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The Politics of Jesus

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Tradition has painted a portrait of a Savior who stands aloof from governmental concerns and who calls his disciples to an apolitical life. But such a picture of Jesus is far from accurate, according to John Howard Yoder. This watershed work in New Testament ethics leads us to a Savior who was deeply concerned with the agenda of politics and the related issues of power, status, and right relations. By canvassing Luke's Gospel, Yoder argues convincingly that the true impact of Jesus' life and ministry on his disciples' social behavior points to a specific kind of Christian pacifism in which "the cross of Christ is the model of Christian social efficacy." This second edition of The Politics of Jesus provides up-to-date interaction with recent publications that touch on Yoder's timely topic. Following most of the chapters are new "epilogues" summarizing research conducted during the last two decades - research that continues to support the outstanding insights set forth in Yoder's original work.

257 pages, Paperback

First published December 1, 1972

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About the author

John Howard Yoder

101 books67 followers
Yoder was a Christian theologian, ethicist, and Biblical scholar best known for his radical Christian pacifism, his mentoring of future theologians such as Stanley Hauerwas, his loyalty to his Mennonite faith, and his 1972 magnum opus, "The Politics of Jesus".

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 157 reviews
Profile Image for Sharon.
179 reviews26 followers
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August 30, 2012
I don't usually review books that I didn't finish, but in this case I thought the reason I didn't finish it was relevant to a review.

Yoder asserts that complete non-violence is an ethical imperative for every follower of Jesus. In his view, noble ends cannot justify violence. Instead, we should act peacefully and trust the outcome of all our actions to God. We are obligated to lives of peace, fairness and love, and no end-goal can abrogate those obligations. At all times, we must put the welfare of others on par with our own.

This may be visionary or this may be preposterous. Either way, it is not matched by the way Yoder practices scholarship. His book seems instead focused on achieving a particular goal by whatever literary means possible. His readings of biblical text are often tendentious. He insists on plain, literal readings when it benefits his ideological goals; he insists as passionately on complicated spiritualized readings when they suit his ideological goals better. He denies the presence of any real problems in the text that have led to the interpretations of his opponents. He summarizes the theology of opponents in ways they might not recognize. Fairness to others is a requirement in life; it is not, apparently, a requirement in writing theology.

All of this is common in scholarship, and I probably wouldn't comment on it in most books. But it grew increasingly painful to read it here because it smacked so strongly of hypocrisy. Maybe Yoder is right, and the refusal to regard our personal welfare is an essential part of a righteous life. But that is not the book he wrote.




Profile Image for Jacob Aitken.
1,644 reviews371 followers
March 14, 2016
While I think this book is wrong on several levels, it marked a valuable turning point in Evangelical ethical reflection. To say Jesus's message was political is commonplace today. It wasn't when Yoder wrote.

Thesis 1: Jesus’s ministry has a political claim that we often hide from ourselves (Yoder 2).

Yoder is against a “Creation Ethic” (8). While his primary target is natural law ethics, he also lists “situation ethics” under the same label: we discern the right be studying the realities around us (9).

Thesis 2: Because of Jesus’s “humanness,” there is the possibility of a distinctively normative, Christian ethic (10).

Yoder is against any kind of “natural law ethic,” and for him natural law = creation = nature = reason = reality. While I suspect Yoder paints with a rather broad brush, one can’t help but note a few points he scores: these models are usually “ascribed a priori a higher or deeper authority than the ‘particular’ Jewish or Christian sources of moral vision” (19).

His exegesis on “Kingdom” anticipates many of the gains found in NT Wright’s own work. Yoder’s argument concerning “Jubilee” is quite interesting, though not without difficulty. He sees Jesus in Luke 4 as inaugurating the New Jubilee. In fact, he can call the “Lord’s Prayer” a “Jubilee” prayer, since debts are wiped away (64). Bottom line: Those in the Kingdom must practice Jubilee. Corollary: to practice the Sabbath without practicing deliverance and Jubilee is not to practice the Sabbath.

(3) The point of OT violence was not violence, but that God acts to save his people without their needing to act (76-77).

(4) Jesus’s kingdom is not simply “internal” but is outward and social.

(5) The universe was made in an ordered form and is called “good” (141).

Be that as it may, Yoder insists “we have no access to the good creation of God” (141). Strong stuff. He does expand upon this language, drawing upon Paul’s words in Acts 17:22-28.

(5a) These power-structures were created by God and today provide a network for our existence (142).
(5b) They rebelled and fell.
(5c) God uses them for good.

My only problem at this point is (5b) seems to think that the powers = angels of one sort or another. That could work but the evidence is slim.

Romans 13

This is the most controversial chapter in the book. I’ll begin by noting some positives. Yoder is correct that Paul is not arguing for a positivist reading: i.e., whatever the state says is just/right by definition (this is the official position of the United States Supreme Court regarding its own rulings). Most controversially, he asserts that the sword, the machaira, is not a weapon as such but a symbol of authority. Therefore, this can’t mean that the state is just in war or taking a life.

