John Howard Yoder as a mission theologian.
Park, Joon-Sik
The work of John Howard Yoder (1927-97) has been influential in the
fields of Christian ethics and theology. It is noteworthy that Yoder
also wrote extensively in the field of mission throughout his
denominational and academic career. His writings on mission and
evangelism, however, have not received the attention those on pacifism and ethical methodology have, partly because a significant portion of
them either were published in denominational popular journals or
remained unpublished. Yet Yoder deserves to be considered and studied as
a mission theologian, for his acute insights and reflections on mission
illumine fundamental issues and would contribute greatly to current
debates in missiology. In this article describing his missionary
involvement and examining some of the major themes in his mission
theology, I intend to portray Yoder as a mission theologian who
consistently drew on the Scriptures and on the Radical Reformation tradition for unique insight and an alternative perspective on issues of
mission and evangelism.
Yoder's Missionary Involvement
The Oak Grove Mennonite Church in Wooster, Ohio, where Yoder was
reared, was progressive in its theology and polity and, at the same
time, was deeply evangelical, emphasizing evangelism and conducting
regular revival meetings. (1) According to his mother, Ethel, Yoder
professed his personal faith in Christ at age twelve. While studying at
Goshen College, he regularly engaged in door-to-door evangelism. An
evangelism partner vividly described Yoder's participation in
evangelistic ministry: "John and I walked the streets of the Locust
Grove community in Elkhart, Ind., every Sunday morning to share the Good
News about Jesus. With Bibles in hand, this very intelligent young man
and I knocked on doors and sat with low-income, poorly educated,
wonderful people and shared our lives. He was able to do this in a
beautiful way. I wish you could have heard his comments and
prayers." (2)
In 1948, a year after his graduation from Goshen College, Yoder
applied for an assignment with the Mennonite Central Committee. He was
accepted, and from 1949 through 1954 he worked in France as director of
postwar relief and social work in that country, supervising the work of
two children's homes. Then, while studying full-time at the
University of Basel in 1954-57, he was charged with a relief program of
the Mennonite Board of Missions and Charities in Algeria, following that
country's 1954 earthquake. (3) After returning to America in 1957,
he served as an administrative assistant for overseas missions at the
Mennonite Board of Missions (1959-65), and then as associate consultant
(1965-70). (4)
From 1959 to 1966 Yoder was involved as a mission strategist in the
Mennonite mission in Nigeria. There he developed a new kind of
postcolonial mission strategy for southeastern Nigeria. According to
Wilbert Shenk, "Yoder's gifts of penetrating analysis,
theological acuity, wide acquaintance with both ecumenical and
evangelical missions, and awareness of the literature of the day were
crucial to the process. (5) Particularly his understanding of ecumenism was highly relevant to the very conflictive, confusing, and fragmentary
church situation in the region. In that environment he argued for
Christian unity as a biblical call and imperative.
Believing in the biblical basis for the unity of the church, Yoder
actively participated in the World Council of Churches in various roles
for more than two decades. As William Klassen has stated, Yoder
"opened up the world of the Anabaptists, especially their
hermeneutics, to the ecumenical church." (6)
The Radical Reformation and Christian Mission
Yoder faithfully and untiringly developed his missiology from a
radical Anabaptist vision. He stressed the fact that, of all the
churches of the Reformation, the Anabaptists alone renewed and retained
the essential missional character of the church. He correlated the
absence of missionary thinking and practice in the magisterial Reformation with its bondage to the state and subsequent provincialism.
