Thursday, October 18, 2018

Reflections on William Stringfellow's Theology of the Powers

For some reason I've been thinking today about William Stringfellow. For those of you who don't know, William Stringfellow (1928-1985) was an American lawyer and lay theologian who was a major voice for peace and justice in the US in the 1960s and 1970s. When I was in seminary between 1997 and 2000 several people, some of whom had met Stringfellow, urged me to read his works. What follows here is a paper I wrote on Stringfellow for a class at the Seattle University School of Theology and Ministry in late 1999 or early 2000. I believe it is worth reading today when the dynamic of social evil that it describes is more obvious than it has been for a long time. The text here is cut and pasted from that paper. It says that all of Stringfellow's works are out of print. That was true when I wrote the paper, but since then many of them have been republished by Wipf and Stock Publishers in Eugene, Oregon, and are available from that source. The copy of the paper I still have doesn't have a title, so I added one here that probably isn't the title the paper originally had. I have edited the paper for typos and other clerical errors, although I won't be surprised if I missed some. The paper is long for a blog post, but I trust you will find it worth reading. Feel free to quote and use it with attribution to me as its author.

Reflections on William Stringfellow's Theology of the Powers

(c) Thomas C. Sorenson, 2018


For many years now, several different people whose opinions I respect have told me I need to read the works of William Stringfellow.  Within the past several months there has been an interesting convergence around this name in which three different pastors whom I know well (and who know me well) have mentioned that they either met Stringfellow or at least heard him speak back in the 1960s or 1970s.  It seemed there was a message trying to get through.  Like me, Stringfellow was a lawyer, and like me, he had a passion for theology.  The necessity of writing a paper for this class presented me with an opportunity at last to take up these repeated suggestions, to listen to that message, and to look into Stringfellow’s thought.  I discovered a powerful theologian and a stirring voice for social justice whose thought is a major contribution to our understanding of the nature of social evil in the world.  It is the thesis of this paper that Stringfellow taught a kind of Social Gospel, but one rooted not in Protestant liberalism but in Neo-Orthodox theology.

This paper will consider primarily an important aspect of Stringfellow’s thought, namely, his theology of the “powers and principalities.”  Although all of Stringfellow’s books are now out of print, through his work on this subject Stringfellow has been a major indirect influence on a great many people today.  Many of us are familiar with the work of Walter Wink on the subject of powers and principalities.[1]  Stringfellow’s earlier work on the subject is clearly the starting point of Wink’s very influential work in this area.[2]  Grounded principally in the writings of St. Paul and the Book of Revelation, Stringfellow used the concept of powers and principalities to make sense out of the chaos, violence, and injustice that he perceived to be rampant in this country in the 1960s and early 1970s, when he did most of his writing.  This concept, as Stringfellow understood it, is quite foreign to the American mind, as Stringfellow never tired of saying.  Nonetheless, it is a concept well worth considering as we try to make sense out of the persistence of social evils in the country and around the world in our own times.  As Stringfellow also often said, we ignore this understanding of the nature of institutional sin at our peril.

Stringfellow was a lawyer, a graduate of Harvard Law School.  In 1956,  just after graduating from law school, he began practicing law in the East Harlem neighborhood of New York,[3] a place he once called “perhaps the most notorious slum in New York City.”[4]  Other details of his biography are scarce in the material available to me.  He was a close friend of Daniel Berrigan[5], and he was once under federal indictment for harboring a fugitive for giving Berrigan a place to stay in Stringfellow’s home while Berrigan was eluding the authorities who were seeking to arrest him.[6]  Stringfellow lived for many years with his “friend and companion”  Anthony Towne.[7]  He was a frequent lecturer at law schools and seminaries and was a prolific writer.[8]  Stringfellow was an Episcopal laymen; and he was involved (in ways my materials do not disclose) in the ordination of the first women as Episcopal priests.[9] 

Stringfellow’s theology of the powers and principalities cannot, I think, be fully understood without keeping in mind the nature of the times in which he lived.  Of course, those times are not so remote as to be unfamiliar from personal experience to many of us, myself included.  Stringfellow’s active professional years were the years of the Civil Rights Movement, the Vietnam War and the peace movement that arose in reaction to it, the assassinations of John Kennedy, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Robert Kennedy, the killings at Kent State, and Watergate.  It was a time of growing awareness of the environmental degradation that was threatening all life on our planet.  Toward the end of Stringfellow’s life, the women’s movement rose to prominence in American public life, and he was influenced by it.[10]  In short, he lived in a time of wide-spread social change and upheaval, a time when it was easier to see than perhaps it is today how the powers and principalities, whose hold on American life was threatened by that upheaval, were fighting back in violent, dehumanizing ways. 

