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[Dr Walter Wink is Professor of Biblical Interpretation
at Auburn Theological Seminary in
New York City. Previously, he was a parish
minister and taught at Union Theological Seminary
in New York City. In 1989-1990 he was a
Peace Fellow at the United States Institute of Peace. This essay is posted
with Dr Wink's permission.] Walter Wink's web site is: http://www.WalterWink.com
The new reality Jesus proclaimed was nonviolent. That much is
clear, not just from the Sermon on the Mount, but his entire life and teaching
and, above all, the way he faced his death. His was not merely a
tactical or pragmatic nonviolence seized upon because nothing else would
have worked against the Roman empire's near monopoly on violence.
Rather, he saw nonviolence as a direct corollary of the nature of God and
of the new reality emerging in the world from God. In a verse quoted
more than any other from the New Testament during the church's first four
centuries, Jesus taught that God loves everyone, and values all, even those
who make themselves God's enemies. We are therefore to do likewise
(Matt. 5:45; cf. Luke 6:35). The Reign of God, the peaceable Kingdom,
is (despite the monarchical terms) an order in which the inequity, violence,
and male supremacy characteristic of dominator societies are superseded.
Thus nonviolence is not just a means to the Kingdom of God; it is a quality
of the
Kingdom itself. Those who live nonviolently are already manifesting
the transformed reality of the divine order now, even under the conditions
of what I call the Domination System.
The idea of nonviolent resistance was not
new. The Hebrew midwives, the Greek tragedians, and Jainism. Buddhism,
Hinduism, Lao-Tzu, and Judaism were all to various degrees conversant with
nonviolence as a way of life and, in some cases, even as a tactic of social
change. What was new was the early church's inference from Jesus'
teaching that nonviolence is the only way, that war itself must be renounced.
The idea of peace and the more general rejection of violence can be found
before Christianity and in other cultures, says Peter Brock, but nowhere
else do we find practical anti-militarism leading to the refusal of military
service.
When, beginning with the emperor Constantine,
the Christian church began receiving referential treatment by the empire
that it had once so steadfastly opposed, war, which had once seemed so
evil, now appeared to many to be a necessity for preserving and propagating
the gospel.
Christianity's weaponless victory over the
Roman empire eventuated in the weaponless victory of the empire over the
gospel. No defeat is so well-disguised as victory! In the year
303, Diocletian forbade any member of the Roman army to be a Christian.
By the year 416, no one could be a member of the Roman army unless he was
a Christian.
It fell to Augustine (d. 430) to make the
accommodation of Christianity to its new status as a privileged religion
in support of the state. Augustine believed, on the basis of Matt.
5:38-42, that Christians had no right to defend themselves from violence.
But he identified a problem which no earlier theologian had faced: what
Augustine regarded as the loving obligation to use violence if necessary
to defend the innocent against evil. Drawing on Stoic just war principles,
he articulated the position that was to dominate church teaching from that
time right up to the present. Ever since, Christians on the left and on
the right, in the East and in the West, have found it exceedingly easy
to declare as "just" and divinely ordained any wars their governments desired
to wage for purely national interests. As a consequence, the world
regards Christians as among the most warlike factions on the face of the
earth. And little wonder; two-thirds of the people killed in the
last 500 years died at the hands of fellow-Christians in Europe,
to say nothing of those whom Christians killed in the course of colonizing
the rest of the world.
As Gandhi once quipped, "The only people on
earth who do not see Christ and His teachings as nonviolent are Christians."
The time has come to look again to the rock from which we were hewn.
And the key text remains Jesus' statement about resisting evil.
38You have heard that
it was said, 'An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.' 39But
I say to you, Do not resist an evildoer. But if anyone strikes you
on the right cheek, turn the other also; 40and if
anyone wants to sue you and take your coat, give your cloak as well; 41and
if anyone forces you to go one mile, go also the second mile. 42Give
to everyone who begs from you, and do not refuse anyone who wants to borrow
from you. (Matt. 5:38-42 NRSV; see also Luke 6:29-30).