By way of response:
>He says God did not create the powers that be, but only orders them (201). Assuming that these powers are not self-existing, then yes, God did create them.

>He says Rom. 13 cannot be used as a proof-text for police/military functions (203). But what of the soldiers who came to John the Baptist? What of the centurion whom Jesus commended so highly? In neither case were they told to quit their unjust professions.

>His claim that the machaira can’t be used for death simply won’t hold. The state is said not to wield it in vain. But if it is merely symbolic and can’t restrain my actions, then the state is wielding it in vain. Jesus reaffirms the death penalty in Matt. 15.

Positives

*Yoder does a fine job demonstrating that Jesus didn’t come to offer a Kantian kingdom and a Kantian, spiritual ethic.


Critique

~1. It’s hard to reconcile Yoder’s claim that the State is the embodied evil of the demonic powers with Paul’s claim that it is a minister of good.

~2. Yoder wants to posit a good creation with good structures (as he should), but given Romans 13 and the fact that God commanded wars in the Old Testament, how can one then critique Just War Theory and the use of the sword?

~3. Yoder almost always dismisses dissonant voices as “unaware of Jesus’s social dimension,” of whom he usually means “Christendom” (whatever that means).

~4. Yoder’s claims in (5a-c) need an additional premise: (5d) Creation has been restored and reaffirmed in the resurrection of Christ. To be fair, Yoder approaches this point (144-145). Yet, in this section he doesn’t mention the Resurrection. He does hint at it on p.239.

~5. While correctly rejecting the Enlightenment project, Yoder uses a lot of its rhetoric. He continually contrasts the “traditional” or “Constantinian” reading with a fresher reading.

~6. What’s the value of positing a good creation if we have no cognitive access to it (141)? In fact, and most devastatingly, how does Yoder even know creation is good if we have no cognitive access to it? In any case, the Bible doesn’t follow this reasoning, since it tells us to look to nature and creation for wisdom (“Go to the ant, thou sluggard!”).

Conclusion:

A valuable and welcome read. His exegesis of Luke is outstanding and he doesn’t opt for easy answers, even when I think he is wrong.

Profile Image for J.M. Hushour.
Author 6 books235 followers
November 17, 2017
Probably the most misunderstood and misquoted thinker since Adam Smith (or Richard Simmons?), the Jeez, as I call him, actually had a lot of nice things to say about other people, even the ones that hated it. And his call to his followers to emulate him with the idea of spontaneous unconditional love for others (I know, right, white-guy America? Feelings?! Gross!) is definitely not cited enough. In fact, as Yoder points out, there are lots of arguments and exegesis trying to justify all the shit that Christ didn't say, but little attention paid to him as a daring, revolutionary social critic who thought, shit, why can't everyone just get along?
You don't need to be any kind of religious person to appreciate this work, which nicely and snugly places J.C. into the pantheon of socially radical nice guys throughout history.
Profile Image for Joanne.
2,641 reviews
January 19, 2013
Yoder is apparently regarded as one of the pre-eminent theologians of the twentieth century, I think because of his emphasis on pacifism and his questioning of the Church's relationship with government and political authority. Perhaps his ideas have been so absorbed into the Christian mainstream that I am not struck by their novelty. Certainly his writing is abysmal: meandering and circling back upon itself, full of double negatives and endless subordinate clauses, heavily footnoted with long walks off topic. Our book group forgave him that verbal meandering a little bit, because the book seems to have been cobbled together from a series of conference papers rather than written with one unifying purpose.

So we finished the book, and I was glad in the way that I finish a tough workout, not that I enjoyed it, but am glad that I did it and feel better for having endured, and then we looked Yoder up on Wikipedia to try to figure out how the book fits into his life's work and why (?) it's considered to be so great, and it happened to mention the sexual allegations against him.

Whaaa...?

We dug deeper. (E.g., this Chicago Tribune article.) Turns out that he harassed / assaulted at least eight -- and they named eighty more -- women throughout his professorial career. He was apparently trying to come to some new sexual ethic within the church, and tried it out with students, colleagues, women in the church, women at conferences, lots and lots of women. No intercourse, but lots and lots of creepy and perverted behavior.

