So the authors challenge that turning the other cheek is the main conflict-solving advice from the Bible, right? Or do they understand it as mutually benefitial too?
I don't think the author challenges the "turn the other cheek" principle, but rather enlarges it: he encourages people who are in conflict with each other to focus first on their own faults and how they contributed to the problem. This seems like a form of turning the other cheek to me.
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