chief among sinners and screw-ups, going St Paul one better. On the secular — political, social — scene, I just wonder what every day, waking up to a Trump presidency, would be like. Four years, eight years? Maybe even he would not now from day to day…!

  11. Ben Wortham says:

    With all due respect to your accomplishments, debating the Pope about theology seems to me to be above your pay grade. In fact, since you have no actual credentials in that discipline, arguing with any garden variety theology graduate is probably outside your justifiable purview. That strikes me as a bit arrogant, but I digress. The main reason for my comment is to point out that, as most informed persons know, you in fact cannot see the great wall of China from space. It is an urban myth.

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About The Author

... Rick Marschall is the author of 74 books and hundreds of magazine articles in many fields, from popular culture (Bostonia magazine called him "perhaps America's foremost authority on popular culture") to history and criticism; country music; television history; biography; and children's books. He is a former political cartoonist, editor of Marvel Comics, and writer for Disney comics. For 20 years he has been active in the Christian field, writing devotionals and magazine articles; he was co-author of "The Secret Revealed" with Dr Jim Garlow. His biography of Johann Sebastian Bach for the “Christian Encounters” series was published by Thomas Nelson. He currently is writing a biography of the Rev Jimmy Swaggart and his cousin Jerry Lee Lewis. Read More