I like to think about what social structures and politics would be like if people really submitted themselves to Jesus as Lord. On a very simple level, I think it would look like Jesus in charge and everyone else equal yet submissive to each other. No command structures or authority hierarchies. No power struggles among men and women, rich and poor, young and old, modern and postmodern, Christian and not. Just everyone serving each other as best they can. Maybe it's idealistic, but I think it's what Jesus had in mind, so I'll risk a little idealism every now and then.
The folks at the Jesus Manifesto call it Christarchy as opposed to anarchy.
Here are some images and quotes that reflect the idea:
Just like the word "christianity" itself, the words "anarchy," "anarchism" and "anarchist" are abused terms. They are abused so often by the media, state historians and government officials that, by no fault of her own, the average person on the street only thinks of chaos, terrorists and random violence when the term anarchist comes up... Anarchism is a rich and powerful critique of modern society that Christians have at our fingertips. We do not wish to confuse Christianity with anarchism but we do believe that when Christianity is lived rightly it looks a lot like anarchism.
-Jesus Radicals
The world is soaked with mutual blood. When individuals commit homicide, it is a crime; it is called a virtue when it is done in the name of the state. -Cyprian
2000 years ago, the son of God was murdered by the state after preaching the subversion of arbitrary political authority and the renunciation of the chains of the temporal world, advocating absolute egalitarianism between all humans under and inspired by the infinite love of the one valid Authority, in preparation for the coming of His eternal kingdom. -Christopher Kilbourn
‘Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God.’ Who are these? Those who imitate the Divine love of others, who show forth in their own life the characteristic of the Divine energy. The Lord and Giver of good things completely annihilates anything that is without affinity and foreign to goodness. This work He ordains also for you, namely to cast out hatred and abolish war, to exterminate envy and banish strife, to take away hypocrisy and extinguish from within resentment of injuries smoldering in the heart. Instead, you ought to introduce whatever is contrary to the things that have been removed. -Gregory of Nyssa
Even when they call us mad, when they call us subversives and communists and all the epithets they put on us, we know we only preach the subversive witness of the Beatitudes, which have turned everything upside down. -Oscar Romero
You cannot demand military service of Christians any more than you can of priests. We do not go forth as soldiers. - Origen
Love is freedom:
Anarchy is not chaos, but order with out control. -David Layson
That they may now understand that this is a new kind of warfare and not the usual custom of joining in battle, when He sent them with nothing He said: And so, marching on, show forth the meekness of lambs, although you are to go to wolves… for so will I best show my power, when the wolves are conquered by the lambs… For certainly it is a greater work and much more marvelous to change the minds of opponents and to bring about a change of soul than to kill them… We ought to be ashamed, therefore, who act far differently when as wolves we rush upon our adversaries. For as long as we are lambs we conquer; even when a thousand wolves stand about, we overcome and are victors. But if we act like wolves we are conquered, for then the aid of the Good Shepherd departs from us, for He does not foster wolves but sheep. - John Chrysostom
Alpha/Omega Anarchy
I gave food to the poor and they called me a saint; I asked why the poor have no food and they called me a communist. -Dom Helder Camara
Luke's comment: Or maybe today they would call you a socialist.
The cross-life of Jesus undermined all social orders based on power and self-interest.
-Richard Foster (Celebration of Discipline)
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Sunday, February 1, 2009
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Simply Christian - NT Wright
The Orthodox Heretic (and Other Impossible Tales) - Peter Rollins
Life, Inc - Douglas Rushkoff
Freedom of Simplicity - Richard Foster
The Prophetic Imagination - Walter Bruggemann
Crossroads of Twilight (Wheel of Time book 10)- Robert Jordan
The Orthodox Heretic (and Other Impossible Tales) - Peter Rollins
Life, Inc - Douglas Rushkoff
Freedom of Simplicity - Richard Foster
The Prophetic Imagination - Walter Bruggemann
Crossroads of Twilight (Wheel of Time book 10)- Robert Jordan
[recently read]
The Sacredness of Questioning Everything - David Dark
Drops Like Stars - Rob Bell
The Wheel of Time (Books 1-9) - Robert Jordan
Jesus Wants To Save Christians - Rob Bell
Wall and Piece - Banksy
And I can't remember what else because I've packed all the books I'm not reading right now...
Drops Like Stars - Rob Bell
The Wheel of Time (Books 1-9) - Robert Jordan
Jesus Wants To Save Christians - Rob Bell
Wall and Piece - Banksy
And I can't remember what else because I've packed all the books I'm not reading right now...
[want to read]
...but keep forgetting about or putting off when I buy some new books...
The Great Omission - Dallas Willard
Surprised By Hope - NT Wright
Life Inc. - Douglas Rushkoff
Streams of Living Water - Richard Foster
Shaping of Things to Come - Michael Frost and Alan Hirsch
Everything Must Change - Brian McLaren
How (Not) To Speak To God - Peter Rollins
The Irresistible Revolution - Shane Claiborne
Flickering Pixels - Shane Hipps
The Great Omission - Dallas Willard
Surprised By Hope - NT Wright
Life Inc. - Douglas Rushkoff
Streams of Living Water - Richard Foster
Shaping of Things to Come - Michael Frost and Alan Hirsch
Everything Must Change - Brian McLaren
How (Not) To Speak To God - Peter Rollins
The Irresistible Revolution - Shane Claiborne
Flickering Pixels - Shane Hipps
[favorites]
Velvet Elvis - Rob Bell
A Generous Orthodoxy - Brian McLaren
The Sacredness of Questioning Everything - David Dark
Simply Christian - NT Wright
The Great Emergence - Phyllis Tickle
Jesus Wants to Save Christians - Rob Bell
The Challenge of Jesus - NT Wright
The Prophetic Imagination - Walter Bruggemann
Barbarian Way - Erwin McManus
The Starfish and the Spider - Ori Brafman
Celebration of Discipline - Richard Foster
A Generous Orthodoxy - Brian McLaren
The Sacredness of Questioning Everything - David Dark
Simply Christian - NT Wright
The Great Emergence - Phyllis Tickle
Jesus Wants to Save Christians - Rob Bell
The Challenge of Jesus - NT Wright
The Prophetic Imagination - Walter Bruggemann
Barbarian Way - Erwin McManus
The Starfish and the Spider - Ori Brafman
Celebration of Discipline - Richard Foster
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3 comments:
I actually encountered the "Jesus Radicals" groups years ago when on a message board. A friend and I bantered it out with one of their leaders.
I can't say that I'm a fan. Part of it is my mixed feelings about Mennonite theology. Other parts of it is that I can barely tell the difference between a group like this, and some other secular, left-wing, egalitarian, utopian group. It's like a Christian version of the Weather Underground complaining about the Christian version of John Birch Society.
Don't get me wrong, I already know there are many things about the group that I sympathize with. Color me skeptical is all...very skeptical.
Yeah, I go back and forth on this. I still won't join the facebook group. I'm certainly not completely on board, and I realize a large part is how I never like to fit in and have always been fascinated by randomness and chaos. I'm not really sure it's good, but I like exploring the ideas to see what the might have to say.
I trust the Jesus Manifesto crowd more than Jesus Radicals, because I feel they have less of a rebellious point to prove. They seem to live in such a way that they don't need to preach out their subversive beliefs to convince people.
I'm gonna listen to some talks from a conference they did called Cynicism and Hope to see learn more. And if all it turns out to be under the surface is cynical complaining (and very little or no hope), then I'll be disappointed. I don't need any more of that. I've got too much as it is.
the gregory of nyssa quote is one of my favorites.
"good word", as rod says.
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