Is There a Sabbath for Thought?

The seventh day on which God rested, and which holds out the possibility of resting in God (ceasing from laborious struggle), is definitive of salvation. Sabbath rest is a return to and acknowledgement of that which precedes tragic knowing (war, struggle, and violence). In Hebrews, Sabbath as salvation is described as a continuous and open possibility, an avenue of experience that by-passes the reign of death, the agonistic struggle in the wilderness, and which provides peace. “For the one who has entered His rest has himself also rested from his works, as God did from His” (Heb 4:10). Sabbath provides entry to all that follows in the commandments, for acquisitiveness of the neighbor’s stuff, fear of death with its murder and revenge, the worship of idols with its manipulation of death, are undermined, in recognizing God. “Therefore let us draw near with confidence to the throne of grace, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need” (Heb 4:16).

This is not simply a delayed peace, awaiting the end of time, as the writer declares we must enter in today: “Today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts” (Heb 4:7). This “today” stretches out to every moment of history as the continual and ever-present possibility. “So then, there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God, for whoever has entered God’s rest has also rested from his works as God did from his. Let us therefore strive to enter that rest, so that no one may fall by the same sort of disobedience” (Heb 4:9-11). This peace is continually available but the vessel must receive what is poured out.

Job describes the all-consuming nature of unrest and suffering, such that sleep offers no refuge, as even his dreams terrify him (Job 7:14). His inability to escape suffering, to turn off his mind, describes mental suffering, perhaps worse even than his physical suffering, as the mind becomes both victimizer and victim. Even death offers no refuge and so he cries out for God to obliterate him: “Oh that my request might come to pass, And that God would grant my longing! Would that God were willing to crush me, That He would loose His hand and cut me off!” (Job 6:8–9).

Job’s description resembles the desperation of case histories presented by Sigmund Freud, describing individuals driven to hysteria or self-harm due to their torturous thoughts. The Wolf Man, the Rat Man, and the case of Dr. Schreber, describe the workings of the obsessive-compulsive disorder and Freud’s attempts to find a cure. He assumed that these extreme cases offered archetypical insights into the universal human condition, which he would eventually link to the death-drive (or Thanatos). Jacques Lacan, extends Freud’s conclusions, presuming that the death-drive or the drive to self-destruction is the worst sort of solipsism, in that the drive to escape the death-drive is the death-drive. The human sickness drives one to a Job-like conclusion that the only cure is annihilation. Annihilation as cure, explains Lacan’s rather sad diagnosis, that the sickness is driven by pursuit of a cure, when in reality the best compromise is to relinquish this notion.

On a larger scale, but following the same logic, is Heraclitus understanding that “War is the father of all things.” Just as death-drive is the impetus undergirding the ego and superego (in Lacan these structures, constituting the human subject, arise from the death-drive), so too, war is the impetus to formation of the city, and the various social and political structures of corporate human personality. Even Plato called for a permanent military class, since the threat of war is constant and peace is never permanent. Though the scale is larger the subject has not changed; killing and being killed in war must trace its etiology to the same dynamic, found both in the individual and corporate personality. The drive to obliterate, projected inward or outward, has the same result.

Thus, the Rat Man, will find a final cure in being slaughtered in WWI. As the Japanese author, Yukio Mishima recognized, war was a missed opportunity in which he could have ceased being, and thus have been relieved of his torturous thoughts (making up the corpus of his work). Peace enters into the equation only as the end-result of death and war. As with the Lacanian therapeutic conclusion, the drive to peace may be seen as the core of the sickness, as it is this pursuit, continually illusive, that sets the world on fire. Peace through war, either implicitly or explicitly, privileges war as original. It is the means and end of the death-drive. The drive to escape the death-drive is the death-drive, or the drive to escape war through war, is only a difference in scale. This is the human sickness, and it describes the masochistic and sadistic snare which entraps the world.

This dark description may function at an unconscious level but the same dynamic unfolds in consciousness. The conscious desire for life, the sex drive or the drive for acquisition (covetousness), speaks of the same death dealing consequences, in that life is to be acquired, extracted (from the other), and spent. Will to power, will to life, springs from a desire in which life is lacking and must be obtained. As Arthur Schopenhauer describes, “All willing arises from want, therefore from deficiency, and therefore from suffering. The satisfaction of a wish ends it; yet for one wish that is satisfied there remain at least ten which are denied.”[1] The process is infinite, in that satisfaction is only “apparent” and not real and an attained object is by definition not a desired object, it is “merely a fleeting gratification; it is like the alms thrown to the beggar, that keeps him alive to-day that his misery may be prolonged till the morrow.”[2] Desire is bottomless and its demands infinite, calling for final resolution or ultimate satisfaction. Freud hit upon the death-drive, finding it behind Schopenhauer’s will.

