Approaching the End. Stanley Hauerwas

Approaching the End - Stanley Hauerwas


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Howard Yoder, as Douglas Harink has suggested, would have found Lou Martyn’s account of Paul’s apocalyptic gospel supportive of his reading of Paul.1 Like Martyn, Yoder did not think Paul’s “gospel” to be first and foremost about us. Rather, as Martyn suggests, Paul’s gospel is centered on “God’s liberating invasion of the cosmos. Christ’s love enacted in the cross has the power to change the world because it is embodied in the new community of mutual service.”2 Thus Yoder and Martyn, in quite similar ways, contend that Paul understood that in the cross and resurrection of Christ a new creation has been enacted, bringing an end to the old age and inaugurating a new time characterized by the reign of God as King.3

      Before turning to Yoder, however, I want to call attention to Harink’s suggestions about how Martyn’s work might be developed politically. For Harink quite rightly observes that there is a politics, a politics that is perhaps underdeveloped, in Martyn’s understanding of the three-­actor moral drama that constitutes Paul’s understanding of the human situation. Besides divine and human agency, there also exist anti-­God powers whose agency is apparent in their ability to deceive and enslave. Harink suggests that in most accounts of Christian ethics the role of these powers, particularly as corporate agents, is ignored, which often means that the church as a political entity and agent is also lost.

      Yoder on Christ the King


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