What Does The Lord Require (J.R. Donahue)
What Does The Lord Require (J.R. Donahue)
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Studies in the
Spirituality of Jesuits
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The Seminar focuses its direct attention on the life and work of the
Jesuits of the United States. The issues treated may be common also to
Jesuits of other regions, to other priests, religious, and laity, to both men
and women. Hence the Studies, while meant especially for American Jesuits,
are not exclusively for them. Others who may find them helpful are cordiaLly
welcome to read them.
Omaha, NE (1990).
The opinions expressed in Studies are those of the the individual authors thereof.
Parenthesis designates year of entry as Seminar member.
Copyright ©
1994 and published by The Seminar on Jesuit Spirituality,
3700 West Pine Blvd., St. Louis, 63108 MO
(Tel. 314-652-5737; Fax 314-652-0810)
What Does the Lord Require?
John R. Donahue, S J.
"What Does the Lord Require?" The title of this issue of Studies
starts with that question from Scripture. Central to the whole teaching of
St. Ignatius is the conviction, born out of his own personal experience,
thatGod can be discovered, that we come to know what God is like,
what God asks of us, and what we might do to respond.
Our responses will vary from person to person, from age to age,
and will depend on a great variety of circumstances; but the first source
of the knowledge we need in order to respond comes from God's revela-
tion in Scripture. For our own circumstances as Jesuits in our own pres-
ent age, the overall context of that answer, however varied it may be for
each of us individually, is what the Society has called "the service of faith
The Institute of Jesuit Sources, too, has been busy with its own
publications. Two new books that have just recently arrived from the
printer narrate how two particular Jesuits responded to the Lord's inspi-
ration. Together their stories might in a sense be called "antipodean,"
coming as they do from almost opposite ends of the earth.
in
The first book is The Letters and Instructions of Francis Xavier. It
formed and inflamed their readers all over the Europe of Francis Xavier's
day, and have continued to do so in the centuries since then.
Editor
IV
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
CONCLUDING REFLECTION 73
An Afterword 74
Appendix 74
INDEX OF AUTHORS 11
VI
What Does the Lord Require?
Introduction
1974-
The Thirty-second General Congregation (Dec.
March 7, 1975) bequeathed many challenges to contempo-
2,
For the last quarter century, Jesuits have been faced with
the challenge of a conversion of heart to relate their service of
faith to the promotion of justice, as well as the intellectual task of
finding resources for this in the Bible. Though this task often
seems daunting, in recent decades there have been a great num-
ber of studies by biblical scholars offering fine resources for the
theology and practice of the faith that does justice. I would like to
survey and summarize some of the major issues and offer a selec-
tive bibliography for further study and use in different ministries.
I make no attempt to be exhaustive and will mention titles avail-
Bibliography
1. *Birch, Bruce C. Let Justice Roll: The Old Testament, Ethics and the Chris-
tian Life. Louisville, Ky.: Westminster/John Knox Press, 1991.
The fruit of over twenty years of reflection, often in dialogue
with Larry Rasmussen (an ethicist), this is the best available
survey of OT ethics, with great sensitivity to social issues. It
surveys the literature in a canonical and historical order from
Genesis through the wisdom literature.
4 4* John R. Donahue, S.J.
2. . What Does the Lord Require? The Old Testament Call to Social Wit-
ness. Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1985. More popular pre-
sentations of material which Birch later develops in Let Justice
Roll.
4. *Haughey, John C, ed. The Faith That Does Justice. New York/Ramsey:
Paulist Press, 1977. Though a bit dated, the essays by Donahue,
"Biblical Perspectives on Justice," and Haughey, "Jesus as the
Justice of God," offer a good introduction to important biblical
5. Mott, Stephen C. Biblical Ethics and Social Change. New York: Oxford
University Press, 1982. Organized thematically with coverage of
both testaments. Mott represents a group of evangelical scholars
committed to issues of social justice. Part 1 constitutes "A Bibli-
Bibliography
8. Von Rad, Gerhard. The Problem of the Hexateuch and Other Essays. New
York: McGraw Hill, 1966. A landmark study on the develop-
ment of the Pentateuch.
quent refrain that "it was good" (Gen. 1:4, 10, 12, 18, 21, 25),
culminating in the final day when God views all creation as "very
good" (v. 31). Claus Westermann, whose extensive writings on
creation are the best resource for a proper biblical theology of
creation, notes that these narratives reveal the priestly stress that
all events have their origin in God's commanding word. They
prepare for the revelation on Sinai, when God's word forms the
somewhat chaotic throng into a people (Creation, 42). He also
notes that the author, by placing the separation of night and day
through the creation of "light" before the creation of "space,"
stresses that human life is temporal and historical.
The term "have dominion" (see "to till and to keep" [Gen.
2:15]) has often been criticized by ecologists as the warrant for a
utilitarian view of creation or as justification for the exploitation of
Genesis 1-11 (see also 4:1-6; 6:1-4, 6-9; 11:1-10). This latter motif
has dominated the history of exegesis of the creation account.
