Go Be Jesus: Serving Up Shalom

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

As part of the Go Be Jesus series, we’re going to revisit a parable of Jesus that is widely known even among non-religious people.  The good news is that since it is so well known, this shouldn’t take long.

 

Just then a religion scholar stood up with a question to test Jesus. "Teacher, what do I need to do to get eternal life?"

He answered, "What's written in God's Law? How do you interpret it?"

He said, "That you love the Lord your God with all your passion and prayer and muscle and intelligence—and that you love your neighbor as well as you do yourself."

"Good answer!" said Jesus. "Do it and you'll live."

Looking for a loophole, he asked, "And just how would you define 'neighbor'?"

Jesus answered by telling a story. "There was once a man traveling from Jerusalem to Jericho. On the way he was attacked by robbers. They took his clothes, beat him up, and went off leaving him half-dead. Luckily, a priest was on his way down the same road, but when he saw him he angled across to the other side. Then a Levite religious man showed up; he also avoided the injured man.

"A Samaritan traveling the road came on him. When he saw the man's condition, his heart went out to him. He gave him first aid, disinfecting and bandaging his wounds. Then he lifted him onto his donkey, led him to an inn, and made him comfortable. In the morning he took out two silver coins and gave them to the innkeeper, saying, 'Take good care of him. If it costs any more, put it on my bill—I'll pay you on my way back.'

"What do you think? Which of the three became a neighbor to the man attacked by robbers?"

"The one who treated him kindly," the religion scholar responded.

Jesus said, "Go and do the same." – Luke 10:25-37 (MSG) 

 

Garbage Cans. I don’t mean to brag, but I’ve got this Good Samaritan thing down.  Nearly every week after the garbage truck comes and empties our cans, I not only take my 2-3 cans back to my side yard, I also take my neighbors’ cans.  Just to be kind.  Just like the Good Samaritan.

            I know what you’re thinking.  “Pete may win ‘Pastor of the Year’ award with that level of selflessness.  Maybe even ‘Christian of the Year!”  Well, shucks.  Thanks.  I better sign off and get to work on my acceptance speech.  Have a great week.

Wait!  I forgot about a couple of notes.  Apparently others have done some thinking about the Good Samaritan, including Pope Francis, who talked about the globalization of indifference: “Whenever our interior life becomes caught up in its own interests and concerns, there is no longer room for others, no place for the poor. God’s voice is no longer heard, the quiet joy of his love is no longer felt, and the desire to do good fades” (Pope Francis, quoted in Christ in Crisis, 43).

Donating Food for the Pantry. Good point, Francis!  Gratefully, I’ve got this covered.  Every year when the Super Bowl is played, CrossWalkers show support for their team and our Food Pantry by bringing in canned goods and placing them on a table of the team they hope will win.  Last year, my two favorites teams were playing each other: the Kansas City Chiefs and the San Francisco 49’ers.  Again, I don’t like to brag, but instead of buying one 12 pack of canned chili and splitting it between the two teams, I bought TWO twelve packs of canned chili, one for each team.  Nailed it.  Two for two!  Back to the speech...

            Okay, hold on.  Sorry, but I missed a couple of things Pope Francis noted: 

“Instead of giving up chocolate or alcohol for Lent, the pope seems to want us to give up our indifference to others. In his apostolic exhortation titled Evangelii Gaudium (which means ‘The Joy of the Gospel’), Francis tells us that as a result of indifference, ‘We end up being incapable of feeling compassion at the outcry of the poor, weeping for other people’s pain, and feeling a need to help them, as though all this were someone else’s responsibility and not our own.’ – Pope Francis, quoted in Christ in Crisis, 18

 

Broken Bleeding Heart.  Sometimes being a Good Samaritan requires significant time. I could totally cheat on this one because I’m a pastor.  It is my job to at times spend significant time with people during struggle.  But I won’t, because I’m the real deal!  There have been numerous times in my life when friends have simply needed a listening ear, encouragement, maybe even some advice, and I showed up, even though it cut into my personal time and the food I bought us came out of my own pocket.  When people are in that awful space, they need someone to help shoulder them through it. Okeedokee, three for three.  On to my acceptance speech...

            Shoot!  I should really pay more attention to my notes.  N. T. Wright, one of the most prolific biblical scholars in the world, observed the following:

“When Jesus told the story of the Good Samaritan, he did so deliberately to shock his audience. Who is my neighbour? asked the lawyer. Jesus turned the question back on him: in this story, who turned out to be neighbour to the man in the ditch? Like so many of Jesus’s brilliant stories, it operates at several levels. At the simplest level, of course, it is a spectacular invitation to a life of self-giving love, love in action, love that’s prepared to roll up its sleeves and help no matter what it takes: yes, precisely the kind of work we associate with the work of this Order. But at the next level down, it’s a story designed to split open the worldview of its hearers and let in a shaft of new and unexpected light. Instead of the closed world of Jesus’s hearers, in which only their own kith and kin were properly to be counted as neighbours, Jesus demands that they recognise that even the hated and feared Samaritan is to be seen as a neighbour.” –  N.T. Wright, quoted in Christ in Crisis, 28

Social Media, Division, and Political Foes. When I think of enemies, my thoughts go to what we are easily witnessing on social media. I am seeing really awful things being posted that are really derogatory toward people with differing views.  We have known for years that the political climate has only become hotter and more divisive, with permission to speak half-truths and insulting language coming from the highest leaders in our country. It’s really disgusting and depressing.  I know of friendships that have ended, and even families broken apart by the tension.  It’s hard to love such “enemies” because we feel great temptation to fight fire with fire, insults combined with not-the-full-story commentary of our own.  How do we love someone that has essentially called us un-American because of our rendition of patriotism?

Sometimes the enemy shows its face along the lines of political issues.  Maybe its Black Lives Matter or immigration of the response to COVID-19.  There are opportunities within each of these three (and every other contentious issue) to be Good Samaritans.  You may have strong feelings about BLM, but should that keep you from using your voice for greater equality and equity?  You may be infuriated by the US immigration policy, but should that, then, limit your generosity toward helping (especially) children who are being detained at the border?  Is your disdain for undocumented immigrants stronger than your devotion to the Way of Jesus who said when we clothe and feed such persons, we are clothing and feeding him?

We have a choice in all of this to add to the problem or build the Kingdom.  Building the Kingdom of God means we treat everyone we speak to with dignity and respect even if they are spewing out words and overtones of hatred toward us.  Sometimes it is literally costly – I lost a job for standing up for equality and equity for the LGBTQ community, I’ve lost church members over gender equality and standing up for peace.  Again, the choice comes down to what we are building, more of the Kingdom of God or more of the kingdoms of this world?  One of those really is founded on the shalom of God, and the means and ends of that kingdom building reflect it.  

 

Jim Wallis, author of Christ in Crisis, has a few things to add:

Jesus is truly brilliant here. First, the best example of a neighbor is a hated outsider, a Samaritan, who demonstrates in the clearest way what a good neighbor is: someone who crosses boundaries to help someone else in need, risks his own safety and security, takes time out from his routine and certainly the schedule for his day, changes the plan for his whole trip, invests not only his time but also his resources, enlists others in his strategy; and then comes back to check to make sure that the injured man is being taken care of and healed of his wounds—all across rigid ethnic lines and national borders. Now, that is a neighbor, says Jesus. You can imagine the young lawyer’s face when the concept of his neighbor just got expanded more than he ever could have imagined. – Jim Wallis, Christ is Crisis, 29.

Theologian and historian Gustavo Gutiérrez offered insight as well: “Who is my neighbor? The neighbor was the Samaritan who approached the wounded man and made him his neighbor. The neighbor... is not he whom I find in my path, but rather he in whose path I place myself, he whom I approach and actively seek” (quoted in Christ in Crisis, 29). In other words, to follow Jesus’ teaching means to be willing to recognize where the hurting people are and be willing to cross over to them.  This reminds me of Jesus’ parable about the good shepherd that leaves the 99 to look for the one lost sheep.  Ridiculously impractical, yet absolutely what we see in Jesus as representative of the incarnation of the Spirit of God.  The fictional Good Samaritan resembles the historical Jesus and those who follow him closely.

So much for a short teaching...  Still time to get a rough draft done on the acceptance speech.

Good grief. I have to offer one last thing.

Shalom is the Answer, Motivation, and Goal.  It has dawned on me that we could do all of the above and still miss the most important word which shows up in each of the two greatest commandments: love.  All of the above are good and make the world a better place, yet without love, they are missing the most critical ingredient and run the risk of just adding to the noise.

When we have been won over by shalom, however, there is a significant shift.  We much more naturally find ourselves acting like the Good Samaritan in our attitude, behavior, tone – everything.  We enter into challenging contexts grounded in shalom, fully resourced with shalom, utilizing shalom, and fostering the growth of shalom.  Shalom is the fruit of being captivated by love as defined by God.  Such love radically reshapes and reorders our lives.  When we’re rapt in God’s love, we find ourselves asking different questions than before, other-centered questions more than self-centered ones.  This reality was expressed in the last speech delivered by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the day before he was assassinated, where he talks about the parable of the Good Samaritan and what happened on that road:

In the day of Jesus it came to be known as the “Bloody Pass.” And you know, it’s possible that the priest and the Levite looked over that man on the ground and wondered if the robbers were still around. Or it’s possible that they felt that the man on the ground was merely faking. And he was acting like he had been robbed and hurt, in order to seize them over there, lure them there for quick and easy seizure. And so the first question that the Levite asked was, “If I stop to help this man, what will happen to me?” But then the Good Samaritan came by. And he reversed the question: “If I do not stop to help this man, what will happen to him?” – Last speech of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, April 3, 1968

I hope this teaching has given you a lot to think about.  Mostly, I hope it has created a craving in your for the love of God.  The more you found your life in that Kingdom reality, the more you will live in and foster shalom, which is the hope of the world.  The Lord’s prayer flows naturally when we are so aligned with the Spirit in this regard.  The words become our words, and our heart easily joins them:

Our Father in heaven, reveal who you are. Set the world right; Do what's best — as above, so below. Keep us alive with three square meals. Keep us forgiven with you and forgiving others. Keep us safe from ourselves and the Devil. You're in charge! You can do anything you want! You're ablaze in beauty! Yes. Yes. Yes.

Go Be Jesus: Unlearning to Learn, Part Two

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Jesus did not live primarily in order to die one day so that we could be forgiven.  This is an unchecked heresy of Evangelicalism and Christian Fundamentalism.

Jesus did not come to initiate a “nice” campaign.  The Jewish leaders and the Roman Empire didn’t orchestrate capital punishment for people guilty of being too nice.  Crucifixion was reserved primarily for those guilty of insurrection.

Jesus was on a world-changing mission that required great courage on his part, and on all who dared to follow.  The invitation still stands.  Today, let’s get under the hood a bit and see what he was teaching and what it meant.

Remember the context. Jesus was terribly poor, hailing from a region of Israel known for its poverty in culture and power.  Under Roman occupation, Jesus and his Jewish contemporaries had little hope for a brighter future.  Jesus knew the emotional toll that comes with lack of food, lack of housing, lack of employment, lack of respect – his life in so many ways was lacking.

Something happened later in his life that completely changed his perspective, however, and he emerged as the leader of a movement that appeared to be empowered by God.  His mission? To help usher in the Kingdom of God increasingly into all the world.  The primary value and goal of the movement was shalom – a Jewish notion of deep peace that represents wellbeing, harmony and wholeness among individuals, in community, and even between varying cultures and their governments, and between humanity and creation itself.  The Way of the Kingdom of God was different than the ways of the world – the only way Jesus sought to usher more shalom into the world was with shalom.  He invited his contemporaries to get in on the project.

Most of the people he knew were in a similar lot.  Poor, oppressed, weary, hopeless, mourning, etc.  Because he saw with Kingdom eyes, he didn’t see them the way the world did, as losers or stupid, but as blessed, especially loved by God because the powerful did not.  What we call the beatitudes were expressions of love and hope to hurting people who felt powerless.

Jesus’ “campaign speech”, the Sermon on the Mount, laid out some basic principles of the Way of God which, when read casually, are inspiring and thought provoking even today, with some helpful, challenging ideas to consider. What we often struggle to see, however, is that the sermon was laden with calls to be politically savvy with the goal of resisting the Roman Empire (and the corrupt Jewish leadership) in order to bring about change.  