Christians have, on the whole, simply ignored
this teaching. It has seemed impractical, masochistic, suicidal--an
invitation to bullies and spouse-batterers to wipe up the floor with their
supine Christian victims. Some who have tried to follow Jesus' words
have understood it to mean non-resistance: let the oppressor perpetrate
evil unopposed. Even scholars have swallowed the eat-humble-pie reading
of this text: "It is better to surrender everything and go through life
naked than to insist on one's legal rights," to cite only one of scores
of these commentators from Augustine right up to the present.
Interpreted thus, the passage has become the basis for systematic training
in cowardice, as Christians are taught to acquiesce in evil.
Cowardice is scarcely a term one associates
with Jesus. Either he failed to make himself clear, or we have misunderstood
him. There is plenty of cause to believe the latter. Jesus
is not forbidding self-defense here, only the use of violence. Nor
is he legitimating the abandonment of nonviolence in order to defend the
neighbor. He is rather showing us a way that can be used by individuals
or large movements to intervene on behalf of justice for our neighbors--nonviolently.
The classical interpretation of Matt 5:38-42//Luke
6:29-30 suggests two, and only two, possibilities for action in the face
of evil: fight or flight. Either we resist evil, or we do not resist it.
Jesus seemingly says that we are not to resist it; so, it would appear,
he commands us to be docile, inert, compliant, to abandon all desire for
justice, to allow the oppressor to walk all over us. "Turn the other
cheek" is taken to enjoin becoming a doormat for Jesus, to be trampled
without protest. "Give your undergarment as well" has encouraged
people to go limp in the face of injustice and hand over the last thing
they own. "Going the second mile" has been turned into a platitude
meaning nothing more than "extend yourself." Rather than encourage
the oppressed to counteract their oppressors, these revolutionary statements
have been transformed into injunctions to collude in one's own despoiling.
But that interpretation excluded a third alternative:
active nonviolent resistance. The word translated "resist" is itself
problematic; what translators have failed to note is how frequently anthistemi
is used as a military term. Resistance implies "counteractive aggression,"
a response to hostilities initiated by someone else. Liddell-Scott
defines anthistemi as to "set against esp. in battle, withstand." Ephesians
6:13 is exemplary of its military usage: "Therefore take the whole armor
of God, that you may be able to withstand [antistenai, literally, to draw
up battle ranks against the enemy] in the evil day, and having done all,
to stand [stenai, literally, to close ranks and continue to fight]."
The term is used in the LXX primarily for armed resistance in military
encounters (44 out of 71 times). Josephus uses anthistemi for
violent struggle 15 out of 17 times, Philo 4 out of 10. Jesus' answer
is set against the backdrop of the burning question of forcible resistance
to Rome. In that context, "resistance" could have only one meaning:
lethal violence.
Stasis, the noun form of stenai, means "a
stand," in the military sense of facing off against an enemy. By
extension it came to mean a "party formed for seditious purposes; sedition,
revolt." The NRSV translates stasis in Mark 15:7 as "insurrection"
(so also Luke 23:19, 25), in Acts 19:40 as "rioting," and in Acts 23:10
as "violent dissension."
In short, antistenai means more in Matt. 5:39a than
simply to "stand against" or "resist." It means to resist violently,
to revolt or rebel, to engage in an insurrection. Jesus is not encouraging
submission to evil; that would run counter to everything he did and said.
He is, rather, warning against responding to evil in kind by letting the
oppressor set the terms of our opposition. Perhaps most importantly,
he cautions us against being made over into the very evil we oppose by
adopting its methods and spirit. He is saying, in effect, Do not
mirror evil; do not become the very thing you hate. The best translation
is the Scholars Version: "Don't react violently against the one who is
evil."