Trusting that resolute attention to the historic free-church
tradition would illuminate Christian missionary thought, Yoder
delineated some of its distinctive marks in relation to mission. First,
the Radical Reformation rejected the Constantinian ecclesiology that
identified baptized Christians with true believers, insisting instead
that the church must be distinguished from the world. It recovered the
crucial importance of voluntary personal decision in Christian faith;
when the element of voluntary commitment is lost, the church comes to
have no concerns beyond its own membership. (7)
Second, Radical Reformation churches recovered the place of the
peace message in the witness of the church. For Yoder a peace witness is
not a sectarian peculiarity but "something very central to [and]
always a part of the Gospel." (8) The credibility of mission and
evangelism is inseparably related with love of one's enemy as a
component of the gospel message. In particular, mass killing of
non-Christians in a war at the call of a government is "'a
disobedience in the field of missions." (9)
Third, the recovery of the peace message in mission would dictate a
missional posture and practices appropriate to the message. Centuries of
colonial domination by Christian nations had built walls that old ways
of mission could not surmount. Yoder believed that the only possible way
left was to "get under the wall. (10) The cross simply cannot be
proclaimed from a position of domination and violence, but from that of
service and humility, which is a distinctively free-church way of
carrying out mission.
Evangelism, Discipleship, and Social Concern
The integration of evangelism and discipleship is another mark of
the Radical Reformation mission. Yoder insisted that evangelism and the
demands of discipleship should not be separated. It is wrong "to
relegate matters of ethical concern to secondary or derivative
status," (11) since such dualism implies that conversion with
regard to the substance of morality is either postponed or considered of
lesser importance. Moral conversion encompassing both the content of
ethical obligation and radical obedient commitment should take place at
the same time with spiritual conversion. Yoder's claim that ethical
content is not to be set aside for the sake of numerical growth is still
relevant for contemporary churches, which often become captive to the
success mentality of our culture.
Yoder also did not allow any dichotomy between evangelism and
social responsibility. Reflecting on Jesus' practices of healing
and feeding, he maintained that Jesus neither expected nor looked for
any particular kind of results based on his physical and material aid;
he simply acted out of compassion. The imperative for every Christian is
thus to care about all the needs of the neighbor, whether physical or
spiritual. There should be separation between charity and missionary
intention; missionaries are not to expect even "a sympathetic
hearing" for their message as a result of material aid. For Yoder,
"mission and service work should both be done. Neither should be
done alone and neither should be done for the sake of the other."
(12)
Congregational Missiology
Yoder's most significant contribution to the field of mission
in particular and to that of theology in general is his passionate call
for recovery of the communal dimension of the church as an ethical and
missional reality. (13) He states that the redemptive work of God in
Jesus is to be understood as "the calling of a people ... from
which both personal conversion and missionary instrumentalities are
derived." Therefore, "the distinctness of the church of
believers is prerequisite to the meaningfulness of the gospel
message." (14)
For Yoder, peoplehood and mission cannot be separated; each upholds
the genuineness of the other. The mission of the church is first and
foremost to be and to remain the "peculiar people" that God
has called it to be. Since the community of believers is the form of the
mission, Yoder called for "the congregational structure of the
mission" rather than "the missionary structure of the
congregation." (15) In fact, the Great Commission "does not
authorize sending by the church; it is the church that is sent."
(16)
Ecumenical Unity
Mark Nation perceptively pointed out that "one way to read
Yoder is that his whole life demonstrated his commitment to a
'special ecumenical vocation' and, often, an embodiment of
'ecumenical patience." (17) Yoder firmly believed that the
unity of the church is a scriptural command and that, where there is no
unity, the Gospel itself is at stake.
The kind of unity Yoder envisioned is not simple agreement that
evades the truth question; it is, first, reconciliation at the point of
difference or division through dialogue, prerequisite to which are
"a mutually recognized authority" and "the willingness to
move, to change positions." (18) True conversation seeks ways to
face differences clearly, accepting both the claims of Christ upon each
party and the authority of Scripture as the court of appeal. Second, the
unity is to be supranational, not subservient to nationalism. Third,
unity in ethical commitment is as central as unity in Christian teaching
and worship: "if there be one faith, one body, one hope, there must
also be one obedience." (19) Fourth, the unity sought is not
"a common denominator," since a merger based on the attainable
consensus functions simply on the level of business administration or
efficiency and not of ecclesiology.
