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Introduction Each To Your Own Abilities Harry Potter and the Bible Acts 2:5-12  (Pentecost) God's Love Can Be Told In Many Ways (Pentecost) Giving Thanks We Are One in Christ's Family Mark 3:20-25 Who Are Your Brothers and Your Sisters? A Home Without a Father?  Not Here! Infant Baptism - Why Babies Are Important Luke 12:7 For Mothers John 15:9-17 A Mother's Day Gift  Luke 10:25-37 - The Good Samaritan James 1:23-24 Who Are You? Palm Sunday/Easter - The Greatest Easter Reminder Easter - Why Is Today The Day We Have Our Easter? Easter - Why is Jesus the Greatest of all Superheroes? Easter Egg I Easter Egg II Pentecost - The Holy Spirit I Pentecost - The Holy Spirit II Balloons and the Holy Spirit (Two Moments) The Christian Clock The Feather and the Brick The Greatest Tool God Ever Created The Plumb Line We Are Created In God's Image The Wizard of Oz God's Bakery The Parable of the Sower (Mark 4) Loaves and Fishes and the Jesus Box The Bristlecone Pine and the Bible From This Little Seed Baptism By Fire Grapes are the Path John 15 - The Vines Seeds of Faith Finding the Kingdom of God Two Magic Kingdoms The Roots of Christianity Pounding Home Our Point The Ladder of Success A Call to Arms God's Greatest Miracle Watch Out! Priceless! A Box Big Enough for God's Love How Much God Loves You Life's Party It's the Right Thing to Do The Sound of God Matthew 25:31-46 Big Ones Look Out For Little Ones Deuteronomy 8:7-18 Everything Comes From God JesusInc. and Pauls memo from Thessalonia Meet John the Baptist Remember the Chapel "He's Got the Whole World, in His Hands" What is God's Favorite Color? Room at the Table Follow Me! Turning the Tables - Getting Angry Jesus Style! God's Love Eclipses All! How to Celebrate Jesus with Music Jesus' Love is a Hoop! Jesus' Love is a Slinky Merry Christmas! In October? Romans 3:19-28 Jesus Forgives Us Our Mistakes Giving Thanks Luke 3:4-5 Prepare the Way Construction Company Karl Barth and Kids (Jesus Loves Me, This I Know) How to Build a "Jesus Box" Remote Control The Sound of Two Fingers Clapping 1 Corin 12: 12 - 27 The Heart of the Church Exodus 34:29-35, Luke  9:28-36 Shine Like Jesus! Acts 11:1-18 Peter's Vision CHRIST IS ATTRACTIVE TO ALL
THE JUST WAR THEORY

Taken from Kingdom Ethics by Glen Stassen and David Gushee, InterVarsity Press, 2003. Click here to purchase the book from Amazon.com

The Just War Theory, originally written in the 4th century and updated through history, is just as vital today as it was in the time of the Christian Roman Empire. Although this is a very abridged version, the words are taken verbatim from the text unless (noted).


From Kingdom Ethics:
The Just War Theory makes the logical point that in order to justify the killing that occurs in war, there must be a reason so important that it overrides the truth that killing people is wrong.

The moral theory of the Just War “begins with the presumption which binds all Christians: we should do no harm to our neighbors; how we treat our enemy is the key test of whether we love our neighbor; and the possibility of taking even one human life is a prospect we should consider in fear and trembling.”

The reasons come in the form of criteria for when a war is just. All Christians – and others – need to know and remember the eight criteria of Just War Theory. Only if we know the rules that determine when war is just or unjust can we exercise our conscientious responsibility in deciding whether to support or oppose a ware which a government proposes to wage on our behalf.

1. Just Cause. This includes the stopping of a massacre of large numbers of people and stopping the systematic and long-term violation of the human rights of life, liberty and community.

Some say that only the defense of one country from attack by another counts as just cause for war.

Some add the criterion that the side wagering a "just war" must have a comparatively more just cause than the other side, but most everyone thinks their own cause is more just than the other side’s. Therefore we stay with the more objective definition (listed above).

2. Just Authority. Constitutional processes must be followed, so the people who will pay with their lives and resources will be represented in the decision. Furthermore, the approval of the United Nations or a representative international body or coalition should generally be sought.
For these two kinds of just authority to function, both government truthfulness and freedom of the press are required so that people can judge situations accurately. Deceitful authority is unjust authority, especially when the deceit is in the service of getting people killed.

3. Last Resort. All means of negotiation, conflict resolution and prevention must be exhausted before resorting to war.

4. Just Intention (Final Cause or Future Aim). “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.”

5. Probability of Success. “It is wrong to enter into a war that will kill many people … in order to achieve a more important goal, if we will quite surely lose and not achieve that goal, and all those people will die in vain.”

6. Proportionality of Cost. “Proportionality requires that the total good achieved by a victory will…outweigh the total evil and suffering that the war will cause. No one should prescribe a cure that is worse than the disease.”

7. Clear Announcement. The government that is about to make war must announce its intention to make war and the conditions for avoiding it. Stipulating the conditions for avoiding war enables the other side to know what it would take to avoid or stop the war.

8. The War Must be Fought by Just Means. (U)sing the huge arsenals of nuclear weapons would cause far worse destruction than any alleged gain, and so any nuclear war would be unjust.
Forbid(den) is “direct, intentional attacks on nonmilitary persons (and) individuals not actively contributing to the conflict.” Bombing a military target like a tank or a weapons factory may have the indirect effect of killing some civilians. That is a realistic and allowable consequence of war (though nonetheless horrible), so long as it truly is unintentional and indirect, and its cost in lives is proportional to the gain.

HOW NOT TO ARGUE FOR THE JUST WAR THEORY
Use of Just War Theory must be based on nonviolence and justice. A Christian who supports Just War Theory should see it as the most effective way to minimize violence and injustice, not merely to rationalize making war. “Just War Theory does not try to justify war. Rather it tries to bring war under the control of justice.”