Ellul walks us through a theological understanding of the city. He does so in a way which is far different than the pro-urbanism which many evangelicals have. The bible starts in a garden and ends in a city, but we only end up in a city because of God's electing grace. For the city is an act of man's rebellion against God instead of trusting in God alone. The city is "not a simple instrument with no determining factors involved. The city is an almost indistinguishable mixture of spiritual power and man's work. It has a very definite spiritual character, an orientation towards evil and away from good which in no way depends on man."
Cain, the first murderer, is also the first person in scripture to build a city. In Cain’s building of a city Ellul sees a pattern that all other attempts to build a city will follow. After Cain killed Abel, he feared he would be killed for what he had done to his brother. The Lord tells Cain he will protect him and puts a mark on him. After receiving this mark from the Lord Cain leaves the presence of the Lord, goes east to settle in Nod, and then he builds a city for his son. All of these aspects are important in understanding what scripture teaches about the city. Cain goes East, which symbolically means faithfulness and the “road man takes in his futile search for eternity.” God does not cast Cain out from his presence. Cain goes east to seek his own destiny away from God. This leads to the building of the city Enoch. God had promised Cain he would not die, but God did not leave Cain a visible reminder of his promise. Cain had to believe the Lord would preserve him by faith. This is intolerable for Cain, who needs security. This leads to the building of the first city, and a place for Cain to find security apart from the Lord. This may seem like a stretched interpretation for one story, but Ellul shows this is the case for all of the cities man builds. All building of cities is an attempt to find security in something other than God.
From Cain Ellul further follows this thread through the rest of the narratives, the prophets, Jerusalem, Jesus, and finally the New Jerusalem. The city continues to be used as a tool of rebellion for man. It is only in David and God’s choice of Jerusalem where the city begins to see redemption. In Jerusalem we see God taking a foothold in the place of man’s rebellion. God’s election of Jerusalem highlights the city as both elect and reprobate. Jerusalem is both the holy city and of no inherent importance. She exists only to testify to the new Jerusalem. The city is condemned, because she is an act of man’s idolatry, but the city is also chosen as the place where God will dwell in the New Heavens and New Earth. Even the city, in her rebellion, cannot stop God from breaking in to redeem humanity.
I found Ellul's interpretation of the city as a furtherance of Cain's rebellion thoroughly convincing and powerful. He shows clearly man's rebellion and attempt to find security by his own means away from God through the city. All of man’s actions to find security in himself is idolatry, and rebellion from God. In scripture, we see this is the idea of the city, and in contemporary settings we can quickly jump to technique.
To understand Ellul’s works we need to read his sociological work alongside his theological work. Each sociological work is an accompaniment to the theological work, which together let us grasp the total meaning he is striving for. The Meaning of the City is the counterpart to The Technological Society, and we can gain understanding of The Meaning of the City by understanding his portrayal of technique. Technique fits with the biblical depiction of the city of Cain. Technique is man’s attempt to find security, comfort, health, and wholeness in the word without needing God. Technique, and the city, is man’s attempt to reject God. This understanding leaves us in an uncomfortable place. For everywhere is now a city, and the world is governed by technique. How then can we live in a world designed around idolatry and rebellion against God without participating in man’s rebellion? Ellul answers this question by the person and work of Jesus. Jesus has allowed for us to no longer be involved in the idolatry of the city, but as is typical for Ellul, the specifics are left up to us to determine. In order to not be involved in the idolatry of the city, or technique, we can use live in the city and use technique, but we can never hope in the city or technique. Which is far harder than most of us assume.
I had not encountered this negative understanding of the city before reading The Meaning of the City, and Ellul convinced me. He looked at Cain, the judgment on cities, the spiritual powers over cities, and engaged with the prophets and the NT, all of which provided evidence to back up his claim. But I was not completely convinced that the city only has a negative purpose in scripture outside of God's election. I found Ellul's diagnosis too one sided (and this is the most one-sided of all of Ellul's books I have read so far).
One significant area of scripture where Ellul did not engage with was the Law. Here I believe we find hints of a more positive view of the city. As James B. Jordan points out the jubilee law did not apply inside the cities, and the logic of jubilee seems designed to force foreigners to go to the cities. In addition, the cities are slightly holier places than the countryside. The Levites do not live in the countryside but live only in cities as they have no land portions. We also see in the leprosy laws how the city is holier than the country. If you have leprosy you had to leave the city, but you did not have to leave the country. None of these parts of scripture are related to the curse or rebellion of Cain. Something more is at play in the theology of the city than Ellul is able to show, even though what he does show is thought provoking.