Every time Jesus talked about the Kingdom of God – and he did a lot – he was offering a contrast and inherent challenge to the Roman Empire and usually the Jewish leadership in Jerusalem.  The phrase shows up 122 times in the Synoptic Gospels, of which 92 were directly attributed to Jesus. John’s Gospel used different language for it – salvation and eternal life, for instance – which were its dominant themes.  In addition, any time the phrase “good news” was used, and any time Jesus was referred to by others as “Son of God”, the Roman Empire and its emperor were directly challenged.  Rome’s Good News was a peace that came by military force: everybody toe the line or face the brutal consequences.

Such tyranny created a hatred toward Rome from the Jewish people, and every now and then some Jewish groups would rise up to try and regain some ground, only to be trounced and often crucified.  Naturally, as a people who had been occupied against their will by force, they wanted to return the favor.  Defeating Rome with military force – turbo-charged by the Spirit of God like what they remembered of the Exodus – was their dream and prayer.  It is very important to sit with this reality. 

Jesus was very aware that he was oppressed. And his primary audience?  Oppressed.  If you have experienced oppression, Jesus’ words are going to resonate with you more than those (like me) who have not.  By the way, white men have been studying and teaching Jesus for most of Christianity’s existence.  Could it be some things were missed because they were generally seeing the world through the eyes of the oppressor and not the oppressed? Of course!  Oppressors generally never see all of the ways they oppress, and likely minimize or rationalize or trivialize aspects of the oppression they force on those with less power than themselves. Oh, and oppressors hate being called out.  You can almost always count on some serious retaliation when accountability comes.  I mention this because Jesus is not speaking from a white, American, middle class or higher perspective.  More likely, he speaks from within Black Lives Matter, or with undocumented immigrants.  That’s who he was.  This is not the perspective of most scholars who have influenced Christianity since its inception.  Uncomfortable yet?

Jesus was nonviolent and taught nonviolence.  As you will soon see, Jesus was extremely savvy in the way he taught his followers to encourage change.  While so many wanted to try and pull off a military coup to regain their land, Jesus taught against it, saying plainly that if one lives by the sword, they would die by the sword.  The only way you get shalom is with shalom…

I learned a lot from Ronald J. Sider’s book, If Jesus is Lord, where he addressed a handful of texts within the “stump speech” that, at first glance, seem really wimpy (which couldn’t be further from the truth).  If you have time and are up for a more academic read, check out his thoughts from a portion of his chapter on the Sermon on the Mount “below” my post. Let’s focus on this part of his speech this week:

 

Matthew 5:38-48 (NLT)

38 “You have heard the law that says the punishment must match the injury: ‘An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.’ 39 But I say, do not resist an evil person! If someone slaps you on the right cheek, offer the other cheek also.40 If you are sued in court and your shirt is taken from you, give your coat, too. 41 If a soldier demands that you carry his gear for a mile, carry it two miles. 42 Give to those who ask, and don’t turn away from those who want to borrow.

43 “You have heard the law that says, ‘Love your neighbor’ and hate your enemy. 44 But I say, love your enemies! Pray for those who persecute you!45 In that way, you will be acting as true children of your Father in heaven. For he gives his sunlight to both the evil and the good, and he sends rain on the just and the unjust alike. 46 If you love only those who love you, what reward is there for that? Even corrupt tax collectors do that much. 47 If you are kind only to your friends, how are you different from anyone else? Even pagans do that. 48 But you are to be perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect.

 

The “eye for an eye” text was a nod to the standard rule of law in the Ancient Near East across many cultural lines that existed for many centuries, showing up in the Old Testament and in other cultures’ legal codes.  The law actually was meant to work two ways. First, it provided some sort of justice for those who had been harmed by another (if you killed my cow, you owe me a cow).  Yet it was also there to prevent over-reaching retribution (I’m really mad that you killed my cow, so I’m going to take your cow and kill your donkey).  The prevailing attitude among Jewish people in Jesus’ day was that since they had been treated violently by the Roman Empire, it was their legal right to resort to violence in return.  Whenever they did, they were immediately crushed.  The worst of it was long after Jesus died – a four-year’ish standoff when some Jews revolted and took Jerusalem back.  They held out for quite a while, but Rome could afford to be patient.  When the food ran out for those inside the walled city and some of the Jews inside were freed, they were slaughtered in plain sight for those on Jerusalem’s walls to witness.  Eventually the city was leveled and the Jews inside killed.  The Temple was demolished and has never been restored.  Violence begets violence, and when you’re outmatched, lasting peace-as-the-absence-of-conflict will not be yours for long. When have you resorted to violence?  How did that work out for you?

            Jesus’ instruction to people who felt wronged was to resist nonviolently.  The Greek word from which “resist” comes is specifically in reference to violent resistance.  Jesus is saying that a violent approach – an eye for an eye – will not work and is not the Way. Shalom begets shalom.  In his next few statements he gives examples of how to pull off non-violent resistance.

            When Jesus said to offer the left cheek after being struck on the right, he is talking about something very specific.  At that time, one of the most insulting, demeaning public acts you could do was to give someone a back-handed slap across the face (not a fisted punch).  In fact, if you slapped an equal in this way publicly, the penalty you would face would be double the fine if you punched the person in the nose because it was so dehumanizing.  Such a degrading act was reserved for wives or slaves who were considered “less than.”  Jesus is speaking to a lot of “less thans” who had been utterly humiliated by people with greater power.  The thought among scholars is that offering the left cheek was a statement of strength, almost demanding the offender to throw a punch instead of another slap, and thereby treating the oppressed person as an equal.  It was a not-so-subtle way of standing up for one’s dignity without resorting to violence (which would likely result in defeat).

Nonviolent protests in the street regarding police brutality, or women’s rights to equality, etc., are examples of speaking truth to power.  John Lewis was beat up and left for dead by police officers when he marched across the bridge in Selma.  By not acting with violence, they were shining a light on the brutality they were protesting against.  The systems of the world want to keep such actors silent.  A nonviolent protest is one way to shine a light on what the system would prefer to keep in the dark.  Such publicly uncomfortable acts are statements that more shalom is needed.  How have you used your voice or presence to make it known that more shalom is needed?

            When Jesus offered an example of being sued in court for one’s shirt, it is another case of highlighting degrading, dehumanizing treatment.  The shirt being referenced would be the only shirt a person owns and would likely resemble a long night shirt you can find today for pajamas.  It was forbidden to take someone’s outer coat because that would serve as their blanket for sleeping.  To offer one’s coat means to become completely naked in court, which in that culture would seem incredibly embarrassing for everyone present and shine a bright light on the person who was suing for the shirt in the first place.  Perhaps, legally, the plaintiff had a right to sue for the shirt.  But should he?  No, if the shirt is all the person has left, to take it is to treat the person as “less than”.  The defendant is already humiliated.  Going full commando draws attention to the inhumanity in a nonviolent, yet inescapably noticed way that would make everybody share in the discomfort.

When San Francisco quarterback Colin Kaepernick took a knee during the national anthem in response to police brutality (which is much higher statistically against blacks than whites), he was shining a light on inequality.  He was misunderstood as demeaning the flag and being unpatriotic. In actuality, he did an extremely patriotic thing by making a nonviolent statement that the equality our veterans fought for – including black veterans – was not there yet.  By the way, did you know that black WWII vets did not receive the GI Bill that white vets did, and also were not “eligible” to receive low interest mortgages with low down payments like white vets were, and were only allowed to purchase homes in less desirable locations (read this article)?   What’s patriotic about that?  How much potential generational wealth was lost due to that systematized act of inequality and inequity?  From family systems theory, we know that systems on all levels stay in place so long as everybody in the system plays their role.  When just one player in the system refuses, the system identifies the one refusing to play their part as the problem.  In alcoholic families, for instance, a child may act out.  From a distance, it may seem like the problem stems from the kid, when in reality, the problematic system is created by the alcoholic.  Kaepernick was the kid – the identified patient – who’s nonviolent act looked like the problem, yet in reality, he was simply doing what he felt he could do to wake people up using his platform.  It cost a nation some years of discomfort.  It cost him his reputation and career.  He waived no gun.  He didn’t wreck a store.  He didn’t burn a flag.  He simply took a knee to make a very plain statement: the freedom so many fought for is at stake within the country I love for full citizens who are supposed to be protected by our Constitution. His kneeling was a high-profile way of stating that shalom was needed.  How have you used your platform to draw attention to the need for more shalom?

When Jesus instructed people to go the extra mile, it likely went over like a lead balloon.  At that time, Roman soldiers could demand local people carry their gear for one mile.  Surely many in Jesus’ audience had been humiliated in this way.  What they really wanted to do was refuse to play along, but that would only result in more (likely violent) oppression.  The Roman military enforced this law and did not permit soldiers to force people to carry their gear beyond one mile.  At the end of the mile, for a Jewish person to willingly keep carrying the gear would make the soldier extremely uncomfortable. If his commanding officer found out the Jewish person went a second mile, the soldier would be in trouble.  Can you imagine the scene?  Upon taking a step toward a second mile, the powerful soldier is now insisting on carrying his own gear!  This simple nonviolent act leveled the playing field, and again shined a light on the lack of dignity Jewish people were experiencing at the hand of their oppressors.  This is a far cry from our common understanding of just being nice.

I am imagining a person who is being treated more like a servant than a fellow human being.  Perhaps one way to shine a light is to draw attention to the indignity by going over the top with the “service” in such an exaggerated way that the one served begins to see how awful their behavior has been.  Maybe it’s  represented by hospitality workers laying it on incredibly thick for guests so that complaints about the often inhumane culture get brought to the management (and above) by the guests.  What do you imagine?  What have you done?  In each case, the point is to declare, “more shalom needed here!”

When Jesus instructed his listeners to give to those who ask, he is telling them to drop the “eye for an eye”, quid pro quo thinking even in terms of economics.  The key idea is to be generous as Kingdom of God people.  Some people won’t give anything to others because they are sure the people are going to spend it in ways the donor would not approve.  In Jesus’ context, the overwhelming majority of people are extremely poor.  The people asking need to eat and are hoping to avoid getting into a common debtors agreement just to get some bread.  If you have some extra to share, share. When have you chosen to give with no strings attached to someone who needed help?

When Jesus taught his audience to love their enemies, you could likely hear a pin drop, followed by a handful of people vomiting.  This idea was not common.  The normal line of thinking was that you should love the people on your “team”, and it was perfectly okay to treat those not on your “team” with great contempt.  To love as Jesus instructs is not to dismiss harmful behavior or deny justice.  His words are not meant to go give an axe murder a big hug while the axe is still swinging.  What he is saying is that our attitudes and behavior should not be dictated by the prevailing culture around us, but rather by the Kingdom of God which calls us to a different way, a way of shalom.  

I’ve been alive long enough to remember the elections of US presidents dating back to the Ford-Carter contest.  Anybody who knows anything about US history knows that our country has endured far worse division than we do presently, yet it feels like the worst it has been in my personal memory and experience.  When we see our national leaders acting like Middle School students, our first thought should be, “more shalom needed.”  (No offense, Middle Schoolers – you get some grace since you’re going through one of the hardest periods of human development).  The challenge for Jesus followers is to not get sucked into the cesspool of degradation, but to live by the Way of Jesus in order to usher in more of the Kingdom of God.  When Jesus followers fall victim to this, everybody loses.  When Jesus followers live by shalom and seek shalom, everybody wins, even if only a little.  This doesn’t mean we ignore issues that are counter-shalom.  Of course not!  What it does mean is that we remember that we don’t get to shalom without shalom. The Middle School approach is violent and dehumanizing.  The Way of shalom is nonviolent and seeks to call out the best of humanity.  How are you speaking out about the childish behavior of your political candidates without being as childish as they are?  By the way, this is directly related to Jesus’ instruction about being perfect.  The same Greek word is used by Paul and refers to maturity, not flawlessness.  Choose to be a grown up in a world of adolescents. How have you chosen to be the grown up in the room, modeling shalom?

            Jesus’ stump speech at times brought incredible comfort to his listeners and also empowered them to see their lives and their potential differently. He was telling oppressed people that they could make a difference.  At minimum, they could live in a way that was dignified even when the world around them treated them as less than.  In community, these Jesus followers could experience an equality and equity that was unparalleled, which would provide immense support and be a conduit of shalom’s eternal love.  To follow his instructions, however, was to seek discomfort, because the nonviolent actions required courage.  Systems like staying the way they are, large and small.  To mess with it is to invite instability.  To follow Jesus is to measure our current reality against shalom, and, when necessary, shine a light on it, bringing disorder where there was once flawed order, all with the goal of ushering in shalom-shaped reorder.

            Where is there a lack of shalom in your world?  How are you going to be shalom, with shalom, in order to usher in shalom?