And that makes me angry. So angry that I don't really care what he has to say about ethics (insert derisive snort!) or what he might say about the politics of Jesus.
Profile Image for Jeff.
156 reviews8 followers
June 6, 2021
Super solid material - so poorly written. I struggled to stay engaged with this author even though I resonate with his theology. It feels like when one becomes a legitimate scholar a lobotomy is performed on the part of the brain where anything creative and beautiful comes from leaving a dusty verbosity in its place.
Profile Image for David .
1,345 reviews178 followers
February 16, 2017
After reading Christian Witness to the State I felt like re-reading this book. The re-read confirmed that this as one of my all time favorite books. Yoder's thesis is rather simple: Jesus Christ is the norm for Christian ethics. He is responding to the argument, made by many Christians, that Jesus' ethic, his way of life, is just not practical or was never intended to be the way that Christians live. Yoder makes no claim at this being a full systematic study, but the ground he does cover in making his argument is convincing. He focuses on the gospel of Luke (chapter 2) and then picks up on themes from the Old Testament in the implications of Jubilee from Leviticus and declared by Jesus (chapter 3) and the trust that God will fight for us as in the Exodus (chapter 4). After some interesting examples of nonviolence in Jesus' day, showing such an idea was possible (chapter 5), he moves on to look at other parts of the New Testament. Often people, including Christians, see a wide gap between Jesus' focus on life and action versus Paul's focus on belief and abstract theology. Yoder challenges this dichotomy, arguing that Paul's ethic is completely in line with Jesus (chapters 6-7). One of the most thought-provoking chapters is on the "powers" (chapter 8). Yoder shows that for Paul the powers (structures) had a good purpose in the original creation but are now fallen. But Christ has defeated these powers and set up the church, therefore the real story of history is in the church, not in the powers (governments). The powers are a mix of good and bad: they still serve a good purpose but they are still fallen.

Chapter nine is about revolutionary subordination. Here Yoder discusses the many passages in Paul about submission (wives to husbands, slaves to masters). His central point is that in a world where such submission was already the norm, something had to have happened for such a teaching to be included. This was that Paul had taught that in Christ a new world had come where all people were equal. Thus, for example, the Christian woman has a newfound freedom in Christ which allows her to speak in the congregation, yet also in Christ she could accept her place in that society. Yoder does not draw this out to a full argument of the place of, for example, women in churches/ministry now. But the point is that all are equal in Christ, yet in certain cultural contexts Christians submit just as Christ did.

Yoder continues looking at Paul in chapters ten and eleven. First he examines Romans 13, reminding us that this passage must be read in context with Romans 12. In this, it does not justify rebelling against unjust states, rather it calls us to the same ethic Jesus' sermon on the mount does. In the next chapter he argues that in the doctrine of justification by faith there is a key component, often overlooked, of bringing Gentile and Jew together. He does not deny that Jesus' death was a sacrifice for sins, as some have charged, he instead seeks to emphasize the social aspect of justification.

The final chapter takes a brief look at other parts of the New Testament, specifically Revelation. Yoder's point is clear: Christians are called to live an ethic like that of Jesus which is a life of radical nonviolence. Importantly, in this last chapter he argues that Christian nonviolence only makes sense rooted in Jesus Christ. A nonviolent Christian does not reject war/violence in order to show the same ends can be achieved by nonviolent means. Christian nonviolence is not pragmatic. Instead, it is obedient: Christians should be nonviolent in obedience to Christ and in that take whatever comes.

This is an issue I have studied and thought on a lot. I agree with Yoder that the way of Christ is nonviolence. But I still think that in a fallen world it is not wrong for a Christian to support a state going to war. Perhaps this shows my still lack of faith in Jesus, maybe that is what Yoder would say. That aside, it is clear that to follow Jesus is to follow the way of peace, revolutionary subordination and self-sacrifice even unto death. This call blows my mind and challenges my heart, and it comes across clearly in this book which is why I give it five stars.
Profile Image for Aeisele.
184 reviews96 followers
July 17, 2009
I think I've been close to considering becoming a pacificist for a while, but Yoder moves me that much closer. And the reasons for this have very little to do with philosophical argumentation, i.e. I would not become a pacificist as an "intellectual" position. They have much more do to with my Christian convictions that our behavior ought to be modelled on the form of Jesus' life and ministry. Yoder, first of all, convinces completely that this form of life was political in character (crucifixion, of course, was a political death), and he's pretty convincing too on Jesus' complete non-violence (through his rejection of the Zealot option).
Another of the best contributions of this book is speaking of the church as having an apocalyptic identity. What that means is that, through the resurrection, the church has a foretaste ("first fruits," as Paul says) of the ultimate hope of a new heaven and a new earth, and as Jesus as its true sovereign (not Caesar), and that Christian identity is to life in this world acknowledging this Lordship and this ultimate hope, through non-violent resistance. I'm not sure what the practical outcomes of this are, but it has set my mind on a completely new path, a completely new way of conceiving social action.
Profile Image for Ryan Lindsey.
44 reviews
March 22, 2019
Don’t let the word “politics” scare you away - in this book, “politics” doesn’t refer to the nasty mess of modern politics. No, here “the political” truly means “the social” or “civil society”.

Cushioned in hundreds of footnotes, Yoder lays out a compelling and powerful case for a church that promotes social justice, peace, and perfect love and rejects nationalism, consumerism, and hyper-individualism. I am convinced that when the next reformation happens, this text will be seen as a groundwork for that needed movement.

