God
and War: What the Bible Says About the Just War Principle
godandscience.org
by Gerald Draayer
Introduction
Most people would
probably agree that war is evil. It's a destroyer of life, families,
and in many cases the innocent. War does not just cause physical
torment, but much emotional torment, as well.
Root cause of war
Before we go further
into this I believe we need to understand the origin of war, the root
of the problem. War, according to the Bible, is not caused by God but
is rather the result of sin in the world (Genesis 4:5-8, Matthew
15:19, Mark 7:21-23, Romans 3:10-18).
Even the book of James
clearly reminds us that the ultimate cause of war is lust and desire
or sin:
"From whence come
wars and fightings among you? Come they not hence, even of your lusts
that war in your members? Ye lust, and have not: ye kill, and desire
to have, and cannot obtain: ye fight and war, yet ye have not,
because ye ask not." (James 4:1-2)
So it seems that since
sin is still in the world, open war is probably inevitable and is
upon us whether we like it or not. Not all evil can be avoided. Yet
the unbeliever probably won’t acknowledge this, (that being sin in
the world).
Our attitude toward
war
So what should be our
attitude toward war? If war is the result of sin, then the obvious
thing to do is stop sin (the root of the problem), which will stop
war. But how is this possible in a fallen world? For the Christian,
war is ultimately a spiritual battle and not carnal as reflected in 2
Corinthians:
For though we live in
the world, we do not wage war as the world does. The weapons we fight
with are not the weapons of the world. On the contrary, they have
divine power to demolish strongholds. We demolish arguments and every
pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we
take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ. (2
Corinthians 10:3-5)
In a similar vein is
the description in Ephesians 6:11-17 of the spiritual armor to be put
on by the Christian warrior in the service of God. Ultimately, the
Christian is to try to be at peace with all other people (Romans
12:18).
God's view of war
Apparently, God is not
too happy about war either. I have heard many people claim that God
is simply a warmonger picking fights with those that oppose him.
Nothing could be further from the truth. Only under extreme
conditions was a war ever sanctioned and not after many years of
warnings (Jeremiah 26:4-6). In fact, even the mighty King David
himself was not allowed to build a temple for God because he was a
warrior and had shed blood in wars (1 Chronicles 28:3).
God it seems does not
like the death of anyone.
• For he does not
willingly bring affliction or grief to the children of men.
(Lamentations 3:33)
• Say to them, 'As
surely as I live, declares the Sovereign LORD, I take no pleasure in
the death of the wicked, but rather that they turn from their ways
and live. Turn! Turn from your evil ways! Why will you die, O house
of Israel? (Ezekiel 33: 11)
•Rebuke the wild
beasts dwelling among the reeds, the herd of bulls (the leaders) with
the calves of the peoples; trample underfoot those who lust for
tribute money; scatter the people who delight in war. (Psalm 68:30)
• He maketh wars to
cease unto the end of the earth; he breaketh the bow, and cutteth the
spear in sunder; he burneth the chariot in the fire. (Psalm 46:9)
• Wisdom is better
than weapons of war, but one sinner destroys much good. (Ecclesiastes
9:18)
Contrary to popular
belief, carnal war it seems is frowned upon by the believer and by
God. But this raises a question. We know that war is the result of
sin and that it is essentially wrong or evil, but what should be our
response when a nation like Communist Anti-Christian Russia (in WWII)
rapes, pillages, and plunders another nation for profit or genocide?
I think that Gleason L. Archer (in the Encyclopedia of Bible
Difficulties) expresses the argument well:
"How could God be
called 'good' if He forbade His people to protect their wives from
ravishment and strangulation by drunken marauders, or to resist
invaders who have come to pick up their children and dash out their
brains against the wall? No policy would give freer rein to
wickedness and crime than a complete surrender of the right of
self-defense on the part of the law-abiding members of society. No
more effective way of promoting the cause of Satan and the powers of
hell could be devised than depriving law-abiding citizens of all
right of self-defense. It is hard to imagine how any deity could be
thought 'good' who would ordain such a policy of supine surrender to
evil as that advocated by pacifism. All possibility of an ordered
society would be removed on the abolition of any sort of police
force. No nation could retain its liberty or preserve the lives of
its citizens if it were prevented from maintaining any sort of army
for its defense. It is therefore incumbent on a 'good God' to include
the right of self-defense as the prerogative of His people. He would
not be good at all if He were to turn the world over to the horrors
of unbridled cruelty perpetrated by violent and bloody criminals or
the unchecked aggression of invading armies.
Not only is a proper
and responsible policy of self-defense taught by Scripture from
Genesis to Revelation, but there were occasions when God even
commissioned His people to carry out judgment on corrupt and
degenerate heathen nations and the complete extermination of cities
like Jericho (cf. the article on "Was Joshua justified in
exterminating the population of Jericho?" in connection with
Joshua 6:21). The rules of war laid down in Deuteronomy 20
represented a control of justice, fairness, and kindness in the use
of the sword, and, as such, they truly did reflect the goodness of
God.
