Our Call to Nonviolence
Nonresistance has been a primary facet of Mennonite
beliefs from the beginning and has its own article in our
Confession
of Faith. It is not a
term known well outside Mennonite structures. In fact, it
is often misinterpreted to mean passive resignation. A
word more commonly used is nonviolence. Use whichever
your congregation is more comfortable with. This Sunday
may again be the time to reaffirm the stance.
Bible verses: Matt 5:39
Deut 30:15-20; Matt 5:1-48; 12:9-14; 23:1-36; 26:36-75;
27:1-56; Mark 14:32-72; Luke 9:51-56; 22:39-71; 23:1-56;
24:1-53; John 2:13-22; 13:1-17; I Peter 1:13-16; Rom 12:21; I Pet 2:21-24
Sermon outline:
- I. Recognize our society's addiction to violence
(list)
- II. Define nonviolence simply: to resist evil
without violence
- Jesus is the model
- Sermon on the Mount
- Jesus was not passive--he often provoked trouble
- Resurrection: ultimate act of not
submitting!
- John Dear's definition:
- Nonviolence Means Remembering We
Are All God's Children
- Nonviolence Flows from
Unconditional, Active Love
- Nonviolence Invites Solidarity
with the Poor and the Oppressed
- Nonviolence Involves Resistance
and Truth
- Nonviolence Is Rooted in Prayer
- Nonviolence Is a Way of
Transformation
(from "Disarming the Heart" by John Dear)
- III. Prayer is the basis of nonviolence (Dear)
- Begins with an admission that we too are
addicted to violence
- Best way to seek out the truth of reality
and to live the truth of nonviolence
- The development of our relationship with
God, without which we give way to despair
and violence
- IV. Often we assume nonviolence doesn't work
(list successes)
- V. Active love willing to suffer disarms the
cycle of violence.
- Practice acts of nonviolence.
Developed for Peace Sunday by Susan Mark Landis,, then
Partner at Large for Intergenerational Peace Education,
Mennonite Board of Congregational Ministries
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