Bruxy confirmed the following points for me:
- The Church is easily wrapped up in and distracted by the attempts to make the state act more Christian, instead of helping the Church act more Christian.
- The way of Jesus is not giving up on society, but bringing change in a different way - serving from the bottom up.
- I am a Christian before and long after I am an American.
- To be a pacifist does not mean "to be passive." Pacifist means "to be working for peace."
- There is one Christian nation, the people of God, and it is a transnational nation.
- The intentional mockery and irony in the actions of Jesus's crucifiers actually reveal the truth of God's kingdom (e.g. the crown of thorns indicates suffering to which the kingdom of God does not run away from, but actually reveals the truth that God enters into our suffering).
- As citizens of the kingdom of God that are foreigners in the earthly kingdoms, our roles are to be ambassadors of the heavenly kingdom to the earthly kingdoms.
Part one:
Part two:
I have a limited knowledge of the Anabaptist tradition, but I am extremely interested in learning more. If you have any comments, other resources, or suggestions about Anabaptists, pacifism, the separation of the Church and state, or other related topics I would love to hear them in the comments.
As you may know, Bruxy works a lot with Greg Boyd's church, Woodland Hills. From time to time, Woodland Hills hosts Q&A Nights on various topics. I think you'd find the Tapestry Q&A, the Wrath and Love Q&A and the Myth of a Christian Nation Q&A very instructive.
ReplyDeleteYou can find those here: http://whchurch.org/sermons-media/other_media/qa
As for nonviolence specifically, I tried to put together an overview of the scriptural perspective here: http://theopolitical.wordpress.com/2011/01/22/christian-nonviolence-scriptural-considerations/
Finally, I contributed to a project called the Xanga Council of Christian Pacifists, where four pacifists contributed answers (not usually the same answers) to community-contributed questions. You can find that archived at xccp.xanga.com
Hope some of this helps.
Thanks for the suggestions. Currently my research has been limited to general Christian pacifism and nonviolence and relating it to the holiness traditions (specifically the Wesleyan tradition), which are not typically peace churches. It looks like these resources will help broaden my perspective. And I'm always glad to find other people with similar passions and convictions. I look forward to reading more from your blog.
ReplyDelete