Why are there so many public pronouncements and so much
public argument about the morality of what we do in private life  and so few about  the morality of what governments and big
business and  armies do ? A lot of talk
about gay marriage – or gay people – and little about drones and invasions, and
banks tempting us to spend beyond our means ? 
There is one explanation that Christians might  find unwelcome .  Jesus Christ 
made clear what his followers should do – renew the face of the earth,
change its habits, obey law but don’t let law overcome generosity; the world
needs changing and you can change it – it will need  vigour and wisdom that are superhuman, even  divine, certainly,  but it can be done just because that superhuman
, divine vigour and wisdom are 
available. So these Christians set out into the broad world happy and
willing, full of confidence in the  divine power they had inherited. And  some of them believed the world as they knew
it was going to end soon and therefore their task was to make sure it was renewed
soon and  fit to end gloriously. 
Then they got a taste of Corinth. And Rome. And Athens ;  of sailors in  Mediterranean harbours wary not to be caught
in the cargo investment scams or lost in leaky boats, Athenians who said, We
must talk to you again sometime, but declined to talk now, Galatians who still
fought with each other  even after they
became Christians, the power of emperors and kings who could kill with a word not
because people were bad but because they were good. These Christians  did their best to renew the face of the earth,
but did many of them  lose courage and
narrow their view not of what should be done but of what could be done with such
a world plagued as it was with so many things going wrong,   and worse,  so many things wilfully made to go wrong? 
If the conversion of the world in so short a time was too
daunting , though, the ideal of personal perfection was still there and
Christians held on to it. Some went to desert places to achieve personal
holiness – it was as if they had taken a long sad look at the world and said,
All I can do for you is go away  and pray
for you. For them the concept of retreating from the world took the place  of staying in with the world , to become  holy apart rather than  with common effort. The scholar Jerome looked
for a deserted place, translated scriptures and urged intense personal
holiness, he was one  retiring Christian genius
among many. 
Looking at what is happening today one can understand their
dilemma. And in any case , conversion of the world begins with the conversion
of oneself.  That might explain why some
Christians  seem to be afraid of  what they call a “social gospel” and who
sometimes rebuke their fellow Christians with being more concerned with  social action than with individual beliefs. Right
through the history of Christianity there runs  
the idea  not only that there is  a struggle between good and evil out there in
the markets and  harbours and even  in homes, but there is a struggle inside each
person and perhaps that should be dealt with first. Or only. Whether early on
with Manichaeism or later with Jansenism or now with the idea of the world, the
flesh and the devil winning , this war between good and evil has to be waged,
it is said,  between the spirit and the
flesh in each person . And therefore….where do we start? Perhaps, though,if  the war starts  there it may end there  too, and the face of the earth may stay unrenewed.
Maybe. Maybe. 
On the other hand, it is an old lesson in old Scriptures
that even an angry God will spare a whole city if there is even a handful of
good people in it. And that thought must have made many a tired Christian heave
a sigh of relief and leave off despairing.  
Clearly it still does.
 
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