Living in this environment, Stringfellow developed a powerfully bleak view of American life.  Writing in 1973, at the very end of the Vietnam War, he stated:



The people have been existing under a state of such interminable warfare that it seems normative.  There is little resistance to the official Orwellian designation of war as peace….Racial conflict has been suppressed by an elaborate apartheid; products which supposedly mean abundance or convenience turn out to contaminate or jeopardize life; the environment itself is rendered hostile; there is pervasive babel (sic); privacy is a memory because surveillance is ubiquitous; institutional coercion of human beings has proliferated relentlessly.  Whatever must be said of earlier times, America has become a technological totalitarianism in which hope, in its ordinary human connotations, is being annihilated.[11]



Stringfellow’s view of American life during his most productive years was very bleak indeed.  His theology of the powers and principalities can best be understood, I think, as an attempt to make theological sense out of the bleak state of the world in which he lived.

Stringfellow must also be understood in light of his experience living and working in East Harlem.[12]  Space and time limitations prevent me from going into this experience in detail.  Suffice it to quote Stringfellow’s own summary of the impact that experience had on him:



Slowly I learned something that folk indigenous to the ghetto know:  namely, that the power and purpose of death are incarnated in institutions and structures, procedures and regimes--Consolidated Edison or the Department of Welfare, the Mafia, or the police, the Housing Authority or the social work bureaucracy, the hospital system or the banks, liberal philanthropy or corporate real estate speculation.  In the wisdom of the people of the East Harlem neighborhood, such principalities are identified as demonic powers because of the relentless and ruthless dehumanization that they cause.[13]



In his experience in East Harlem, Stringfellow thus experienced firsthand the effects of institutionalized sin on human beings.  When he wrote about the powers and principalities, he was writing from intense personal experience.  Stringfellow was an “Anglo-Saxon white man.”[14]  He grew up in Northampton, Massachusetts, which he describes as “radically different” from East Harlem.[15]  It seems likely, therefore, that in East Harlem he had a new kind of experience of injustice in American life, the kind of experience so many of us white, relatively well-off Americans never have.  His theology of the powers and principalities grew largely out of this experience.

            The Biblical roots of the concept of powers and principalities lie primarily in the letter of Paul.  The word “principalities” comes from the King James Version, and the word “powers” is found both there and in more modern translations such as the NRSV.  Thus, in Romans 8:38 Paul lists “powers” among the things that cannot separate us from the love of God in Christ.  At Ephesians 6:12 Paul says: “For our struggle is not against enemies of blood and flesh, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers of this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places.”  Although probably not written by Paul himself, the pseudo-Pauline Letter to the Colossians, referring of course to Christ, states:  “He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation;  for in  him all things in heaven and on earth were created, things visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or powers—all things have been created through him and for him.”  Col. 1:15-16  One commentator, referring specifically to the passage in Ephesians, says this about Paul’s meaning when he uses this term:



Rather than imposing a mythological or demonic worldview upon the readers, the author of Ephesians probably means by these terms biological and psychological, social and political, cultural and religious forces that are unseen and yet encountered in human existence (cf. Romans 8.38–39; also Colossians and Revelation). Ephesians intends to assure the tempted, suffering, and desperate among humankind that God has made his own cause not only the suffering that must be endured, but also the resistance, combat, and victory over the superhuman ruling powers.[16]



Markus Barth’s attempt here to portray this worldview as neither mythological nor demonic is less than convincing, but his main point is well taken.  Stringfellow would certainly agree that the powers and principalities are unseen forces of this sort encountered in human existence.  He would probably even agree that they are “superhuman ruling powers;” and he would certainly agree, as we shall see, that God has made resistance to them God’s own cause.  Clearly Stringfellow is using concepts with a solid Biblical foundation in the writings of St. Paul.

            Just what did Stringfellow think the powers and principalities are?  The answer seems to be that they are anything other than an individual person that exerts a power over human life.  He wrote that they include



all institutions, all ideologies, all images, all movements, all causes, all corporations, all bureaucracies, all traditions, all methods and routines, all conglomerates, all races, all nations, all idols.  Thus, the Pentagon or the Ford Motor Company or Harvard University or the Hudson Institute or Consolidated Edison or the Diners Club or the Olympics or the Methodist Church or the Teamsters Union are all principalities.  So are capitalism, Maoism, humanism, Mormonism, astrology, the Puritan work ethic, science and scientism, white supremacy, patriotism, plus many, many more--sports, sex, any profession or discipline, technology, money, the family--beyond any prospect of full enumeration.  The principalities and powers are legion. [17]



Thus, we are daily surrounded by principalities.  We live our lives in them.  We are their agents.  There is no way to escape them.  They are everywhere, and their influence is pervasive in every aspect of our lives.

