Bust of Constantine I, photographed by Jean-Christophe Benoist. |
- Absolutist (the government may do more or less whatever it wants).
- Compatibilist (the government may do most things, as long as it does not compel me to do anything against my Christian-informed conscience.)
- Anabaptist (all coercion, violence and authority are immoral. Jesus was a pacifist.)
The absolutist view is not common, though there is good evidence that it was Luther's view -- such as when he sided against the peasants in their rebellion. Green, of course, gives evidence of its persistence.
The Anabaptist view is also not common, though it has had some brilliant expositors. Tolstoy and Gandhi probably did a good deal to inspire it, but the key works are John Howard Yoder's Politics of Jesus and Jacques Ellul's Anarchy and Christianity. It has some passionate contemporary advocates, such as Shane Claiborne (author of Jesus for President) and the folks at Jesus Radicals.
Yoder's masterpiece of Christian pacifist exegesis. |
The brilliant part of Green's analysis, though, is that he takes many of the smartest critiques of the Anabaptist school (1 Samuel 8 alone is a pregnant chapter) and demonstrates that they make more sense as a critique of the coercive state than as a critique of violence per se. The verses usually cited by the Anabaptist interpreters retain all of their potency and pose none of the same interpretative problems when read in the way Green suggests. Green's essay might also be profitably read in light of James Davison Hunter's critiques of political Christianity in To Change the World (expect a fuller review of that book in a future post).
Let me close with a quotation that will hopefully pique your interest if it hasn't been already to read the article:
In Anglo-Saxon countries until the mid 1800’s with the introduction of police, the administration of justice worked well, largely without government. The Common Law was (and still is in some places) administered by unpaid local Justices of the Peace and Constables who were independent and often opposed the State. "Citizen’s arrest" was the primary means of enforcement. Enforcement of law under ancient Israel was similar, with Judges and volunteer officers of the court.