For most of his career Freud attempted to link the basic drive to sex or biology or to a more positive and life-giving desire, but he realized desire functions at two levels, and underneath desire was drive, in which life and death are confused. He concluded sadism was a projection of masochism, or the internal dynamic turned outward. The superego (father) which would punish the ego (child) makes oppression and dominance, or acquisition from the self (self-consumption) the means to life. The price for life is death (self-punishment). Consciously or unconsciously, the grave is the final immortalization, as here there is no mortality. The drive for life, in other words, is death-drive hidden beneath the layer of conscious desire. Security is achieved through acquisition (of wealth, power, and sex), which means the race is driven by a deadly acquisitive aggression. As a result, eternal life is through unlimited resources and acquisition, so that peace and security arise through mutually assured destruction. As William Desmond notes, “If this is our primary relation to the world, war inevitably defines human existence relative to what is other to us.”[3] He raises the question (and answers it) as to whether we can give it a rest, and find peace.

God’s resting and his declaration that creation is not only “good” but “very good” contains the goodness released from God into creation, realized in Sabbath. This primordial goodness contains no hint of violence nor is this a self-satisfied and selfish goodness: “this is not the erotic self-satisfaction of an autistic god, but an agapeic release of the otherness of creation into the goodness of its own being for itself.”[4] The otherness of creation to God informs recognition of goodness, which does not require acquisition or consumption. “When we behold something, something of the otherness of the thing beheld is communicated to us: beholding is not a self-projection. Every anthropomorphism —call this our own self projection on the other —is made possible by this “yes,” as first giving creation to be for itself, endowing it with the promise of its own being for itself.”[5] We can enjoy creation, not because it is “good for us” but simply because it is good. “It is given for the other as other, and the good as for us comes to us from a giver that is beyond any enclosure of ‘for self.’”[6] This is a knowing, a mindfulness, which is given, perhaps reflected in the activity of bestowing names; recognizing what is given, and not struggling to determine thought, or to attain being through thought, but enjoying what is.

In contrast, the tragic knowing of the fall is centered on the self, and aimed at attaining through knowing (“You shall be like gods”). The falling apart and shame impose a new sort of work, in which the self is at stake in the struggle. Antagonism, disputation, agonistic struggle, argument, conflict, murder, become the means to life and wisdom. This human failure is reflected in all the areas constituting humanity (religion, psychology, philosophy, and culture).

In religious myth, war and violence are the primal reality behind wisdom and existence. Athena, the goddess of wisdom, is the goddess of war, springing from the head of Zeus, brandishing her spear. Heraclitus’ “War is the father of all,” accords with religious myth, in which out of violence and war the world is created. The celestial gods war among themselves, and often it is out of the cadaver of the deity that creation commences, thus death is divine (e.g., Thanatos, Hades, Hel, Yama, Anubis, Mictlan). The gods of war promise salvation through destruction. Odin leads warriors to Valhalla through death, while Horus, the Egyptian god of the sky swoops like a falcon, and Kali transforms through destruction.

So too modern philosophy focuses on the creativity of death: Kant presumes war produces the sublime, Schelling pictures God arising though being opposed to himself; Hegel pictures dialectical strife and contradiction, or spirit at war with itself as the avenue to synthesis; Marx translates the Hegelian dialectic into a creative class warfare as the engine of history; and according to Lenin, “The unity of opposites is temporary; antagonistic struggle is absolute,” which Mao liked to quote in conjunction with his idea that “power grows out of the barrel of a gun.”[7] Desmond goes on to describe Socrates, Nietzsche, Blake, Schopenhauer, and Spinoza as given over to an originary violence. In this nightmare, work, war, and struggle are primary. Nature, red in tooth and claw, power through the barrel of a gun, ceaseless struggle over limited resources, is the Hobbesian reality with which we are most familiar. Life is no rose garden, and at best peace is the temporary cessation of war. It is derived from war, from preparation for war, and from threat of war. Machiavelli would advise a pretense of peace and religion, while recognizing the cruel realities necessary to exercise power. Even thought and the possibility of thinking are relinquished, in a form of thought which must first attain the self (e.g., the Cartesian grasp for self). Lost thought, the lost self, the absence of life, is the ground of originary violence (religious and philosophical).