            Although all powers and principalities share certain characteristics, the most important of which are discussed below, the principality that Stringfellow on at least one occasion called “archetypical,”[18] is the nation or the state.  Stringfellow said that the state “has a particular eminence” among the principalities that derives from “the jurisdiction asserted by the State over other institutions and powers within a nation.”[19]  It epitomizes those other principalities and powers and possesses or at least claims “a certain special stature or eminence” with regard to them.[20]  The state exposes the essential characteristic of all principalities (which as we shall see below Stringfellow names as death) “with a directness and severity that is not so public or so obvious in the existence of most other principalities.”[21]

            The powers and principalities were for Stringfellow not human constructs but divinely generated creatures in the same sense as humans and all other created entities.  They are not biological creatures as humans are, but they are creatures made by God nonetheless.  He called a principality or power “a form of life, a creaturliness, which is potent and mobile and diverse, not static or neat or simply defined by what it may now or then be called.”[22] He said that “[w]hat the Bible calls principalities and powers are called in contemporary language ideologies, institutions, and images.”[23]  He commented:



A principality, whatever its particular form and variety, is a living reality, distinguishable from human and other organic life.  It is not made or instituted by human beings, but as with humans and all creation, made by God for God’s own pleasure.[24]     



The powers and principalities were, then, for Stringfellow creatures originating with God.  They do not have organic bodies, but they are creatures nonetheless.

            As creatures in their own right, powers and principalities are not merely human creations, nor are they mere collectives of human beings.  Stringfellow recognized that this can be a difficult concept.  Indeed, he admitted he could not fully explain how this fact comes about, given the undeniable truth that on some level humans indeed create the things that become powers and principalities.  He commented:



     The typical version of human reluctance to accord the principalities their due integrity as creatures is the illusion of human beings that they make or create and, hence, control institutions and that institutions are no more than groups of human beings duly organized.  How do these creatures called principalities come into existence?  How does an institution originate?  Where does tradition come from?  When is a nation born?  How is an ideology created?

     I am frank to admit to no full answers to such queries and further to confess that I am more or less content to leave these questions unanswered.  The exact origins of the creatureliness of principalities is a mystery in quite the same sense that the creaturehood of human beings remains mysterious.  Within such mysteries, we are not bereft of any insight, but what is knowable is partial and ambiguous, limited and fragile.  Thus, we know that human beings are privy to the public inception and generation of institutions and other principalities….Yet that human privity seems insufficient to be the whole truth; something more than the summation of human thought and activity is involved in the creature identity of principalities.[25]



Stringfellow buttressed his claim that principalities are creatures by appealing to empirical evidence:



[A]n understanding of the life of principalities as part of God’s work of creation, and not man’s doing, is the biblical view confirmed empirically by the most widespread redundant and cumulative evidence that human beings do not control institutions or any other principalities.[26]



Thus, while we live under the illusion that we create and control the non-human forces in our lives, those forces are in fact not under our control because in the last analysis they are independent creatures independently and mysteriously created by God.

            Stringfellow makes (but does not stress) the point that because the powers and principalities are God’s creations they are, like the rest of creation, created good and initially put under the dominion of humans.  He wrote:  “They are given by God into human dominion and are means through which human beings rejoice in the gift of life by acknowledging and honoring God, who gives life to all and to the whole of creation.”[27]  Thus, God’s original intention in creating the principalities was good.  More specifically, that intention was to make them servants of humanity to the glory of God.  The initial goodness of the principalities is not a major theme with Stringfellow, but it is a logically necessary element of his theology once he has declared them to be creatures of God and not mere human constructs.

            The principalities were created good but, as we will see in greater detail below, and as has probably become clear already at least by implication, their effect on humans in the world is profoundly negative.  Stringfellow explains this paradox by the very traditional Christian method of emphasizing the reality and the significance of the Fall.  The Fall means for Stringfellow “the alienation of the whole of Creation from God….[28]  As a result of the Fall, all relationships in creation are disordered, including the relationships of the principalities to God, to humans, and to their own true nature.  All principalities (he here uses the word institutions but he means the same thing by it)



exist, in time, in a moral state which is the equivalent of death or which has the meaning of death.  Every principality in its fallenness exists in remarkable confusion as to its own origins, identity, and office.  The fallen principalities falsely--and futilely--claim autonomy from God and dominion over human beings and the rest of creation, thus disrupting and usurping the godly vocation or blaspheming, while repudiating their own vocation.[29]



Like all of the rest of creation, the principalities under conditions of the Fall are not what God created them to be.  Rather than being subject to God and to human dominion, they claim autonomy and supremacy within creation.  This is the source of all the trouble they cause in the world.