With regard to cooperation in ministry among churches, Yoder stated
that the degree of communion and shared ministry is to depend on the
level of reached agreement. The principle is "to go neither farther
nor less far than existing agreement permits." (20) In other words,
a different degree of unity is required in accordance with the nature of
each common task. Faithful to his Radical Reformation tradition, Yoder
also insisted that the real ecumenical action be carried out not by
mission agencies and task forces but by local congregations. Actual
local gatherings for worship and business are the place where that unity
must be tested and experienced.
Interreligious Dialogue
Although Yoder wrote less about interfaith relations and dialogue
than he did about ecumenism, (21) the depth of his insights and his
vigor with regard to the issue of interreligious dialogue are
significant indeed. Carefully examining the challenges posed by the
resurgence of other faiths and contemporary responses to them, Yoder
sought to provide an alternative perspective faithful to his Radical
Reformation tradition and to his belief in the particularity of the
Gospel.
For Yoder, Christians' view of other religions is at the
deepest level "a reflection or a projection of our faith."
(22) Since, however, the church's accommodation to pagan culture
and religion, which had begun in the second century, led to new depths
of unfaithfulness under Constantine in the fourth century, (23)
Christianity's true encounter with other religions should start
with the disavowal of Constantine, recovering and clarifying its own
identity. Yoder believed that a rejection of Constantinianism would
fundamentally alter our perspective in interfaith dialogue, since
Christendom was formed more by other religious cultures than by the
Bible.
The marks of a non-Constantinian perspective include "concern
for the particular, historical, and therefore Jewish quality and
substance of New Testament faith in Jesus." (24) Yoder traced the
beginning of the fall of the church back even further than Constantine
to its separation from Judaism in the second century and its denial of
authentic continuity between Judaism's particular vision and its
own. (25) That separation and denial resulted in the church's loss
of uniqueness and particularity. Thus, for Yoder, the clarification of
identity means returning to the vision of Abraham--'a radically
historical alternative to a religious [abstract and universal] vision of
[the] cosmos" (26)--which was later fulfilled by the particular
historical figure Jesus of Nazareth.
The error of the Christendom mission was not that it tied itself
too closely to Jesus but that in actuality it denied him in its alliance
with imperialism and the use of violence. Thus, the corrective would be
"not to talk less about Jesus and more about religion, but the
contrary," that is, to radicalize "the particular relevance of
Jesus, enabling dialogue through the content of the message: the love of
the adversary, the dignity of the lowly, repentance, servanthood, the
renunciation of coercion." (27) For Yoder, Christians'
ultimate contribution in interfaith dialogue is to get out of the way so
that people of other faiths might see Jesus more clearly and concretely.
Prerequisite to interfaith dialogue is affirmation of "the
uncoercible dignity of the interlocutor as person and one's
solidarity ... with him as neighbor." (28) Furthermore, we must
accept the vulnerability of the gospel message in the sense that it must
remain noncoercive if it is to be valid. With such a posture, mission
and dialogue are not mutually exclusive alternatives; each finds its
validity only in relation to the other. This is because "respect
for the genuineness of dialogue demands in both directions that there be
no disavowal in principle of my witness becoming an open option for the
other." (29)
"As You Go": Migration and Mission
The major themes of Yoder's missiology are woven together most
integrally in his vision of "migration as mission." As early
as 1961 Yoder advocated "migration" as a new way of mission
and evangelism in the postcolonial era. (30) First, in order to know
another religion, Christians must go to reside where it is practiced so
as to learn its language and culture and to live and struggle through
the differences and the distance between systems. In going to a foreign
country as immigrants, missionaries would intend to be nationalized
rather than expecting eventually to return to their home countries.
Their own language and culture would not last more than one generation.
Second, people can learn to know who Jesus is only if disciples of
Jesus come to them. Yoder suggested that migrant missionaries should go
in numbers sufficient to create a functioning Christian fellowship,
"yet not so large [as] to create a self-sufficient cultural island
of their own." (31) A lone missionary or a small group of scattered
missionaries would not be able to form a visible community whose life
together and practices of reconciliation and service could be observed
by the surrounding society.