After the "fair the narrative relates the trial and the pun-
ishment (3:8-24). The expected punishment of 3:3 ("you shall
die") does not occur. Instead, the harmony of their earlier status
is destroyed. Desire for human autonomy leads to alienation and
breakdown of community with nature and between man and
woman. It is important to note that the subordinate position of
women (3:16f.), which reflects the de facto situation of women in
ancient society, is not something that was to be part of the origi-
ism, Brothers and Sisters to Us (Nov. 14, 1979), the U.S. bishops
describe racism as social sin "in that each one of us in varying
degrees, is responsible. All of us are in some measure accompli-
ces" (Origins 9, No. 24 [Nov. 29, 1979]: 383-89). The 1986 letter of
the United States bishops on the economy, "Economic Justice for
On Genesis
On Social Sin
17. Henriot, Peter. "The Concept of Social Sin." Catholic Mind 71 (Oct
1973): 38-53.
19. Kerans, Patrick. Sinful Social Structures. New York: Paulist, 1974.
20. O'Keefe, M. What Are They Saying About Social Sin? New York: Paul-
ist, 1990. A helpful overview.
cal dimensions of the text; the second, that the Exodus is consid-
ered in isolation from other biblical themes. While liberation from
oppression is a fundamental aspect of the Exodus narrative, it is
not simply freedom from which is important, but freedom for the
formation of a community which lives under the covenant. As
Michael Walzer says, the journey of Israel is to a "bonded free-
dealt well with the midwives, and the people multiplied and
became very strong/ On the narrative level they allow the prom-
ise to continue and also prepare for the rescue of Moses from
death (2:1-10).
the liberator. The agent of liberation must suffer the same fate as
el. In the plagues nature itself turns against the Egyptians, almost
in revulsion for their oppression of God's people. As the plagues
escalate, the issue again becomes the nature of God and the usur-
pation of divine power. In 9:16-17a God speaks through Moses to
Pharaoh: "This is why I let you live: to show you my power, and
to make my name resound through all the earth. You are still
had become "the cult legend" for the later celebration of Passover.
Here the Exodus receives the character of anamnesis, something to
be re-presented and celebrated annually. Thus it continues to
shape the identity of the people and reveal the nature God.
Bibliography on Exodus
21. Coats, George. Moses: Heroic Man, Man of God. Sheffield: Journal for
the Study of the Old Testament Press, 1988. An academic study
of the portrayal of Moses in the Hebrew Bible.
the plagues are signs that nature itself revolts against the moral
injustice of Pharaoh's reign.
25. Pixley, George V. Exodus: A Liberation Perspective. Maryknoll: Orbis
Books, 1987. A powerful but somewhat simplistic reading of the
biblical text.
26. Walzer, Michael. Exodus and Revolution. New York: Basic Books, 1985.
A very interesting study of the biblical text and the subsequent
impact of the Exodus narrative, written by a political theorist
(author of Spheres of Justice).
27. Wildavsky, Aaron. The Nursing Father: Moses as a Political Leader. Uni-
versity of Alabama Press, 1984. An interesting study by an emi-
nent political scientist.
of Manna and the water from the rock), Num. 11:16-34 (the revolt
of the elders against Moses), and Num. 16:1-40 (the revolt of
Dathan and Abiram). This is the root of the later ambivalence of
"the wilderness" in Israel's traditions. It is the place of betrothal
18 * John R. Donahue, S.J.
have only a full and honest measure (see Ezek. 45:10), "just"
sacrifices (Deut. 33:19; Ps. 4:5, 51:19). Scales are "just" when they
give fair measure; paths are "just" when they get you where you
should be going. "Justice" is also used in the sense of "victory" or
20 4* John R. Donahue, S.J.
saving act: ""They repeat the triumphs (sidqoth) of the Lord" (Judg.
5:11) and "all the saving deeds of the Lord" (1 Sam. 12:7).
one of the stipulations of the covenant (Hos. 2:21, see below, and
Jer. 9:23f.). The Bible speaks of a just individual who is in "right
relation" to God and others, with a special concern for those
"others" who are powerless or marginal (Job 4:3-4, 29:12-16, 31:16
-19; Prov. 31:9).
be miSpat);
in love (be hesed) and in mercy (be rahamtm)
I will espouse you in fidelity (be ^munah)
and you shall know the Lord.
People are just when they are in right relationship to God and to
ness and justice are the foundation of your throne"; see also Pss.
45:8; 72, especially vv. 3f.; 85:11, 99:14.) Kings are judged good
when they fulfill this mandate and evil when neglecting it (Jer.
rest of the Pentateuch, it receives its final shape after the exile;
(2) the decalogue, found in two versions (Exod. 20:1-17 and Deut.