            In their fallen state, the principalities, every last one of them, have become for Stringfellow instrumentalities of death.  Death as the moral force operative in the powers and principalities, or as the consequence of human idolatry of the principalities, is a central concept for Stringfellow.  This notion of Stringfellow’s is in some ways  difficult, but if we would understand Stringfellow we must attempt to understand what he means when he says that the principalities are driven by the principle of death.  The following is one of his better statements of his understanding of principalities as instrumentalities of death:



Death is the only moral significance which a principality proffers human beings.  That is to say, whatever intrinsic moral power is embodied in a principality--for a great corporation, profit, for example, or, for a nation, hegemony; or, for an ideology, conformity--that is sooner or later suspended by the greater moral power of death….Death is--apart from God himself--the greatest moral power in this world, outlasting and subduing all other powers, no matter how marvelous they may seem to be for a time being.  This means, theologically speaking, that the object of allegiance and servitude, the real idol secreted within all idolatries, the power above all principalities and powers--the idol of all idols--is death.[30]



All principalities are, in the last analysis, “agents of death.”[31] 

            Stringfellow here is essentially setting up, if not an ontological dualism of forces of good and evil, then at least a way of understanding reality in which there are only two moral forces to which one can owe allegiance, namely, God and death.  He wrote:  “After all is said and done, apart from God himself, death is the only extant moral power living in this world (notice Luke 10:17-20).”[32]  Anything that does not owe ultimate allegiance to God therefore ultimately owes its allegiance to death.  Because the principalities are fallen, they no longer owe their allegiance to God, as they were created to do.  Because they do not, they become agents of death.

            Death for Stringfellow is not merely the physical death of individuals.  Rather, it is a pervasive power in the life of the world.  In addition to physical death it means “death apprehended sociologically and anthropologically, psychologically and psychically, economically and politically, societally and institutionally.  Death as a moral power means death as a social purpose.”[33]  Death as a social purpose!  For Stringfellow, the powers and principalities are indeed all about producing death because, as fallen, they are not about fostering life.

            Perhaps in an effort to avoid an ontological dualism in which evil would become a rival god to the God of creation, Stringfellow denied that the principalities are evil.  He preferred to call them “demonic.”  He wrote:



Like all people and all things, the angelic powers and principalities are fallen and are become demonic powers.  Demonic does not mean evil; the word refers rather to death, to fallenness.  An angelic power in its fallen estate is called a demonic power because it is a principality existing in the present age in a state of alienation from God, cut off from the life originating in God’s life, separated from its own true life, and thus, being in a state of death.[34]



By using the term demonic rather than the term evil, Stringfellow has retained, in a Biblically legitimate way, the ontological connection between the principalities and God.  Though they are fallen, the principalities are not the creations or the tools of an evil having ontological standing apart from God.

Rather than labeling the principalities evil, Stringfellow focuses on the effect they have on human beings.  That effect is, in a word, dehumanization.  Thus, early in An Ethic for Christians and Other Aliens in a Strange Land, as part of his analysis of the nature of contemporary American life from which we quoted above, he wrote:



I refer…not so much to an evil mind as to a paralyzed conscience; not so much to either personal or corporate immorality as to a social pathology possessing persons and institutions; not so much to malevolence, however incarnate, as to the literal dehumanization of human life in society.[35]



The problem is not that people are evil, he says, but that they “have been dehumanized by the principalities and powers, for which they are acolytes.”[36]  The American middle class, he believed, has become so demoralized and dehumanized by the powers and principalities that they have essentially “quit as human beings.”[37]  Stringfellow did not at this point explain what he meant by that striking phrase; but it seems likely that what he had in mind was the widespread failure of the American public to resist the work of the principalities in such atrocities as the Vietnam War.  This notion is seen in such statements of Stringfellow’s that only in those who are in conflict with “the established order” can one identify “maturity, conscience, and paradoxically, freedom…,”[38] that is to can say, can one identify true humanity.

