"A Great Irony of History": the Cross and Peace by Wayne Northey
Ever since Clark Pinnock taught
an interterm course in 1975 at Regent College, entitled “The Politics
of Jesus”, for close to half of my life, I have been drawn to the
nonviolent Cross of Jesus. Pinnock later taught a full-semester
course by the same title, based upon a then recent publication by Mennonite
theologian John Howard Yoder, The Politics of
Jesus (1972 & 1994), that theologian Stanley Hauerwas believes
is the most important publication on ethics of the twentieth century.
What do I mean by “violence” in this talk? A very succinct definition is given in Marjorie Suchocki’s The Fall To Violence (1994): “… at its base, violence is the destruction of well-being (Suchocki, 1994, p. 85, italics added.)” Violence is the destruction of well-being.
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