Third, the witness of missionary migrants could be more penetrating
and transformative than that of traditional missions. They would seek to
support themselves rather than relying on financial support from
churches at home; they would be willing to live at the economic level of
people they serve. Yoder believed that "part of our Christian
witness can be made only by way of economy," (32) that is, through
an example of honesty and reliability. Migrating missionaries, by their
involvement in the local economy, would be able to make such witness
through their daily contacts in work and marketplace.
Yoder on the Third World
Yoder's missiology does not, however, appear to appreciate
fully the unique place of the Third World countries in God's grand
scheme of redemptive mission. In "The Third World and Christian
Mission," he agreed that we should take the Third World seriously
as the theater of God's missionary purposes. However, he concluded
that the missionary situation of the faithful church in any age and any
place--even in overchurched suburbia in North America--is that of the
"third world." For Yoder, "third world" thus becomes
a mood, not a place.
His statement certainly has merit in the sense that, in any
missionary context, the Gospel is to be proclaimed from a position not
of power and strength but of weakness and vulnerability. It fails to
recognize with full seriousness, however, the particularity and
uniqueness of the cultures in the Third World countries and their
concrete experiences of, and struggles against, various forms of
oppression. When Yoder said that "'the third world' is
the world of our mission wherever we be," (33) he was in danger of
neglecting and ignoring the particular political and economic burdens of
the Third World countries and the corresponding accountability and
responsibility for them on the part of the Western churches.
Although Yoder rightfully called for disavowal of Christendom and
criticized its past imperial missional practices, he failed to point out
positive elements in the missional legacy of Christendom. Not everything
done and left by Christendom has been negative. It can safely be said
that, in the expansion of Christianity, God still graciously worked in
and through and in spite of Christendom's wrongful vision and ways
of mission and evangelism. (34) Yoder recognized the Third World as
"the theater" of God's missionary purposes but failed to
see it as now the center of Christianity and its churches as the primary
agent of Christian mission. He legitimately lamented the failure of
Christendom. God in his providence, however, has worked even through the
fallible instrument of Christendom to accomplish his larger and greater
redemptive mission for humanity. For this we praise him.
Conclusion
John H. Yoder critically addressed major themes of missiology from
an Anabaptist vision, persistently providing a unique alternative
perspective on them based on his understanding of the particular
character of Jesus and of the Christian mission. He consistently
referred to the Scriptures and to the Radical Reformation tradition for
insight on current issues of mission and evangelism. In numerous ways
Yoder argued convincingly that "a more resolute attention to Free
Church orientation might illuminate our missionary thought in more
places than some would have expected." (35)
In his mission theology Yoder attempts to recover the encompassing
totality of God's vision of salvation, since "nothing less
than the whole will of God for the whole man can be the burden of our
mission." (36) In his missional writings we see an integral
interrelation of missiology, ecclesiology, and ethics. The church as a
distinct ethical community is to experience, proclaim, and witness to
the new reality of human fellowship. Thus the distinction between church
and mission is inadmissible; the presence of the church is to be the
message as well as its medium. It is crucially important that our
practice of mission and evangelism not be separated from the biblically
grounded vision of the faithful church.
We must also give careful heed to Yoder's call to give the
peace message its legitimate place in Christian mission. Responsible
Christian mission implies not only passive avoidance of violence but
also active prevention of its use to attain any end. If we consider any
person or group from the perspective of mission--that is, with concern
for their being able to respond to the proclamation of Christ--then
clearly "it is impossible to kill anybody as a solution to an
ethical problem." (37)
In the face of the resurgence of other faiths, Yoder's
understanding of the gospel truth as particular yet communicable provides a refreshing, worthy alternative to traditional approaches. He
would not subordinate particularity and identity to universality and
communicability. "Instead of seeking to escape particular
identity," said Yoder, "what we need ... is a better way to
restate the meaning of a truth claim from within particular
identity." (38) The truth claim should, however, be expressed from
within the language and thought-worlds that a people inhabit and be made
with utmost respect for their culture and religion. Often interreligious
dialogue is pursued by intellectuals on the level of abstract religious
systems; what we need in interfaith dialogue is to be particular and
local rather than being hierarchical and institutional.