 

If Jesus is Lord, Ronald J. Sider (66-72):

A careful study of the verb used in this text ( shows clearly that Jesus is not recommending passivity. Anthistēmi is a variant of the word antistēnai (used in v. 39) and anthistēmi appears in the Greek Old Testament primarily as a military term. In forty-four of seventy-one uses in the Greek Old Testament, the word refers to armed resistance in military encounters (e.g., Lev. 26:37; Deut. 7:24; 25:18; Josh. 7:13; 23:9; Judg. 2:14).32 Josephus, the first-century Jewish historian, uses the word fifteen of seventeen times to refer to violent struggle. The Greek lexicon by Liddell and Scott defines the word to mean “set against especially in battle.”33Ephesians 6:13 uses the word antistēnai to refer to the spiritual battle against Satan when Christians are armed with the full armor of God. “In short, antistēnai means more in Matt. 5:39a than simply to ‘stand against’ or ‘resist.’ It means to resist violently, to revolt or rebel, to engage in an insurrection.”34

         N. T. Wright summarizes the meaning of the word this way: “The word ‘resist’ is antistēnai, almost a technical term for revolutionary resistance of a specifically military variety. Taken in this sense, the command draws out the implication of a good deal of the sermon so far. The way forward for Israel is not the way of violent resistance. . . but the different, oblique way of creative non-violent resistance. . . . Jesus’ people were not to become part of the resistance movement.”35 In his new translation, N. T. Wright translates verse 39 this way: “Don’t use violence to resist evil.”36

After prohibiting a violent response to evil, the text describes a proper response in four concrete situations. In each case, the commanded response is neither violent nor passive. Jesus calls his disciples not to turn aside passively or hit back but rather to confront the evil nonviolently.37 “By doing more than what the oppressor requires, the disciples bear witness to another reality (the kingdom of God).”38

Walter Wink has proposed an interpretation of verses 39b–41 that, if correct, greatly strengthens the claim that in these statements Jesus is suggesting a vigorously activist (although certainly nonviolent) response to evil and injustice.39 Some scholars agree with Wink.40 Others do not. But his argument merits careful evaluation.

Turn the other cheek. The text says, “If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to them the other cheek also” (5:39b). Hays notes that there is widespread acceptance by commentators that someone could strike a person on the right cheek only with the back of the hand and that such an action would be the kind of insult that a superior would deliver to an inferior.41 (To test this theory, face someone and notice how much easier it is to slap that person’s right cheek with the back of your right hand than it is to hit the right cheek with your right fist.) We know from documents of the time that a backhanded blow to the right cheek was a huge insult, “the severest public affront to a person’s dignity.”42 Ancient documents also show that the fine for striking an equal with the (insulting) back of the hand was double that for a blow by one’s fist.43 But no penalty followed for striking slaves that way. A backhanded slap was for inferiors, like slaves and wives.44

If that is the proper context for understanding the saying, then Jesus’s advice to turn the other (left) cheek conveys a surprising suggestion. Normally, an inferior would simply accept the insult (or on occasion fight back). But by turning the left cheek to the person insulting one, one almost forces the attacker to use his fist if he wants to strike again. (It is much harder to hit the left cheek with a backslap than with a fist.) The effect, Wink believes, is that the inferior person astonishes the superior by a dramatic act that asserts the inferior’s dignity, not by striking back but by forcing the attacker either to stop or use his fist and thus treat the inferior as an equal. Thus, Jesus is urging a nonviolent but nonetheless activist response to evil. One cannot assert with certainty that this is Jesus’s intended meaning.45 But that conclusion is certainly plausible.

Sued for one’s coat. “If anyone wants to sue you and take your shirt [inner garment], hand over your coat [outer garment] as well” (Matt. 5:40).46 The setting refers to a typical first-century context where debt was widespread among the poor. Jesus tells many parables about people in debt. Rome’s client king in Galilee, Herod Antipas, taxed the people heavily to pay tribute to Rome. Many poor people fell into debt.47

In Jesus’s example, the person taken to court for an unpaid debt is obviously very poor, owning nothing of worth to repay the debt except clothes. Such an impoverished person has no hope of winning against the richer person and so loses the inner garment as payment on the debt. Probably the reason the text says the person is being sued to give up the inner garment is because the Old Testament specifically forbade taking the outer garment as collateral for more than the daytime, because the poor person needed an outer garment to use as a blanket while sleeping.48

But why would Jesus tell this kind of poor person who has just lost an inner garment to give the person who is owed money the outer garment as well? Since many poor people had only one outer garment, that would mean stripping naked in court. And nakedness was a terrible disgrace in Palestinian Jewish society.49

Wink’s explanation is certainly plausible. The disgrace for nakedness fell not only on the naked person but also on those viewing the naked person.50 By stripping naked, the debtor exposes the cruelty not only of the creditor but also of the oppressive system the creditor represents. “The entire system by which debtors are oppressed has been publicly unmasked.”51 Rather than recommending a passive response to injustice, Jesus urges a dramatic nonviolent protest.

The second mile. “If anyone forces you to go one mile, go with them two miles” (Matt. 5:41). The

context for this saying is clearly Roman imperialism. The word translated “mile” is a Roman word, not a Jewish word.52 And the word translated “forces you” is the verbal form of the technical term (angareia) widely known in Roman law to refer to the legal right of Roman soldiers to compel subject people to carry their packs for one mile.53 Matthew 27:32 uses precisely this word to describe the way Simon of Cyrene is compelled to carry Jesus’s cross. There is also a large literature that demonstrates both that Roman soldiers often abused this right and that colonized people hated this burdensome obligation.

Earlier, in chapter 1, we saw how angry, violent rebellion against Roman rule and its collaborators kept erupting among the Jews in the century around the time of Jesus. These violent revolutionaries certainly urged fellow Jews to refuse to carry the baggage of oppressive Roman soldiers.54 What Jesus recommends “is the precise opposite of what the zealots advocated doing in their revolutionary sedition against the Romans.”55The words used and the context demonstrate that Jesus is clearly rejecting a widespread, popular attitude toward the oppressive Roman imperialists.

But is he recommending passivity? Is he urging fellow Jews to affirm Roman oppression? Again, Wink’s interpretation is intriguing and plausible. The soldier knows the colonized person has a legal obligation to carry his pack one mile. He also knows the law forbids the Roman soldier forcing the person to carry it more than one mile. And he knows his commander may punish him severely for breaking this law. So when they reach the end of the first mile, the soldier asks for his pack back. “Imagine then the soldier’s surprise when, at the next mile marker, he reluctantly reaches to assume his pack and the civilian says, ‘Oh no, let me carry it another mile.’” Now the soldier is in trouble. He may be disciplined by his superior. So he begs to be given back his pack. “Imagine the situation of a Roman infantryman pleading with a Jew to give back his pack! The humor of this scene may have escaped us, but it would scarcely have been lost on Jesus’ hearers, who must have been regaled at the prospect of thus discomfiting their oppressors.”56

With this action, the oppressed Jew seizes the initiative and asserts personal dignity—all in a nonviolent way fully compatible with loving the oppressor without endorsing the oppression.

Economic sharing. “Give to the one who asks you, and do not turn away from the one who wants to borrow from you” (Matt. 5:42). It is important to note that Jesus does not say give whatever a person asks. Rather, he teaches his followers to respond in love to those in economic need. On occasion, a loving concern for the best interests of the other may prompt rejection of some of the specifics of the request. Jesus is not urging some idealistic, impractical, utopian behavior that ignores practical reality.57 But here and elsewhere he does call his disciples to doable, albeit costly, economic sharing that reflects the fact that the messianic kingdom has already begun. In that new kingdom, Jesus’s followers abandon every rigid eye for an eye, even in the economic realm.

“Love Your Enemies.” There is no dispute about the source of the traditional summons to “love your neighbor,” which Jesus mentions in verse 43. It is a verbatim quote from the Greek translation of Leviticus 19:18. In his scholarly analysis of pre-Christian Jewish thinking on love for neighbor, John Piper has shown that the neighbor whom one was obligated to love was normally understood to be a fellow Israelite.58 A different attitude toward gentiles was expected.

But who are those who call people to “hate your enemy”? Who does Jesus have in mind? We know that the Manual of Discipline of Jesus’s contemporaries the Essenes (known to us from the Dead Sea Scrolls) explicitly says, “Love all the sons of light . . ., and . . . hate all the sons of darkness.”59 And for some of the Jewish revolutionaries of Jesus’s day, “the slaying of the godless enemy out of zeal for God’s cause was a fundamental commandment, true to the rabbinic maxim: ‘Whoever spills the blood of the godless is like one who offers sacrifice.’”60

But might Jesus also be thinking of Old Testament passages? There is certainly no Old Testament text that explicitly commands hatred of enemies. In fact, there are Old Testament passages that urge kindness toward enemies. If you find your enemy’s lost donkey, return it (Exod. 23:4–5). If your enemy is hungry, feed him (Prov. 25:21).61

But a number of scholars argue that there is material in the Old Testament that does teach hatred of God’s enemies and hatred of the enemies of the people of God.62 Speaking of those who hate God, the psalmist says, “I have nothing but hatred for them; I count them my enemies” (Ps. 139:21–22). And Psalm 137 says of Babylon, an enemy nation that conquered Judah, “Happy is the one who repays you according to what you have done to us. Happy is the one who seizes your infants and dashes them against the rocks” (137:8b–9). ThusGuelich concludes, “Matthew 5:43 in one sense stands in continuity with the teaching of the Old Testament. . . . The premise of 5:43 sets forth the common understanding of the Law in the Old Testament.”63It is impossible for modern readers to be certain whether Jesus is thinking of his contemporaries or Old Testament texts. Perhaps he is thinking of both. But in any case, his command represents a radical challenge to virtually every person and culture. It urges the very opposite of the reciprocity principle embedded in the norm of an eye for an eye.

But who are the enemies Jesus summons his disciples to love? It is interesting that in Matthew 5:43 (“love your neighbor and hate your enemy”) the words for “neighbor” and “enemy” are singular. But verse 44 uses the plural: “Love your enemies.” Every class of enemy seems to be included.64

Richard Horsley has argued that the word for “enemies” (echthroi) used by Jesus refers not to foreign or military enemies but to personal enemies, because of local squabbles in small Palestinian villages. Therefore, this summons to love one’s enemies has nothing to do with the question of whether Jesus opposes killing violent enemies.65

Duke New Testament scholar Richard Hays, however, argues convincingly that Horsley is wrong. There is nothing in Matthew’s text that suggests the kind of precise social situation in small villages that Horsley imagines. Furthermore, the lexicographical evidence does not support Horsley. “The term echthroi is generic. It is often used in biblical Greek of national or military enemies.”66 For example, in Deuteronomy 20:1 (LXX), the text says, “When you go to war against your enemies [echthroi] and see horses and chariots and an army greater than yours, do not be afraid of them.” (It is also interesting that this verse follows immediately after Deuteronomy 19:21, which commands an eye for an eye—the principle that Jesus specifically rejects.) After a major review of recent scholarly literature on the topic, Heinz-Wolfgang Kuhn concludes that the enemies Jesus calls his disciples to love include everyone. “The directive is without boundaries. The religious, the political, and the personal are all meant. Every enemy is meant.”67

Martin Hengel, one of the leading scholars on the nationalist, revolutionary Jewish movements of Jesus’s time, thinks that Jesus’s command to love one’s enemies “was formulated with direct reference to the theocratic and nationalistic liberation movement in which hatred toward an enemy was regarded as a good work.”68 There is no way to prove that decisively. But the fact that, in the immediately preceding section, Jesus has urged his followers to carry the packs of Roman soldiers not just the legally mandated one mile but also a second mile demonstrates that Jesus is thinking about the situation the violent Jewish revolutionaries hated. If in verse 41 Jesus is talking about how to respond to Roman imperialists, it is very likely that his command to love enemies includes the people the revolutionaries seek to kill.

Jesus’s stated reason for loving one’s enemies is important. His disciples should act that way so “that you may be children of your Father in heaven” (Matt. 5:45). Since God sends the sun and rain on both good and evil people, Jesus’s disciples must act in love toward everyone, both friends and enemies. As one of the beatitudes says, the peacemakers are “called children of God” (5:9).

