On May 10, I posted a blog article titled ”In Admiration of John Wesley and Methodism.” This post expresses my admiration for Stanley Hauerwas, a contemporary Methodist scholar who is celebrating his 85th birthday next week.
Stanley Martin Hauerwas was born in Dallas
on July 24, 1940. He grew up in a working-class
household located in a suburban area of that Texas city. His father was a
bricklayer, and Stanley worked summers with his father from the age of nine.
Upon finishing high school, Stanley
enrolled in Southwestern University in Texas, the first in his family to attend
college. Then he went to Yale, where he earned his B.D. (M.Div.) degree in 1965
and completed his Ph.D. in theology and ethics in 1968.*
Even though he became a theology and ethics
scholar, he retained much of the blue-collar culture of his boyhood. His “salty”
language was criticized by some people who thought a university professor shouldn’t
use “unacceptable” language.
Hauerwas married in 1962, the year he
finished college, and six years later, his only child, a boy, was born. His
wife struggled with mental illness, though, and they divorced after 25 years of
marriage. In 1989 he married Paula Gilbert, a theologian and an ordained United
Methodist minister.
I first learned about Hauerwas by reading Resident
Aliens: Life in the
Christian Colony (1989), a book
co-written with William Willimon. That was a rich read for me, and it influenced how many Christians
perceived their role in society.
When I recently looked at the notes I took when I
read Resident Aliens again back in 2008, I wrote, “Thirty-six years ago,
the authors contended, ‘The
times are too challenging to be wasting time pressing one another into boxes
called liberal or conservative. The choice is between truth and lies’ (p. 160).”
And then in the concluding sub-section
of the last chapter, they aver that
the challenge facing today’s Christians is not the necessity to translate Christian convictions into a modern idiom, but rather to form a community, a colony of resident aliens which is so shaped by our convictions that no one even has to ask what we mean by confessing belief in God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Hauerwas’s newest book is Jesus Changes
Everything, a small volume
edited by Charles Moore and released by Plough Publishing House in March 2025.**
Much in that book is a reaffirmation of what he and Willimon emphasized in Resident
Aliens.
In his ten-page introduction of the author, Moore
says that “Hauerwas eludes categorization. He is neither conservative enough
for the conservatives nor liberal enough for liberals” (p. xxiv).
In the concluding paragraph of that introduction,
Moore states,
Stanley Hauerwas and his writings were a large reason why 30 years ago I left a professorship at a seminary and moved 2000 miles with my wife to join the Bruderhof, a Christian community that shares possessions in common in accordance with the Sermon on the Mount.
Then, in an
article published by the Bruderhof in March 2025, Anglican priest Tish
Harrison Warren writes that she “became a pacifist because of Hauerwas” and
that she has “friends who went to seminary to study theology because of Hauerwas’s
work. His words change people.”
Hauerwas is a Mennonite theologian/ethicist, as well as being a lifelong Methodist and active
in an Episcopal church. Unlike Warren, I became a pacifist long before I knew
about Stanley Hauerwas, but I was delighted when I learned that he became a
devotee of Mennonite scholar John Howard Yoder.
Unfortunately, Yoder (1927~97), who was arguably
the most significant Anabaptist scholar of the twentieth century, badly
tarnished his reputation because of his “abusive behavior toward women,” which
became public in the 2010s. But his influence on Hauerwas was long before that.
In
The Politics of Jesus (1972), Yoder argued forcefully that the life,
death, and resurrection of Christ necessitates a nonviolent discipleship as the
definitive Christian ethic. Hauerwas adopted and extended that conviction: nonviolence
is not optional but obligatory for loyal followers of Jesus.
Authentic
Christians are “disciples” of Jesus rather than mere “admirers,” and the primary
task of the church is to be the church, a faithful community of Jesus-followers,
rather than an organization trying to do things for the benefit of society. Yes,
indeed!
_____
* I feel considerable affinity with Hauerwas.
Born just two years earlier, I am the son of a (working-class) farmer and the
first male in the direct-line Seat family to attend college, finishing with a
B.A. degree in 1959, graduating from seminary with a B.D. in 1962, and then
finishing work for my Ph.D. in 1966. When it comes to nationwide influence, books
written, and scholarly articles published, though, there is absolutely no
comparison.
**
Moore is a contributing editor and author for Plough, the
publishing arm of the Bruderhof community, introduced in my 12/5/20
blog post. Moore is also the editor of Provocations:
Spiritual Writings of Søren Kierkegaard (1999), a valuable, easy-to-read
book, as well as the compiler and editor of Called to Community (2016; 2nd
ed., 2024). Hauerwas wrote the Foreword to the latter.
I also read Hauerwas years ago, but did not take notes. I was impressed and influenced. Interesting that Hauerwas began his BD (MDiv) work the same time I did, and completed his doctoral work in 1968, as did I. But I didn't go to Harvard!
ReplyDeleteHere are comments from Thinking Friend Mike Greer in Kentucky:
ReplyDelete"Thanks for the words. These days I think often of Hauerwas' words 'How many of you worship in a church with an American flag? I am sorry to tell you your salvation is in doubt.' And, 'How many worship in a church in which the Fourth of July is celebrated? I am sorry to tell you your salvation is in doubt.'"
Then, I received these related comments from Thinking Friend Nancy Garner in Ohio:
ReplyDelete"Thanks for this tribute to Hauerwas. I was at a conference in England in 1991 on July 4th - so we (mostly Americans) were celebrating a bit when Hauerwas (the assigned speaker) got up and berated us (deservedly) for our Christian nationalism. It was powerful."