In the three examples that follow in Matthew,
Jesus illustrates what he means.
Turn the Other Cheek
"If anyone strikes you on the right cheek, turn
the other also." Why the right cheek? A blow by the right fist
in that right-handed world would land on the left cheek of the opponent.
An open-handed slap would also strike the left cheek. To hit the
right cheek with a fist would require using the left hand, but in that
society the left hand was used only for unclean tasks. Even to gesture
with the left hand at Qumran carried the penalty of ten days' penance.
The only way one could naturally strike the right cheek with the right
hand would be with the back of the hand. We are dealing here with
insult, not a fistfight. The intention is clearly not to injure but
to humiliate, to put someone in his or her place. One normally did
not strike a peer thus, and if one did the fine was exorbitant. The
Mishnaic tractate Baba Qamma specifies the various fines for striking an
equal: for slugging with a fist, 4 zuz (a zuz was a day's wage); for slapping,
200 zuz; but "if [he struck him] with the back of his hand he must pay
him 400 zuz." But damages for indignity were not paid to slaves who
are struck (8:1-7).
A backhand slap was the usual way of admonishing
inferiors. Masters backhanded slaves; husbands, wives; parents, children;
men, women; Romans, Jews. We have here a set of unequal relations, in each
of which retaliation would be suicidal. The only normal response
would be cowering submission.
Part of the confusion surrounding these sayings
arises from the failure to ask who Jesus' audience was. In all three
of the examples in Matt. 5:39b-41, Jesus' listeners are not those who strike,
initiate lawsuits, or impose forced labor, but their victims ("If anyone
strikes you...wants to sue you...forces you to go one mile...").
There are among his hearers people who were subjected to these very indignities,
forced to stifle outrage at their dehumanizing treatment by the hierarchical
system of caste and class, race and gender, age and status, and as a result
of imperial occupation.
Why then does he counsel these already humiliated
people to turn the other cheek? Because this action robs the oppressor
of the power to humiliate. The person who turns the other cheek is
saying, in effect, "Try again. Your first blow failed to achieve
its intended effect. I deny you the power to humiliate me.
I am a human being just like you. Your status does not alter that
fact. You cannot demean me."
Such a response would create enormous difficulties
for the striker. Purely logistically, how would he hit the other
cheek now turned to him? He cannot backhand it with his right hand
(one only need try this to see the problem). If he hits with
a fist, he makes the other his equal, acknowledging him as a peer.
But the point of the back of the hand is to reinforce institutionalized
inequality. Even if the superior orders the person flogged for such
"cheeky" behavior (this is certainly no way to avoid conflict!), the point
has been irrevocably made. He has been given notice that this underling
is in fact a human being. In that world of honor and shaming, he
has been rendered impotent to instill shame in a subordinate.
He has been stripped of his power to dehumanize the other. As Gandhi
taught, "The first principle of nonviolent action is that of noncooperation
with everything humiliating."
Give the Undergarment
The second example Jesus gives is set in a
court of law. Someone is being sued for his outer garment.
Who would do that, and under what circumstances? The Hebrew Scriptures
provide the clues. When you make your neighbor a loan of any sort, you
shall not go into his house to fetch his pledge. You shall stand
outside, and the man to whom you make the loan shall bring the pledge out
to you. And if he is a poor man, you shall not sleep in his pledge;
when the sun goes down, you shall restore to him the pledge that he may
sleep in his cloak (himatio) and bless you....You shall not...take a widow's
garment (himation) in pledge. (Deut. 24:10-13, 17; see also Exod.
22:25-27; Amos 2:7-8; Ezek.18:5-9.) Only the poorest of the poor would
have nothing but a garment to give as collateral for a loan. Jewish
law strictly required its return every evening at sunset.
Matthew and Luke disagree whether it is the
outer garment (Luke) or the undergarment (Matthew) that is being seized.