The final verse of this section (“Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect”; Matt. 5:48) could be understood to demand an impossible ideal that drives us to repentance rather than calls us to discipleship. But the word translated “perfect” (teleios) is used by Paul and often translated “mature” (e.g., 1 Cor. 2:6; Phil. 3:15). In 1 Corinthians 14:20, Paul uses this word to urge Christians to stop being children and instead think like “adults” (teleioi).69 “Jesus is not frustrating his hearers with an unachievable ideal but challenging them togrow in obedience to God’s will.”70

But we dare not minimize Jesus’s costly summons. His words echo the Old Testament call to “be holy because I, the LORD your God, am holy” (Lev. 19:2). “The community of Jesus’ disciples is to reflect the holiness of God in scrupulous obedience to the will of God as disclosed through the teaching of Jesus, who has taken the place of Moses as the definitive interpreter of the Law.”71 The messianic kingdom has begun, and it is now possible and imperative for Jesus’s disciples to demonstrate (imperfectly but powerfully) the character of God. And that, according to Jesus, includes loving one’s enemies.

The same teaching about loving enemies appears in the Gospel of Luke. There too, as in Matthew, it is a major part of Jesus’s first ethical teaching.72

It is hard to exaggerate either the originality or the importance of Jesus’s direct command to love our enemies. It contradicts the practice of every society known to historians. No precise parallel to Jesus’s words has been found. New Testament scholars point out that the saying appears in both the earliest sayings tradition of Jesus’s words (scholars call it Q) and then Luke (6:27, 35) as well as Matthew. This leads Hengel to say that “this Magna Charta of agape” is what is “actually revolutionary in the message of Jesus.”73 John Howard Yoder notes that there is no other ethical issue about which the New Testament says Jesus’s disciples are like the heavenly Father when they act a certain way.74

Also striking is the fact that Matthew 5:38–48 is probably the most frequently cited biblical text when one collects all the statements about killing from the early Christian writers before the time of Constantine. Ten writers in at least twenty-eight different places cite or refer to this passage and note that Christians love their enemies and turn the other cheek. In nine instances, they link this passage from Jesus with a statement that Christians are peaceable, ignorant of war, or opposed to attacking others. Sometimes they explicitly link Jesus’s saying to a rejection of killing and war.75 In every single instance where pre-Constantinian Christian writers mention the topic of killing, they say that Christians do not do that, whether in abortion, capital punishment, or war.76 And Jesus’s statement about loving enemies is one of the reasons cited.

 

Note: Sider’s book is a winner. If you choose to read it, be prepared to get uncomfortable (and likely defensive).  Let it stretch you to think about things you may not have thought about before.

 

If Jesus is Lord Footnotes…

32. Wink, “Neither Passivity nor Violence,” 114.

33. Liddell and Scott, Greek-English Lexicon; quoted in Wink, Jesus and Nonviolence, 107.

34. Wink, “Neither Passivity nor Violence,” 115. The related word stasis is used in Mark 15:7 to refer to Barabbas’s violent insurrection and in Acts 19:40 to rioting. See also the use of variations of the basic word to refer to violent revolt  (Acts 5:37) and attacks on Christians by Jews (Acts 16:22; 17:5).

35. N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God, 291. Wright (291nn179–80) cites and agrees with Walter Wink’s basic analysis of antistēnai. Guelich has argued for a more narrow understanding of verse 39a, saying the text only condemns opposing an evil person in court (Sermon on the Mount, 220). But Richard Hays points out that although antistēnai can refer to a legal setting, this word is “not a technical term for legal opposition” and it does not normally have this sense in the rest of the New Testament. Furthermore, the narrow meaning does not make much sense of either 5:39b or 5:41, 42 (Hays, Moral Vision, 325–26). Bruner (Matthew, 1:248–49) also rejects Guelich’s view.

36. N. T. Wright, Kingdom New Testament, 9. So too Glen Stassen and David Gushee, who translate the verse: “Do not retaliate or resist violently or revengefully, by evil means” (Kingdom Ethics, 138). There is another ambiguity in verse 39a. The NIV translates, “Do not resist an evil person.” But the Greek word translated “person” is in the dative, and therefore it could equally be a masculine or a neuter. In the latter case, the word refers to evil generally, not an evil person.

37. Bruner, Matthew, 1:251.

38. Hays, Moral Vision, 326.

39. Wink, Engaging the Powers, 175–84; Wink, Powers That Be, 98–111.

40. E.g., Stassen and Gushee, Kingdom Ethics, 139; Fahey, War and the Christian Conscience, 35–38; Kraybill, Upside-Down Kingdom, 182; Neufeld, Killing Enmity, 23–25.

41. Hays, Moral Vision, 326. Hays himself is not fully convinced.

42. Keener, Gospel of Matthew, 197.

43. Gundry, Matthew, 95.

44. Wink, Engaging the Powers, 176.

45. Bruner disagrees with Wink’s argument about the slap on the right cheek but agrees that Jesus is calling the person to confront the evil, not run away or hit back. See Bruner, Matthew, 1:251.

46. The words for “shirt” and “coat” are chitōn and himation, respectively, which Liddell and Scott say mean the inner garment worn next to the skin (chitōn) and the outer garment (himation). Liddell and Scott, Greek-English Lexicon, 829, 1993.

47. Wink, Engaging the Powers, 178.

48. See Exod. 22:25–27; Deut. 24:10–13, 17. The word for “garment” in the LXX is himation. Luke 6:29b has the debtor being sued for the outer garment. Matthew’s version corresponds better with Old Testament law. Gundry, Matthew, 95.

49. Keener, Gospel of Matthew, 198.     

50. Gen. 9:20–27.

51. Wink, Engaging the Powers, 179. Stassen and Gushee agree with Wink; see Kingdom Ethics, 154.

52. France, Gospel of Matthew, 222.

53. See the massive literature cited in Wink, Engaging the Powers, 371–72nn17–19. There is no extant Roman law limiting the right to one mile, but scholars have generally believed that was the law (371n17).

54. Rome’s client king, Herod Antipas, ruled Galilee in Jesus’s day, so it is possible Matt. 5:41 refers to Herod’s soldiers. See Wink, Engaging the Powers, 373n28.

55. Schweizer, Matthew, 130. So too Bruner, Matthew, 1:255.

56. Wink, Engaging the Powers, 182.

57. Stassen and Gushee, Kingdom Ethics, 132–37, make the point that Jesus’s ethical demands in the Sermon on the Mount are realistic and doable.

58. Piper, “Love Your Enemies,” 30–32. See also, Schweizer, Matthew, 132.

59. Quoted in Schweizer, Matthew, 132. See also Josephus, JW 2.139.

60. Quoted in Hengel, Victory over Violence, 75.

61. See also 1 Sam. 24:5–7, 18; Job 31:29; Prov. 24:17.

62. So Bruner, Matthew, 1:268; Gundry, Matthew, 96–97; Guelich, Sermon on the Mount, 227; Keener, Gospel of Matthew, 203. Old Testament texts certainly command punishment of enemies (e.g., Deut. 25:17–19).

63. Guelich, Sermon on the Mount, 226–27.

64. So France, Gospel of Matthew, 225.

65. Horsley, “Ethics and Exegesis.” See also Horsley, Jesus and the Spiral of Violence, esp. 261–73.

66. Hays, Moral Vision, 328.

67. Quoted in Klassen, “‘Love Your Enemies,’” 11. So too Schrage, Ethics of the New Testament, 76.

68. Hengel, Christ and Power, 19.

69. See France, Gospel of Matthew, 228–29; Bruner, Matthew, 1:276.

70. Blomberg, Matthew, 115; so too Yoder, War of the Lamb, 146–47.

71. Hays, Moral Vision, 329.

72. Luke 6:27–36. There are some differences from Matthew in the Lukan version, but the call to love enemies and thus be children of God is central to both.

73. Hengel, Was Jesus a Revolutionist?, 26–27.

74. Yoder, War of the Lamb, 79.

75. Sider, Early Church on Killing, 171–72.

76. Sider, Early Church on Killing, 163–95, esp. 190–95.

 

Go Be Jesus: Campaign Speech

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Jesus was on a mission: to bring more shalom into the world. He talked about this whenever he spoke of the Kingdom of God, which operates from a completely different center than the kingdoms of this world. Today, we take a look at his campaign speech in Matthew 5-7. The point of this teaching is to gain familiarity with this foundational teaching, so much of the recorded video and audio are simply reading through what Jesus was remembered saying using Eugene Peterson’s The Message translation.

My challenge to you is to first listen to or watch the teaching, which includes a brief meditation on the first section of the speech. Occasionally, I give some text notes which may be helpful. This week, try to carve out 20 minutes a day to simply read through the speech on your own, jotting down a note or two about what is messing with you.

Good luck!

Go Be Jesus: Follow Me!

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Rob Bell did an awesome job in this Nooma Video, Dust, explaining what “Follow Me!” meant to Jesus’ original audience. It was a huge deal for Jesus to invite “everyday” people to become his disciples, and to do so implied that Jesus believed the disciples could actually learn the Way of Jesus and live it out.  Further, at one point Jesus said to them that they would do even greater things than he did!

Remember that the Way of Jesus wasn’t simply to be a nice person, but rather to bring much needed change to the world with shalom (the means), with the goal of shalom (the end). This was what the Kingdom of God was all about.  This deep peace and harmony, this real wellbeing for everyone and everything would challenge the status quo and threaten ways of the world that are not shalom.  Largely, systems that use power, intimidation, and domination, which favor those with more power over those with less, would be called out, because, simply, such a paradigm is incongruent with the nature of God.  This kind of mission would require great courage because eventually those using power to ingratiate themselves at the expense of others would do what it takes to protect their power by attempting to eliminate the threat, usually with some sort of violent behavior.  Slander, lies, and even physical harm were experienced by Jesus.  What happened to the Master would happen to his disciples. And yet, despite the challenges, the mission would be worth it and it would work, no matter how awful they were treated.  Why? Because the Kingdom of God is what is real and true and everlasting, and the kingdoms of this world always pass away. One leads to life and living, the other death and dying.  The “Follow Me!”, ironically, was an invitation to lay down one’s life for something much greater than oneself. Not violent, suicidal martyrdom, but giving oneself to a cause so fully that it actually did lead to death.  Paradoxically, such a move led to deeper experiences of life.  Jesus once said that if we hold onto our lives with a tight fist, we will actually lose the life we want so badly, but if we follow in his footsteps completely, we will find life – life everlasting, real, holistically well, harmonious, in rhythm, and in a word: shalom.

All of the above is simply to say that Jesus didn’t come to start a “nice” campaign, but rather a campaign to change the world with love, which is very much needed and worth it, and also very challenging.  And, as Bell noted, to be asked to follow implies that the one asking believes we can actually do it.  Awesome.

I can’t leave it there, however, knowing what I know.  Bell can only do so much in a brief video, and he did a fantastic job introducing us to what “follow me” meant.  But I know that if we are aware of how saying yes to “Follow Me!” plays out, we will be in a lot better shape.  Our expectations will be aligned with reality, and we won’t get thrown when it hits the fan.  Because it will. So, I offer just a few glimpses from the life of Peter – the one who dared get out of the boat to join Jesus on the walking on water experience Bell referenced. If you want to see shalom realized in the world so much that you accept the invitation, you can expect the following to happen…

Sometimes you will ace the test.  When asked by Jesus, “Who do people say that I am?”, the rest of the disciples waffled a bit, but Peter nailed it: “you are the Messiah/anointed one” (Matthew 16:13-20).  Jesus commended him, saying that such anointing is exactly what the Kingdom of God is built upon. Such a moment of spiritual insight was a mountain-top experience for Peter.  As you learn the Way of Jesus, you can expect such moments of true insight and inspiration coupled with a sense of divine blessing and celebration.  Such awakenings feel really good.  Enjoy them.  Record them.  Remember and savor them.  And remember that you have not arrived yet – there is more than a lifetime of learning ahead. Stay humble, because such awakenings can very easily tempt us toward pride which, you may have heard, generally precedes a fall…

Sometimes your pride will lead away from Kingdom of God sensibilities in favor of well-conditioned and supported paradigms of the world. Course correction will come.  Hint: correct as soon as possible to avoid robbing yourself and the world of potential shalom. Peter was feeling so confident as the star pupil that he forgot for a moment that he wasn’t the Master.  After Jesus articulated what lay ahead for him and those who followed (his non-violent shalom campaign would so threaten the power of those who held it that they would kill him), Peter let Jesus know that he must surely be mistaken.  Jesus’ response? “Get behind me, Satan, for you have in mind the things of men and not the things of God” (Matthew 16:21-28).  “Satan” needs to be viewed as a role here more than some weird demon-possession moment.  In this frame, Jesus is feeling the power of a prosecuting attorney asking if that’s really what Jesus wanted to do.  The very human, lizard-brained side of Jesus surely wanted to avoid suffering and death and instead pursue the very common (and failure-assured) method of using power, intimidation, and domination to bring about a shallow, false peace.  That’s what so many of his followers wanted him to do – how tempting! In a way, the temptation was Peter’s as much as Jesus’, wasn’t it?  Peter didn’t want to suffer and die, either.  He wanted to enjoy power and control like so many others.  But that’s not the Way that leads to life.  Count on your pride to tempt you throughout your life. Count on hearing the stinging words, “Get behind me Satan” again and again.  It’s simply part of the deal.