For an absolute layman when it comes to academic theology, this was one of the most difficult books I’ve ever read - but also one of the most rewarding.
Profile Image for Nick Klagge.
806 reviews66 followers
January 24, 2011
I got interested in Yoder through Stanley Hauerwas and decided to read this book. For some reason, probably at least partly bias because of the Amish last name, I had assumed that this book would be simple and folksy. It is far, far from that--even if its message is reasonably simple, Yoder's style is heavily-footnoted, erudite academic (which I don't mind). In fact, I learned six new words from this book, which may be a record:

-parousia
-elenchtic
-docetic
-ebionitic
-exousiology
-paraenesis

The main thrust of the book is to argue that Jesus stands as a normative example for Christian people, in a very specific way--not in his barefooted itinerancy (a la St. Francis' interpretation), but rather in his complete rejection of violence to achieve his ends. (In fact Yoder encompasses violence under a larger umbrella called "the compulsiveness of purpose that leads the strong to violate the dignity of others.") He counterposes this position against a number of more "classic" interpretations, which include interpreting Jesus' life in only metaphysical terms or assuming that he simply represents an ideal type which is so unreachable as to be non-normative.

While I found the book interesting throughout, by far the most insightful part for me was Chapter 8, "Christ and Power". In this section Yoder addresses carefully the language of "powers and principalities" (i.e., angels, demons, etc.) in the writings of Paul, something that is either skipped over or discomforting to the modern reader. Yoder makes a very compelling interpretation that this language was intended to be mapped on to what modern readers would understand as "power structures" in society--systematizing forces that can provide beneficial order to human life, but which are "fallen" in that, and to the extent to which, they claim for themselves absolute value and sovereignty. This to me was a very powerful image, and Yoder provides a strong interpretation of the meaning of the life of Jesus with regard to these Powers.

Unfortunately, the copy of the book that I checked out of the library (the only one available at the NYU/NY Public/Brooklyn Public libraries) is missing about 30 pages, not because they fell out, but because 30 other pages were printed twice, once over where the missing pages should be. I checked the Google Books preview to see if I could use that to fill in the missing space, but the same problem is there as well!
Profile Image for Michael.
1,680 reviews5 followers
July 9, 2012
I have exhausted my reading of Christian pacifists. I got about 20 pages into this book and realized I had made an mistake. Mr. Yoder--an Anabaptist and pacifist--posits the Jesus was a complete pacifist, and that those who call themselves Christians should be pacifists as well.

I object. As I said in an earlier book review (Toward a Theology of Peace), I'm all for peace, but let's not kid ourselves about who God is or the world He made for us to live in. I admit I find Anabaptists a trifle annoying, as I do all pacifists. It's wonderful that they have sworn off violence and conflict, especially since they are protected by the most powerful military the world has ever seen. I would have much more respect for Christian pacifists who lived in places like, say, Pakistan. They would really have an opportunity to live out their ideals there, since Christians are routinely brutalized, murdered, have their children stolen and sold into sexual slavery, and are not allowed to own anything.

Having read the Bible, and read about the Bible, a great deal, I have come to the conclusion that it says what is says to each and every individual. There is background, certainly, one needs to understand the context of the stories in the Bible. Likewise, there are issues of translation that need to be taken into consideration. There are communities of interpretation that have given rise to certain beliefs and traditions. There are bad readings, better readings, and spot-on readings. Some people seem to 'get it' more than others. Others don't get it at all. Ultimately, though, the Bible is a book that you yourself will have to wrestle with, interpret, and live with. My reading is no more or no less authoritative than yours.

So, to Mr. Yoder and all the others who believe that God is love, and that the answer to all of life's problems is nonviolence, I wish you well, and I ask you to remember just who it is that allows you the safety to live out your values.They are not sheep, my friends. They are wolves.
Profile Image for marcus miller.
528 reviews4 followers
January 30, 2011
I tried reading this when I was in college. I remember bogging down somewhere in the middle and never finishing the book. Reading it 30 years later I found the book much more understandable which says much more about me and where I was at in college than it does about John Howard Yoder and his writing. If I understand him correctly, Yoder states that we should read the New Testament through the person of Jesus and that we should pay attention to the political dimensions of his message. Some of my professors were steeped in JHY and so even though I didn't finish the book back then, elements of his ideas were certainly familiar. Those who want to focus on Jesus as the Messiah who came to "save the lost," and those who focus solely on conversion will probably be appalled by the book. Those who believe Jesus and the early church had something to say to the social and political structures of their day, and by extension, the structures of today will find this book to be thought provoking and stimulating. The ideas presented by Yoder are important. They hopefully will continue to impact the Christian church and broader society.
Profile Image for Etienne OMNES.
303 reviews13 followers
January 12, 2021
The Politics of Jesus est un traité de théologie politique libéral d'origine mennonite, écrit par John Howard Yoder.