But the Jewish practice of giving the outer garment as a pledge (it alone
would be useful as a blanket for sleeping) makes it clear that Luke's order
is correct, even though he does not preserve the legal setting. In
all Greek usage, according to Liddell-Scott, himation is "always an outer
garment...worn above the chiton," whereas the chiton is a "garment worn
next to the skin." Consistent with this usage, the Greek translation of
the Old Testament (LXX) reads himation in the passages just cited.
S. Safrai and M. Stern describe normal Jewish dress: an outer garment or
cloak of wool and an undergarment or tunic of linen. To avoid
confusion I will simply refer to the "outer garment" and the "undergarment."
The situation Jesus speaks to is all too familiar
to his hearers: the debtor has sunk ever deeper into poverty, the debt
cannot be repaid, and his creditor has summoned him to court (krithenai)
to exact repayment by legal means.
Indebtedness was endemic in first century Palestine.
Jesus' parables are full of debtors struggling to salvage their lives.
Heavy debt was not, however, a natural calamity that had overtaken the
incompetent. It was the direct consequence of Roman imperial policy.
Emperors had taxed the wealthy so stringently to fund their wars that the
rich began seeking non?liquid investments to secure their wealth.
Land was best, but it was ancestrally owned and passed down over generations,
and no peasant would voluntarily relinquish it. Exorbitant interest,
however, could be used to drive landowners ever deeper into debt.
And debt, coupled with the high taxation required by Herod Antipas to pay
Rome tribute, created the economic leverage to pry Galilean peasants loose
from their land. By the time of Jesus we see this process already
far advanced: large estates owned by absentee landlords, managed by stewards,
and
worked by tenant farmers, day laborers, and slaves. It is no
accident that the first act of the Jewish revolutionaries in 66 C.E. was
to burn the Temple treasury, where the record of debts was kept.
It is to this situation that Jesus speaks.
His hearers are the poor ("if any one would sue you"). They share
a rankling hatred for a system that subjects them to humiliation by stripping
them of their lands, their goods, finally even their outer garments.
Why then does Jesus counsel them to give over
their undergarments as well? This would mean stripping off all their
clothing and marching out of court stark naked! Imagine the guffaws
this saying must have evoked. There stands the creditor, covered
with shame, the poor debtor's outer garment in the one hand, his undergarment
in the other. The tables have suddenly been turned on the creditor.
The debtor had no hope of winning the case; the law was entirely in the
creditor's favor. But the poor man has transcended this attempt to
humiliate him. He has risen above shame. At the same time he
has registered a stunning protest against the system that created his debt.
He has said in effect, "You want my robe? Here, take everything!
Now you've got all I have except my body. Is that what you'll take
next?"
Nakedness was taboo in Judaism, and shame
fell less on the naked party than on the person viewing or causing the
nakedness (Gen 9:20-27). By stripping, the debtor has brought
the creditor under the same prohibition that led to the curse of Canaan.
And much as Isaiah had "walked naked and barefoot for three years" as a
prophetic sign (Isa. 20:1-6), so the debtor parades his nakedness in prophetic
protest against a system that has deliberately rendered him destitute.
Imagine him leaving the court, naked: his friends and neighbors, aghast,
inquire what happened. He explains. They join his growing procession,
which now resembles a victory parade. The entire system by which
debtors are oppressed has been publicly unmasked. The creditor is
revealed to be not a legitimate moneylender but a party to the reduction
of an entire social class to landlessness, destitution, and abasement.
This unmasking is not simply punitive, therefore; it offers the creditor
a chance to see, perhaps for the first time in his
life, what his practices cause, and to repent.
The Powers That Be literally stand on their
dignity. Nothing depotentiates them faster than deft lampooning.
By refusing to be awed by their power, the powerless are emboldened to
seize the initiative, even where structural change is not immediately possible.
This message, far from being a counsel to perfection unattainable in this
life, is a practical, strategic measure for empowering the oppressed, and
it is being lived out all over the world today by powerless people ready
to take their history into their own hands.
