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I find your contemporizing of ancient Jewish sects intriguing. You're right--they all show various approaches to empire and/or hellenization (which loosely correspond to US Empire/Western Consumer Capitalist culture, respectively).
You are likely to find various opinions on imperial engagement on this site. I suspect that many, like me, tend towards the Essene response--at least in regards to the governmental machine. I do recognize the need for political engagement, but the question becomes "what sort of engagement?"
The particulars are going to be contested, but as a general thrust, I think the politics of Jesus, as practiced in Empire should account for the following:
* it needs to resist power-over, operating from below. As Jesus was tempted with economic, political, and religious power, we too are tempted and must resist wielding economic, political, and religious power coercively. Rather, ours should be a prophetic stance that names powers, calls people to account, and personally and communal practices jubilee.
* it needs to begin with the Body that Jesus ordained as his political agent--the Church. I reject the notion that the State is the political agent of God and the Church is the religious. Rather, the Church is God's elect socio-political agent in the world. This does not invalidate the State entirely; however it does create challenges for how the church is to operate in the midst of empire and the state. I think that the exilic prophets are helpful for us in our attempt to imagine how to imagine as people of Zion in Babylon, but we also must temper such imaginations with the early counter-political witness of the underground church, whose stance towards powers was largely martyriological (if that is a functional word).
*my biggest concern here is the use of violence. I just can't see how participation in violence is every acceptable for a christian. Sure, there are systemic issues that are nigh impossible to avoid. But that shouldn't therefore mean we resign ourselves to participation in violence.
We, the church, should determine strategies of discernment that help us navigate through these murky waters (for example, do we refuse to buy products that are directly tied to violence (blood diamonds, etc)? How many degrees of separation should we follow this logic (do we refuse to buy computers that have parts that were cut using tools that contain blood diamonds as a cutting element)? With regards to political involvement, do we simply draw the line at military service? Or serving in government? At what level? What about voting?
Regarding Anabaptism and the 30 years war...yes, I do think that the shape of Anabaptism has been influenced by the 30 years war, just as many of their commitments were tempered by years of diasporic persecution. Many traditional Anabaptists wouldn't claim me because my beliefs--as well as the beliefs of other neo-Anabaptists--have been shaped by other traditions and ethical approaches. For example, I am much more of an activist and Anarchist than traditional Anabaptists, who are more separatistic. This difference came up quite a bit when I recently spoke at a missions conference at a Conservative Mennonite college.
I have other thoughts, but this is enough fodder for now.
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