I'm pretty sure that what he was getting at here was that America was entirely full of "true Christians" who would really "turn the other cheek", as opposed to having a vast majority of Christians like Strife, our enemies (who have no such prohibition against violence) would swarm over the borders and destroy us. There are those in the world who say, "our religion is the only true way and we will destroy all others" and if we didn't have teenagers riding around in tanks and helicopters, they would in fact "destroy all others". This would not leave a whole bunch of "true Christians" around to feed the hungry and clothe the poor.
That's what I think Strife was getting at. Keep in mind that religiously I think Strife is wrong on every point, but from a pragmatic point of view, I agree with him on the necessity for every country to have a military.
Oh, and Sean, apparently Hawk Dude is cool with this. Since his project is now done, I don't think he minds what happens to the topic. At least he hasn't posted in the topic recently to tell us to knock it off.
Yeah, again - speaking from a secular, pragmatic point of view you're absolutely right. The point I'm making is that if you view things from a Christian point of view, things look totally different.
There's always going to be suffering in the world, is one thing, and having Christians run governments has pretty much never alleviated that. Who was it that brought us the great wars of the last century and the holocaust? Yep, "Christians." Not saying this to make the retarded "point" that religion causes violence, but to point out that once you give Christians power over the world's empires and armies, they become exactly like the heathens they were supposed to be different from. This is what happened the first time Christians got power (1700 years ago) and it's happened every single time since.
Again, I could weigh in on the pragmatic benefits of pacifism (I AM a pacifist) but that's not really relevant to the issue, since the point of Christianity was never to solve problems from a "practical" standpoint.
Jesus wasn't laying out a code of nations. Jesus was saying how individual people should make autonomous decisions.
Exactly! He was, and part of the way that he told people to live involved distancing themselves from worldly powers and institutions, because those are inevitably corrupting, abusive and evil.
Remember, Jesus did NOT preach a strict code of laws, he fought that notion and that we are capable of making individual decisions. He said it was important to follow God's law, but more important yet, to love our neighbors as ourselves. Jesus spoke against the conflict of his day, not about the notion of just war which arose 300 years later. He clearly did not speak in favor of just war, but he never spoke against just war.
Does just war conflict with the central principles of altruism, mercy and forgiveness?
That's another frequent bastardization of the gospels, that people use to justify everything from hoarding wealth and not helping feed the starving, to "just war." Again, not such a big deal for a non-Christian to dismiss the gospels that way, but if you claim to be a Christian, it just makes you a huge hypocrite.
The social problems Jesus lived among are basically still present today, in different forms, but the essence is practically identical. The only difference being that we (Americans) live IN Rome, not under its occupation.
And how did he not speak against just war? His views on how to resist violence and oppression range from turning the other cheek, walking the extra mile, giving your underwear to someone who sues you for your cloak, healing a guy's ear that was about to kidnap him after one of his disciples chopped it off (note that the disciples, throughout the gospels, are continually not getting it and he has to reprimand them for it), loving your enemy like he was your brother, and on and on and on. He never spoke out against homosexuality either, but saying that he "never spoke out against just war" would be like saying that homosexual (or any) orgies would be A-OK with him.
Does just war conflict with the central principles of altruism, mercy and forgiveness?
Absolutely!