Christian Peace Theology - An Introduction
I wrote this short piece for the Christian Student Movement website.
Christian peace theology is founded upon the premise that if Jesus is who the church has traditionally proclaimed him to be: the Word made flesh, God incarnate, then the example of his life and teachings reveals the true nature of God and serves as a pattern for Christian life and ethics. The way of Jesus is made known to us both through the biblical witness and, by the Holy Spirit, through the presence of the living Word with us and within us. Jesus calls us to be peacemakers (Matthew 5:9), to resist evil non-violently (Matthew 5:38-42) and to love our enemies (Matthew 5:43-44). He teaches that the Kingdom of God does not operate by the violent ways of the world (John 18:36) and rejects the use of violence to defend himself (Matthew 26:51-52, Luke 22:51, John 18:11).
Christian peace theology is founded upon the premise that if Jesus is who the church has traditionally proclaimed him to be: the Word made flesh, God incarnate, then the example of his life and teachings reveals the true nature of God and serves as a pattern for Christian life and ethics. The way of Jesus is made known to us both through the biblical witness and, by the Holy Spirit, through the presence of the living Word with us and within us. Jesus calls us to be peacemakers (Matthew 5:9), to resist evil non-violently (Matthew 5:38-42) and to love our enemies (Matthew 5:43-44). He teaches that the Kingdom of God does not operate by the violent ways of the world (John 18:36) and rejects the use of violence to defend himself (Matthew 26:51-52, Luke 22:51, John 18:11).
This
message of peace is also present in the teachings of the apostles who note that,
while violent conflict comes from human greed and the desire to own and control
things (James 4:1-2), the way of Jesus offers a path to peace and
reconciliation (Ephesians 2:14-18). They argue that Jesus’ followers should not
seek to overcome evil by using evil means (Romans 12: 17 & 21, 1 Peter
3:11), but should instead live in harmony with each other and seek peace with all
people (Romans 12: 18, Romans 14:19, 2 Corinthians 13:11, Hebrews 12:14). They
point out that the fruits of the Holy Spirit include love and peace (Romans
13:10, Galatians 5:22, James 3:17-18) and that God’s kingdom will be realised
by spiritual struggle and not by violence or coercion (2 Corinthians 10:4).
Peace theology draws on the peaceable witness of the early church and notes
that this commitment was largely lost in the fourth century with the
development of Christendom when Christianity became the official religion of
the Roman Empire. Christendom tended to side-line the ethics of Jesus in favour
of a different set of standards and it was left to marginalised and persecuted
groups such as the Anabaptists and the Quakers to maintain a peace church
witness to the way of Jesus, often at great cost.
However, with the decline of
Christendom, peace church perspectives are becoming increasingly visible within
modern Christian theology. For example, satisfaction and penal substitution
theories of atonement, which have dominated Western Christianity for the past
thousand years, are being subject to criticism because of the way they portray God
as an angry and violent Father who required his Son to endure savage punishment
and death in order to forgive humanity. Instead, drawing on the Christus Victor
motif of the early church, new models of atonement are being developed, in
which the Jesus’ death and resurrection are understood as a divine victory over
the power of evil and violence, offering all people liberation from these forces
of darkness and death. Jesus shows us how God overcomes evil: not by violent
retribution, but by patient endurance, forgiveness and suffering love.
Peace
theology proposes that, however violent and chaotic the world appears to be,
this is both temporary and illusory: It will not be the final word. At a deeper
level, the order that God has given the creation is good, fruitful, loving and
harmonious. The fulfillment of this divine order is presented in the Bible by
the vision of shalom, where humans live in right relationship with God, with
each other and with the rest of creation. Jesus has been victorious over the
forces of darkness and death and, with the pouring out of the Holy Spirit at
Pentecost, he is working within creation to finally eradicate the evil of violence
and injustice and establish his kingdom of shalom. Christians are therefore
called to be partners in this process, modelling the way of peace as individuals
and in community and acting as agents of peace-making and reconciliation within
the world.
References
for Further Study
Baker, Sharon L (2013) Executing God: Rethinking Everything You’ve
Been Taught about Salvation and the Cross (Westminster John Knox)
Hardin, Michael (2013) The Jesus-Driven Life: Reconnecting Humanity
with Jesus (JDL Press)
Jersak, Brad and Hardin, Michael (2007) Stricken by God: Nonviolent Identification
and the Victory of Christ (Wm. B. Eerdmans)
Moules, Noel (2012) Fingerprints
of Fire…Footprints of Peace: A Spiritual Manifesto from a Jesus Perspective (Circle
Books)
Nayler, James (1657) The Lamb’s War against the Man of Sin in ‘The Works of James Nayler’, vol. 4 (Quaker Heritage Press)
Ruether, Rosemary (1998) Introducing Redemption in Christian Feminism
(Sheffield Academic Press)
Swartley, W M
(2006) Covenant of Peace: The Missing Peace in New Testament
Theology and Ethics (W B Eerdmans)
Warren, James (2012) Compassion or Apocalypse? A Comprehensible
Guide to the Thought of Rene Girard (Christian Alternative)
Weaver, J Denny (2001) The Nonviolent Atonement (Wm. B.
Eeerdmans)
Weaver, J Denny (2013) The Nonviolent God (Wm. B. Eeerdmans)
Weddle, M. B. (2001) Walking the Way of Peace: Quaker Pacifism in the Seventeenth Century (Oxford University Press)
Wink, Walter (2000) The Powers That Be: Theology for the New Millennium (Bantam Doubleday Dell)
Weddle, M. B. (2001) Walking the Way of Peace: Quaker Pacifism in the Seventeenth Century (Oxford University Press)
Wink, Walter (2000) The Powers That Be: Theology for the New Millennium (Bantam Doubleday Dell)
Yoder-Neufeld, Thomas (2011) Jesus and the Subversion of Violence:
Wrestling with the New Testament Evidence (SPCK)
Yoder, John Howard (1973) The Politics of Jesus
(Eerdmans)
Yoder, Perry (1989) Shalom: The
Bible’s Word for Salvation & Justice (Evangel)
Simply excellent!
ReplyDeleteThank you friend Noel! I forgot to include 'Fingerprints of Fire' in the further reading list. I will rectify that. It really should be there. Come Lord, Come Shalom! Stuart.
ReplyDeleteI think I only go along with half of this, because I don't accept that the world is violent and chaotic. Rather, I'm with Pinker in that I think we are living in unprecedentedly peaceful and non-violent times. One of the reasons for this is, as you say, that Christians are called to be peaceable, as indeed are all people of good will. So there is a process that has always been going on. In a sense the kingdom of shalom is already upon us; we just have to see it.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your blog, which puts me in touch with all sorts of interesting stuff I was previously unaware of. It's a great education for me.
Thank you Mark. I agree that the kingdom of Shalom is already among us. I also think that in all sorts of ways compassion for the 'victims' of violence and injustice is growing within human culture (see the blog post on Rene Girard. You might find Anthony Bartlett's book 'Virtually Christian' gives support to your view. The reason I am not quite as optimistic is that, although our violence may be waning slowly, our capacity to destroy has grown massively. War and destruction of ecosystems pose a serious threat to the survival of our species and many others with us. Shalom, Stuart.
ReplyDeleteI've had a further thought. Christianity is essentially communitarian, and part of the community is the government of the day. Reading your blog about Rachel Muers' Quaker Testimony Viewed Through the Lens of Theological Ethics and having blogged myself about Tom Paine, I really think that Quakers need to lose the anti-establishment attitude and recognise that their role, and that of faith groups generally, is gracious moral leadership rather than finger-pointing.
ReplyDelete