On the 25th Anniversary of the United Methodist Bishops’“In Defense of Creation”
Earlier this autumn I was invited to speak about theological ethics, war, and peace to a United Methodist congregation in Des Moines, Iowa. At the beginning of my presentation, I held up the foundation...
View ArticleUnited Methodism on War and Peace: Embracing the Tension between Optimism and...
United Methodism embraces an internal tension in its official statements on war. The United Methodist Discipline both teaches that war is “incompatible with the teachings of Christ” (¶165.C) and...
View ArticleWar, Peace, and the Wesleyan Tradition’s Charism: to be “perfect in love in...
By D. Stephen Long When I published my first book, which was on United Methodism and war, John Howard Yoder surprised me by blurbing it with the comment that it was interesting to see “non binding...
View ArticleOn War and Peace: Methodism’s Responsible Ambivalence
The third post for our short series of reflections on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the United Methodist bishops’ war and peace pastoral letter, In Defense of Creation; this one is by Dr. J....
View Article“Inaction” in the Face of Injustice? United Methodism on War and Peace
By Nicole L. Johnson In response to changing political and cultural realities over the past several decades, the United Methodist Church has come to embrace various positions on the subject of war and...
View ArticleBook Preview: Modern Just War Theory by Michael Farrell
[Michael Farrell, Reformed Theological Seminary, Orlando, previews his new book, Modern Just War Theory: A Guide to Research (Scarecrow Press, 2013).] The just war tradition is one of several...
View ArticlePacifism as Privilege
Being a pacifist and an American is virtually impossible. Typically, the peace and justice community focus on violence issues, human trafficking, and other visible forms of oppression. They come out...
View ArticleA Sheep in Wolf’s Clothing: Nonviolence and Pacifism Part I (by Jonathan McRay)
Nonviolence and pacifism are often pitted against one another, even though pacifism was once considered the activist term to distinguish it from nonresistance. Now, pacifism is thrown under the bus,...
View ArticleA Sheep in Wolf’s Clothing: Nonviolence and Pacifism Part II (by Jonathan McRay)
At the very least we might say that both nonviolence and pacifism should attempt to understand and redirect violence. And maybe we should shelve the tired terms for a spell and speak of life-giving or...
View ArticleJames Childress and the Presumption Against War
....Because war’s constituent ingredients are killing and/or physical harm, and because, in Childress’ argument, those two things are “intrinsically prima facie wrong” because of the prima facie...
View ArticleBarth on War, Peace, and Pacifism: A Primer
Current crises across the Middle East and other war-torn locations demand careful consideration of war, just war theory, and other tenets of military interventionism. The Christian theologian faces a...
View ArticleUnited Methodism on War and Peace: Embracing the Tension between Optimism and...
United Methodism embraces an internal tension in its official statements on war. The United Methodist Discipline both teaches that war is “incompatible with the teachings of Christ” (¶165.C) and...
View ArticleWar, Peace, and the Wesleyan Tradition’s Charism: to be “perfect in love in...
By D. Stephen Long When I published my first book, which was on United Methodism and war, John Howard Yoder surprised me by blurbing it with the comment that it was interesting to see “non binding...
View ArticleApplying Just War Theory To Community Policing (Nathaniel Grimes)
How can peace-minded Christians (specifically Roman Catholics and Mennonites) find common ground on the problems of war and policing? A decade ago, Gerald Schlabach put forward a proposal for “Just...
View ArticleOn War and Peace: Methodism’s Responsible Ambivalence
The third post for our short series of reflections on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the United Methodist bishops’ war and peace pastoral letter, In Defense of Creation; this one is by Dr. J....
View Article“Inaction” in the Face of Injustice? United Methodism on War and Peace
By Nicole L. Johnson In response to changing political and cultural realities over the past several decades, the United Methodist Church has come to embrace various positions on the subject of war and...
View ArticleBook Preview: Modern Just War Theory by Michael Farrell
[Michael Farrell, Reformed Theological Seminary, Orlando, previews his new book, Modern Just War Theory: A Guide to Research (Scarecrow Press, 2013).] The just war tradition is one of several...
View ArticlePacifism as Privilege
Being a pacifist and an American is virtually impossible. Typically, the peace and justice community focus on violence issues, human trafficking, and other visible forms of oppression. They come out...
View ArticleA Sheep in Wolf’s Clothing: Nonviolence and Pacifism Part I (by Jonathan McRay)
Nonviolence and pacifism are often pitted against one another, even though pacifism was once considered the activist term to distinguish it from nonresistance. Now, pacifism is thrown under the bus,...
View ArticleA Sheep in Wolf’s Clothing: Nonviolence and Pacifism Part II (by Jonathan McRay)
At the very least we might say that both nonviolence and pacifism should attempt to understand and redirect violence. And maybe we should shelve the tired terms for a spell and speak of life-giving or...
View Article