Loewen takes up the task of recontextualizing the cross within the broader narrative of Jesus’ life and ministry, crucifixion, death, and resurrection. In doing so, she illuminates an expansive understanding of redemption.Many contemporary progressive Christians don’t know what to do with the cross. Tired of it being used to excuse or promote a violent and/or masochistic understanding of the faith, many advocate avoiding the cross altogether, and emptying it of its redemptive significance. But what if the cross can be reclaimed in ways that speak an empowering and liberating word to those experiencing trauma and suffering and those seeking to embody a Christian peace ethic?Using a Mennonite-feminist perspective which holds together historic peace church emphases on peace, nonviolence, and empowering discipleship, this book explores each stage of the narrative of Jesus. What emerges from this unique conversation is a peaceable reclaiming of the cross as a moment of Divine embrace and presence, reflected all the way from Jesus’ compassionate ministry of peace to his cross as a symbol of all of the ways people are crucified today.
Susanne Guenther Loewen teaches Peace Studies at St. Thomas More College at the University of Saskatchewan, Canada.
Introduction1. What Redeems Us? Wrestling with the Myths of Redemptive Violence and Redemptive Suffering2. The Passion of Jesus: A Life and Ministry of Redemptive Compassion3. “The Crosses by Which We Are Surrounded”: Reclaiming the Crosses of Trauma, Embrace, and Resurrection4. Remaining in Holy Saturday: On Trauma and Redemptive Accompaniment5. Resurrection and the Empty Tomb: The Ethical Community of the Absent ChristBibliographyIndex