Sometimes our fears and insecurities will get the best of us, and we will fail.  Peter denied even knowing Jesus when it mattered most (see John 18).  You will, too.  Maybe with your lips, but most likely with your life – your attitudes and behavior will at times belie your insecurities and missteps.  No way around it – it will happen.  And it will feel like a sort of death.  We will repeat this cycle again and again because we are human beings trained on the kingdoms of this world which run counter to the Kingdom of God.  Knowing this ahead of time helps.  Expect failure.

When we fail, shalom, by its very nature, will want to restore us.  This sounds all warm and fuzzy like a Hallmark channel movie, but it’s actually painful work, a required death before resurrection, because it requires us to agree with what happened regarding our failure.  After Jesus was experienced alive in a new way after his horrible death, Peter quickly realized that he was still welcome in the company of disciples and in the company of God.  This was true.  Yet there was unfinished business to conduct: the failure needed to be recognized and thought through in order for reconciliation to take root.  Jesus held Peter accountable in an incredibly memorable scene on a beach. We like to skate over such steps in our lives.  It is much easier to just sort of casually nod to our failures and move forward.  It is not easy to break away from such face-saving devices.  In fact, it is incredibly hard to really look at where we’ve blown it.  Yet, if you want to grow forward, it is an absolute necessity.  The accountability isn’t punitive but restorative. The point of the scene wasn’t to scold Peter but to help him see what had happened more clearly so that he could grow from it (John 21:15-23).  This difficult exchange and call to follow may seem incongruent with Jesus’ statement that his yoke is easy and his burden is light, right?  It’s only easy when we are fully aligned with the Kingdom of God.  When we’re not, when we are trying to live in two kingdoms simultaneously, life is incredibly difficult.  Stay humble and in the zone of shalom.  Christians have become known for being grumpy instead of lovely.

We will grow exponentially in love and have ever deepening and heightening experiences of love if we keep on following the One who invites us forward.  Peter (or his disciples) told his listeners:

All praise to God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. It is by his great mercy that we have been born again, because God raised Jesus Christ from the dead. Now we live with great expectation, and we have a priceless inheritance—an inheritance that is kept in heaven for you, pure and undefiled, beyond the reach of change and decay. And through your faith, God is protecting you by his power until you receive this salvation, which is ready to be revealed on the last day for all to see.

So be truly glad. There is wonderful joy ahead, even though you must endure many trials for a little while. These trials will show that your faith is genuine. It is being tested as fire tests and purifies gold—though your faith is far more precious than mere gold. So when your faith remains strong through many trials, it will bring you much praise and glory and honor on the day when Jesus Christ is revealed to the whole world.

You love him even though you have never seen him. Though you do not see him now, you trust him; and you rejoice with a glorious, inexpressible joy. The reward for trusting him will be the salvation of your souls.– 1 Peter 1:3-9 (NLT) 

Do you hear the call from the Spirit of God that flowed through Jesus so long ago calling the original disciples?  It still beckons, still calls to all people everywhere who long for more shalom in the world that will come about from the incredibly challenging yet rewarding work of bringing it about with shalom itself.  By the Spirit of God, Jesus is still calling. Will you follow?

 Bonus Material.  If you want a picture of what this journey has, in part, looked like for me, suffer through some of the stories of my discipleship below…

I grew up in a devout Christian home in a mainline Christian tradition, where there wasn’t much emphasis on hell or judgment or sin forgiveness.  When my parents thought I was old enough to make a decision to become a Christian, it was quite solemn.  I was baptized by my dad (who was a pastor).  A bonus of baptism is that, in my family, it meant you got to take communion.  To be honest, the wafer thing tasted awful and the grape juice was watered down.  I also remember not feeling much when I first took it. I was sincere in my decision, but a lot of emphasis was placed on being grateful for being forgiven.  I understood it, but it didn’t connect all that much for me.  Maybe it was because I was 9 or 10 years old and didn’t have a whole lot of juicy sins to forgive? Stealing a significant portion of my brother’s Halloween candy when I was 5 or 6 was the worst thing I could come up with.  At that point, I was just affirming that it was my decision to follow Jesus as the leader of my life and the guarantor of heaven. I’ve run into a lot of people with a similar story.  It’s not unmeaningful, but it also kind of generates a “meh” response after a while, and I’ve known many people who didn’t really do much with their faith after their confession.  It was still an important yes for me, however.  It stuck with me and is part of my story.

Was that how faith started for you – sort of affirming what was already there – like you were essentially a Christian out of the womb? I think this is akin to a lot of the initial following accounts of the disciples -theirs was an easy yes (at first).

When I was in high school, I had a lot of great conversations with my neighbor, Brenda, who was a few years older than me.  We became really good friends over the summer, mainly having each other to hang out with.  She had a different vitality to her faith than I did, and I wanted it.  Hers was a really relational faith where she seemed to have ongoing conversation with God, and sensed God speaking back to her in myriad ways.  She wasn’t crazy or anything – it was simply a lived-out faith.  I sensed something in me inviting me into the same kind of faith experience, and I said yes.  It was an incredibly moving experience that I will never forget, which brought with it an experience of the Spirit of God that was unexpected, immersive, and mind-blowing.  It was a born again kind of event, where I saw the world in a very different way than I had before. The yes deepened my understanding of God and life itself.  I was a changed person.

Have you ever had that kind of experience where you sensed God calling you to follow into that kind of relational faith?  I think this is like what we see when Jesus interacts with the Samaritan Woman at the Well. 

Even though my household faith was not “judgy”, I certainly picked up on what was on the don’t list: don’t drink or smoke, don’t swear, and don’t have sex.  My parents never actually talked with me much about sex, but youth groups and church camps sure did!  The born-again buzz that I had stuck with me for awhile, but I didn’t have a person in my life to guide me or help me (my parents would have helped, but I as a teenager, so, you know…).  My faith struggled as the experiential side faded.  I still believed, but was really in an agnostic phase for about four years, which took me through high school and halfway through college, when all of the temptations to explore the pros and cons of the don’ts are turbo-charged by hormones and coming of age.  A crisis of faith born of a heartbreak brought me to my knees after my sophomore year in college.  I was in really rough shape, and sought healing from the church I attended.  After a couple of days attending a weekend seminar on helping people heal with God’s help, I sensed God inviting me to give it a try myself.  When I finally caved, carrying four years of shame and guilt and pain and sorrow and disappointment, I found God to be graceful, welcoming, restoring, forgiving.  An experience I will never forget. It was what I consider my adult conversion.  Once again I felt born again, seeing God, my life, and the world around me very differently.

Have you had that kind of experience, where you felt reborn after life sort of killed you?  I think this is like the story of the woman who was forgiven much, or the woman caught in adultery who was then freed by Jesus, or Zacchaeus the tax collector.

The next several years were filled with success.  I graduated from college, married an incredible woman, sailed through seminary earning my Masters of Divinity, landed my first pastorate which went extremely well, and moved to California to become the pastor of what is now called CrossWalk.  The early successes – which I believe God was working in to varying degrees – pumped up my ego pretty good.  My first few years at Napa proved to be one of the hardest seasons of my life where a lot of pain from a lot of pride brought me to a crossroads. Things were so hard for a while that my faith was shaken a bit.  Yet, even while I was in the throes of spiritual turmoil, I sensed God with me.  Such a strange experience of grace during a time when I am sure my pride led me to deeply offensive attitudes and behaviors that were not in line with following Jesus.  Once I reached my breaking point, I gave up on my own way of thinking and being and gave in to yet another yes to the invitation to follow Jesus.  Once again, I was met with the freedom that comes with grace.  I was deeply humbled in all the best ways – not humiliated – and experienced God quick to comfort and guide again.  Another layer of born again, again. This cycle has repeated itself over and over again over the years.  Usually, I become aware of my pride from either my work or my marriage, and for good reason: those are the areas where I am most known and seen, where feedback is most present.  We can easily blow off comments and observations from casual friends or the majority of Facebook friends, because we tell ourselves that they don’t really know us (which is probably true).  But when those who are closest have the courage to speak truth into our lives, we either own it and deepen our relationships and our experience of living in shalom, or we pull back and distance ourselves from such painful reality, which also keeps us from growing deeper. I’m so grateful for a strong partner who is not afraid to speak truth into my life, as hard as it must be for her to say and as hard as it is for me to hear.  I hate it in the moment, and yet it is necessary if we are to grow as people and in our relationship.

Have you had any experiences like this, when your pride catches up with you, when your attitudes and behaviors don’t reflect Jesus much, and your life doesn’t much reflect the Kingdom of God or the shalom it brings?  I think this is like the time Peter challenged Jesus’ game plan to go to Jerusalem, and much later when he balked his way through the unclean foods vision, or Paul’s conversion experience.

            There have been times of great sorrow, when the shadow of death has covered my eyes and weighed down my heart.  I have known grief that is too deep for words, when you weep so hard you can’t make a sound as you just try to breathe, when you can’t sleep because it hurts, and when you wake, the pain is still there.  I know what it feels like to have a loved one slip away leaving you without them.  It is so hard.  And yet, there is a voice that invites me to follow even in those moments.  When I have said yes to that invitation, I have again and again been met with comfort and hope.  Not like a magic wand that makes it all disappear – grief is a process that takes time.  But there is grace for each moment, an appropriate amount to get me through, to give me strength and rest.  This is a great expression of shalom, of healing and wellbeing that, when embraced, when met with a yes, it takes us deeper into the heart of God and into our True Selves where we discover that we are born again, again, in some way.

            Have you ever said yes to such an invitation from God?  Have you found God to be faithful in your grief?  I think of Martha and Mary when their brother Lazarus died, and how Jesus brought hope on that fourth day.

            There have been times when saying yes has led to pain and suffering for the benefit of others, when I have sensed that I needed to bear a cross and follow Jesus.  Crosses mean death is imminent.  As a pastor, I have had many experiences where I sensed the need to introduce new ways to seeing scripture and of thinking theologically, and it always comes at a price that I mostly pay. Usually this happens after I have been stretched in my thinking and seeing which requires its own level of suffering before I inflict it on others.  Over the years I have sensed God inviting me to speak about a bigger, more expansive Christianity that is inclusive of everyone and respects other faith traditions rather than disparaging them.  I have led the church through so many changes I lost track of how many we’ve gone through!  I’ve felt invited to lead us to expand our ministry abroad, and more broadly in Napa.  For many people who love CrossWalk, they cannot imagine it any differently.  And yet, every major step represents an invitation to risk on the Way of Jesus.

            Have you ever had such experiences where you knew you were being called to follow that would carry a personal cost, and yet you did it anyway? Peter and Paul were champions of the faith, and they took their licks every step of the way.  Resistance came from Rome, from Jewish leaders, and at times from within the Christian community.

            I share my experiences with you because I think the Christian life is saying yes to Jesus’ invitation to follow again and again and again and again in a hundred different ways and contexts, all born from God’s desire to create more shalom in the world – personally with us and for the world through us. We will often be tempted to be complacent – that’s human nature – yet when we give into our lethargy we miss out on shalom that could be ours.  How much better if we could start each day waiting and looking for the invitation to follow!  How much more shalom would we enjoy, and the world around us, too?

            The invitation always comes.  It is a constant. Do you hear it?  Will you follow?

Go Be Jesus: The Jesus Campaign

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Is it just me, or does it feel like we are in a perennial cycle of political campaigning that never stops?  It’s like the day after an election, future challengers to newly-voted-in politicians are already criticizing and strategizing for the next round.  And, of course, there are now a seemingly unlimited number of information sources that report on all of this through their particular lens.  My wife grew up in a home where her parents chose not to install cable television service.  They got one channel.  CBS, I think. My parents opted to get cable, and we got 13 channels!  What a luxury!  Two of those were C-SPAN, another was The Weather Channel, and a couple of local broadcasting stations.  Boiled down, we still basically had three media outlets that told us what was happening in the world: ABC, NBC, and CBS.  If you are my age or older, you should feel overwhelmed by the amount of information that is thrown at us.  If you’re younger, you simply may not know you are overwhelmed because such saturation is normal.