Understanding the Gospel as the message of God's acceptance of
weakness, Yoder advocated that the practice of mission and evangelism be
rooted in faithfulness rather than in effectiveness. He called for
restoration of trust in the weakness of the Gospel, which is the mark of
the power of God, as well as for abandonment of the success mentality.
On the one hand, churches today need to remember that short-term
"discernible effectiveness" or apparent success is not to be
equated with the progress of God's kingdom. On the other hand, when
the church is faithful, even failures should not call into question
God's ultimate victory. As Yoder emphatically stated, "That
God's cause will triumph was decided on Easter morning."
Therefore "we do not realize [Jesus'] victory; we manifest
it." (39) Few in the second half of the twentieth century were more
eager and faithful than Yoder in calling the attention of the people of
God to this great victory.
Notes
(1.) The following biographical sketch of Yoder is based upon two
works by Mark Thiessen Nation: "The Ecumenical Patience and
Vocation of John Howard Yoder: A Study of Theological Ethics"
(Ph.D. diss., Fuller Theological Seminary, 2000) and "John Howard
Yoder: Mennonite, Evangelical, Catholic," Mennonite Quarterly
Review 72 (July 2003): 357-70.
(2.) Geraldine Harder, "Who Is to Blame for Misconduct?"
Mennonite Weekly Review, July 23, 1992, quoted in Nation, "John
Howard Yoder," p. 365.
(3.) Based on his experiences in Algeria, Yoder wrote a series of
five articles in the Gospel Herald: "Islam's Special Challenge
to Christian Mission," December 31, 1957, pp. 1142-43;
"Islam's Challenge to Mennonites," February 4,1958, pp.
110-11; "Our First Three Years in Algeria," February 18, 1958,
pp. 158-60; "The War in Algeria," March 18, 1958, pp. 254-56;
and "Missions and Material Aid in Algeria," April 1, 1958, pp.
306-7.
(4.) Yoder's unpublished writings during his service for the
Mennonite mission board include "Outline Commentary on Matthew
28:16ff. and Acts 1:8" (1961), "Anabaptist Understanding of
the Nature and Mission of the Church" (1967), "Leadership
Training in Overseas Churches: A Study Prospectus" (1967), and
"Creativity in Missionary Personnel Administration" (1969).
(5.) Wilbert R. Shenk, "'Go Slow Through Uyo': A
Case Study of Dialogue as Missionary Method," in Fullness of Life
for All: Challenges for Mission in Early Twenty-first Century, ed. Inus
Daneel, Charles Van Engen, and Hendrik Vroom (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2003),
p. 334.
(6.) William Klassen, "John H. Yoder and the Ecumenical
Church," Conrad Grebel Review 16 (1998): 77.
(7.) John H. Yoder, "Reformation and Missions: A Literature
Survey," in Anabaptism and Mission, ed. Wilbert R. Shenk
(Scottdale, Pa.: Herald Press, 1984), p. 48.
(8.) John H. Yoder, "The Place of Peace Witness in
Missions," Gospel Herald, January 3, 1961, p. 14.
(9.) John H. Yoder, "The Nature of the Unity We Seek,"
Religion in Life 26 (1957): 219.
(10.) Yoder, "Place of Peace Witness," p. 14.
(11.) John H. Yoder, "Experiential Etiology of Evangelical
Dualism," Missiology: An International Review 11 (1983): 450.
(12.) Yoder, "Missions and Material Aid," p. 307.
(13.) For further discussion of Yoder's ecclesiology, see my
"Ecclesiologies in Creative Tension: The Church as Ethical and
Missional Reality in H. Richard Niebuhr and John H. Yoder,"
International Review of Mission 92 (2003): 332-44.
(14.) John H. Yoder, "A People in the World: Theological
Interpretation," in The Concept of the Believers' Church, ed.
