Every time a truce between David Bentley Hart and me has been broken, it has been broken by him. And more than once, friendly and fence-mending exchanges in private have been followed by a public shivving on his part. The man has no honor. In a new documentary, he casually remarks that “Feser… really is a person for whom Christianity is mostly about, you know, killing people or, or you know, it’s about beating them.” The surrounding remarks are no less nasty. (Readers who don’t want to watch the entire thing can fast forward to about 57 minutes into it.)
The truth is
that I have merely defended the teaching of scripture and two millennia of
Christian tradition that capital punishment and corporal punishment can, under
some circumstances, be justifiable. The
truth is that this is a small part of my work, the vast bulk of which (as
anyone who follows it or peruses my list of publications can easily verify) is
devoted to other and unrelated matters. The
truth is that I have consistently and vigorously condemned the excessive use of
violence, from Dresden and Hiroshima to Gaza. And the truth is also that I have, as Hart
well knows, done my part to try to help him when he was in need.
None of this
deters him from issuing the grave calumny that for me, Christianity is mostly
about killing and beating people.
The man has no honor.