Jesus and the Abolitionists: How Anarchist Christianity Empowers the People

· Broadleaf Books
Ebook
173
Pages
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About this ebook

Isn't anarchy just chaos? How could it possibly relate to Christianity?

Countless people, including (and sometimes especially) those from religious backgrounds, are exploring radical ideas. The pandemic, the Black liberation movement, climate disaster--all these concerns are leading us to ask, "Does our system actually work? Is capitalism ethical? Is this the only way to build a society?"

Questions like these led author and pastor Terry Stokes to the political philosophy of anarchy. Now, we all have a scary picture in our minds about anarchy: that it calls for chaos, violence, and disorder. But anarchy actually calls for the end of rulership, not violence in the streets. Anarchy seeks to empower small communities of people to take care of their own needs at the local level, thereby making the state obsolete. It's all about constructing societies in which people are placed above profit and systems are built on ethics of justice and equality. To Stokes, that sounded a whole lot like the building blocks of Christian faith.

In Jesus and the Abolitionist, Stokes introduces readers to the ancient practice of anarchy and how it intersects with Christian beliefs and values. We see how beliefs about God, humanity, divine-human interaction, the Bible, and more can be illuminated and faithfully reformulated through an anarchist lens. This view, which Stokes calls anarchist Christianity, seeks to abolish tyrannical systems that do not recognize the changing values of our times and that disempower the people. Stokes's vision of an anarchist Christian future charts a caring theology and practice of living, one based in our voluntary cooperation, the goodness of all people, and faith in God. We can build an ethical world--one built on structures of care--and anarchy might just be the unlikely key.

About the author

Raised in California and Virginia, Terry J. Stokes completed his undergraduate studies at Yale University in 2016 and his master of divinity at Princeton Theological Seminary in 2020. He served in parish ministry for several years before moving into nonprofit community development work in central New Jersey. In 2021 he published a collection titled Prayers for the People: Things We Didn't Know We Could Say to God (Convergent 2021). Around that time, his interest took him in the direction of radical theology and philosophy, which led him down the path of study and formation which led to Jesus and the Abolitionists: How Anarchist Christianity Empowers the People.

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