5:6-21), which represent early covenant law; (3) the Deuteronomic
Code (Deut. 12-26), which embodies traditions from the seventh
century B.C., and perhaps from Josiah's reform, but which was
incorporated into the full-blown "Deuteronomic history" only
after the exile; (4) the Holiness Code (Lev. 17-26), put together
after the exile and often attributed to priestly circles. This last-
mentioned code is also similar to the thought of Ezekiel.
tions that deal with the powerless (often made concrete as the
poor, the widow, the orphan, and the stranger in the land).
with the promise that God will heed their cry and "kill with the
sword" their oppressors; and the section concludes with the pro-
hibition of lending to the poor at interest and the command to
restore a neighbor's coat taken in surety for a loan. Here also the
are the statutes and ordinances that you must diligently observe
in the land the Lord, the God of your ancestors, has given you to
occupy" [Deut. 12:1]). When read after the exile, it can be seen as
a warning against an infidelity that allows the kind of society to
develop which is in opposition to the Exodus event and the Sinai
Covenant.
ues. First, they show that religious belief must be translated into
law and custom which guide life in community and protect the
vulnerable. Paul Hanson states this well in describing Torah as
"faith coming to expression in communal forms and structures"
(The People Called, 47). Second, although these traditions do not
offer concrete directives for our complex socioeconomic world,
they offer a vision of a "contrast society" not ruled by power and
greed, where the treatment of the marginal becomes the touch-
stone of "right relationship" to God. Christians and Jesuits today
must ask soberly how our lives provide a contrast society and
whether, when we think of our "right relation" to God, the con-
cerns of the marginal in our own time have been really made
concrete in our attitudes and style of life.
31. Biale, David. "Jewish Statements on Social Justice." In A Cry for Jus-
tice. Ed. R. M. Brown and S. Thompson, 64-77. New York:
Paulist Press, 1989. It covers biblical and contemporary state-
ments. See also the essays by J. Coleman, "A New Catholic
Vision of Social Justice," and Karen Lebacqz, "Protestant State-
ments on Economic Justice."
32. Epsztein, L£on. Social Justice in the Ancient Near East and the People of
the Bible. London: SCM Press, 1986. Good on background of
Israel's social legislation.
34. *Gnuse, Robert. You Shall Not Steal: Community and Property in the
Biblical Tradition. Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books, 1985. Gnuse is
36. Harrelson, Walter. The Ten Commandments and Human Rights. Phila-
delphia: Fortress Press, 1980. One of the most helpful writings
on the relation of the decalogue to all aspects of Israel's life,
with strong sensitivity to questions of social justice today.
39. . "Poverty in the Laws of the Ancient Near East and the Bi-
ble." Theological Studies 52 (1991): 34-50. The best single thing on
the poor in Israel's evolving legal traditions.
41. Malchow, Bruce. "Social Justice in the Israelite Law Codes." Word
and World 4, No. 3 (1984): 293-306. A clear and readable over-
view.
42. Menzes, Ruiz de, "Social Justice in Israel's Law." Bible Bhashyam 11,
Nos. 1 and 2 (March-June 1985): 10-46. The best comprehensive
and short survey of social concerns in the legal traditions. (Note:
Many interesting and important articles which relate the Bible
and social justice are being published in the two Indian journals,
Bible Bhashyam and Vidyajoti. Librarians take note!)
43. Miranda, Jose. Marx and the Bible. Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books,
1974). Despite the title, which may seem both naive and dated,
Miranda provides evocative and challenging perspectives on
many important texts.
1.
(
ani (plural, (
aniyyim) probably derives from a root nh, (
2.
(
anazv (plural
(
anawtm), derived from the same root as ant (
3.
}
ebydn (the term "Ebionites" derives from this), whose root is
a very debated question, comes from a word meaning "lack" or
"need" or "wretched," miserable"; it is used sixty-one times in the
OT (especially twenty-three times in Psalms) and appears often in
a stereotyped formula with ani; for example, in (
Deuteronomy
24:14; Jeremiah 22:16; Ezekiel 16:49, 18:12, 22:29; it is translated
by the LXX as penes twenty-nine times, as ptochos ten times, and
as adynatos ("powerless") four times.
its corruption. Jeremiah was the son of a priest, Isaiah used cultic
imagery associated with the Jerusalem temple, and Ezekiel was
steeped in the cult. Recent research on Amos, often popularly
portrayed as a "righteous peasant/' has suggested some contact
with the Jerusalem temple.
in this context.
10, 20-23; 10:1-4; 32:6f. Isaiah also criticizes false religion (1:12-17;
see Isaiah 58) and calls God the "stronghold of the poor" (25:5).
In his eschatological section he looks to a time when the meek
will obtain fresh joy in the Lord and the poor shall exult in the
holy one of Israel (29:19f.; see Matt. 5:3f.). Yet Isaiah speaks of
the power of conversion (l:18f., 26f.) and of hope in an ideal king
(2:2-4, 9:1-7, 11:1-9).
1
N. Gottwald, The Hebrew Bible: A Socio- Literary Introduction (Philadel-
phia: Fortress Press, 1985), 375.
What Does the Lord Require? •$• 33
postexilic period. Texts: Isa. 41:17, 51:21-23, 58:1-9 (the true fast),
61:1-7 (see Luke 4:16-19), 66:2.