Sabbath is a return to an original possibility upon which everything else depends, “The Lord God is One.” Here there is rest and peace, and the painful labor produced by human rebellion is resolved before it occurs. “God is good” and his goodness is overflowing, and grace is simply given. Desmond appeals to the poetry of Yeats to capture the imagery: “peace ‘in the bee-loud glade,’ peace that ‘comes dropping slow, dropping from the veils of the morning to where the cricket sings.’”[8] It is “dropping slow” like honey from the comb. It descends like the evening, when night falls, as it is a gift from above.

It is not that a certain effort is not involved: “strive to enter that rest” (Heb 4:11), or strive to bring about the conditions ripe for receiving. According to Desmond, “When peace descends on us, we do not sleep but are overtaken and transformed, though if we were asked to give a definition of that peace it would be like the intimate universal —impossible to fix completely.”[9] It is a “God send” which awakens us to a peace beyond finite possibility, opening to a “love of being,” a gift which we mostly fall asleep to. Perhaps like Job, we are awakened from our nightmares to a more primordial possibility: “If it is true that it is polemos (war or conflict) that is second-born, then polemos is the fugue state, and born of falling asleep to the first peace of being.”[10]

The promise of Sabbath is to remind us that there is more than exile, more than the fall, more than the sweat of the brow, and the pain of labor. Though this darkness has penetrated to our bones, there is the possibility of exposing this lie through the word of God (“penetrating joint and marrow”) and the power of Sabbath (Heb 4:12-13). “I would say that the Sabbath is not the first, but it follows from the first. God is the First. Hence the first and most hyperbolic commandment: I am God, and there is none other; God is God and nothing but God is God.”[11] This God is not equivocal or in opposition to himself. He is a singularity in which there is the possibility of Sabbath harmony. Our tendency is to create divine false doubles (requiring equivocity), the myths of war between the gods, so that inevitably the “harbingers of war are hidden in the false names of God.”[12]

The Sabbath is made for recognizing God and to rid ourselves of idols (the derivatives, the seconds, the counterfeit reality). “I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery. You shall have no other gods before me” (Ex 20:2–3). In false realities, God’s otherness is made to seem an infinite distance and his peace an otherworldly impossibility. God draws near in the Sabbath. Love of God is renewed so that we might once again recognize his image in our neighbor and in ourselves. “You shall not make for yourself a carved image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth” (Ex 20:4).

The turn to worship of the creaturely is to forget the God of Sabbath peace. To attach the name of God to death is to transgress the third commandment (Ex 20:7). The resolution: “Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days you shall labor, and do all your work, but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the LORD your God” (Ex 20:8–10). The peace of the Sabbath is more primordial than death, and the unified God of the Sabbath precedes the deities of division. “It is a reminder: against the counterfeit doubles we produce, the substitute seconds we secrete, against the war hinted in the equivocal, there is a recall to the First, a recall to a peace more primordial than war.”[13]

We are at stake in realizing the primordial peace of Sabbath; our own well-being, our mindfulness, our salvation, from out of violence and war, into participation in the primordial peace of God. This touches on what is deepest and most intimate to us, as we are involved in this remembrance or forgetting (it is not merely an objective problem). It is the realization of the overflowing love of God – what Desmond calls, “agapeic astonishment.” We are awakened to the love of God and the sheer wonder of the world in its plenitude, a “too-muchness.” “Astonishment has the bite of happening in it: an otherness is shown or communicated to us, and a celebrating wonder at its sheer being there as given awakens us to it, and indeed awakens mind to itself.”[14] Sabbath is a time of grateful reception, peace with self, others, and God are communicated (we receive ourselves back).

As Desmond explains, there is a “de-weaponizing.” There is a disarming, a dropping of all weapons, a ceasing of weaponized work (futile striving) so as to take up the work of love. It is not so much working as grateful enjoyment and gratitude. “Work becomes prayer. Prayer is not now the impotence of work, that is, impotence for which nothing anymore works. Prayer is the empowering apotheosis of powerlessness.”[15] It is on the order of Paul’s weakness, in which he discovers God’s grace. This disempowerment frees for a saturation in grace. Like Job, who endures the extremity of suffering and the acceptance of his nakedness, which is the entry point of blessing. “Naked I came into being, naked I go out; the Lord gives, the Lord takes; blessed be God forever. This is a sabbatical prayer —a faith in sabbatical being beyond the night of exposure.”[16]

Yes, there is a Sabbath for thought, in which the war of words, the inner struggle, and its outward form cease. It is not an end of thinking, but a new form of received thought, in which we are awakened to mindfulness, to love, to “It is good,” and we become participants in God’s recreation. Lack, absence, and deprivation describe the violent struggle which is all consuming in the annihilation of war or the all-consuming “neurosis” of death-drive but the work of remembrance, of receiving, of participating, is on the order of prayer. The grace of Sabbath peace is the overflow granted to being in creation. This life is not gained through struggle but remembered as the good gift. War springs from a love of life that must be gained, protected, and preserved, but this life is not one that is missing but which is freely given.

