POST SERIES

Introduction
Views of Christian Participation and War
Jesus on Violence and the Kingdom in Matthew 5:38-44
Paul on Empire and Submission in Romans 13:1-7
The Kingdom of Heaven and Christian Identity
Analyzing War and Christian Participation in Light of a Kingdom-Identity
A Christian Response to War
Conclusion

A few days ago we began a series on what a Christian posture should before violence generally and war particularly. Today picks up the discussion with Jesus’ teachings on enemy-love in the so-called “Sermon on the Mount.” Here is the crux of Jesus’ argument, which I make below: “this teaching instructs that even though there are bad people in the world, bad people who desire to harm the disciples, their admitted badness is no justification for the disciple resisting them, whether actively or passively, violently or nonviolently, legally or illegally.” If this is true, what does this mean for our broader issue of guns, and Christians insisting on protecting the 2nd amendment right to bear arms in order to resist bad people? What does this mean for Christian participation in violence, especially armed conflict?

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After establishing the dominant views of war and Christian participation, it is necessary to attend to the perspectives of Jesus Christ and Paul the apostle. In Matthew 5:38-44 Jesus provides the starkest admonition regarding Christians faced with violence: love your enemies. Along side His application of the Shema—love the lord your God with all your heart, soul mind and strength; love your neighbor as yourself—He includes the necessity to do “enemy-love.” How does this work in the context of a democratic nation, though? What are the responsibilities of Christians to the State regarding involvement in war in light of Jesus’ teachings on enemy-love? Paul provides an understanding of that relationship to Empire in Romans 13:1-7. This passage is often used to justify involvement because it instructs Christians to submit themselves to the “governing authorities” and insists those authorities are established to wield the sword. Does this passage instruct Christian participation in war, though? Examining Jesus’ perspective on violence and the Kingdom of God and Paul’s viewpoint regarding Empire submission will bring clarity in order to analyze war and Christian participation.

A. Jesus on Violence and the Kingdom in Matthew 5:38-44

The end of Matthew 4 tells of Jesus going “throughout Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, proclaiming the good news of the kingdom, and healing every disease and sickness among the people.” ((Matt. 4:23.)) Part of this proclamation came in the form of one of the most recognized and widely known set if teachings in the so-called Sermon on the Mount. After calling the disciples to “follow me,” Jesus went up on a mountainside and instructed them in the way of the Kingdom of Heaven. These instructions were to his disciples, instructions calling them to live by a set of stringent standards  articulated in six antitheses (established in the “You have heard that it was said…But I tell you…” formula) ((Richard A. Burridge, Imitating Jesus(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing,2007), 216 notes that this unique Mathean formula is “part of his intensifying interpretation of the law.”)) in order to represent the reality of the Kingdom of Heaven in their pluralist, sinful world. ((Hays, Moral Vision, 321.)) The fifth and six of these antithesis is in regards to anti-retributional violence in the form of loving ones enemies.

Amazingly, this teaching instructs that even though there are bad people in the world, bad people who desire to harm the disciples, their admitted badness is no justification for the disciple resisting them, whether actively or passively, violently or nonviolently, legally or illegally. ((R.T France, Matthew, (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing 2007, 219-220.)) Jesus tangibly illustrates this through four examples: a slap on a cheek, suing in law court for the disciples shirt, the Roman military machine enlisting someone to carry the equipment of a soldier, and a request for money or goods. ((Matt. 5:39-42.)) In the face of these “violent” acts, Jesus tells the disciples to act counterculturally: a slap was a serious insult in which legal redress could be sought, though Jesus tells the disciples to accept the insult without responding and forego the financial benefit to which he is legally entitled; though someone demands his shirt, he is to give up his rightfully held coat, even at the expense of having nothing to wear; while a Roman prefect might require the legally permitted “mile” from a disciple, she is to accept the imposition and double it; and finally the disciple is to reflect the remarkable generosity of Deut. 15:7-11 to help a fellow Israelite in need. ((France, Matthew, 219-222.)) With each of these four instructional illustrations, Jesus requires His disciples to live and lean into them, ending with the instruction of enemy-love.

The final antithesis is enemy-love. The core of Jesus’ teachings is the combination of the Jewish Shema of Deut. 6:4-5 (“love God…”) and Lev. 19:18 (“love your neighbor as yourself.”) Important to this present discussion is understanding what is meant by the term “neighbor.” “For most contemporary interpreters the term was restrictive, leaving non-neighbors outside the command to love; hence the popular addition ‘and hate your enemy,’” ((France, Matthew, 223.)) of which Jesus quotes in 5:43. For Jesus neighbor becomes broadly inclusive, even to the point of loving ones enemies. This radical perspective does not delineate whether or not He means personal affronts or political enemies, which during this time would have been the occupying forces of Rome, but instead is entirely comprehensive: “enemy” includes all classes. ((France, Matthew, 225.)) In fact, Jesus’ demands go beyond the negative demands He made in vs. 39-42 to include the positive requirements to seek the good of those who are oppressing them, to “pray for those who persecute you.” ((Matt 5:43.)) Not only are followers of Jesus called to actively non-resist, they are also called to actively do acts of enemy-love.

It is obvious that the teachings of Jesus in this pericope call the disciple to a radical way of living that is both countercultural and counterintuitive. This is the entire point of Matthew’s vision: “Matthew offers a vision of a radical countercultural community of discipleship characterized by a ‘higher righteousness’—a community free of anger, lust, falsehood, and violence.” ((Hays, Moral Vision, 322.)) This ‘higher righteousness’ was demonstrated by Jesus Himself in the Garden of Gethsemane when He fought His own disciple who wanted to violently resist the authorities who were taking Him away to be tried and executed. “This scene at the arrest is the authentic interpretation of the sentence in the Sermon on the Mount, ‘Do not resist an evildoer.’” ((Ulrich Mauser, The Gospel of Peace (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1992), 80.)) As such, the prophetic task of nonviolence and nonresistance instructed in the Sermon and exemplified in Jesus, while seeming ridiculous and arduous, is not impossible, even in the face of an Empire who insists and requires otherwise.