The Poor
45. Articles in the Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament, ed. G. J. Bot-
terwick and H. Ringgren (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1977- ):
49. *George, A., ed. Gospel Poverty: Essays in Biblical Theology. Chicago:
Franciscan Herald Press, 1977. A very important collection of
essays by leading French biblical scholars. The essays by George
on the OT and Dupont on the NT are especially good.
50. Gowan, D. "Wealth and Poverty in the Old Testament: The Case of
the Widow, the Orphan and the Sojourner." Interpretation 41
(1987): 341-53.
52. Hoppe, Leslie J. Being Poor: A Biblical Study. Wilmington, Del.: Mi-
chael Glazier, 1987. A fine study of important texts.
54. Patterson, R. "The Widow, the Orphan and the Poor in the Old Tes-
tament and Extra-Biblical Literature." Bibliotheca Sacra 130 (1973):
223-35.
The Prophets
56. Achtemeier, Paul J., and James L. Mays, eds. Interpreting the Prophets.
Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1987. A series of articles originally
published in Interpretation. They treat mainly literary and histori-
59. Coote, Robert. Amos Among the Prophets: Composition and Theology.
Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1981. A very interesting and chal-
lenging view of Amos, with strong emphasis on his social teaching.
61. Limburg, James. The Prophets and the Powerless. Atlanta: John Knox
Press, 1977. A helpful and readable study.
63. Petersen, David L., ed. Prophecy in Israel: Search for an Identity. Phila-
delphia: Fortress Press, 1987. A collection of classic (by Gunkel,
Mowinckel, and Weber) and recent on the prophets. The
articles
and his sons) or Roman prefects (in Judea). This period also wit-
nessed the rise of a large corpus of "intertestamental writings"'
(Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha) which are important for the
history of ideas and as a background to the NT, even though
most are not part of the Jewish and Christian canon.
leaders; they are "just" because they do not follow the evil ways
of the rich and powerful. Both the king and the whole people are
obliged to seek justice, which involves being on the side of the
poor and the powerless. This perspective informs all of Israel's
traditions in all stages of its history.
31:9. (5) Riches can be evil and poverty can foster righteousness:
67. Gillingham, Sue. "The Poor in the Psalms/' Expository Times 100
(1989): 15-19.
71. Pleins, J. D. "Poverty in the Social World of the Wise." Journal for the
Study of the Old Testament 37 (1987): 61-78.
century A.D.
What Does the Lord Require? 4* 39
Introduction
the NT, to the neglect of the Hebrew Scriptures. I will select five
gy), yet he proclaimed that the reign of God had already begun in
his teaching and action and that people were to live in response
to it (eschatology in the process of realization). The eschatological
thrust of Jesus' teaching (and later of Paul's) should not be in-
voked to undermine its effective impact (as if the nearness of the
end made ethical behavior superfluous); rather it is "a view from
the future" of what life should be in the present. The fact that
ally unclean and by being willing to break the law on their behalf,
Jesus alienates the religious establishment of his day in such a
way that he is both a political and a religious threat. By taking the
side of these people, Jesus, like the OT prophets, gives a voice to
the voiceless. Ultimately, Jesus dies a victim of a mode of execu-
tion reserved for those who were threats to the "public order/
due between the Jerusalem temple authorities (whose
to collusion
power rested on proper subservience to Rome) and the Roman
prefect, Pontius Pilate. Jesus' life is a paradigm of the cost of
discipleship for those who take the side of the poor and the mar-
ginal. On Nov. 16, 1989, our Jesuit brothers and their co-workers
in San Salvador again proclaimed this cost to the world.
42 •£• John R. Donahue, S.J.
76. Bussmann, Claus. Who Do You Say? Jesus Christ in Latin American Liber-
80. *Chilton, Bruce, H. McDonald. Jesus and the Ethics of the King-
and J.
85. *Lohhnk, Gerhard. Jesus and Community: The Social Dimension of Chris-
tian Faith. Philadelphia: Fortress Press; New York/Ramsey: Paul-
ist Though only one half of the book is devoted to
Press, 1982.
Jesus, the work is a fine statement of the social dimension of
Christian faith. Like his brother, G. Lohfmk argues that Chris-
tianity should be "a contrast society/'
86. Lohfink, Norbert. "The Kingdom of God and the Economy in the
Bible." Communio 13 (1986): 216-31. A short but very original
examination of the kingdom and its background, with continued
reflection on how the kingdom evokes a "contrast society."
87. Meier, John P. "Jesus." In the New Jerome Biblical Commentary. Ed. R.
E. Brown, J. A. Fitzmyer, and R. E. Murphy, 1320-22. Engle-
wood Cliffs, The best short and accu-
N.J.: Prentice Hall, 1990.
rate study of Jesus. Meier's magnum opus on Jesus comprises
three volumes. The first volume, A Margi?ial Jew: Rethinking the
Historical Jesus (Garden City: Doubleday, 1991), treats mainly
preliminary matters for a proper reconstruction of the life and
teaching of Jesus, to be treated in the second and third volumes.