La note de ce livre dépendra beaucoup de votre approche de la théologie systématique. John Howard Yoder travaille dans ce livre à justifier les prises de positions politiques et sociales de son église, en suivant une méthode libérale. Tout en conspuant la "scolastique" (en fait, l'exégèse évangélique ordinaire qui vise à être systématique) il adhère à une école d'interprétation qu'il appelle le "réalisme biblique"et qui revient à lire la Bible de façon isolée et réduite et surtout a-systématique. Il cible les passages qui ont une pertinence pour sa thèse, mais ignore volontairement tout passage contraire et surtout: ne fais aucune sorte d'harmonisation entre les textes. Pour un réformé fan de scolastique et qui accorde du prix à l'orthodoxie, c'est un des auteurs les plus aux antipodes que je pouvais trouver.

Pour ce qui concerne le style, il est parfois difficile de voir où il veut en venir et quelle est la forme de son raisonnement. C'est peut être à cause de son a-systématicité. Cela dit, il n'est pas hermétique dans son vocabulaire, et il a une érudition certaine. Il manque juste de clarté dans la construction de ses chapitres et de son livre.
Un mennonite ou un libéral trouvera probablement dans ce livre quelque chose d'inspirant. Pour ma part je ne suis pas le public de ce livre.
Profile Image for Gideon Yutzy.
234 reviews29 followers
July 15, 2020
Makes a persuasive case that Jesus wasn't about a private, sectarian faith, but about transforming society through nonviolence. I wish JHY would have fleshed out better what that might look like. I suspect his ideas would be discussed more today if not for the sexual allegations against him. Even as things are, in the theological world his voice is the lone "big gun" from the Anabaptist world.
Profile Image for Jake Owen.
93 reviews
August 7, 2024
Definitely somewhat of a slog to get through at some points and really wasn’t anything I haven’t heard. But it was cool to read a book like this that had impacted so many. Good book on the victorious lamb and whatever idk.
Profile Image for Robbie Brown.
24 reviews1 follower
April 30, 2020
obviously complicated read due to jhy’s legacy, but it was fascinating and is making me want to dig into Stanley Hauerwas’ stuff.
Profile Image for Greg Williams.
213 reviews5 followers
December 24, 2016
This is an older book initially published in 1972, long before the conservative Christian preoccupation with right-wing politics in the US. So don't be misled by the title to think it is concerned with the Moral Majority of the 80's or the conservative Christian attachment to the Republican party in the US. Instead, it is a scholarly argument against the idea that the New Testament is focused on spiritual truths that have no bearing upon a Christian's political loyalties.

This is a more difficult read, since it is targeted toward a scholarly audience. So it took me a while to read, but I found it personally worthwhile as a Christian. Yoder points out that the very nature of what it means to truly follow Jesus will be counter-cultural and will go against the grain of what the financial and political institutions of the world are striving for. To be generous with others in the same way that God is generous with us will be considered foolish and wasteful. To forgive others as Christ has forgiven us (which includes monetary debts as well as sin) will rub against the grain of the justice and financial systems. To love our enemies just as Christ does will rub against the grain of the military-industrial complex. To proclaim that 'Jesus is Lord' is a direct challenge to all the political systems of this world.

The result of following Jesus in this way is necessarily persecution of one sort or another (John 15:20; 2 Timothy 3:12). And what sets Christians apart is how we respond to persecution. A person who is following Jesus will try to respond as Jesus did (1 Peter 2:21). A follower of Jesus responds to persecution in a non-violent way by blessing those who are persecuting him/her (Roman 12:21 , 1 Peter 3:9).

The most impactful insight I got from this book is that we often confuse subordination with submission or subjection when reading the "be subject to the authorities" passages in the New Testament (Romans 13:1; 1 Peter 2:13). Yoder points out that the Greek word used in these passages is best rendered as subordination (willingly accepting one's place below an authority). It does not mean that we should blindly obey everything those in authority tell us or that we should just play along with what our government wants. This matches what we see Jesus doing in the Gospels. He did not play along with what the religious leaders or the Roman government wanted. He freely criticized both and continued to be faithful to His purposes regardless of what the authorities wanted Him to do. Instead, He willingly accepted the punishment given to Him on the cross. He subordinated Himself to the authorities without compromising His purposes or values. This idea of "subordination does not mean obedience" also applies to the New Testament passages teachings related to wives, children, and slaves.

Another insight I got from this book is that, for a follower of Jesus, it is more important to be faithful than to be effective. We live in a world that worships progress and effectiveness. I am often guilty of being a pragmatist, which can lead to compromising my own values for the sake of being more effective. However, Yoder points out that this is not how Jesus lived his life on earth. Jesus did not compromise Himself for the sake of making His mission more effective. Instead, He remained faithful to His Father and accepted the consequences of that.

Bottom line: This is a tough read, not just because it is written in a dense, scholarly fashion but also because it exposes attitudes in our hearts that are contrary to the Way of Christ. Nevertheless, I highly recommend it because, in this age of political division and rage, it pointed me back to Jesus and the way of life He has called me to.
Profile Image for Spencer.
156 reviews22 followers
April 9, 2014
I am rereading this for my dissertation on James McClendon, a Southern Baptist theologian that regarded reading this book to be a "second conversion" in his faith.