(Sign up for “Do Not Let Your Hearts Be Troubled: Perspectives on Peace” Starting April 8th and running through May 27th. This class, with Ethan Vander Leek, examines “peace” from various perspectives: Biblical, theological, philosophical, and inter-religious. Go to https://pbi.forgingploughshares.org/offerings.)


[1] Arthur Schopenhauer, The World As Will And Idea, Translated by R. B. Haldane and J. Kemp,  (London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co. 1909) 260.

[2] Ibid.

[3] William Desmond, Is There a Sabbath for Thought? Between Religion and Philosophy (New York: Fordham University Press, 2005), 317

[4] Desmond, 325.

[5] Desmond, 326.

[6] Desmond, 326.

[7] Philip Short, Mao: A Iife (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1999), 459; on power out of the barrel of a gun, see 203, 368. Cited in Desmond, 328.

[8] Desmond, 322. Citing Yeats, “The Lake Isle of Innisfree.”

[9] Desmond, 322-323.

[10] Desmond, 323.

[11] Desmond, 324.

[12] Desmond, 325.

[13] Desmond, 325.

[14] Desmond, 332

[15] Desmond, 347.

[16] Desmond, 347.

God is not Violent

It is not God’s violence that killed Christ but human violence. This violence is projected onto God (as His will), obscuring who He is, and Christ reveals God through enduring, exposing, and defeating the power that killed Him. The final and full revelation of God in Christ displaces violent notions of God, as not only is Christ nonviolent, but his entire life journey through death and resurrection defeats the weaponization of death, exposing notions of originary violence as the lie of the devil. In Christ God is defeating both this violent image of God and deployment of death as the means to salvation. The power that killed Christ is exposed, and the death-dealing of the world and the ruler of this world are defeated in Christ. “Now judgment is upon this world; now the ruler of this world will be cast out. “And I, if I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to Myself” (John 12:31-32). Jesus ends the violent hostility by defeating death and making the God of peace known and knowable and thus ending the confusion between God and the devil.

We Know God Through Christ

The revelation given through Christ is not simply propositions about God (though this is not excluded) but a personal knowing, and this knowing stands in contrast to previous forms of knowing. Formerly God was not known in the fullness of his personhood (which also includes an inadequate propositionalism). The former incompleteness is variously described as dealing in “dead works,” “the law of sin and death,” “the body of death,” or “the letter that kills.” Life in Christ is the primary contrast with this former way characterized by death, and this life is characterized by peace, love, hospitality, and nonviolence. In the former system God is not known directly but is partially revealed through the mediation of law, angels, and human messengers, which are variously likened to shadows or subject to an entrapment to “elementary principles” or may give rise to a violent deception. Knowing God in Christ is to pass from death to life (inclusive of all those characteristics and orientations involved in each).

Hebrews: God in Christ Defeats Enslavement to the Fear of Death

The writer of Hebrews contrasts knowing God in Christ with every manner in which God was revealed in the Hebrew Scriptures and religion: “God, after He spoke long ago to the fathers in the prophets in many portions and in many ways, in these last days has spoken to us in His Son, whom He appointed heir of all things, through whom also He made the world. And He is the radiance of His glory and the exact representation of His nature, and upholds all things by the word of His power” (Heb. 1:1–3). Chapter by chapter the writer describes the variety of means used previously  and their inferiority compared to Christ: chapters 3-4: Christ is greater than Moses and the law delivered by angels and not God; chapters 5-7: Jesus is the true High Priest in that he is true mediator and thus perfect representative of God; chapters 8-10: Christ establishes a new relationship or covenant which brings about the life and peace lacking in the temple and its system; chapter 11 describes faithfulness of the Hebrew martyrs in the face of violent death even though they had not received the fullness of Christ; chapter 12 points out that though they may be suffering violent persecution the recipients of this letter have not yet shed any blood (12:4) thus they are experiencing the discipline of the life of faith; chapter 13, Jesus is the author and perfector of faith and thus they are to endure in love and not fear the violent things that might be done to the body.