88. Mott, S. C. Jesus and Social Ethics. Grove Booklets on Ethics, No. 55.
Maiden, Mass.: Institute for Christian Renewal, 1984. An edited
version of two articles that appeared in Transformation 1, No. 2
(April-June 1984): 21-26, and 1, No. 3 (July-Sept. 1984): 19-26;
these are also published in The Journal of Religious Ethics 15, No.
2 (1987): 225-66, under the title "The Use of the New Testament
for Social Ethics." These articles and the book present a strong
criticism of the view that, since Jesus founded no political sys-
tem, his life and teaching cannot be invoked for systemic social-
justice concerns today.
89. Myers, Ched. Binding the Strong Man: A Political Reading of Mark's
Story of Jesus. Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books, 1988. Since I have
no special treatment of Mark, I will mention this work here. It
90. Nolan, Albert. Jesus Before Christianity. Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books,
1978. A popular and influential study of Jesus, with relevance to
issues of justice and liberation.
91. Oakham, Douglas. Jesus and the Economic Questions of His Day. Toron-
to: Edward Mellen Press, 1986. A published dissertation, but a
gold mine of information on economic life in Palestine.
93. Riches, John. Jesus and the Transformation of Judaism. New York: The
Seabury Press, 1982. Very well informed on the social and cul-
tural context of Jesus' teaching.
94. Ringe, Sharon H. Jesus, Liberation and the Biblical Jubilee. Philadelphia:
Fortress Press, 1985. An excellent study of the "Jubilee" in bibli-
cal thought and the influence of its images upon our under-
standing of Jesus' proclamation.
95. Sanders, E. P. Jesus and Judaism, 123-245. Philadelphia: Fortress Press,
1985. Sanders is especially sensitive to the Jewish background
and context of Jesus' teaching; good on the kingdom.
96. Schottroff, Luise. "Non-Violence and the Love of Enemies." In R.
Fuller, ed. Essays on the Love Command, 9-39. Philadelphia: For-
tress Press, 1978. An interesting essay arguing that true love of
enemies can involve actions which confront and change the
enemy.
97. Schrage, Wolfgang. The Ethics of the New Testament. Philadelphia: For-
tress Press, 1988. A comprehensive study synthesizing the best
NT scholarship. The on Jesus (pp. 13-106) presents an
section
accurate exegesis of important texts, especially on the kingdom
and the love command.
98. Song, C. S. Jesus and the Reign of God. Minneapolis: Fortress Press,
1993. An important study by an Asian liberation theologian.
99. *Verhey, Alan. The Great Reversal: Ethics and the New Testament. Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1984. An excellent survey of NT ethics, espe-
cially pages 1-33, on the ethics and politics of Jesus.
What Does the Lord Require? 4* 45
Represented by James
return as king and summon all the nations of the world, they will
be separated like sheep and goats, the former for eternal joy, the
made visible to the world. Like Jesus, the disciples in mission are
to be the occasion of the disclosure of God's will for all peoples.
This interpretation (a bit over-condensed here) would, I felt,
100. Balch, David, ed. Social History of the Matthean Community: Cross
Disciplinary Approaches. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1991. A col-
lection of scholarly articles that offer descriptions of the social
context of Matthew.
101. Cope, Lamar. "Matthew XXV: 31-46, 'The Sheep and the Goats/
Reinterpreted." Novum Testamentum 11 (1969): 32-44. This is the
most succinct statement of the "missionary" interpretation of
Matthew 25:31-46.
102. Crosby, Michael. House of Disciples: Church, Economics and Justice in
Matthew. Maryknoll: Orbis Books, 1988. Using "house" as a root
metaphor, Crosby derives a vision of social justice from Mat-
thew. The work is a bit sprawling, with a somewhat undigested
mixture of methods, and thus is not easy to read.
103. Donahue, John R. "The 'Parable' of the Sheep and the Goats: A
Challenge to Christian Ethics." Theological Studies 47 (1986): 3-31.
A somewhat shortened version of this is in Donahue, The Gospel
in Parable: Metaphor, Narrative and Theology in the Synoptic Gospels,
109-25. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1988.
105. Harrington, Daniel. The Gospel of Matthew. Sacra Pagina, No. 1. Col-
legeville: Liturgical Press, 1991. An excellent commentary at the
level of "religious professional" in what promises to be an im-
portant series.
106. Johnson, Luke T. "The Use of Leviticus in James." Journal of Biblical
111. Shepherd, Massey. "The Epistle of James and the Gospel of Mat-
thew." Journal of Biblical Literature. 75 (1956): 40-51.
113. Tamez, Elsa. The Scandalous Message of James. New York: Crossroad,
1990. A fresh and powerful reading "from the perspective of the
oppressed."
but "buys a farm" (see 4:32) with the "payment of his injustice";
he seems to die accidentally, and the farm is deserted (cursed).
• 7. Paul and Silas are beaten for freeing a slave girl from
venal owners (16:16-24); see also 19:23-41, where the silversmiths
of Ephesus feel their livelihood threatened by Paul's preaching.
Bibliography on Luke-Acts
115. Cassidy, Richard J. Jesus, Politics and Society: A Study of Luke's Gos-
pel Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books, 1978. Cassidy's two works
are important contributions to understanding the social status
and political perspectives of Luke's community. Cassidy rejects a
view that Luke portrays Roman power in a favorable light.