This book came out in the heyday of Nienuhr-style "realist" Christian political engagement, which ended up supporting the status quo on a lot of issues, namely race and economic injustice. "Realism" meant compromise. Yoder's study, at the very minimum, demonstrates that Jesus was enacting a new political strategy for liberation through faithful non-violence, that did have the expectation of actuallly "working." Jesus was not being a hopeless idealist or just an evangelical soul-saver.

Many baulk at pacifism. In fact, I did as I was raised solidly in a just-war tradition of thought. But it seems inescapable that Jesus engaged oppressive powers with the strategy of the cross, and that the cross' character is the central ethic of the NT writers. What does that mean today in all the different sorts of political conflicts? I don't know if pacifism is the solution for every conflict. But, as I recommend to my congregation, Christianity's "default setting" is a skepticism against the all notions of "justifiable" war (How rare is that actually the case, when we get through the fog of propaganda!) as well as a commitment to non-violence and even self-renunciation (the way of the cross) as the means to bring peace.

Yoder's work now is several decades old, but there is still tons of insights for the average reader. His discussion on justification on faith pertaining more to reconciliation between Jew and Gentile is still relevant as it has been picked up by the New Perspective on Paul guys.

His treatment on demonstrating a Christological basis for God's attributes and our ethic (who God is = who Christ is = how we ought to act) will teach any fundamentalist the error of their ways when they elevate, for instance, holy wrath or omnipotence over perfect love in God's being. Indeed, the only reason God is powerful is because of the embrace of weakness on the cross!

For those interested, I would recommended looking up McClendon's Systematic Theology. In particular his chapter in Ethics (Vol. 1) on the "anastatic" dimension of pacifism and Doctrine (vol. 2) on the atonement. These fill out Yoder's work. As well, Ched Myer's commentary on Mark, Binding the Strong Man, fills out Yoder's thinking in a wonderful commentary.

Profile Image for Andrew.
Author 1 book41 followers
February 9, 2013
I am not, strictly speaking a pacifist, and I don't view Constantine or so-called "Constantinianism" in the same way as people like Yoder. However, it is a generally well-argued point Yoder makes regarding the root of Christian social action being in Christ's renunciation of violence AND coercion. For any on the Left or Right who want to use political power to further their social agenda, or who (more likely) are manipulated by the "powers" (politicians, ideologies, structures, etc.) to sanctify means and goals potentially not so worthy of Jesus, this is a good book for taking a second look at things.

Yoder's chief problem is in beginning with his assumptions related to church history, the "purity" of the gospel and the early church in contrast to "post-Constantine," and his Radical Reformation background - and interpreting the Scriptures through these assumptions rather than letting the Scriptures speak for themselves. The effect is to produce confusion or guilt in the naive reader who disagrees: it's hard to disagree with Scripture as a faithful believer. The result is that it becomes a "What would Jesus think?" kind of thing which, of course, Yoder uses the Scriptures to answer more definitively than is really possible.

His second problem is that he makes very selective use only of Scriptures that explicitly support his views. He does little or nothing with Scripture examples that contradict his views - even in order to attempt to reconcile the paradox in support of himself. How that differs from how Marcion or Thomas Jefferson chopped and pasted their Bibles to support their views, I don't know.

But that isn't to call Yoder a heretic by any means. I actually think his views, while methodologically deficient and theologically incomplete, are extremely well-argued and fit within the parameters of what can indeed be accepted as "A Christian approach" - as opposed to any notion of "THE Christian approach." This is a book worth taking very seriously and doing further Scriptural study on one's own while reading.
Profile Image for Luke Wagner.
197 reviews18 followers
August 20, 2020
John Howard Yoder’s work “The Politics of Jesus” has been recommended to me on more than one occasion, and after reading it I can understand why. This book, originally published in 1972, and later revised and updated in 1994, still speaks powerfully today. There have been few books in my life that I have wrestled with, engaged with, and sought to dig deeper into than this book.

Yoder’s insight into Western Christianity—primarily since the time of the Reformation, but also since the beginning of Christendom—and how the Church in the West has understood Christian ethics and the impact of the divine and human Jesus of Nazareth on Christian ethics was both eye-opening and saddening. Anyone who is the least interested in or stirred by the topic of Christian ethics, or the lifestyle of a Christian in the midst of secular society, or the meaning of Jesus’ lifestyle as it pertains to the political or social realm should pick up this book.

Much of Yoder’s goal in this work is to peel back the presuppositions and misconceptions that interpreters of Scripture have been bringing to the text for centuries, and rather, allowing—as best we can—for the text to speak for itself, and to indicate the relevance of both Jesus’ lifestyle and teaching, how this relevance was carried forth in the works of Paul the Apostle, and how this relevance has been tweaked, changed, and even entirely forgotten within much of mainline Christianity in the West.