James Leo Garrett, Jr. (Scottdale, Pa.: Herald Press, 1969), pp. 258-59.
(15.) Ibid., p. 283, italics mine.
(16.) Yoder, "Commentary on Matthew 28:16ff.," p. 4.
(17.) Nation, "Ecumenical Patience," p. 8.
(18.) Yoder, "Nature of Unity," p. 216.
(19.) Ibid., p. 221.
(20.) John H. Yoder, "The Free Church Ecumenical Style,"
Quaker Religious Thought 10 (1968): 38.
(21.) Nation, "Ecumenical Patience," p. 132.
(22.) John H. Yoder, "The Christian View of Other
Religions," prepared for a class "Theology of Mission" at
the Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminaries, 1970, p. 1. For Yoder the
issue of the uniqueness of Christianity "calls for inward critique
and not for self justification"; "uniqueness is not a
possession or an advantage, but a call, a vulnerability" ("The
Finality of Jesus Christ and Other Faiths," collected material from
lectures and essays reproduced in the fall of 1983 for the Associated
Mennonite Biblical Seminaries course, "Ecclesiology in Missional
Perspective," pp. 25-26).
(23.) Yoder's criticism was not so much of Constantine himself
as of the age he inaugurated, in which the church, now allied with the
state, began a systematic denial of the Gospel.
(24.) John H. Yoder, "The Disavowal of Constantine: An
Alternative Perspective on Interfaith Dialogue," in Aspects of
Interfaith Dialogue: Tantur Yearbook, 1975-1976, ed. W. Wegner and W.
Harrelson (Jerusalem: Tantur Ecumenical Institute for Advanced
Theological Studies, 1979), p. 50.
(25.) Yoder understands part of the character of the Radical
Reformation to be "a different relationship to the Jewish heritage
of Christianity" (ibid.). See his "Judaism as
Non-non-Christian Religion," in his book of essays The
Jewish-Christian Schism Revisited, ed. Michael G. Cartwright and Peter
Ochs (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003).
(26.) Yoder, "Finality of Jesus Christ," p. 23.
(27.) Yoder, "Disavowal of Constantine," p. 64.
(28.) Ibid., p. 62.
(29.) Ibid., p. 61.
(30.) John H. Yoder, As You Go: The Old Mission in a New Day, Focal
Pamphlet no. 5 (Scottdale, Pa.: Herald Press, 1961).
(31.) John H. Yoder, "Christian Missions at the End of an
Era," Christian Living, August 1961, p. 14.
(32.) John H. Yoder, "Missionary Church," Gospel Herald,
January 8,1963, p. 38.
(33.) John H. Yoder, "The Third World and Christian
Mission," paper presented at the Inter-Seminaries Consultation,
Elkhart, Ind., January 28-31, 1971, p. 10.
(34.) I appreciate the comment of Wilbert R. Shenk, alerting me to
the fact that a defense of Christendom--based on positive elements that,
due to God's providence, are to be found in its missional
legacy--could "divert attention from the task of the theologian to
struggle to evaluate practice in light of the divine intention"
(personal correspondence, January 3, 2004). Although I am aware that
wording similar to mine could be used by some as an excuse not to
respond faithfully and responsibly to the call to renewal of Christian
mission, such is far from my intention.
(35.) Yoder, "Third World and Christian Mission," p. 8.
(36.) Ibid.
(37.) John H. Yoder, "Teaching Ethics from a Missionary
Perspective," in Occasional Papers of the Council of Mennonite
Seminaries and the Institute of Mennonite Studies, no. 2, ed. Willard M.
Swartley (Elkhart, Ind.: Institute of Mennonite Studies, 1981), p. 99.
(38.) John H. Yoder, "On Not Being Ashamed of the Gospel:
Particularity, Pluralism, and Validation," Faith and Philosophy 9
(1992): 290.
(39.) Yoder, "Third World and Christian Mission," p. 7.
Joon-Sik Park is the E. Stanley Jones Associate Professor of World
Evangelism, Methodist Theological School in Ohio, located in Delaware,
Ohio.