            A major effect of the Fall with regard to the powers and principalities is that in the Fall the human dominion over them that God intended was reversed.  Under the conditions of the Fall, “the principalities exert dominion over human beings and claim in their own names and for themselves idolatrous worship from human beings.”[39]  Indeed, the fundamental harm that humans suffer from the principalities comes for Stringfellow from the function of the principalities as idols.  In our alienation from God that results from the Fall, humans engage in a “pathetic” search for a God substitute.  We make one or another principality our idol, our God substitute.  Our efforts, however, to replace what we have lost with an idol is always futile.  Idolatry is invariable worship of death.  Stringfellow states:  “The principalities are themselves consigned to death just as much as the people who worship them.  Thus, the idolatry of the demonic powers by humans turns out always to be a worship of death.”[40]  The principalities constantly assail humans  with “the claim…for an idolatry that, in spite of all disguises, really surrenders to death as the reigning presence in the world.”[41]  We can perhaps summarize Stringfellow here by saying that for him the central dynamic of human life under the conditions of the Fall is a continual falling into an idolatry to the principalities that inevitably becomes a worship of death.[42]

            It would be harder to imagine a bleaker evaluation of American life, or a bleaker analysis of the dynamics of all human life, than Stringfellow gives in his theology of the powers and principalities.  Again and again in his writing one encounters striking, even shocking condemnations of America and of American life.  He did not consider America morally superior in any way to the Nazis.  Rather he wrote that after World War II American was taken over by the spirit of Nazism:



That is to say, the ethos of Nazism, the mentality of Nazism, the social ethos of Nazism, survives, prospers, and more and more prevails in specific American versions…which can be symbolized and summarized in three words:  war, racism, and genocide.[43]



            The American church did not escape Stringfellow’s searing criticism.  He wrote extensively on the church, but space and time limitations prevent me from going into that part of his thought.  Suffice it to say that in Ethic, which is not primarily about the church at all, he identified the American churches as “the most venial, manipulated, and degraded vassals of the power of death.”[44]  He saw nothing but captivity by death even in the law, his chosen area of professional life.[45]  One is left with the burning question:  Is there no hope?

            Perhaps surprisingly Stringfellow’s answer was:  Yes!  Hope is possible because of the action of God in Christ and the presence of God in the world.[46]  We noted above that the concept of the Fall was central for Stringfellow’s understanding of the powers and principalities.  He understood the result of the Fall, as we have seen, as being alienation of humans, and of the principalities for that matter, from God, each other, and their own true nature.  That alienation, that is, the Fall itself, is overcome for Stringfellow (as for St. Paul) in Christ.  He wrote:



In Jesus Christ there is no chasm between God and the world…. Jesus Christ means that God comes extremely, decisively, inclusively, immediately for the ordinary, transient, proud, wonderful, besetting, profane, frivolous, heroic, lusty things of men.  The reconciliation of God and the world in Jesus Christ means that in Christ there is a radical and integral relationship of all men and of all things.  In Him all things are held together….Existentially and empirically the reconciliation of the world with God in Jesus Christ establishes a man in unity with both God and the whole world.[47]



In language Karl Barth would have loved, Stringfellow says that our knowledge of the power of death in our lives leads us into a crisis,[48] and that it is this crisis that makes us Christians.  He wrote:



The event of becoming a Christian is that event in which a man confronts and confesses the presence and power of death in his own life--in every facet and detail of his own personality…while in the same event he is exposed to and beholds the power and presence of God which is greater than death.[49]



When we experience this crisis, we at the same time become aware of “the power and the truth of the Resurrection:  this presence of God in history which is greater than any of death’s threats or temptations and more potent and which endures forever.”[50]  God participates in this crisis with us.  Indeed, God even participates in death with us, and it is this divine participation in every aspect of our lives that renders the Christian safe.[51]  In his or her knowledge of the truth of the Resurrection and of God’s enduring presence in all aspects of our lives, the Christian is free; free, that is, “to give his present life away, since his life is secure in the life of God.”[52]

            The Christian’s knowledge of the saving presence of God in the world carries with it an obligation to be fully engaged in the world for the sake of the world.  “The Christian is committed permanently to radical protest in society,”  Stringfellow wrote.[53]  Every Christian is responsible for the “stewardship of the Gospel in his daily life and work.”[54]  Part of that stewardship is what Stringfellow calls “moral theology, that is, the interpretation and articulation, from time to time, of the significance of the Word of God in social conflict and change.”[55]  That work requires that the Christian be engaged in “a full involvement in secular affairs….”[56]  Stringfellow wrote:



The Christian social witness is achieved only insofar as Christians are deeply implicated in the real life of society--in unions and political clubs and citizen groups and the like; it is not made by Christian people gathering off by themselves in a parish house to study and discuss social issues.  Witness becomes possible only when the Christian is on the actual scent where the conflict is taking place, the decision is being made, the legislation is being enacted.[57]



Thus, for Stringfellow, Christians are called into to witness for the Word of God in the world.  Clearly for Stringfellow, that meant being present with the poor and the oppressed.  That’s where he spent much of his professional life as a lawyer.  Clearly it meant engaging in that “radical protest” to which he refers in the quote above.  Stringfellow did that in his own life.  It meant giving one’s life away, or at least being willing to do so, in the freedom we have in Christ from death and the fear of death.  Here is a sound theological basis for a life of Christian commitment to justice and social change.