116. . Society and Politics in the Acts of the Apostles. Maryknoll, N.Y.:
Orbis Books, 1988.
117. Donahue, John R. The Gospel in Parable (#103 above), 162-80, on
Luke's parables dealing with the poor.
118. . "Two Decades of Research on the Rich and the Poor in Luke-
Acts." In D. A. Knight and P. J. Paris, eds. Justice and the Holy:
Essays in Honor of Walter Harrelson, 129-44. Atlanta, Ga.: Scholars
Press, 1989.
119. Dupont, J. Les beatitudes. 3 vols. Paris: Gabalda, 1969, 1973. See
especially 2:19-142; 3:41-64, 151-206, 389-471. A classic study
that had immense impact on interpreting the beatitudes not
simply as promises of future bliss.
125. Gillman, John. Possessions and the Life of Faith: A Reading of Luke-
Acts. Zaccheus Studies. Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 1991. A
very good popular presentation covering major texts and areas.
126. Hamel, Gildas. Poverty and Charity in Roman Palestine, First Three
Centuries C.E. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990.
Though this is not on Luke, I have listed it here because it is a
magnificent study of poverty and the attempts to alleviate it,
Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Press, 1987. Cover-
ing more than Luke, this is technical but comprehensive.
134. Stegemann, Wolfgang. "The Following of Christ as Solidarity Be-
tween Rich, Respected Christians and Poor, Despised Christians
(Gospel of Luke)." In L. Schottroff and W. Stegemann. Jesus and
the Hope of the Poor, 67-120. Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books 1986.
135. . The Gospel and the Poor. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1984. An
excellent short study which covers more than Luke. One of the
best works to use in a pastoral setting.
What Does the Lord Require? 4* 55
Theological Observations
others cannot separate a person from the love of God (Rom. 8:28-39).
and Christians are to look forward to the final victory over death,
when the risen Christ hands over the kingdom to his Father
(1 Cor. 15:51-54). Between the "already" and the "not yet/ Chris-
tians are to walk in the newness of life and not let sin reign in
their mortal bodies (Rom. 6:12). They should yield themselves to
God, so that they might become instruments and servants of
justice (Rom. 6:13, 18). Eschatology thus provides a "view from
day. The growing gap between rich and poor within Catholics in
the United States is not simply an economic problem but a prob-
lem of the unity of faith within the body of Christ. As U.S. Cath-
olics move up the economic ladder, they often forget their immi-
grant and working-class origins. Effective concern for the growing
number of Latino Catholics and the new immigrants from Asia,
many of whom are Catholic, is a way to affirm the inclusive vision
permeating Paul's writings.
What Does the Lord Require? •£• 59
argue that any gift should be freely given from a motive of gener-
osity, "for God loves a cheerful giver/' The important thing is not
that we try to translate Paul's collection rhetoric and strategy into
present-day practice, but that he provides an example of theologi-
cal ideas translated into concrete action for the poor.
supper that you are eating, for when the time comes to eat, each
one goes ahead with his own supper and one goes hungry, while
another gets drunk" (1 Cor. ll:22f.).
When Paul says that one who eats without discerning the
body eats and drinks judgment on oneself (11:28), the "body" is a
reference not primarily to the body of Jesus (as the later concept
of sacrilege affirmed), but the community as the body of Christ
(which he will discuss in great detail in the following chapter).
Discerning the body for Paul means assessing the impact of one's
actions on the good of the community, especially in regard to its
no gap between the faith they celebrate on Sunday and the way
they live the other six days of the week. (See also the bibliogra-
phy on liturgy and social justice.)
Bibliography on Paul
His Theology: A Brief Sketch. 2nd ed. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Pren-
tice Hall, 1987.
136. *Bassler, Jouette. God and Mammon: Asking for Money in the New
Testament. Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1991. A popular and
learned presentation with stress on Paul.
137. Beker, J. Christian. Paul the Apostle: The Triumph of God in Life and
Thought. Philadelphia: Fortress Press 1980. A major theological
study focusing on the apocalyptic in Paul.
142. Georgi, Dieter. Remembering the Poor: The History of Paul's Collection
for Jerusalem. Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1992. A translation of
Georgi's important 1965 scholarly study of the collection.
154. Jewett, Robert. "Coming to Terms with the Boom Doom." Quarterly
Review 4 (1984): 9-22. Good guidelines for interpreting apocalyptic.
155. Schiissler Fiorenza, Elisabeth. The Book of Revelation: Justice and Judg-
ment. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1985. An excellent collection
of essays; see especially Chapter 7, "Visionary Rhetoric and
Socio-political Situation."
texts in their historical and literary context and to read them with
a concern for issues of social justice. Allied to this is a "hermeneu-
tics of suspicion"' about interpretations supporting individualized
piety. Philip Esler (#123 above, p. 170) states that Luke's writings
God with one's whole heart, mind, and soul and the neighbor as
oneself. What the Bible relentlessly affirms, from the law of Moses
to the Pauline summons "to bear another's burdens and so fulfill
the law of Christ" (Gal. 6:2), is that the love of neighbor is mani-
fest especially in care for the weak and the powerless.