How do you sort all of the information out?  When you are considering a candidate for public office or discerning how you want to vote on a ballot measure, what sources do you tap, and why?  What values are you looking for in a candidate that you need to see if you’re going to give them your vote?  Is it simply what political party they are aligned with?  If so, why?  Note: if you are curious what observers think about the bias of your favorite news sources, just Google “Media Bias Chart” and you’ll find a lot to chew on.

It may surprise you to learn that Jesus’ public ministry looked a lot like a political campaign.  Why do you think his words were remembered?  It wasn’t just one sermon on the mount – it was likely dozens and dozens if not hundreds of public teachings and conversations with smaller groups of people and talking a lot with his disciples as he traveled around mostly the Sea of Galilee region of northern Israel. Remember that he was executed by crucifixion, the most brutal form of capital punishment the Roman Empire could conjure, custom-made for those whom they wanted to make an example: follow them and die in absolute shame and disgrace.  Remember also that the Jewish religious leaders – the High Priest and company – were deeply instrumental in bringing him to court and finding him guilty of blasphemy and insurrection.  Jesus’ life ended in humiliation.

For many people, being a Christian simply means to be a nice person.  Christians should be nice persons, for sure, but is that what Jesus was really about?  No offense to “Be Kind” campaigns – which are wonderful and serve as good reminders of what should come naturally in a world of unkindness – but I don’t think the Jewish leadership or the Roman Authorities would have had Jesus killed for handing out buttons and giving hugs.

What does being Christian mean to you?  Is it more than being a nice person?

Jesus had a lousy tech team.  None of them knew how to create a website and thought social media was a fading trend.  But they did manage to record their remembrances of what he said and did in four related collections: the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.  Each were written by different groups of people, with Mark being the first, followed by Matthew and Luke (which used Mark as a key source, explaining why they are so similar), and many years later, John was written (with greater interest in theology than chronology).  These are called gospels, which translates as “good news”.  What was the good news that captivated enough people to garner interest from religious leaders and Roman Empire officials?  What about Jesus’ message was seen as a threat?  Why didn’t Christianity die with Jesus on the cross?

This teaching series may be disturbing for many of you, because you will discover that the Christianity that resembles Jesus is quite different than the Christianity you may have originally signed up for.  It is incredibly likely that you signed up for a “Be Kind” campaign with the assurance of heaven thrown in.  Or maybe you were compelled by the heaven piece and you’re trying really hard to be kind until your reward.  Jesus does have something to say about being kind and getting to heaven – both matter – yet neither of these things were part of his core campaign message.  For the earliest followers, to say yes to remaining a Christian after Jesus’ death was to invite trouble, perhaps even torturous death. Was that part of the deal for you when you embraced the faith?  Was there any disclosure stating that your life may be at risk if you take this seriously?  I doubt it.  What was it, then, about Jesus’ message that won the hearts and lives of such ardent followers? Why did they sign up and stay signed up?

What was it that won your vote for Christianity originally?  Why did you say yes?  What was the primary message that you were saying yes to?

Every election cycle, candidates seeking office talk about the need for change.  Incumbents talk about how well their change-making is going and the need to keep changing the way they’ve been leading, and their opponents declare that the person in the office needs to change.  In one sense, Jesus was no different. Following in the footsteps of his relative, John the Baptist, famous for his fire-and-brimstone type preaching followed by baptism as a response and indicator of repentance (turning/changing), Jesus was known for talking about change, too.  Most of the time in our experience, regardless of the political promises, many are generally left underwhelmed by the lack of progress toward deep change that actually takes place, perhaps because the means to change – power – is used by all opposing sides, perpetuating the need for another coup of sorts.  The Jewish leadership at that time crafted a working relationship with Rome whereby they enjoyed a large amount of power to govern their Jewish adherents.  But power has a way of corrupting those who hold it. Jesus came to realize that the power model only led to more strife and was not rooted in the nature or person of God.  So, while Jesus came to announce a change was coming and is already here, it was founded on an entirely different paradigm: love.

Let’s take a look at how Jesus began his ministry for clues about the vision he was casting and how he was going to bring to reality. Remember that Jesus was born into extreme poverty in Northern Israel, when the Jewish people who lived there were under the Roman Empire’s occupation, which brought order to their subjects via threat of violence.  They were the world Superpower at that time.  The Jewish religious leadership were corrupt, having struck a deal with Rome whereby they were able to keep their power so long as they kept the Jewish people in check, which they did using a different threat of religious violence.  They became known for living very comfortably in Jerusalem while those they served struggled to scrape together food for each day.

Before Jesus began his public ministry, his distant cousin, John the Baptist, was calling people to turn from their former ways toward God, because he believed God was about to bring about a new chapter in history.  When he saw religious leaders who came to observe him, he called them a “brood of vipers”, charging them with only giving lip service to God without any action to back up their belief.  This was the beginning of a movement.  Jesus resonated with it, and joined the cause with his baptism, in which God showed up in a tangible expression:

The next day John saw Jesus coming toward him and said, “Look! The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world! He is the one I was talking about when I said, ‘A man is coming after me who is far greater than I am, for he existed long before me.’ I did not recognize him as the Messiah, but I have been baptizing with water so that he might be revealed to Israel.”

Then John testified, “I saw the Holy Spirit descending like a dove from heaven and resting upon him. I didn’t know he was the one, but when God sent me to baptize with water, he told me, ‘The one on whom you see the Spirit descend and rest is the one who will baptize with the Holy Spirit.’ I saw this happen to Jesus, so I testify that he is the Chosen One of God.” –John 1:29-34 NLT

            Everybody who heard the story heard that this Jesus was anointed by God to take away the sin (singular) of the world.  Not the sins, but the sin.  Sin has been defined as the culpable disturbance of shalom. The prevailing systems that dominated the political and religious realms worked against shalom, which refers to peace, wholeness, harmony, equity on a large scale, which includes personal lives but extends to the entire world.  Jesus came to change that, to rectify that, to bring peace and harmony back to the world that had lost it because it chose the ways of power and control that offered a false peace – the absence of conflict because it was squashed by violent domination.

            Immediately following his baptism, Jesus went on an extended retreat to sort out how he would live into the new reality, the different way of God’s kingdom that leads to true shalom.  While on retreat, the following happened:

Then Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, returned from the Jordan River. He was led by the Spirit in the wilderness, where he was tempted by the devil for forty days. Jesus ate nothing all that time and became very hungry.

Then the devil said to him, “If you are the Son of God, tell this stone to become a loaf of bread.”

But Jesus told him, “No! The Scriptures say, ‘People do not live by bread alone.’”

Then the devil took him up and revealed to him all the kingdoms of the world in a moment of time. “I will give you the glory of these kingdoms and authority over them,” the devil said, “because they are mine to give to anyone I please. I will give it all to you if you will worship me.”

Jesus replied, “The Scriptures say, ‘You must worship the Lord your God and serve only him.’”

Then the devil took him to Jerusalem, to the highest point of the Temple, and said, “If you are the Son of God, jump off! For the Scriptures say, ‘He will order his angels to protect and guard you. And they will hold you up with their hands so you won’t even hurt your foot on a stone.’”

Jesus responded, “The Scriptures also say, ‘You must not test the Lord your God.’”

When the devil had finished tempting Jesus, he left him until the next opportunity came.

Then Jesus returned to Galilee, filled with the Holy Spirit’s power. Reports about him spread quickly through the whole region. He taught regularly in their synagogues and was praised by everyone. – Luke 4:1-15 NLT

 Jesus was tempted to live by his passions (bread), to bow down to the world’s system of order, dominance, and peace, and to place himself above God.  The temptations were to give into everything wrong about the way the world was living and leading, to which Jesus simply said “no.”  The way of God that would restore shalom was markedly different than the way that disturbed it.  Politicians say that if you want what you’ve got keep doing what you’re doing.  Jesus was fully aware that real change required an entirely different path and sensibility.  If God was the origin and goal of the shalom, then the way of God had to be the means to get there.

All four Gospels record that Jesus quickly invited people to become his disciples:

From then on Jesus began to preach, “Repent of your sins and turn to God, for the Kingdom of Heaven is near.”

One day as Jesus was walking along the shore of the Sea of Galilee, he saw two brothers—Simon, also called Peter, and Andrew—throwing a net into the water, for they fished for a living. Jesus called out to them, “Come, follow me, and I will show you how to fish for people!” And they left their nets at once and followed him.

A little farther up the shore he saw two other brothers, James and John, sitting in a boat with their father, Zebedee, repairing their nets. And he called them to come, too. They immediately followed him, leaving the boat and their father behind.

Jesus traveled throughout the region of Galilee, teaching in the synagogues and announcing the Good News about the Kingdom. And he healed every kind of disease and illness. News about him spread as far as Syria, and people soon began bringing to him all who were sick. And whatever their sickness or disease, or if they were demon possessed or epileptic or paralyzed—he healed them all. Large crowds followed him wherever he went—people from Galilee, the Ten Towns, Jerusalem, from all over Judea, and from east of the Jordan River. – Matthew 4:17-25 NLT

  Who did he choose?  Not people in power, but everyday people.  Not highly educated religious folks, but common folks.  Why?  Probably because they were more in touch with the problems baked into the system that disturbed/destroyed shalom, and they would therefore have less unlearning to do going forward.  Furthermore, if they “got it”, anybody could. This was a truly grassroots movement of real, normal human beings, who resonated with the message from his home turf and beyond.

Note also that the anointed was extremely powerful on him, giving him the capacity to teach powerfully and heal many forms of diseases which, at that time in history, were considered curses by God.  Through Jesus, God was restoring people from their “sin” within their physical bodies.  He was beginning to gain great notoriety.

However, as he was prone to do, he made sure to clearly communicate that the Way of God that restored shalom to the world was not like the way that disturbed/destroyed that shalom:

When he came to the village of Nazareth, his boyhood home, he went as usual to the synagogue on the Sabbath and stood up to read the Scriptures. The scroll of Isaiah the prophet was handed to him. He unrolled the scroll and found the place where this was written:

“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,

for he has anointed me to bring Good News to the poor.

He has sent me to proclaim that captives will be released,

that the blind will see,

that the oppressed will be set free,

and that the time of the Lord’s favor has come.”

He rolled up the scroll, handed it back to the attendant, and sat down. All eyes in the synagogue looked at him intently. Then he began to speak to them. “The Scripture you’ve just heard has been fulfilled this very day!”

Everyone spoke well of him and was amazed by the gracious words that came from his lips. “How can this be?” they asked. “Isn’t this Joseph’s son?”

Then he said, “You will undoubtedly quote me this proverb: ‘Physician, heal yourself’—meaning, ‘Do miracles here in your hometown like those you did in Capernaum.’ But I tell you the truth, no prophet is accepted in his own hometown.

“Certainly there were many needy widows in Israel in Elijah’s time, when the heavens were closed for three and a half years, and a severe famine devastated the land. Yet Elijah was not sent to any of them. He was sent instead to a foreigner—a widow of Zarephath in the land of Sidon. And many in Israel had leprosy in the time of the prophet Elisha, but the only one healed was Naaman, a Syrian.”

When they heard this, the people in the synagogue were furious. Jumping up, they mobbed him and forced him to the edge of the hill on which the town was built. They intended to push him over the cliff, but he passed right through the crowd and went on his way. – Luke 4:16-30 NLT

            What was he saying to his nationalistic home crowd?  That God was not nationalistic.  What was the result?  Those that were counting on a paradigm where they would come into power over those who had overpowered them were infuriated. They had not yet understood that the way out of the problems of the world would not come from the ways that created the problems in the world.  You don’t restore shalom via the means that disturbed and destroyed it, even if you feel like you are God’s beloved.  Note how powerful this paradigm was in Nazareth.  They were ready to kill him, an allusion to what would eventually come.  Jesus, however, was not stopped by their attempts to nearly kill him, also an allusion to a day when power-brokers thought the movement died with Jesus, only to discover that the Kingdom of God extends beyond this life, which cannot be touched by the kingdoms of this world.

            We are living, once again, at a time when the world’s paradigm of power and domination has greatly disturbed shalom even while claiming to be its source.  We are living, once again, during a time when it appears that religions have bought into that same paradigm to varying degrees and have found themselves culpable of the very shalom they were entrusted to restore.  Once again, to see Jesus and his message clearly calls us to the same questions it did originally: do we want to see shalom restored in all its fullness?  If so, do we understand that the shalom sought by Jesus was also the shalom lived by Jesus – the means becomes the end, the end is determined by the means.