The author consistently ties in the personhood of Christ, not only with a complete understanding of God but a complete understanding of the world: Christ “upholds all things by the word of His power. When He had made purification of sins, He sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high” (Heb. 1:3). The character of God revealed in Christ permeates the universe, as he creates and sustains, but also because he perfects and purifies. Though the world of man is given over to violence and persecution of Christ and Christians, we now have direct access to God, behind the veil that previously obstructed access but through Christ has been removed (chapter 10). Jesus has brought peace between God and man, where formerly hostility reigned, and he has established peace within human conscience (9:9-14): “how much more will the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered Himself without blemish to God, cleanse your conscience from dead works to serve the living God?” (9:14).

 Though the writer does not explicitly equate the incompleteness of the old covenant with violence, nor the completeness of the new covenant with peace, this is the implicit comparison throughout. The danger is one of perishing in the wilderness like the Israelites rather than entering God’s sabbath rest (chapter 4); there is the danger of clinging to repeated blood sacrifices (dead works which leave one with a troubled conscience) rather than being united with God in the once and for all sacrifice of Christ which leads to a clean conscience (chapter 9); or there is the danger of dealing in death and being ruled by this fear, rather than finding eternal life through Christ’s defeat of death: “Therefore, since the children share in flesh and blood, He Himself likewise also partook of the same, that through death He might render powerless him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and might free those who through fear of death were subject to slavery all their lives” (2:14-15). Rather than dealing in death, Christ has opened “a new and living way” (Heb. 10:20). In the book of Hebrews Christ fully reveals God and this revelation amounts to the passage from dealing in death (the incomplete, the fearful, the sacrificial, the mediated, the shadows) to dealing in life (peace, rest, sanctification, clean conscience, faithfulness, hope, forgiveness, etc.)

John: God is Revealed in Christ’s Defeat of Violent Death On the Cross

Perhaps the most famous passage equating the revelation of Christ with knowing God is John 1:1-14. This passage identifies Jesus as the Word who “was with God” and who “was God.” He is creator and redeemer: “All things came into being through Him, and apart from Him nothing came into being that has come into being. In Him was life, and the life was the Light of men” (John 1:3-4). The Word is God in the flesh, revealing the reality of God in and through his divinity and humanity. Throughout his Gospel John identifies Jesus directly with God, assuming the highest name for God (ἐγώ εἰμι, “I am” or YHWH)  in his “I am” statements (e.g., John 8:58: “Before Abraham was, I am.”). He tells Philip, that to see Him is to see the Father : “Have I been so long with you, and yet you have not come to know Me, Philip? He who has seen Me has seen the Father; how can you say, ‘Show us the Father’? “Do you not believe that I am in the Father, and the Father is in Me?” (Jn 14:9–10). Jesus is the full revelation of who God is, and again the two-fold characteristic of this revelation is that Jesus reveals the truth about God and the truth about all of creation.

In his confrontation with “the Jews” Jesus contrasts himself with their understanding: “You are of your father the devil, and you want to do the desires of your father. He was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the truth because there is no truth in him. Whenever he speaks a lie, he speaks from his own nature, for he is a liar and the father of lies” (Jn 8:44). The Jews will kill Jesus to protect their understanding of the law and the temple, which certainly points to their failure, but also to the inadequacy of the Jewish system to change their thought world, grounded in violence and death. They speak the native language of their father, a lying murderer, while Jesus is offering the word of life (8:51). There are two streams of meaning or two heads or fathers of language (8:38); the deadly language of the devil and the Living Word of Christ. The law and the temple are not inherently evil, but taken as an end in themselves they are the basis for rejecting the reality about God revealed in Christ.

In their understanding they would kill Jesus to save their religion, and Jesus would rescue them from their entrapment to violence. Those who “continue in” or do the word of Jesus “will know the truth, and the truth will make you free” (John 8:31-32). They could be free from sin, which in the context pertains directly to killing Jesus, but their attachment to the law as an end in itself leaves no room for the Truth: “you seek to kill Me, because My word has no place in you” (8:37). They are committed to killing Jesus due to their understanding that Abraham is their father, and Jesus explains they have confused their paternity: “They answered and said to Him, ‘Abraham is our father.’ Jesus said to them, ‘If you are Abraham’s children, do the deeds of Abraham. But as it is, you are seeking to kill Me, a man who has told you the truth, which I heard from God; this Abraham did not do. You are doing the deeds of your father” (John 8:39-41). They think they know God, and in killing Jesus they imagine they are doing the works of their father, but Jesus suggests they do not know God at all: “Jesus said to them, “If God were your Father, you would love Me, for I proceeded forth and have come from God, for I have not even come on My own initiative, but He sent Me” (John 8:42).