Above all, this is a book concerning the biblical text; it is exegetical and hermeneutical, and with any book revolving around biblical interpretation, there will be much discussion and debate. Yoder is not the final word on the subject of Christian ethics or Jesus as being political or socially relevant, and nor should he be. But if the way of Jesus is to be normative whatsoever for his followers—and I believe it is—then I would encourage many, if not all, Christ-followers to consider how the ethics of Jesus himself point us to how we are to live within society.
Profile Image for Clif Hostetler.
1,204 reviews907 followers
March 10, 2012
Since being published in 1972 this book has been widely recognized as an explanation of anabaptist theology. The book’s approach is to study the Gospel of Luke and parts of Paul’s letter to the Romans to show that Jesus’ message was one of radical Christian pacifism in behalf of the cause of the week, poor, and disenfranchised. The book makes the case that Jesus had a social agenda that proclaimed the cause of a new society while not using violence to achieve those ends which in turn resulted in his crucification -- a punishment used for political rebels. This view of Jesus is generally accepted as being compatible with the thinking of anabaptist Christians because of its emphasis on how Christians live their lives in this world; as opposed to considering the message of Jesus to be strictly spiritual and not concerned with earthly injustices.

The Politics of Jesus was ranked by evangelical publication Christianity Today as the 5th most important Christian book of the 20th century.
Profile Image for Leroy Seat.
Author 8 books16 followers
May 20, 2012
This is a most significant book, and one that needs to be read slowly and thought about deeply.

John Howard Yoder (1927-97), the premier Mennonite scholar of the twentieth century, made a major contribution to Christian theology/ethics with the publication of this book, and I have profited greatly by reading it again.

This book is primarily for Christians. At least, those who are not Christians will doubtlessly not agree with the central themes of the book. But most "liberal" Christians who have an Enlightenment worldview will likely not agree with much of Yoder's book either.

When I finished read this book a few minutes ago, it dawned on me that probably the worldview of many contemporary Christians is formed far more on the basis of what they hear on CNN (or, God forbid, on Fox News) or read in "Time" or "Newsweek" than on the basis of what they read and understand about the Bible. Many such people would perhaps realize that that is so by comparing their worldview with that expounded in "The Politics of Jesus."
Profile Image for Joel Wentz.
1,198 reviews131 followers
May 2, 2013
I originally read this book in college, and decided to re-visit it recently, which proved quite fruitful. Yoder's central thesis is that Jesus' gospel cannot be stripped of its socio-ethical, political implications for those who want to follow Him. The book was written in '72, and some of the arguments Yoder responds to definitely seem dated (I'm not aware of many young Christians today who insist that Jesus' message was limited to an "inner spiritual decision"), however I was still moved by Yoder's passionate arguments. Particularly his explanations of Jesus' final temptation in Gesthsemane, as well as his interpretation of Ephesians 5, were exciting to read. Reader beware - Yoder is a staunch pacifist, and does not shy away from this perspective. Overall, this is a great read for anyone who struggles with questions about how following Jesus impacts our ethics.
Profile Image for Trevor.
70 reviews7 followers
June 13, 2011
I moved between liking this book and not liking it. On the one hand, Yoder is an able thinker and writer who has great faith in the power of God to change people/places by the alternative witness of the church in society. On the other hand, I don't see how forming what amounts to convents and monateries affects the public at-large. I know he insists that it's not sectarianims that he's talking about, but I'm not clear on how his vision works out in the world of laws, law enforcement, and war.

I think John Stackhouse makes some VERY worthwhile counterpoints to Yoder (see Making the Best of It: Following Christ in the Real World).
Profile Image for Ian Caveny.
111 reviews29 followers
June 17, 2018
Stanley Hauerwas once claimed that American theology would be forever divided into "pre-Yoder" and "post-Yoder." If only he could have been right! Realizations of Yoder's own personal (sexual) ethics in recent years have sullied his presence in theological circles in recent years, creating a new (complicatedly unfortunate) kind of divide: "Yoder-defenders" and "Yoder-opposers." It is a sad situation. (Hauerwas, of course, would never claim that American theology will be forever divided into "pre-Hauerwas" and "post-Hauerwas," and perhaps his ethical integrations of Yoder's insights will last longer than Yoder's own influence...?)

It is a sad situation because Hauerwas' praise is so thoroughly merited: The Politics of Jesus is a theological-ethical masterwork in every way, rhetorically discrete and socially savvy. Yoder isn't the smoothest or lyrical of writers (like Hauerwas is), nor is he the most amusing. As a good "university man formed in the third quarter of this [= last] century," he is brusque and to-the-point. He cuts off side-points quickly and aims undistractedly at his central goal, which is the uncovering of the political content of Jesus' radical life-and-message.

