Non-violence in the Early Church

Started by Corey Farr, July 05, 2018, 03:17 PM (Read 1283 times)

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Corey Farr

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Last Edit: July 05, 2018, 06:07 PM by Jon Stovell

Abstract:

The intent of this paper is to survey the attitudes of the early (pre-Constantinian) church towards violence, military service, and martyrdom and bring them into dialogue with contemporary US-American evangelical views and practices. I will examine this both in terms of the more passive and prohibitive critiques of culture and the more “active” affirmation of the merits of martyrdom. In doing so, I hope to show that the church had not only the negative/passive witness of refusing to engage in violent acts, but also the positive/active witness of being willing to accept and even embrace violence done to themselves – in a way that is less pathological than it sounds – in imitation of their cruciform king.

The full paper is attached to this post.


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Corey Farr. Nonviolence in the Early Church.pdf

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