Special hardship
conditions were defined as a ground for excusing individual soldiers
from military duty until those conditions were cleared up
(Deuteronomy 20:5-7). Even those who had no such excuse but were
simply afraid and reluctant to fight were likewise allowed to go home
(Deuteronomy 20:8). Unlike the heathen armies, who might attack a
city without giving it an opportunity to surrender on terms (cf. 1
Samuel 11:2-3, 30:1-2), the armies of Israel were required to grant a
city an opportunity to surrender without bloodshed and enter into
vassalage to the Hebrews before proceeding to a full-scale siege and
destruction. Even then, the women and children were to be spared from
death and were to be cared for by their captors (Deuteronomy 20:14).
Only in the case of the degenerate and depraved inhabitants of the
Promised Land of Canaan itself was there to be total destruction; a
failure to carry this out would certainly result in the undermining
of the moral and spiritual standards of Israelite society, according
to Deuteronomy 20:16-18. (This corrupting influence was later
apparent in the period of the judges (Judges 2:2-3, 11-15)"1
I think Archer makes
some very good points. When we look at war in the Bible, such as the
verses in Deuteronomy, they are actually defensive in nature and not
offensive. These areas of the Hittites, Amorites, Canaanites,
Perizzites, Hivites and Jebusites were morally corrupt and would have
destroyed the Israelis, if left alive. God did not set the Israelis
to conquer other nations this way. If you will notice, He didn't say
now after that go into Asia, Europe, and Africa and take those ones
out too. There has always been a buffer zone around the country of
Israel because this land was promised to them by God. In order to
keep the borders clean from attack and moral corruption they had to
defend themselves. Hence, the creation of a buffer zone. It should be
noted that the Israelis were to make peace before they went into
battle, as well (Deuteronomy 20:10).
Lord of war
I believe God is
against war, even though he allows war under certain circumstances.
We have police officers today who carry guns don't we? Should we say
that anyone who wishes to protect the innocent by law shouldn't be
allowed to carry weapons? Is it evil for them to use guns against
lawbreakers? In some circumstances people get killed by these guns.
From this reasoning, that is God's defensive nature, it does appear
that God could also be considered a Lord of War:
•The LORD is a man of
war: the LORD is his name. (Exodus 15:3)
•For there fell down
many slain, because the war was of God. And they dwelt in their
steads until the captivity. (1 Chronicles 5:22)
•There is… a time
to love and a time to hate, a time for war and a time for peace.
(Ecclesiastes 3:8)
The just war
The key thing to
remember is that the just war theory does not try to justify war,
rather it tries to bring war under the control of justice so that,
when its consistently practiced by all parties in a dispute, it would
eliminate war altogether. With that, I'd like to turn to the book,
War: Four Christian Views.
"With these
preliminaries completed, we can turn to a fuller statement of the
just war view. This can best be given by means of the following rules
which spell out the application of justice to war.
1.Just cause. All
aggression is condemned; only defensive war is legitimate.
2.Just intention. The
only legitimate intention is to secure a just peace for all involved.
Neither revenge nor conquest nor economic gain nor ideological
supremacy are justified.
3.Last resort. War may
only be entered upon when all negotiations and compromise have been
tried and failed.
4.Formal declaration.
Since the use of military force is the prerogative of governments,
not of private individuals, a state of war must be officially
declared by the highest authorities.
5.Limited objectives.
If the purpose is peace, then unconditional surrender or the
destruction of a nation's economic or political institutions is an
unwarranted objective.
6.Proportionate means.
The weaponry and the force used should be limited to what is needed
to repel the aggression and deter future attacks, that is to say to
secure a just peace. Total or unlimited war is ruled out.
7.Noncombatant
immunity. Since war is an official act of government, only those who
are officially agents of government may fight, and individuals not
actively contributing to the conflict (including POW's and casualties
as well as civilian nonparticipants) should be immune from attack."2
With all this, we also
know some day in the future that God will not allow any more wars.
Notice in Isaiah that God "will teach us of his ways, and we
will walk in his paths." The result of this is that people
"shall not learn war any more" (in other words, war is
learned by people, not that God wants it).
And many people shall
go and say, Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of the LORD, to
the house of the God of Jacob; and he will teach us of his ways, and
we will walk in his paths: for out of Zion shall go forth the law,
and the word of the LORD from Jerusalem. And he shall judge among the
nations, and shall rebuke many people: and they shall beat their
swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruninghooks: nation
shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war
any more. (Isaiah 2:3-4)
Christians should not
desire war, but neither are Christians to oppose the government God
has placed in authority over them (Romans 13:1-4; 1 Peter 2:17). The
most important thing we can be doing in a time of war is to be
praying for godly wisdom for our leaders, praying for the safety of
our military, praying for quick resolution to conflicts, and praying
for a minimum of casualties among civilians on both sides
(Philippians 4:6-7).
This anti war example
was fused into Jesus Christ who did not defend himself when
questioned by his persecutors (in a court of law), instead he faced
them head on, with no weapons, and was turned into a bloody mess.
Although Christians are
not to oppose the government and its authority, it doesn't mean that
we have to agree with them every time. For example, regarding the
Iraq war, Christians ask, "Was this war justified?" In some
ways yes, others no, but I'm not willing to say that God had a hand
in this decision... We just don't know.
On a final note, it’s
interesting to find that unlike other nations and their codes, you
won’t find how to make weapons of war in the Bible, you might find
a recipe on how to make bread, but not a weapon.
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