            Yet it is a very different basis for such a life than most liberal Christians usually think of.  It is commonplace in liberal denominations, like my own United Church of Christ, to take mission work to mean providing social services and working for peace and against oppression.  To the very limited extent that Evangelization is considered at all, the assumption is that some people may be moved to inquire into why these Christians do these things, and some may wish to join a faith that moves people to such work.  There is also a widespread assumption that God’s Kingdom can come about only through our own efforts, since God has no other way to work in the world.  These assumptions are grounded in considerable part in the Social Gospel traditionally understood.

            Stringfellow would have none of it.  To him, the Social Gospel traditionally understood is a form of agnosticism.[58]  This form of Protestantism, he said,



expects that fortunate concurrence of circumstances in which men master history and build themselves a city of salvation.  For such Protestants sacramental worship seems an indecisive, historically insignificant and archaic exercise.  And why shouldn’t it if, from their vantage point, the saving work of God in Jesus Christ is incomplete and still contingent upon the work of men, and God is less than God?[59]



In other words, for Stringfellow the bringing about of the Kingdom of God on earth is the work of God, not the work of human beings, not even the work of the Church or of Christian people collectively or individually.  We witness to the Word of God in the world; God builds the Kingdom.  The Christian’s call is only “exposing the Word to others….This is the only service which Christians owe the world, and all else they do or may do…is encompassed in this service.”[60]  The Christian’s job, then, is to focus on what is unique to the Christian witness.  Social service work is not unique to Christians.  Working for justice and an end of oppression is not unique to Christians.  Opposing war and working for peace is not unique to Christians.  Witnessing to the Word of God in Jesus Christ is  unique to Christians.  That is what we are to do, and all else will follow from the witness.

            One of Stringfellow’s more stirring bits of writing sums up how we are then to live in the midst of the Fall, amidst the power of death:



     In the face of death, live humanly.  In the middle of chaos, celebrate the Word.  Amidst babel (sic)…speak the truth.  Confront the noise and verbiage and falsehood of death with the truth and potency and efficacy of the Word of God.  Know the Word, teach the Word, nurture the Word, preach the Word, defend the Word, incarnate the Word, do the Word, live the Word.  And more than that, in the Word of God, expose death and all death’s works and wiles, rebuke lies, cast out demons, exorcise, cleanse the possessed, raise those who are dead in mind and conscience.[61]



In other words, he said, live out the gifts of the Holy Spirit:  The exercise of those gifts constitutes the essential tactic of resistance to the power of death.[62]

            What then are we to make of Stringfellow’s  theology of the powers and principalities?  It constitutes, I believe, a Neo-Orthodox Social Gospel.  Stringfellow is clearly Neo-Orthodox.  The echoes of Barth, who was a big fan of his,[63] are unmistakable in his ideas about the crisis of our awareness of the prevalence of death leading us to faith in the Resurrection of Christ. Only in Christ do we have any ability to resist the power of death in the world.  Stringfellow is no Christian liberal, although he may have been a political and social one.  He has no faith in the goodness of human beings apart from their redemption in Christ.  He has no faith in our power to bring about the Kingdom on our own.  Indeed, bringing about the Kingdom is not our job, is not what we are called to attempt to do.  Rather, we are called merely to witness to the power of the Word of God in the world, to witness to the power of Christ to overcome the power of death.  No wonder Barth was so fond of Stringfellow.

            Any evaluation of Stringfellow must come to terms with, among other things, his relentlessly bleak view of the nature of social, political, economic, cultural, educational, religious, and other institutions.  Are they really all about death?  Is there nothing redeeming about them?  We must keep in mind that for Stringfellow anything that does not serve the Word of God in the world serves death.  These are the only two moral forces available to us.  So to some extent, the powers and principalities serve death by definition, since they do not serve God.  Beyond that, we live perhaps in more tranquil times than those that produced Stringfellow’s view of the principalities (though many of us lived through those times too); and most of us white, middle class, well-educated, straight people have not had his immediate experience of the life of the very poor and oppressed among us.  Perhaps for these reasons it is difficult for me to see such institutions as law and social service agencies in as totally pessimistic terms as Stringfellow did.  Yet his words are a good reminder to us.  Institutions do have a life of their own; and that life is almost always their ultimate concern.  They can and usually do therefore become anti-human, that is, they can easily become, if they are not already, instruments of death.  We forget these truths at our peril.