The mistake to be avoided is to imagine this misrecognition is a peculiarly Jewish problem. The Jews are representative of humanity, and their problem is the human problem. All people are captive to the violence (the murderous devil) that gives rise to the cross, and at the cross Christ exposes the lie behind the universal violence, and shows who God really is: “Now judgment is upon this world; now the ruler of this world will be cast out. “And I, if I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to Myself” (John 12:31-32). The ruler of this world rules through the sort of violence that put Jesus on the cross. This should be Satan’s triumphal moment, as he has accomplished the end goal of his work throughout history. He has enslaved the nations to the death dealing lie that puts Christ on the cross, but the lie behind violent killing is exposed and the fear of death is defeated.

In John 3, Jesus explains to Nicodemus, who seems to represent the Jew veiled from understanding the Scriptures (he has no concept of being “born again”, a theme of the Hebrew Scriptures) and in Jesus estimate he seems incapable of receiving things of the Spirit (3:6,11,12). Here too it is the being “lifted up” that unveils the truth of Moses in Jesus: “As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up; so that whoever believes will in Him have eternal life” (3:14-15). The sting of death warded off by the upraised serpent of Moses is fulfilled in Jesus destroying the work of the devil on the cross. “Now judgment is upon this world; now the ruler of this world will be cast out” (John 12:31). Sin and the devil rule through death, but God has decommissioned the singular weapon in the devil’s arsenal.

It is the “lifting up” which reveals Jesus’ identity as the “I am” (YHWH): “So Jesus said, ‘When you lift up the Son of Man, then you will know that I am He’” (John 8:28). Here is the realization of Isaiah, that through the “lifted up” servant “you may know and believe that I AM” (Isa. 43:10; 52:13). The universal appeal of the gospel is found in the death of Christ, as it is in his violent death that violence and death are defeated. Universal violence is overcome in the cross, as the peace of God in Christ defeats the violence of the world through the final and full revelation of the peace of God. As J. Denny Weaver writes, “God’s overcoming of death puts on sharp display the contrast between God’s modus operandi and that of the forces of evil. Whereas the forces of evil employ death-dealing as the solution to their supposed problems, God’s answer and response is the overcoming of death, the restoration of life. God saves, not by taking life but by restoring life.”[1]

Universal Salvation Through Peace

The claim that God is not violent is strangely controversial, though this understanding is at the very heart of the gospel. It is the orthodox understanding of the Trinity, and part of a theological commonplace that the persons of the Trinity share the essential divine characteristics such as peace. The nonviolence of God is tied to salvation as incorporation into the universal peace of God realized in Christ (see my previous blog here dealing with Paul’s epistles), in that universal peace also speaks of an originary peace in God (the very definition of universal peace). Neither God nor the universe are built upon an originary violence in which peace is a by-product of violence (peace through war, harmony through an original disharmony, unity as obliteration of the other, divine satisfaction through violence and death, etc.). God’s capacity to extend and incorporate into his peace through the Trinity, through creation, and through redemption, is the reality revealed in Christ. The peace of God revealed in the cross (inclusive of the life, death and resurrection of Christ) means we know God in and through the peace he gives in giving himself. We know God most completely through Christ, who is the very image of God, and the peace of God revealed and realized through Christ is the gospel.

Conclusion

A “gospel” focused on God’s violence as that which killed Christ misses the gospel. Violence projected onto God obscures God as God is the very definition of peace, and Christ reveals God through enduring, exposing, and defeating the reign of death and restoring the peace of God. The final and full revelation of God in Christ displaces violent notions of God and the seeming necessity of the war within and without, as not only is Christ nonviolent, but his entire life journey through death and resurrection defeats the cudgel of death constituting evil. In Christ God defeats evil and the confusion between the devil (in the violent image of God) and the Father of the Prince of Peace. The power that killed Christ is exposed, and the death-dealing of the world is defeated in the peace that passes understanding. Jesus ends the violent hostility by defeating death and making the God of peace known and knowable.


[1] J. Denny Weaver, The Nonviolent God (pp. 32-33). Eerdmans. Kindle Edition.