Jesus provides here a hint of how to take
on the entire system by unmasking its essential cruelty and burlesquing
its pretensions to justice. Here is a poor man who will no longer
be treated as a sponge to be squeezed dry by the rich. He accepts
the laws as they stand, pushes them to absurdity, and reveals them for
what they have become. He strips naked, walks out before his fellows,
and leaves this creditor, and the whole economic edifice which he represents,
stark naked.
Go the Second Mile
Jesus' third example, the one about going
the second mile, is drawn from the relatively enlightened practice of limiting
the amount of forced or impressed labor (angareia) that Roman soldiers
could levy on subject peoples to a single mile. The term angareia
is probably Persian, and became a loan?word in Aramaic, Greek and Latin.
Josephus mentions it in reference to the Seleucid ruler, Demetrius who,
in order to enlist Jewish support for his bid to be king, promised, among
other things, that "the Jews' beasts of burden shall not be requisitioned
(angareuesthai) for our army" (Ant. 13.52). We are more familiar
with its use in the Passion Narrative, where the soldiers "compel" (angareuousin)
Simon of Cyrene to carry Jesus' cross (Mark 15:21//Matt. 27:32). Such forced
service was a constant feature in Palestine from Persian to late Roman
times, and whoever was found on the street could be compelled into service.
Most cases of impressment involved the need of the postal service for animals
and the need of soldiers for civilians to help carry their packs.
The situation in Matthew is clearly the latter. It is not a matter
of equisitioning animals but people themselves.
This forced labor was a source of bitter resentment
by all Roman subjects. "Angareia is like death," complains one source.
The sheer frequency, even into the late empire, of legislation proscribing
the misuse of the angareia shows how regularly the practice was used and
its regulations violated. An inscription of 49 C.E. from Egypt orders
that Roman "soldiers of any degree when passing through the several districts
are not to make any requisitions or to employ forced transport (angareia)
unless they have the prefect's written authority" --a rescript clearly
made necessary by soldiers abusing their privileges. Another decree
from Egypt from 133-137 C.E. documents this abuse: "Many soldiers without
written requisition are travelling about in the country, demanding ships,
beasts of burden, and men, beyond anything authorized, sometimes seizing
things by force...to the point of showing abuse and threats to private
citizens, the result is that the military is associated with arrogance
and injustice." In order to minimize resentment in the conquered
lands, at least some effort was made by Rome to punish violators of the
laws regarding impressment.
The Theodosian Code devotes an entire section
to angareia. Among its ordinances are these: If any person
while making a journey should consider that he may abstract an ox that
is not assigned to the public post but dedicated to the plow, he shall
be arrested with due force by the rural police...and he shall be
haled before the judge [normally the governor] (8.5.1, 315 C.E.). By
this interdict We forbid that any person should deem that they may request
packanimals and supplementary posthorses. But if any person should
rashly act so presumptuously, he shall be punished very severely (8.5.6,
354 C.E., ital. added). When any legion is proceeding to its destination,
it shall not hereafter attempt to appropriate more than two posthorses
(angariae), and only for the sake of any who are sick (8.5.11, 360 C.E.).
Late as these regulations are, they reflect
a situation that had changed little since the time of the Persians.
Armies had to be moved through countries with dispatch. Some legionnaires
bought their own slaves to help carry their packs of sixty to eighty?five
pounds (not including weapons). The majority of the rank and
file, however, had to depend on impressed civilians. There are vivid
accounts of whole villages fleeing to avoid being forced to carry soldiers'
baggage, and of richer towns prepared to pay large sums to escape having
Roman soldiers billeted on them for winter.
With few exceptions, the commanding general
of a legion personally administered justice in serious cases, and all other
cases were left to the disciplinary control of his subordinates.