            Finally we must assess Stringfellow’s strong Christocentric view of life and his strong belief that Christians are called only to witness to the Gospel, not first of all to do other good works in response to God’s grace.  These are challenging words for those of us who live squarely in the tradition of liberal Protestantism and the Social Gospel more traditionally understood.  Yet I find them to be an important corrective to some of the more unfortunate tendencies of my tradition.  Liberal, Social Gospel Protestantism can look very much like liberal secular humanism with stained glass windows.  The theology, such as it is, of liberal UCC churches can be a kind of functional Unitarianism that uses Trinitarian language it neither understands nor believes.  It can cease to look much like Christianity altogether.  When it does, it loses its grounding, its roots.  It becomes cut off from that living faith out of which it originally grew and which has the ability to nourish it and sustain it in profound and powerful ways.  We would do well to rediscover Stringfellow and, as Barth said, to listen to him.



Bibliography



Barth, Markus K., “The Letter of Paul to the Ephesians,” The Oxford Companion to the Bible,, The New Oxford Annotated Biblical Reference Library, CD Rom version, Oxford University Press, 1996.



Kellermann, Bill Wylie, ed., A Keeper of the Word, Selected Writing of William Stringfellow, William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1994.



Stringfellow, William, Count It All Joy, Reflections on Faith, Doubt, and Temptation Seen Through the Letter of James, William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1967.



Stringfellow, William, An Ethic for Christians and Other Aliens in a Strange Land, Word Books, Waco, Texas, 1973.



My People Is the Enemy, an Autobiographical Polemic, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York, 1964.



Stringfellow, William, A Private and Public Faith,  William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1962



