Raymund Schwager SJ (1935-2004) was a close colleague and friend of René Girard – philosopher of violence. In close collaboration with Girard he developed an understanding of the Gospel as an ongoing drama in five Acts – a drama in which all of us are still involved.
It was to Schwager that Girard later attributed a famous change of mind. Arguing at first that the crucifixion was not a sacrifice he was persuaded by Schwager that Jesus had effectively changed the meaning of sacrifice – from the always evasive offering to God of some other person, or some other creature, into self-giving – the essential challenge to all Christians.
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we fear losing our place
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we imitate rivals
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we seek approval
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we accuse or defend
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we hide from truth
The Five-Act Drama of Salvation
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Jesus announces the Kingdom as good news.
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His healings, table‑fellowship, and exorcisms reveal a non‑violent divine initiative.
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He calls disciples freely; no one is compelled.
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Conflict is not yet central — the accent is on invitation, mercy, and openness.
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Religious and political authorities begin to resist him.
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Accusations emerge: blasphemy, Sabbath violations, demonic possession.
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The satanic dynamic (accusation, rivalry, scapegoating) becomes visible.
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Jesus responds with parables, prophetic critique, and non‑retaliation.
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Jesus is betrayed, arrested, falsely accused, condemned, and executed.
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He does not retaliate or curse; he forgives and remains faithful.
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The scapegoat mechanism is exposed: the innocent one is killed to restore order.
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Jesus’ non‑violence reveals the Father’s non‑violence.
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The risen Christ returns with forgiveness, not retribution.
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He gathers the scattered disciples and restores communion.
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The divine initiative overturns the logic of accusation and fear.
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The Spirit is promised as the power of new life.
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Pentecost inaugurates a community shaped by forgiveness and mutual service.
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The Church is called to embody Jesus’ non‑violent mission.
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The drama continues in history: the Spirit opposes new forms of accusation and violence.
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The final act anticipates eschatological fulfillment, when God’s non‑violent reign is complete.



A wonderful summary! Thank you.
Thank you Sean for your research and offering a theology of the crucifixion which is challenging but more satisfying than the Atonement justification we have been fed all our lives.
Much appreciated, Elias and Anthony.
As the world becomes ever more troubled by violence and our church’s mistaken alliance with the state and its violence recedes, Raymund’s theology becomes daily more persuasive. Vatican II’s insistence that the truth cannot convey itself by force (in Dignitas Humanae) obliges us to see that while the Crucifixion was a violent event, that violence comes from opposition to the Kingdom of God as offered by Jesus, and not from God – who responds without violence.
I foresee at some stage an official doctrinal denial that God willed the violence of the crucifixion as distinct from the non-violence of Jesus the Christ, but we will only get to that point if enough people begin to see and point to that distinction. That challenge too is inbuilt in the drama of salvation that we are all involved in.