            There remains a great threat in Jesus’ mission, personally and beyond.  The power and domination mode of this world that lives in us is challenged.  Can you tell?  Can you feel it?  What do you really want in your life and in our world?  Are you satisfied with the system that got us where we are, or is there something within you that longs for something deeper, a peace that is much more than the absence of conflict but is truly the expression of harmonious well being.  If not, don’t utter the prayer Jesus taught and lived, because it is a rally cry for restoration.  If so, let your voice be loud and clear:

 

Our Father, who art in Heaven, hallowed by Thy name.

Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in Heaven.

Give us this day our daily bread.

Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.

Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.

For Thine is the Kingdom, and the Power, and the Glory forever. Amen.

Deeper than Do's and Don'ts

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

The bride and groom were before me.  It was there wedding day.  We had moved to the final section of the service where they would recite classic vows to each other, repeating after me to mitigate against wedding day jitters that can mess with memory recall.  “I, _____, take you, ____ to be my husband/wife.  To have and to hold, for better or worse, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health, and to be faithful to you ‘til death do us part.”  It was all fine for the groom until the last line about being faithful.  At first, I thought he didn’t hear me being so wrapped up in love.  So, I repeated it.  He looked at his bride, then at me.  I said it again, “to be faithful to you ‘til death do us part.”  Finally, he vowed, “to strive to be faithful to you ‘til death do us part.”  So ended the ceremony, and the relationship.  The vibe wasn’t nearly as festive, but the catering was spot on…

There are a lot of approaches to having a healthy marriage, several of which I cover with couples who want to talk about it before tying the knot (most don’t). One approach, illustrated in Willard Harley’s book, His Needs, Her Needs, takes a quid pro quo approach, where couples agree ahead of time what their relationship is going to look like and essentially draw up a covenant with each other that they sign. There is value in clearly communicating needs and wants with each other and delineating how each help meet each other’s needs. But it can get so mechanical that love is basically forgotten.  Sometimes one or both persons are so out to lunch on what “healthy” looks like that the contract serves as a pilot’s checklist before they attempt taking their marriage for a flight.  The approach has helped many couples communicate more clearly and serve each other well.

Another great marriage book written by the Yerkoviches entitled How We Love. This book goes deep into personal history, looking at family of origin issues as primary shaping influences on how a person loves others and hopes to be loved.  I have seen a lot of personal and marital healing come from that book and its related course.

I’m a growing fan of a newer method based on Emotion-Focused Therapy discovered by Dr. Sue Johnson.  The premises of this approach is that when people feel connected to each other, everything else more easily falls into place.  No contracts are needed to state needs and wants because the partners are already deeply desiring to discover that on their own, and long to serve one another.  There is less homework to be done discovering how to love one another, too, because the connection discovers that on its own.  Insults, fights, mutually assured destruction give way to loving communication.  Keep that connection strong, and the marriage will thrive.  Let the connection fade, and expect those old hurtful patterns to re-emerge.  Connection is the key.

In Paul’s letter to the Colossians, the first and greatest emphasis upon which the letter is based is Christ. Not simply Jesus, but rather that aspect of God which was the critical agent in creation itself.  When the Gospel of John’s Prologue refers to the Word that was in the beginning, that’s Christ – the visible manifestation of God.  The Good News that Paul shared is that the work of Christ clearly demonstrates and communicates that all of creation – including humanity – is deeply loved by God, and that if we ever wonder if we’ve burned the bridge too badly for God to want anything to do with us, we need not worry: in Christ God reconciled everything to Godself.  Love and grace are the constant variable for us to build our lives on.  We can’t do anything to make God love us more or less – it is already fully complete.  Paul then went on to tell the church that the goal wasn’t simply to accept the Good News, like you might imagine happening at a revival altar call or something.  Sure, Paul hopes everyone will embrace the life-transforming foundation, but his real hope was that people who grow into maturity in their relationship with God evidenced in the living of their lives.  The Good News compels us to live differently, seeking to orient our lives by God’s Kingdom/True North more than any other influence.

The remainder of the letter moves through a series of ethical concerns listing a bunch of behaviors that they should stop doing, and also providing direction on what they should be doing. If you’ve read it, you know that Colossians chapter three can come off like a real buzz kill.  No horny teenager wants to read that they can’t take a cookie out of the cookie jar until they’re married.  No driven American in pursuit of the American Dream wants to be reminded not to put themselves first in order to get ahead. No political talk show hosts want to learn that character assassination and its related verbal assaults are off the table. Some view the whole chunk as confirmation that God is an eternal bookkeeper tracking us with great precision only to rip us apart at the end of our days. See for yourself:

 

Since you have been raised to new life with Christ, set your sights on the realities of heaven, where Christ sits in the place of honor at God’s right hand. Think about the things of heaven, not the things of earth. For you died to this life, and your real life is hidden with Christ in God. And when Christ, who is your life, is revealed to the whole world, you will share in all his glory.

So put to death the sinful, earthly things lurking within you. Have nothing to do with sexual immorality, impurity, lust, and evil desires. Don’t be greedy, for a greedy person is an idolater, worshiping the things of this world. Because of these sins, the anger of God is coming. You used to do these things when your life was still part of this world. But now is the time to get rid of anger, rage, malicious behavior, slander, and dirty language. Don’t lie to each other, for you have stripped off your old sinful nature and all its wicked deeds. Put on your new nature, and be renewed as you learn to know your Creator and become like him. In this new life, it doesn’t matter if you are a Jew or a Gentile, circumcised or uncircumcised, barbaric, uncivilized, slave, or free. Christ is all that matters, and he lives in all of us.

Since God chose you to be the holy people he loves, you must clothe yourselves with tenderhearted mercy, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience. Make allowance for each other’s faults, and forgive anyone who offends you. Remember, the Lord forgave you, so you must forgive others. Above all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds us all together in perfect harmony. And let the peace that comes from Christ rule in your hearts. For as members of one body you are called to live in peace. And always be thankful.

Let the message about Christ, in all its richness, fill your lives. Teach and counsel each other with all the wisdom he gives. Sing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs to God with thankful hearts. And whatever you do or say, do it as a representative of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks through him to God the Father.

Wives, submit to your husbands, as is fitting for those who belong to the Lord.

Husbands, love your wives and never treat them harshly.

Children, always obey your parents, for this pleases the Lord. Fathers, do not aggravate your children, or they will become discouraged.

Slaves, obey your earthly masters in everything you do. Try to please them all the time, not just when they are watching you. Serve them sincerely because of your reverent fear of the Lord. Work willingly at whatever you do, as though you were working for the Lord rather than for people. Remember that the Lord will give you an inheritance as your reward, and that the Master you are serving is Christ. But if you do what is wrong, you will be paid back for the wrong you have done. For God has no favorites.

Masters, be just and fair to your slaves. Remember that you also have a Master—in heaven.

Devote yourselves to prayer with an alert mind and a thankful heart. Pray for us, too, that God will give us many opportunities to speak about his mysterious plan concerning Christ. That is why I am here in chains. Pray that I will proclaim this message as clearly as I should.

Live wisely among those who are not believers, and make the most of every opportunity. Let your conversation be gracious and attractive so that you will have the right response for everyone. – Colossians 3:1-4:6 |NLT

 

Oh, and did you catch the bit about wives submitting to husbands?  Or how about slaves obeying their masters?  Did anybody else throw up a little just then? What do we do with such outdated advice? Should we just chuck the whole thing?  Tempting, for sure.  Yet if we dust off our hermeneutic, we may find more relevance than originally thought.  And yes, you do have a hermeneutic, and it’s showing right now…

Hermeneutics is the fancy word that refers to how we read and apply biblical text.  I believe that we should use the same hermeneutic for all of the Bible’s texts if we want to have any consistency in our faith, otherwise we really do become guilty of favoring some passages over others for no other reasons than the favored ones likely bolster our held world view.  My hermeneutic includes a belief that well-meaning, faithful people wrote the Bible.  While they likely prayed a lot as they wrote, God did not override their quills or stories. This, by the way, is a direct challenge to what is called plenary inspiration.  I don’t believe in it, and I don’t think the biblical writers did either.  Since human beings wrote the Bible in a wide range of contexts over many centuries, I am confident they made some mistakes.  Some minor, some major. This, by the way, is a direct challenge to the idea that the Bible is inerrant and infallible.  I don’t think the biblical writers thought that either of those words were true of the scriptures, including Jesus (who never wrote anything down – photographic memory, I guess).  Ancient Rabbis, by and large agree with me, which means that Jesus and Paul agree with me, too, since they were part of the ancient Jewish rabbinical tradition.  They would have wanted robust discussions about the meaning of texts and were comfortable ignoring texts that they simply couldn’t make heads or tails of. Context was appreciated.  Realizing context is everything allowed them the freedom of flexibility.  Respecting genre enabled them to read some passages as the metaphors they were intended to be.  What does that all mean for the above passage related to wives and slaves, specifically?  It means we allow Paul to write at a time when women were treated as property and slaves were mostly indentured servants. Knowing that Paul actually championed gender equality (and writes of equality in this letter), he would likely rescind the submission instruction today.  Ditto on the slave and master advice, especially if he could have seen the atrocious abomination that was American Slavery. (Side note: it’s interesting that we can quickly recognize the sever inhumanity of Hitler’s Nazism and other historical examples of barbaric behavior yet still struggle to own the slavery which we took to an unparalleled level simply for profitable gain.  Recently the world marked the 75th anniversary of the US’s dropping the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, which burned over 100,000 (mostly) civilians to death (men, women and children).  Such barbarism wasn’t illegal until after the world witnessed it in us. Imagine what Paul would write to the US…).

The buzz kill instructions need to be appreciated beyond the Willard Harley quid pro quo, contractual lens.  We can sometimes jump right to the words about God’s wrath and find ourselves questioning God’s love for us all over again.  Perhaps Paul would edit his letter if he wrote this in 2020.  What we can see here, in light of the context of the whole letter is that the foundation of the entire ethic that Paul is instructing is being connected to God thanks to God’s unending love for us.  Paul is definitely favoring a “connection” based relationship approach here, and is pointing out that there are behaviors that hurt than connection.  If Jesus taught that the two greatest commandments are to love God with all we’ve got and all we are, and to love our neighbor as ourselves, that means we drop behavior that hurts ourselves and others, all because of our love for God, others, and ourselves.

Maybe you are clueless and don’t realize that some of the behaviors listed are destructive.  Go ahead and cut those out of your life like outdated sweaters and shoes.  You’ve got a new wardrobe; you’ve been born into something fresh and eternal.  Wear clothes from that closet.

Think of your faith like a marriage, because that metaphor is legit.  Keeping your love for God strong and connected is what yields the life you are meant to live that not only blesses you but seeks to bless the whole world. When it’s “on”, the new clothes fit effortlessly, perfectly, are noticeable and remarkable. Lovely. How do we do that? We think on Christ, we keep our minds focused on Christ, we integrate disciplines that remind us of what matters most in our lives. Sometimes we have to be really intentional about this, especially since so much of the noise in our world isn’t supportive of faith beyond the shallows.  What are you doing to foster your connection to God? If you don’t know, it might mean you’re missing out on a level of vitality you didn’t know what possible.

I struggle with leaving work at the office.  As a pastor and an Enneagram Type 3, I am pretty driven.  If I don’t monitor myself, I can find myself constantly at work even if I’m not.  At times, I literally need to change my playlist to help my mind get out of work mode and into more important things in life mode like my wife and kids and actually having a life beyond work.  Lynne and I have together created a growing playlist of tunes we both like that serve to in some way represent out love for each other.  At times when I need to let work go, I play that playlist and am transported into my marriage.  I’m amazed how effective it can be.  Perhaps you need to do something similar regarding your faith, to remind you of God’s love for you and your love for God.  Give it a try.  What do you to lose except your quality of life and a better world for everybody?

John Lewis, Jesus, Paul, and You: Love in Action

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

            On July 17, 2020, Rep. John Lewis lost his fight with Pancreatic Cancer.  Lewis was known for taking on challenges.  He was the last of the Big Six leaders who were key leaders during the Civil Rights movement in the 1960’s.  He co-led the march over the Edmund Pettus Bridge on what would become known in the US as Bloody Sunday, where peaceful marchers were beaten by Alabama State police.  Lewis was beaten – receiving a concussion – and thought he was going to die.  Nobody would blame Lewis for holding hatred toward the officers and their leaders who commanded such violent action on non-violent protestors.  But Lewis didn’t hate his oppressors.  He trained himself not to.  The primary reason he couldn’t allow himself to harbor hatred was because of his theology.  Lewis essentially believed that those who beat him had Christ within them, that they had intrinsic worth, that they were, therefore, at their core, good.  He chose a path of love even toward his enemies.  Sounds like Jesus. It also sounds like one of Jesus’ converts, Paul.