4:1, 6:4-7), the plight of the poor man in Psalm 10, and the blind-
ness of the wealthy to the needy at their gates (Luke 16:19-31) are
hauntingly familiar in our own day. Paul's concern for the poorer
churches of Palestine and even his collection strategy has rele-
vance to a church in the United States increasingly divided along
socioeconomic lines. Paul Tillich once defined the task of theology
as one of correlating the symbols of the faith (where symbol is
157. *Bauckham /
R. The Bible in Politics: How to Read the Bible Politically.
Third Way Books. London: S.P.C.K., 1989. An introduction to
66 •$• John R. Donahue, SJ.
tian Life. Rev. ed. Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1989. The best single
resource.
160. Cahill, Lisa Sowle. "The New Testament and Ethics: Communities
of Social Change." Interpretation 44 (1990): 383-95.
168. Sandeen, Ernest, ed. The Bible and Social Reform. Chico, Cal.: Schol-
ars Press, 1982. A study of how the Bible has been used by
North American theologians concerned with social issues.
gap between academic study of the Bible and its use in the
Church. Though dealing with complex theories of hermeneutics,
it is clearly and elegantly written.
171. *Spohn, W. What Are They Saying About Scripture and Ethics? New
S.
York/Ramsey: Paulist, 1984. Presently out of print; it will be
reissued in revised form.
and Liturgy
174. Achtemeier, Elizabeth. The Old Testament and the Proclamation of the
Gospel. Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1973. Not specifically
on issues of social justice, but it contains helpful guidelines for
use of OT.
68 4* John R. Donahue, S.J.
175. Baldovin, John F. "The Liturgical Year: Calendar for a Just Commu-
nity." In Liturgy and Spirituality in Context. Ed. E. Bernstein, 98-
114. Collegeville, Liturgical Press, 1990.
176. Burghardt, Walter, et al. "Preaching the Just Word: Resources for
Homilists." Homily Resources. Special issue. Available from the
Department Development and World Peace of the U.S.
of Social
Bishops' Conference. Essays on preaching and justice by Walter
Burgardt, John Coleman, John Donahue, and James Connor.
This volume is also available through the Woodstock Center.
177. *Empereur, James L., and Christopher Kiesling. The Liturgy That
Does Justice. A Michael Glazier Book. Collegeville, Minn.: The
Liturgical Press, 1990. An excellent study with fine insights,
covering all aspects of the liturgy. The annotated bibliography is
179. Grosz, Edward M., ed. Liturgy and Social Justice: Celebrating Rites-
Proclaiming Rights. Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 1988. Papers
read at the 1988 meeting of the Federation of Diocesan Liturgical
Commissions. See especially Dianne Bergant, "Liturgy and
Scripture: Creating a New World," 12-25, and J. Bryan Hehir,
"Liturgy and Social Justice: Past Relationships and Future Possi-
bilities," 40-61.
182. Hughes, Kathleen, and Mark R. Francis, eds. Living No Longer for
Ourselves: Liturgy and Justice in the Nineties. Collegeville, Minn.:
The A good collection of essays. See espe-
Liturgical Press, 1991.
ciallyHughes, "Liturgy and Justice: An Intrinsic Relationship,"
36-51, and R. A. Kiefer, "Liturgy and Ethics: Some Unresolved
Dilemmas," 68-83.
What Does the Lord Require? •£• 69
183. Searle, Mark, ed. Liturgy and Social Justice. Collegeville, Minn.: The
Liturgical Press, 1980. Important essays by Burghardt ("Preach-
ing the Just Word")/ Searle, Kilmartin, and Duffy.
sues of faith and justice is the rise of feminism and the realization
of the injustices to which women have been and are still subjected
in both church and society. While feminism, and its more recent
self-designation "womanism," has spawned most fruitful research
("The Feminist and the Bible/ 100); she offers as well an excellent
overview of the different feminist approaches to the Bible. I will
list works that fill out the picture she presents. (For further works
in addition to these, see Trible, #12 above, and Schneiders, #169
above.)
189. Osiek, Carolyn, R. S.C.J. "The Feminist and the Bible: Hermeneu-
tical Alternatives." Religion and Intellectual Life 6, Nos. 3 and 4
(1989): 96-109.
193. Tolbert, Mary Ann. "Defining the Problem: The Bible and Feminist
Hermeneutics." Semeia 28 (1983): 113-26.
The principal biblical term for peace, §aldm, does not mean
simply the absence of conflict but suggests wholeness, complete-
ness, or health. For this reason, in certain important biblical texts,
especially those describing the effect of the just use of royal pow-
er, or in eschatological expectations of a restored kingdom, peace
and justice are closely linked; for example, "Justice will bring
about peace; right will produce calm and security" (Isa. 32:17, in
the New American Bible translation); "Kindness and truth shall
meet; justice and peace shall kiss. Truth shall spring out of the
earth and justice shall look down from heaven" (Ps. 85:llf.). See
also Isaiah 9:7, 60:17; Psalm 72:7. One legacy of the OT is that
What Does the Lord Require? •$• 71
ry the Bible has been invoked far more often to warrant violent
194. Cadoux, C. J. The Early Christian Attitude to War. New York: Sea-
bury, 1919, 1982. An early and important historical study of the
first three centuries.