Centurions had almost limitless authority in dealing with routine cases
of discipline. This accounts for the curious fact that there is very
little codified military law, and that late. Roman military historians
are agreed, however, that military law changed very little in its essential
character throughout the imperial period. No account survives
to us today of the penalties to be meted out to soldiers for forcing a
civilian to carry his pack more than the permitted mile, but there are
at least hints. "If in winter quarters, in camp, or on the march,
either an officer
or a soldier does injury to a civilian, and does not fully repair the
same, he shall pay the damage twofold." This is about as mild
a penalty, however, as one can find. Josephus' comment is surely
exaggerated, even if it states the popular impression: Roman military forces
"have laws which punish with death not merely desertion of the ranks, but
even a slight neglect of duty" (J.W. 3.102-8). Between these extremes
there was deprivation of pay, a ration of barley instead of wheat, reduction
in rank, dishonorable discharge, being forced to camp outside the fortifications,
or to stand all day before the general's tent holding a clod in one's hands,
or to stand barefoot in public places. But the most frequent punishment
by far was flogging.
The frequency with which decrees were issued to curb misuse of
the angareia indicates how lax discipline on this point was. Perhaps
the soldier might receive only a rebuke. But the point is that the
soldier does not know what will happen.
It is in this context of Roman military occupation
that Jesus speaks. He does not counsel revolt. One does
not "befriend" the soldier, draw him aside and drive a knife into his ribs.
Jesus was surely aware of the futility of armed insurrection against Roman
imperial might; he certainly did nothing to encourage those whose hatred
of Rome was near to flaming into violence.
But why carry his pack a second mile?
Is this not to rebound to the opposite extreme of aiding and abetting the
enemy? Not at all. The question here, as in the
two previous instances, is how the oppressed can recover the initiative
and assert their human dignity in a situation that cannot for the time
being be changed. The rules are Caesar's, but how one responds to
the rules is God's, and Caesar has no power over that.
Imagine then the soldier's surprise when,
at the next mile marker, he reluctantly reaches to assume his pack, and
the civilian says, "Oh no, let me carry it another mile." Why would
he want to do that? What is he up to? Normally, soldiers have
to coerce people to carry their packs, but this Jew does so cheerfully,
and will not stop! Is this a provocation? Is he insulting the
legionnaire's strength? Being kind? Trying to get him disciplined
for seeming to violate the rules of impressment? Will this civilian
file a complaint? Create trouble?
From a situation of servile impressment, the
oppressed have once more seized the initiative. They have taken back
the power of choice. The soldier is thrown off balance by being deprived
of the predictability of his victim's response. He has never dealt
with such a problem before. Now he has been forced into making a
decision for which nothing in his previous experience has prepared him.
If he has enjoyed feeling superior to the vanquished, he will not enjoy
it today. Imagine the situation of a Roman infantryman pleading
with a Jew to give back his pack! The humor of this scene may have
escaped us, but it could scarcely have been lost on Jesus' hearers, who
must have been regaled at the prospect of thus discomfiting their oppressors.
Jesus does not encourage Jews to walk a second mile in order to build up
merit in heaven, or to exercise a supererogatory piety, or to kill the
soldier with kindness. He is helping an oppressed people find a way
to protest and neutralize an onerous practice despised throughout the empire.
He is not giving a non-political message of spiritual world-transcendence.
He is formulating a worldly spirituality in which the people at the
bottom of society or under the thumb of imperial power learn to recover
their humanity.
One could easily misuse Jesus' advice vindictively;
that is why it must not be separated from the command to love enemies integrally
connected with it in both Matthew and Luke. But love is not averse
to taking the law and using its oppressive momentum to throw the soldier
into a region of uncertainty and anxiety where he has never been before.
Such tactics can seldom be repeated. One can imagine that within
days after the incidents that Jesus sought to provoke, the Powers That
Be would pass new laws: penalties for nakedness in court, flogging for
carrying a pack more than a mile! One must be creative, improvising
new tactics to keep the opponent off balance.
