There is nothing fancy about Trocmé’s approach. With prophetic intuition rather than weighty analysis, he renders interpretations that are both subtle and provocative. His core argument is simple: Jesus inaugurated the kingdom of God based on the Jubilee principles of the Old Testament. These principles call for a political, economic, and spiritual revolution in response Jesus and the Nonviolent Revolution to human need. Jesus intended nothing less that an actual revolution, with debts forgiven, slaves set free, and land returned to the poor.
It was this threat to vested interests that awakened the hostility toward Jesus that led to the cross. Jesus understood the kingdom of God in terms of God’s work in human history; every sphere of life was a domain for God’s rulership. But he saw, too, that such rulership would always cost a struggle. The first Christians, who were charged with seditiously "turning the world upside down," understood their master well. They had caught this vision and begun to live it out.
I am needing to have my memory refreshed as to how and why Christ is central to how I live my life. This looks like just the thing.
2 comments:
John, I've started reading this one just recently. I have only one student in my Gr. 12 English class, and he's not a steady attender, so I have some spare time. I can't respond yet, on the above (or below) comment, but maybe after I've read more, I'll have some insight. From what I know though, it does sound like Trocme really strove for the Kingdom of God; both spiritually and physically. We'll see...
JJ, thanks for the heads up on this one...looking forward to reading it. Grace. I hope it refreshes your memory too.
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