Archive for March 19th, 2009

Evangelicals for Human Rights: A Christian Rationale for a Truth Commission

From Evangelicals for Human Rights come this call for a Truth Commission:

A Christian Rationale for a Truth Commission

By David P. Gushee

Senator Patrick Leahy has begun hearings exploring the possibility of establishing a Truth Commission to investigate Bush detainee policies. His proposal is viewed as controversial, but here is why I support it as an evangelical Christian.

Our nation needs a Truth Commission on the issue of torture because we need to know, at last, exactly what happened. We need the truth, and we need it from multiple perspectives. Minimally, such a body needs to gain access to all government documents in which policies related to detainee interrogation were debated and articulated. The commission further needs to talk to the policymakers who developed the policies, at least some of the people who implemented them, and some who were on the receiving end of that implementation and are willing to speak about it. If there are surviving videotapes of these interrogations these also need to be examined by any Truth Commission.

The Bible teaches that truth is central to God’s character, to a community’s well-being, and to the way of life of God’s people. Many people who know the Bible only minimally think of truth primarily in terms of a moral obligation not to bear false witness. But the Bible at least as often emphasizes truthfulness as an aspect of character—both personal and national character. Believers are called to live in truth, to walk in truth, to stay on the path of truth. And it is recognized repeatedly in scripture that truth is essential to healthy public life, and that lies corrode life in community. When “truth has perished; it has vanished from their lips” (Jer. 7:28), society is at risk of moral collapse.

It has been very difficult to have an honest public debate about exactly what our nation has done to those in our custody because we have never been given full information. We have half-debated what has been only half-revealed. We need to bring what has been done in the shadows into the full light of day, and see how it looks when exposed to that cleansing sunlight. Those who have defended these policies as both moral and essential to national security would be given full opportunity to make their case in light of what was actually done, to how many people, with what results, and with what effects on everyone involved. If the policies were truly defensible they will reveal themselves as such in the process of exposure to the sunlight of public scrutiny. If they were not defensible, as I firmly believe, that will also very likely be obvious in the course of public examination. It’s time to have a full public airing.

Finding out exactly what happened could be the first step toward a process of national and international reconciliation. In scripture, reconciliation is a fundamental theme. It is God’s goal in relation to humanity and should be the goal of Christians (and all people) in relation to one another. It is sufficiently important to fractured societies and to international relations that in many cases lives depend on it.

Biblically, reconciliation generally involves truthtelling, repentance, and forgiveness. Unpacked a bit further, reconciliation includes the wrongdoer’s acknowledgment of responsibility, confession of the act as sin, expression of grief for any harm done, serious commitment to a new course of action, and request for forgiveness. It sometimes also involves some concrete form of recompense offered to the one harmed by the one who did the harm.

Of course, forgiveness then needs to be extended by the aggrieved party for full reconciliation to be experienced. And in situations in which wrong has been done by both sides, both parties need to walk through this process and extend forgiveness to each other at the end of it.

Is it too much to dream that the United States of America could walk through a process like this in relation to our detainee policies? Once our nation’s acts have been exposed to the clear light of day, with nothing any longer hidden, if the facts merit it, I dream that we would demonstrate the moral courage to acknowledge responsibility for wrong acts, confess them as sin, express real grief for the harms done, commit ourselves to a new course of action (and solidify that commitment in concrete legislation and executive policies), offer recompense especially to those innocent persons whom we have harmed where that is appropriate, and ask our victims for forgiveness.

We are living through a period in which private deceptiveness and lies in economic life is having disastrous consequences for our society and the world. But we need to likewise see that the public deceptiveness and lies in political life also have had disastrous consequences for our society. As a people, we need to rediscover integrity, and the truthfulness that is its indispensable prerequisite.

March 19th, 2009


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