To those whose lifelong pattern has been to
cringe before their masters, Jesus offers a way to liberate themselves
from servile actions and a servile mentality. And he asserts that they
can do this before there is a revolution. There is no need to wait
until Rome has been defeated, or peasants are landed and slaves freed.
They can begin to behave with dignity and recovered humanity now,
even under the unchanged conditions of the old order. Jesus' sense
of divine immediacy has social implications. The reign of God is already
breaking into the world, and it comes, not as an imposition from on high,
but as the leaven slowly causing the dough to rise (Matt.13:33//Luke 13:20-21).
Jesus' teaching on nonviolence is thus of a piece with his proclamation
of the dawning of the reign of God.
In the conditions of first-century Palestine,
a political revolution against the Romans could only be catastrophic, as
the events of 66-73 C.E. would prove. Jesus does not propose armed revolution.
But he does lay the foundations for a social revolution, as Richard A.
Horsley has pointed out. And a social revolution becomes political
when it reaches a critical threshold of acceptance; this in fact did happen
to the Roman empire as the Christian church overcame it from below.
Nor were peasants and slaves in a position
to transform the economic system by frontal assault. But they could
begin to act from an already recovered dignity and freedom, and the ultimate
consequences of such acts could only be revolutionary. To that end,
Jesus spoke repeatedly of a voluntary remission of debts.
It is entirely appropriate, then, that the saying on debts
in Matt. 5:42//Luke 6:30//Gos. Thom. 95 has been added to this saying-block.
Jesus counsels his hearers not just to practice alms and to lend money,
even to bad-risks, but to lend without expecting interest or even the return
of the principal. Such radical egalitarian sharing would be necessary
to rescue impoverished Palestinian peasants from their plight; one need
not posit an imminent end of history as the cause for such astonishing
generosity. And yet none of this is new; Jesus is merely issuing
a prophetic summons to Israel to observe the commandments pertaining to
the sabbatical year enshrined in Torah, adapted to a new situation.
Such radical sharing would be necessary in
order to restore true community. For the risky defiance of the Powers
that Jesus advocates would inevitably issue in punitive economic sanctions
and physical punishment against individuals. They would need economic
support; Matthew's "Give to everyone who asks (aitounti--not necessarily
begs) of you" may simply refer to this need for mutual sustenance. Staggering
interest and taxes isolated peasants, who went under one by one.
This was a standard tactic of imperial "divide and rule" strategy. Jesus'
solution was neither utopian nor apocalyptic. It was simple realism.
Nothing less could halt or reverse the economic decline of Jewish peasants
than a complete suspension of usury and debt and a restoration of economic
equality through outright grants, a pattern actually mplemented in
the earliest Christian community, according to the Book of Acts.
Jesus' Third Way
Jesus' alternative to both fight and flight can be graphically presented
by a chart:
Jesus' Third Way Seize the moral initiative
Find a creative alternative to violence
Assert your own humanity and dignity as a person
Meet force with ridicule or humor
Break the cycle of humiliation
Refuse to submit or to accept the inferior position
Expose the injustice of the system
Take control of the power dynamic
Shame the oppressor into repentance
Stand your ground
Make the Powers make decisions for which they are not
prepared
Recognize your own power
Be willing to suffer rather than retaliate
Force the oppressor to see you in a new light
Deprive the oppressor of a situation where a show of force
is effective
Be willing to undergo the penalty of breaking unjust laws
Die to fear of the old order and its rules
Seek the oppressor's transformation
Flight FightGandhi insisted that no one join him who was not willing to take up arms to fight for independence. They could not freely renounce what they had not entertained. One cannot pass directly from "Flight" to "Jesus' Third Way." One needs to pass through the "Fight" stage,
Submission Armed revolt
Passivity Violent rebellion
Withdrawal Direct retaliation
Surrender Revenge