@inbook{10.2307/j.ctt9m0v40.7, ISBN = {9781451480429}, URL = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt9m0v40.7}, abstract = {In the work of Dorothy Day, we find a second voice offering an account of the interrelation between ecclesiology and nonviolence, albeit in a distinctly different manner. For Day, Christ’s Mystical Body assumes all human existence and directs all humanity toward its full communion: the visible body of Christ, the Catholic Church.¹ In certain ways, Day’s thesis agrees with Yoder, insofar as Yoder also measures the church’s nature and witness according to Christ’s humanity. For Yoder, the church (Christ’s body) is inextricably related to nonviolence, to the extent that the faithful church could not be narrated as other than nonviolent.}, bookauthor = {Myles Werntz}, booktitle = {Bodies of Peace: Ecclesiology, Nonviolence, and Witness}, pages = {107--156}, publisher = {Augsburg Fortress, Publishers}, title = {The Church Forming Nonviolence: Dorothy Day, The Mystical Body, and the Logic of Tradition}, year = {2014} }