195. Craige, Peter C. The Problem of War in the Old Testament. Grand Rap-
ids: Eerdmans, 1978. A popular and readable treatment of diffi-
199. Hengel, Martin. Victory over Violence: Jesus and the Revolutionists.
Philadelphia: Fortress, 1973. A careful historical study of the
relation of Jesus to the revolutionary movements of his time.
200. Hirsch, R. G. The Most Precious Gift: Judaism in Pursuit of Peace. New
York: Union of Hebrew Congregations, 1974. An excellent de-
scription of peace in Judaism.
72 •£• John R. Donahue, S.J.
201. *Klassen /
William. Love Your Enemies: The Way to Peace. Philadelphia:
Fortress, 1984. An excellent study of the love of enemies in
Hellenistic and Jewish thought as well as in the NT. Excellent
bibliography.
202. McSorley, Richard. The New Testament Basis of Peacemaking. 3rd ed.
rev. and expanded. Scottdale, Pa.: Herald Press, 1985. A good
overview of pertinent texts; excellent for a parish or lay group.
203. Melko, Matthew, and Richard Weigel. Peace in the Ancient World.
Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland and Co., 1981. Written by historians,
this book studies a number of ancient societies that had sus-
tained periods of peace, and it attempts to assess the political
and social conditions which brought this about.
204. Perkins, Pheme. Love Commands in the New Testament. See #92
above.
205. Piper, John. Love Your Enemies: Jesus' Love Command in the Synoptic
Gospels and the Early Christian Paranesis. Society for New Testa-
ment Studies Monograph Series, No. 38. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1979. An excellent scholarly study of the liter-
Concluding Reflection
The beginning of the fight against hatred, the basic Christian an-
swer to hatred, is not the commandment to love, but what must
necessarily come before in order to make the commandment bear-
able and comprehensible. It is a prior commandment to believe.
The root of Christian love is not the will to love, but the faith that
one is loved. The faith that one is loved by God. That faith that
2
The Word of God and the Word of Man (New York and Evanston: Harp-
er and Row, 1957), 32.
74 •!• John R. Donahue, S.J.
An Afterword
One of my hopes in offering such a survey is that readers
will say, Why didn't he mention this or that work, which I found
very helpful? This bibliography is part of a larger project and may
someday appear in revised form. I would appreciate it very much
if readers would send any additions, criticisms, and suggestions
Appendix
For those who inquire, Where can I find the books? I have
listed a large number of books and articles that I hope will send
them scurrying to libraries and bookstores. The publishing busi-
ness has been in considerable flux in the past decade, with the
merger and moving of publishers. For example, Fortress Press
and Augsburg have merged, as have John Knox and Westminster.
Michael Glazier, which had contributed so much to Catholic Bibli-
chased the line of books as well as the name. Books listed above
from the publishers should now be ordered from the merged
publishers. I will list below some addresses, so that those who
might not have immediate access to a bookstore can contact the
publishers directly. People also might want to write for cata-
logues, which are a fine way to keep abreast of issues. Some of
these publishers have branch bookstores in many cities.
3
A
Thomas Merton Reader, T. P. McDonnell, ed. (Doubleday: Image
Books, 1974), 322, quoting from Merton's New Seeds of Contemplation.
What Does the Lord Require? 4- 75
Johnson, Luke T.
34, 48, 51, , 54 O'Keefe, M. 13
Oakham, Douglas 44
Karris, Robert J. 54 Ogletree, Thomas W. 4, 25
Kasemann, Ernst 43 Osiek, Carolyn, R. S.C.J. 69, 70
Keck, L. E. 54 Overmann, J. A. 49
Kerans, Patrick 13
Kiefer, R. A. 68 Paris, P. J. 53
Klassen, William 72 Patterson, R. 34
Klein, Ralph W. 38 Perkins, Pheme 44, 72
Knight, D. A. 53 Petersen, David L. 35
Kysar, R. 66 Pilgrim, Walter E. 54
Piper, John 72
Landes, G. 12 Pixley, George V. 17
Lebacqz, Karen 26 Pleins, J> D. 38
Limburg, James 34, , 35 Prabhu, Soares 29
Lindboe, I. M. 70
Lohfink, Bernard 24 Rasmussen, Larry L. 4, 66
Lohfink, Gerhard 43 Reid, David P. 35
Lohfink, Norbert Riches, John 44
18, 22-24, 26, 27, 33 43
;
, Ringe, Sharon H. 44
Maimonides 14 Sakenfield, K. D. 70
Malchow, Bruce 27, 38 Sandeen, Ernest 66
Maynard-Reid, Pedrito U. 48 Sanders, E. P. 44
What Does the Lord Require? 'h 79
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