[1]              The reference is to Wink’s highly influential three volume series Naming the Powers (1984), Unmasking the Powers (1986), and Engaging the Powers (1992), all published by Fortress Press, Philadelphia.  Because Stringfellow’s works are out of print, only the few contained in the Seattle University library were available to me.  Most of these are listed in the bibliography to this paper.  Fortunately, the SU library has a copy of a very useful compilation of selections from Stringfellow’s writings:  Kellermann, Bill Wylie, ed., A Keeper of the Word, Selected Writing of William Stringfellow, William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1994.  This anthology contains sections of some of Stringfellow’s important works that would not otherwise have been available to me.
[2]              Id., pp. 1-2.
[3]              Id., p. 2.
[4]              Stringfellow, William, A Private and Public Faith,  William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1962, p. 58.
[5]              Stringfellow maintained close friendships with several other prominent people as well, perhaps most notably with the French writer Jacques Ellul.
[6]              Id., p. 13.  A little oral history here:  Although Kellermann does not say so, Rev. Dr. Dennis Hughes, the pastor of Northminster Presbyterian Church in Seattle, who was an anti-war activist himself during his time at Yale Divinity School in the late 1960s, has told me that at the time Berrigan was under indictment for breaking into a draft board office and pouring blood over the draft records.  Stringfellow was very sympathetic and may even have been involved in that incident himself.
[7]              Id., p. 7.  Some more oral history:  Rev. Kimbrough Besheer, a local Episcopal priest and Jungian analyst, who met and spoke with Stringfellow on at least one occasion in the office of the Episcopal bishop of Rhode Island, has told me that Stringfellow was gay.  Kellermann does not mention this fact.  Neither does Stringfellow in anything I have seen.  If it is true it would add another dimension to Stringfellow’s personal experience of social oppression by the powers and principalities, which clearly include prominently in their number heterosexism and homophobia.
[8]              Kellermann’s bibliography of Stringfellow’s works covers ten pages.  Kellermann, op. cit., pp. 416-426.
[9]                 Id., p. 10.
[10]             Stringfellow came late to an understanding of the need for inclusive language.  Id.  In the quotes that follow, I will not change Stringfellow’s language for the sake of inclusiveness, as Kellermann has done to some extent.  Any masculine exclusive language in those quotes is Stringfellow’s.  My decision not to change his words comes from a respect for the integrity of historical texts as reflecting the culture in which they were written and in no way reflects a personal endorsement of the use of such exclusive language.  Since Kellermann made a different decision and changed some of Stringfellow’s language to be more inclusive, I cannot be sure that all of the language in the passages quoted from Kellermann are Stringfellow’s original words.  You will note in some of those passages, for example, the frequent use of words like “human beings” or “humans.”  Stringfellow’s original wording may well have been “men” in some of these instances, especially in his earlier works.
[11]             Stringfellow, William, An Ethic for Christians and Other Aliens in a Strange Land, Word Books, Waco, Texas, 1973, p. 20.
[12]             Stringfellow recounts the nature and significance for him of this experience in his book My People Is the Enemy, an Autobiographical Polemic, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York, 1964.
[13]             Stringfellow, William, Instead of Death, 1967 ed., Seabury Press, p. 5; quoted in Kellermann, op. cit., p. 2.
[14]             Stringfellow, My People Is the Enemy, supra, p. 3.
[15]             Id., p. 4.
[16]             Barth, Markus K., “The Letter of Paul to the Ephesians,” The Oxford Companion to the Bible,, The New Oxford Annotated Biblical Reference Library, CD Rom version, Oxford University Press, 1996.
[17]             Stringfellow, An Ethic for Christians and Other Aliens in a Strange Land, supra, p. 78.  Kellermann says that this work “articulates most completely [Stringfellow’s] theology of the powers.”  Kellermann, op. cit., p. 3.  Many of the quotes used in this paper are from this work, which for convenience I will henceforth cite as Stringfellow, Ethic.
[18]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p. 110.
[19]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p. 109.
[20]             Stringfellow, Ethic,, p. 110.
[21]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p. 110.
[22]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p. 79.
[23]             Quoted at Kellermann, op. cit., p. 194, quoting from Stringfellow, William, Free in Obedience, The Radical Christian Life,, Seabury Press, 1964.  Kellermann calls this work Stringfellow’s “seminal treatment of the principalities and the ethics of freedom.”  Kellermann, op. cit., p. 2.
[24]             Id.
[25]             Stringfellow, Ethic, pp. 79-80.
[26]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p. 80.
[27]             Quoted in Kellermann, op. cit., p. 194, from Freedom in Obedience, supra.
[28]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p. 76.
[29]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p. 80.
[30]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p. 81.
[31]             Id.
[32]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p. 68.  The Gospel passage Stringfellow cited here is the report of the seventy when they returned to Jesus of how even demons submitted to them when they ministered in his name.
[33]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p. 70.
[34]             Kellermann, op. cit., p. 199, quoting from Free in Obedience, supra.
[35]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p. 29.
[36]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p. 30.
[37]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p. 31.
[38]             Id.
[39]             Kellermann, op. cit., p. 200, quoting from Freedom in Obedience, op. cit.
[40]             Id.
[41]             Id., p. 202.
[42]             Although in the analysis below I stress Stringfellow’s similarity to Barth, his analysis of idolatry has a distinctly Tillichean ring to it.
[43]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p. 125.
[44]             Stringfellow, Ethic, p., 121.
[45]             I remember reading, but as I write this cannot find in my notes, a statement in which he rejects the idea that the law is in some ways beneficent because, in America at least, it acts to some extent to protect the individual from the power of the state.  He rejected that view because, he said, as a principality the law itself is ultimately an agent of death no better than any other agent of death.  I know few people as cynical about the American legal system as I am after 18 years of practicing law in it; yet Stringfellow’s total denial of any positive role for the law in society goes too far even for me.  It’s bad, but it isn’t as bad as a legal system can be.  Certainly the legal system in the old Soviet Union, which I have studied and about which I once taught at the University of Washington, was far more in bondage to the powers of death than is the American legal system.  Our system does actually, on the too rare occasions when it works the way it should, provide significant protection to individuals from the principalities.  Did Stringfellow never see that happening in his work as a lawyer?
[46]             Stringfellow had a rather odd practice of using the phrase “Word of God” when what he actually meant was simply God.  In the quotes that follow, it will help to understand God when Stringfellow says Word of God.
[47]             Stringfellow, William, A Private and Public Faith, supra, p. 40.
[48]             Id., p. 65.
[49]             Id., p. 64.
[50]             Id.
[51]             Id., p. 65.
[52]             Id., p. 66.
[53]             Id., p. 22.
[54]             Id., p. 53.
[55]             Id.
[56]             Id.
[57]             Id., p. 54.
[58]             Id., p. 28.
[59]             Id., pp. 28-29.
[60]             Id., pp. 61-62.
[61]             Ethic, pp. 142-143.
[62]             Id., p. 145.
[63]             Stringfellow had a famous encounter with Barth at the University of Chicago in 1962.  The book jacket to A Private and Public Faith quotes Barth as calling Stringfellow “the conscientious and thoughtful New York attorney who caught my attention more than any other person.”  Kellermannn reports that Barth said of Stringfellow:  “You should listen to this man!”  Kellermannn, op. cit., p. 1.