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Preface to Theology: Christology and Theological Method. In Preface to Theology Yoder develops his Christology in terms of the threefold office of prophet, priest, and king. I suspect he thought that by doing so he was staying closer to the language of the Bible and, just as important, the people of Israel. Yoder suggests, therefore, that when Jesus says, “I am the king, but the servant kind of king,” he fulfills the hope of the Jews who had learned through bitter experience that earthly kings are, to say the least, a mixed blessing.13

      Yoder’s well-­known criticisms of the Constantinian settlement are but the expression of this understanding of the eschatological character of the gospel. The fundamental problem that beset the church when Constantine became a member, a problem Yoder recognizes was beginning well before Constantine, was how becoming established changed the self-­understanding of the church. Under the influence of Constantinianism the church no longer understood herself to live simultaneously in two times. Eschatology had now become an ideal relegated to the future rather than a reality that transforms the character of time.

      Leithart on Sacrifice

      In his book Defending Constantine: The Twilight of an Empire and the Dawn of Christendom, Peter Leithart develops a helpful critique of Yoder’s politics. His critique is helpful because Leithart’s criticisms, I hope to show, help us better appreciate the significance of Yoder’s eschatology. I need to be clear. I am not particularly concerned with Leithart’s defense of Constantine’s integrity as a Christian. As Leithart recognizes, Yoder’s critique of Constantinianism has little stake in questions surrounding the authenticity of Constantine’s “conversion.” Much more interesting is Leithart’s suggestion that Yoder failed to appreciate how Christianity fundamentally transformed Rome by Constantine’s outlawing of sacrifice.