To Hear the Word - Second Edition. John Howard Yoder

To Hear the Word - Second Edition - John Howard Yoder


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meaning of a particular passage.

      The Constructive Alternative

      If the focus is not, then, on a particular understanding of the individual standing alone and transformed alone, where does it lie? It lies in Jesus’s initial proclaiming the imminence of the kingdom. Persons must repent if they are to enter it. Repenting and entering it both have about them subjective dimensions, but they can best be described in terms that include the cognitive (dealing with awareness of ideas) and the social (dealing with the awareness of other persons and groups to which one is related). The description of the change that comes over a person who repents and believes will freely include elements of emotion and self-understanding; but it will not involve any need to demonstrate that the changed nature is self-contained or self-interpreting, or that its inwardness is prior to, or the sole and adequate cause of, or independent of, its social reality.

      When we move from Jesus to Paul the same answer is clearer. The reconciliation of Jew and Gentile in the “new humanity” is first a community event. It cannot happen to a lone individual. The prerequisite for personal change is a new context into which to enter. A Gentile can only find Abraham by meeting a Jew. A Jew can only celebrate the messianic age by welcoming a Gentile. This is not to negate other dimensions—mental ideas, psychic self-understandings, feelings, etc. The issue is the sovereignty of the individualistic definition over other levels of interpretation.

      All that is needed now is to have seen that both major texts we have tested are understood more fully and more roundly if their location in the ethnic policy debate of the early churches is given more attention than the agenda of modern Western self-doubt.

      2

      It is customary to designate as “Sermon on the Mount” chapters 5–7 of Matthew’s Gospel, which appear as one uninterrupted discourse. This is the first such block of such material to be reported at the beginning of Jesus’s ministry; it is also the longest. Luke 6:17–49, a briefer passage containing parallel material, is sometimes designated “Sermon on the Plain.” It too stands (in addition to 4:16–21) as a kind of “platform” statement at the beginning of Jesus’s public ministry.

      I shall be analyzing five fragments of this material, looking at both the Matthean and the Lucan versions. My concern shall not be to lift from them a catalogue of sample statements about proper behavior, although such specimens are given. My intention is rather to see these examples as representing the mentality and the world vision within which Jesus calls his disciples to a new style of life.

      This text being neither parabolic nor poetic, our goal should be the most straightforward interpretation possible. We need therefore to direct a special suspicion to traditions of interpretation whose intent or effect is to divert our attention from taking these words of Jesus as a call to us, here and now.


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