Mennonite Traditions of Peacemaking
Judy Zimmerman Herr
July 12, 2002
I’ve been asked to talk about
Mennonite traditions of peacemaking, but I have to begin by mentioning one of
our non-peacemaking traditions. That is
a tendency to split or for division.
Mennonites are a very small group, but very diverse, and not all
Mennonites would recognize themselves in what I have to say. But what I’ll try to do here is lay out
something of the terrain, and ask my brothers and sisters to make it a more
complete picture.
I’d like to begin by sharing
with you a baptismal vow from 1743, found in the current Mennonite ministers’ manual. This is part of one suggested series of
questions for the baptismal candidate, which begins by asking about the
person’s repentance of their sins and their belief in God: Father, Son and Holy
Spirit. But those questions are then
followed by this third question:
Do
you promise, by God’s grace, to follow Jesus the Lamb all the days of your
life,
ready to love your enemies and suffer
wrong nonresistantly?”
This is the action, the
response, that grows from repentance and allegiance to God: to follow Jesus, to
love enemies, to suffer without resisting.
This is the identity the candidate is being baptized into. This is something of what Jeff Gros pointed
to this morning when he talked about peace as a confessional stance.
This question to a new church
member illustrates a central way in which beliefs about peace have been
expressed in the Mennonite tradition.
Arnold Snyder will tell you that the Anabaptist movement in its
beginnings was not necessarily pacifist as we now think of that term. But what has been crucial and central for
this tradition is the notion of following Jesus. And following Jesus includes loving enemies and responding to
them in the way Jesus taught and modeled — turning the other cheek, being
nonresistant. The Mennonite tradition
of peacemaking goes back to Jesus, and relies on his teachings as shaping the
way Christians should live.
Historically this response
has meant that there are things we don’t do.
It has led to a refusal to take up arms, a refusal to fight or to serve
in the army, and for some in our tradition a refusal also to work as police or
with the civil authorities, because they may be required to use violence. (It has also meant refusing to swear oaths,
including loyalty oaths... and for my father it meant not serving jury duty,
because that was taking part in a coercive structure. For some it continues to mean not voting in national
elections). It has meant thinking of
one’s self as a citizen of God’s Kingdom, and holding loyalty to earthly
“kingdoms” at arm’s length. At times it
has meant being imprisoned for refusing those things, or needing to move to a
new land to avoid them.
But it has also led to
continual reflection on what it means to love enemies and to turn the other
cheek. Those of us who grew up in Mennonite homes will remember children’s
story books about people who were kind to those who were persecuting or
stealing from or threatening or in other ways harming them, even though the
result was their own suffering or death.
Those were the heroes we were taught to emulate.
You’ll note that the question
for much of our history has been “how do I/we love enemies and live at peace?”
— in contrast to questions like “how do we make peace?” (or in our more contemporary
terminology, “transform conflict?”) or “how do we help bring about
justice?” It’s not a world-shaping kind
of question. It betrays a certain
assumption about the place of the church in society. It has been the question of groups who were marginalized and
withdrawn, or to put that in a positive way, who saw the church as living
separately in order to embody an alternative to the systems of the world. We have seen the Christian’s role as
refraining from using violence or killing, and as willingness to suffer, but
the responsibility questions have been for the most part foreign
questions. For much of our history, the
preoccupation has been how we live as faithful Christians, but that was very
far from asking about the role of the church in helping to shape a just
society.
in So this is one pole if you
will of the spectrum or continuum of Mennonite traditions of peacemaking — the
church as strangers and pilgrims, the called-out community living as
defenseless witnesses within an alien world. This tradition has sustained a minority witness that has served to
remind the larger church that Jesus called his followers to love enemies, and
has upheld this costly witness. It’s a
history I cherish dearly ...
But reflection on this
“sectarian” experience, and on the question of how we follow Jesus, has also
led to what we might call the other pole of Mennonite traditions of
peacemaking. Most of this has been in
our more recent history, though there are certainly voices and examples from
the early days of the Aanbaptist movement as well. It tends to fit under the theme of “seeking the peace of the
city,” echoing Jeremiah’s word to the exiles in Babylon.
This understanding would
continue to hold up as central the question about following Jesus, but would
also recognize that we are involved in our wider societies, as Jesus was in
his. It would see the church as engaged
continuously in a series of negotiations — asking how, where and with what
values we participate in society? It
would see the calling to love enemies and to be peacemakers as a calling to be
active and creative, to find ways to call society to new patterns and
alternative viewpoints, to pose new possibilities. One recent example might be the work of restorative justice —
which began within Mennonite circles and has now become a broader movement in
the criminal justice field, creating alternative ways to work at dealing with
offenders and victims of crime. Another
is the burgeoning field of conciliation, or conflict transformation, that
develops skills to work with conflict in new ways.
This more engaged end of the
Mennonite peace tradition has tended to focus on practical skills and actions,
but it’s accompanied by a growing stream of theological reflection that asks
how we can be both engaged and also faithful to the call to be
peacemakers. Much of this has been
expressed under the rubric of the Lordship of Christ over the whole world. An on-going topic for reflection is how and
when we can call society and government to certain actions, without assuming
that society or government operates from a Christian framework. In other words, how can we affirm that our
orientation to the world is shaped and undergirded by our faith, and at the same
time offer our viewpoints and actions to those who are not so shaped and
undergirded? The “sectarian” pole of
Mennonite tradition would caution against crossing this divide — and in my
office we get those cautions from some in our churches, who think, for example,
that it’s not our role as the church to be speaking to government or telling it
how to act. The “engaged” pole would
say that as Christians who love neighbors and enemies, we must do exactly
that. So this is an on-going
conversation, and questions like security and terrorism provide occasions for
new rounds of this conversation within the Mennonite peace traditions.
In thinking about our
conversation here these days, I would suggest that the Mennonite peace
traditions, across the spectrum I have begun to describe, bring some strengths
to the wider church:
·
understanding peace as
central to the Christian message: this is not one among ethical options, but is
central to our understanding of the reconciliation God offered to us through
Christ, and calls us to live out in the world
·
always raising the hard
question about enemy-love, and being willing to suffer as expression of that
love, rather than to kill
·
viewing the church as an
alternative, a sign of the reign of God, offering the world new possibilities
·
raising questions about
nationalism and the Christian’s identity and loyalty
At the same time, I would
suggest that the Mennonite peace traditions, because of our particular history,
lack some things, for which we need to learn from others in the wider church:
·
we tend to lack a strong
theological expression of God’s sovereignty over the whole created order, and
God’s care for the ordering of life outside the bounds of the church
·
we need help in thinking
about the church’s transformative role for justice within society, and about
how we struggle with the hard questions about responsibility
·
we need more careful
reflection on the role of the Christian as a citizen
·
we need to learn from
the long tradition of careful thought on how we might use power or social
coercion appropriately (in contrast to our traditions’ tendency to either deny
that we have power or to deny that using it has much to do with our beliefs
about peace)
We need help in reflecting on
these issues from other traditions who have a longer history of doing so. We need to struggle with them in order to
make our theology and our language congruent with our actual lives in the world
we live in. But our struggle is how we
might think about responsibility and shaping a just society without losing some
of the emphases which have sustained our traditions of peace across our
history.
Judy Zimmerman Herr
Co-Director, MCC Peace Office
July, 2002