Speaking in his context as a black sheep already (at least, I'm pretty sure there were no other Anabaptists employed by Notre Dame at the time), Yoder deftly navigates both historical-critical and evangelical approaches to Scripture in order to arrive at a complex, nuanced, holistic picture of Jesus' refutation to the "powers" of First Century political life, whether those "powers" were the Romans, the Pharisees, the high priests, or the Zealots.

Yoder's exegesis and observations are so thoroughly insightful that I (who have started reading theology from my contemporaries backward) take them for granted. This is Yoder's greatest legacy, theologically: forcing politically-engaged liberal Protestants to re-assess the centrality of Jesus and His unique death and resurrection, and forcing politically-estranged (at the time, of course) conservative evangelicals to re-assess that same Jesus' political presence. By now, so many of his cultural-hermeneutic insights have become the "ground floor" of Bible-background studies (e.g. C.S. Keener's IVP Bible Background Commentary New Testament).

Still, there are observations that occasion surprise that should gain more traction: Yoder's explication on why the "Powers" must crucify Jesus and how Jesus' radicalism is a real threat to their "power," his discourse on "power" more generally (contra, I must observe, Michel Foucault), his reading of Romans 13, and his landmark final chapter on Revelation, pre-figuring some of N.T. Wright's observations, all need additional attention (although some has already been brought by figures like Hauerwas). I recently read and reviewed Fleming Rutledge's The Crucifixion, and if I were to say one thing her work needed in addition, it is Yoder's practical, political reading of the crucifixion. (Not that she really needed to add anything to that perfect book!)

All this being said, a serious question mark (as mentioned earlier) can be well-placed atop Yoder's doctrine of "radical subordination." It has recently surfaced, and discussed at much depth, that Yoder was a serial sexual abuser. This is a serious contention to his works on ethics.

With other "failed" theologians or philosophers or thinkers, we can recognize the allure of pride or fame and perhaps easily pass over their failings. Martin Heidegger strikes me as one such example. Some would discard him because of his relations with the Nazi party, and, yet, Heidegger was never an actual Nazi. He is perhaps best understood (as many academics can be understood) as someone whose selfish, prideful, egoism blinded him to serious wickedness. Academics would be cautious to throw the first stone at him. We can see this too in theology with Karl Barth, whose marital infidelity brings to question his theological work; we seem to have no such trouble with inconsistencies in the marital faithfulness of other intellectuals.

But Yoder's insistence in his theology and ethics is a principle of rejecting violence, rejecting power, rejecting, in essence, Nietzsche's "will-to-power." He spent not only his whole life advocating for this claim theologically, but also proclaiming it in his lifestyle (something Hauerwas was often starry-eyed about). Yoder's sexual philandering (and more) was more than just a simple moral failure of a man who presumed himself "great" (like Heidegger's egoism), or than the oft-seen tragedy of infidelity that emerges when thinkers and leaders separate themselves time-and-again from their wives (like Barth's affair). Yoder's sexual indulgences are an epistemological threat to his whole project. If a Mennonite who thought and considered his Christian pacifism so thoroughly couldn't, at the same time, recognize his own, repeated, indiscretions, abuses, and assaults as contradictory to his rigid ethics, are those ethics even valid? Are they even possible?

I think Hauerwas has made much work in this regard, salvaging what is salvageable from Yoder's sinking ship (or, to mix metaphors, falling star). But it has left The Politics of Jesus, a great, masterful work, in purgatory, perhaps to be gutted and skinned as a fish, leaving only a skeleton behind on the side of the river while the flesh becomes something useful. One questions, at the end of the day, how the fish really died: was it the exposure to the air, or some mercury consumed long ago? And if it is the latter, should we really eat its meat?
Profile Image for Sarah.
362 reviews4 followers
July 24, 2010
Yoder's arguments are very compelling and now I understand why many Christians believe the church cannot support war at all in any circumstances. Yoder first argues that Jesus is socially relevant and that the way we are called to be like him is in the realm of social ethics. He concludes by explaining that we are called to the way of the cross, which means giving up any attempt to take control of history and instead obey in a radical way by submitting to suffering.
Profile Image for Joel Morris.
5 reviews3 followers
August 9, 2007
Possibly the most influential book in my spiritual development thus far... its value lies its cunning exposure of some very fundamental assumptions that we make when approaching God and determining what he wants from us.

Do not get side-tracked by his seemingly simplistic agenda towards non-violence. It is more nuanced than it appears at first look.
Profile Image for Susie.
90 reviews7 followers
January 29, 2008
Great book for all those who, like me, grew up learning that Jesus primarily wanted to cultivate inner goodness in people. Instead, this book examines how Jesus' ethics were social and political by nature, and that it was always his intention that his followers have a correspondingly challenging, integrated ethic--both inward and outward. SUCH a good read!
Profile Image for Davis.
126 reviews3 followers
June 25, 2012
A little repetitive and overly academic at times, but this is a very thorough and convincing book explaining the social relevance of Jesus, something I never thought much about before.
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