“A BRIEF HISTORY OF NONVIOLENCE”
A Sermon for Martin Luther King, Jr. Sunday
by the Rev. Melanie Morel-Ensminger
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Sunday, January 20, 2008
This morning, in honor of Dr. King, I will attempt a brief history of nonviolence in the West. The nonviolence taught by Dr. King did not arise in a vacuum, but was instead arrived at through a direct line of transmission and inspiration, and it is important that we remember the antecedents to King’s work. The task I have set for myself is impossible to accomplish in the time allotted, but I hope that the whirlwind tour on which we’re about to embark will whet your appetite to learn more about the movements of what Gandhi called “the great eternal law of nonviolence.” (In order to keep this sermon a reasonable length, I will not today be treating the teachings of nonviolence that can be found in Eastern traditions such as Buddhism and Taoism.)
The first known teacher of nonviolence in the Western canon is, of course, Jesus of Nazareth. His famous dictum, “If anyone strikes you on the right cheek, turn the other also; and if anyone would sue you and take your cloak, give your tunic as well” becomes all the more remarkable when one realizes that in Jesus’ day, the poor folks he was speaking to pretty much had only those 2 garments to their name. Thus, literally following Jesus’ admonition would leave someone naked. (Some commentators believe that this was the point, since the very public nakedness of the oppressed person would be a kind of public rebuke to the oppressor.)
It was not until the conversion of the Emperor Constantine in the midst of war that Christianity would be transformed into a religion that could develop theories of “just war” and holy war. In the earliest days, devout Christians were resolutely pacifist; many went gladly to their deaths, taking the example of the first martyr, Stephen, whose saint’s day is December 26. (Touchingly, Stephen’s last words before he was stoned to death presaged the final words of Ed Johnson, an innocent black man murdered at the hands of a white lynch mob in Chattanooga in 1901: “Lord, do not hold this sin against them.”) Even though the institutional church all but abandoned non-violence, what Jesus taught had subversive implications in centuries to come.
In the mid-1800s, the nonviolence inherent in the teachings of Jesus inspired a native people in the face of oppressive colonialism. The Maori Parihaka movement of
Similarly, a religious movement to take back land appropriated by armed invaders arose among Native American peoples of the
Although neither Unitarianism nor Universalism were part of the historic American “peace churches,” still, in the 19th century Universalist minister Adin Ballou, minister to the Unitarian congregation in Hopedale, Massachusetts, wrote A Treatise on Christian Non-Resistance, which in later years influenced the work and writings of such notable preachers of nonviolence as Leo Tolstoy, Mahatma Gandhi, Howard Thurman, and Martin Luther King, Jr.
Mohandas K. Gandhi of
On December 1, 1955, the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. was a new pastor in
Looking back over this brief history of nonviolence, we see that there are 5 things that all mass movements of passive resistance have in common:
1) They are grounded in both spirituality and politics, the material world and the ideal world;
2) They require an absolute determination to renounce the use of force, no matter the provocation, even when seemingly justified by the oppressor’s actions;
3) They are predicated on a disciplined community of participants, whose training is constantly reinforced, and not on spontaneous or individual actions;
4) There must be a willingness to pay whatever price necessary to gain freedom and justice – arrest, loss of reputation, prison, bodily injury, even death;
5) There must be an assumption of hopefulness, of eventual victory, depending on a higher power and that the oppressor’s own ideals and principles will win them over.
Another thing we can see from our brief look at the history of non-violence in the West is that some passive movements for peace and justice were only partially successful, and some were, materially at least, complete failures. Perhaps Gandhi was right, that we cannot say that nonviolence does not work since it has not yet been fully put into practice. (Interestingly, Gandhi felt the same way about Christianity, saying once that he had never yet met a Christian.)
What is the future of nonviolence today? Is there a future? Is there any place for passive resistance in today’s world? Could nonviolence be successful in places where armed struggle and reciprocal violence have failed? Would it work in
I don’t know if I’d say I’ve ever done sermons that end with “Here’s the final answer: you ought to do this, now go and do it” but if I have, this is not one of those. I do not have the answers to all these questions – I just have more questions. But on this weekend when we honor the work and life and words of a “drum major for justice” whose life was dedicated to nonviolence but who died from an assassin’s bullet, I think we should at least look at the history of nonviolence, and think about what its future might be, and what that means, if anything, to us and to our children. And then what we do about it is up to us. AMEN – ASHE – SHALOM – SALAAM – NAMASTE – BLESSED BE!