            Paul reportedly wrote the letters to the churches in Colosse and Ephesus, as well as a letter to Philemon, from Rome where he was under house arrest.  He would not leave Rome alive.  He was in the final season of his life, but he was not done living, and not done making a positive contribution to the world.  His letters to the church were meant to encourage people who found themselves trying to live into a new paradigm, one which was heralded by Jesus as the Way of the Kingdom of God.  Paul spent his last days physically living under the shadow of the Roman Empire while doing his best to live under the reign of God.

            Most Jewish people had a bad opinion of non-Jewish people – Gentiles – and for understandable reasons.  For most of their history, the Jewish people lived under the thumb of foreign oppressors, with Rome being the dominating force during Jesus and Paul’s lives.  Living under the Pax Roman which came with extremely heavy taxation, it would not be difficult to imagine the underlying hatred that simmered just below the surface for many Jewish people in the first century CE.  And yet Paul was able to transcend that hatred.

            One reason Paul was able to avoid succumbing to hating his oppressors is because he saw them with God-fashioned eyes.  More than simply being loving and forgiving, Paul, as recognized in his letters to Colosse and Ephesus, believed that through Christ, everything had been reconciled to God.  Further, he understood that Jesus taught and lived to bring to light a great truth: “God wanted [God’s people] to know that the riches and glory of Christ are for Gentiles, too. And this is the secret: Christ lives in you. This gives you assurance of sharing his glory” (Colossians 1:27 NLT).

            This truth which transformed Paul communicated that every person is inherently worthy of dignity and respect, because the creative presence of Christ is a part of them. Paul was deeply convinced of this truth as evidenced in his other letters encouraging Jesus followers to see beyond the labels they put on others and rather view everybody as equals in terms of God’s love and grace.  This moved Paul to treat others from a position of grace instead of hatred.

This capacity to see Christ in others and in everyone and in every part of creation is the game-changing paradigm shift.  When the shift is made, it is truly an experience of being born again.  Many people who wake up to the grace that is theirs are immediately more graceful toward others, even those who oppressed them in some way.  The love of God is that powerful.  It is a choice to embrace it or not.  Paul uses language like circumcision, baptism, and death-and-resurrection to describe the decision his Colossian audience made to follow a new Way.

            When have you experienced a waking up moment akin to being born again or anew?  

            Paul knew, however, that being born again was really just the start.  As he wrote to the Colossians, “we want to present everybody to God, perfect [mature, full-grown, fully initiated, complete] in their relationship to Christ” (Colossians 1:28b NLT).  Paul knew that God’s dream was for everyone to grow into their healthiest full potential where they thrive, propelled by the very Spirit of God.  This is not easily done.  As John Lewis surmised, while people may be born innocent, they are immediately trained to see the world through the eyes of those who raise them, which is always distorted to varying degrees.  Correcting vision is an unlearning process that requires intent and courage and involves action that may go against the status quo.  This is why Paul instructed the Colossians not to be swayed to participate in practices that ran counter to the Way of Jesus.  Be certain, however, that when the Colossian people chose not to engage in the behavior of the majority, it came with a price (as it always does).  Sometimes the price is social, sometimes economic, sometimes physical, sometimes emotional – but always there is a price to be paid by those who behave counter-culturally.

            When has choosing the Way of God – the Way of Love, Peace, Justice, Mercy, Humility, etc. – cost you something? What choices are before you right now?

            Paul knew that to mature in Christ – to live more and more into our True Selves – required work.  He instructed: “And now, just as you accepted Christ Jesus as your Lord, you must continue to follow him. Let your roots grow down into him, and let your lives be built on him. Then your faith will grow strong in the truth you were taught, and you will overflow with thankfulness” (Colossians 2:6-7 NLT).  Rooted in Christ, building on Christ, leads to the life we were meant to live.  When we are living that life, thankfulness overflows.

            Jesus used both of these metaphors.  He is remembered using a parable about four soils into which seeds of faith are planted with varying levels of success: rocky soil, weedy soil, a well-trodden path, and good soil.  The type of soil we are when we receive the seed of the Good News determines to differing degrees how well the seed will grow.  Obviously, the good soil is most likely to produce a good plant.  We can’t help our original soil, but we can definitely influence our type of soil once we know it’s a “thing”. 

How are you promoting healthy soil for your soul, for your faith?

Jesus concluded his Sermon on the Mount with a parable about building on his teaching (Mt. 7:24-27).  Jewish leaders were present who knew the right answers but did not live accordingly.  Jesus admonished them, saying that they were essentially not in relationship with God.  The relationship is one of knowing and acting on what we know. Without the action piece, we might have a beautiful structure, but it won’t be able to handle the storms of life.  James said that faith without works is dead.

In light of Jesus’ teaching about building on a foundation of rock as the putting into practice what Jesus taught, how are you doing?  In what areas of your life has this come easily?  In what areas has it been more difficult? How do you know when you’re not practicing what has been preached?

In his interview with Krista Tippet, John Lewis talked about his lifelong work regarding civil rights was love in action.  Love of nation, love of neighbor, love of the beloved community dream – all compelled him to action to see the best in each realized. It was this love that kept him from hating his oppressors, that kept him on the path of non-violence, and that helped him persevere.  Makes me think that Christ really was in him.  

Beyond theological reasoning, how might we know Christ is really in us? What role does our action play in our experience of faith, in our spiritual knowing and assurance?

Colossians 1: Good News!

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Colossians 1: Good News

 

Imagine waking up tired.  The news of the day is heavy.  The economic outlook is bleak.  You check your social media and are bombarded with instructions on what you should and shouldn’t be doing to stay safe.  It feels like no matter what you do, someone is looking over your shoulder letting you know you blew it and should feel ashamed of yourself.  You are a spiritual person who heard of Jesus and you’ve been trying your best to stick with it, but it’s hard.  There are people who think you’re a fool and admonish you to get back to the way most other people seem to be believing.  You hear this from deeply religious people and deeply unreligious spiritual people alike.  Oh, and imagine great political and economic uncertainty. All of this together makes your stomach hurt, weighs on your heart, and makes your mind churn. Imagine how this impacts how you feel about yourself and your future.  Can you imagine this?

            Of course, I’m talking about waking up in the city of Colosse during the second half of the first century CE.  Might as well be talking about Napa, CA, in 2020!

            Knowing that early Jesus followers (Christians) were struggling with all of the above, the Apostle Paul wanted to send a letter of encouragement.  As you read the opening paragraphs below, I wonder how it would make you feel as a recipient?

 

 

This letter is from Paul*, chosen by the will of God to be an apostle of Christ Jesus, and from our brother Timothy.

We are writing to God’s holy people in the city of Colosse, who are faithful brothers and sisters in Christ.

May God our Father give you grace and peace.

We always pray for you, and we give thanks to God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. For we have heard of your faith in Christ Jesus and your love for all of God’s people, which come from your confident hope of what God has reserved for you in heaven. You have had this expectation ever since you first heard the truth of the Good News.

This same Good News that came to you is going out all over the world. It is bearing fruit everywhere by changing lives, just as it changed your lives from the day you first heard and understood the truth about God’s wonderful grace.

You learned about the Good News from Epaphras, our beloved co-worker. He is Christ’s faithful servant, and he is helping us on your behalf. He has told us about the love for others that the Holy Spirit has given you.

So we have not stopped praying for you since we first heard about you. We ask God to give you complete knowledge of his will and to give you spiritual wisdom and understanding. Then the way you live will always honor and please the Lord, and your lives will produce every kind of good fruit. All the while, you will grow as you learn to know God better and better.

We also pray that you will be strengthened with all his glorious power so you will have all the endurance and patience you need. May you be filled with joy, always thanking the Father. He has enabled you to share in the inheritance that belongs to his people, who live in the light. For he has rescued us from the kingdom of darkness and transferred us into the Kingdom of his dear Son, who purchased our freedom and forgave our sins.

 

The opening words above provide a classic example of a letter written in the first century CE in the Greco-Roman world. Paul lets them know up front that he is deeply grateful for them and recognizes their good work as Jesus followers, and alludes to some themes he is going to flesh out in the body of the letter to come. You feel quite honored receiving a letter from the big cheese, the Apostle Paul!  And it turns out he’s proud of you!  How wonderful! He obviously knows your church’s story because he mentions Epaphras, the leader who founded your community.  You are thrilled to hear that the message that captivated you is having a similar impact all over the world.  So far, this is good stuff!  You read on to hear that Paul himself is praying for your church!  Paul himself!  Wow!  And it seems from what he is praying for that he really knows what you’re struggling with. He knows you’ve been thrown off a bit by all the noise from people with their own ideas which happen to be quite popular.  Being in the minority has made you question the whole message and made it more difficult to follow.  Paul’s words are a salve to your wounded, heavy heart.  You hear him praying for strength directly from the Spirit of God to help you patiently endure living in such a reality, to not give up, because the Way of Jesus leads to a fruitful, good, hopeful life.  Then Paul pens the words to a hymn that poetically reminds you of Christ, the foundation of the Good News message that changed your life:

 

 

Christ is the visible image of the invisible God.

He existed before anything was created and is supreme over all creation,

for through him God created everything

in the heavenly realms and on earth.

He made the things we can see

and the things we can’t see—

such as thrones, kingdoms, rulers, and authorities in the unseen world.

Everything was created through him and for him.

He existed before anything else,

and he holds all creation together.

Christ is also the head of the church,

which is his body.

He is the beginning,

supreme over all who rise from the dead.

So he is first in everything.

For God in all his fullness

was pleased to live in Christ,

and through him God reconciled

everything to himself.

He made peace with everything in heaven and on earth

by means of Christ’s blood on the cross.

 

And then Paul applies the core content of the hymn to their daily living:

 

This includes you who were once far away from God. You were his enemies, separated from him by your evil thoughts and actions. Yet now he has reconciled you to himself through the death of Christ in his physical body. As a result, he has brought you into his own presence, and you are holy and blameless as you stand before him without a single fault.

But you must continue to believe this truth and stand firmly in it. Don’t drift away from the assurance you received when you heard the Good News. The Good News has been preached all over the world, and I, Paul, have been appointed as God’s servant to proclaim it.

 

When you consider what Paul has written so far, your heart swells.  The way the world around you thinks about the cosmos is that the gods are in constant need of reminders of your sincere allegiance to them: offerings of various sorts and strict adherence to following the letter of the law, all with a sorrowful, repentant, sincere frown on your face.  A joyless, hopeless life where you can’t help but feel like a loser.  According to the loudest religious voices around you, your origin story is bad, making you bad.  You’ve been told this story in a hundred ways since you were born.

            Some of you can really relate to this.  Maybe for you the religious tradition may have claimed to be good news, but once you were in it became a prison of legalism with no escape – toe the line or lose your salvation.  You were a loser from birth – don’t you forget it!  Grovel for the rest of your life like a dutiful slave, and be happy you haven’t been tortured more than you have.  Maybe for some of you it wasn’t about religion, but rather very painful messages you received from unhealthy people who, out of their brokenness, communicated to you that you were an object to be used and abused.  You bear the scars of a crushed self-esteem from such an awful origin story.

            Hearing Paul’s words, however, you are reminded of the Good News that captivated you in the first place.  The presence of God was not just the cause of creation, but is also infused in it.  God isn’t “up there” in heaven.  God is everywhere.  Everything is anointed by God.  Everything, therefore, is inherently good.  Even the worst form of capital punishment, designed to humiliate those so sentenced, did not defeat the Good News.  The witness of the life-after-death resurrection of Christ declared victory over death, our greatest nemesis and source of our fear.  God is eternal and forever good.  So is the anointed, God-infused creation, which includes us.  What is of God is not defeated by death.  That within us that is the reflection of God is eternal and will never perish.  The grave is not our end.  Building our lives on this good news origin story has the power to overcome whatever bad news we’ve been sold.  So much so that even if we find ourselves in deep trouble, we can still find ourselves buoyed by deep joy.

            Christ is a game changer.  Our whole view of our lives is radically changed if we’ll embrace it.  The old, destructive voices are dead and gone and replaced by new, more beautiful voices that echo from Godself. As biblical scholar Andrew Lincoln observes (The Letter to the Colossians, New Interpreters Bible):

 

If this status of Christ is truly appreciated, then both the dualistic tendencies and the world-denying spirituality that are always in danger of creeping into the life of the Christian church are undercut. Since Christ is the one at work in creation as well as in redemption, then the created world is immeasurably enhanced, not relegated to some inferior status by the work of reconciliation. Salvation is not rescue from a totally evil world but the claiming of the rightful possession of this world by the one who was an agent in its creation. The scope of salvation is as broad as life and as vast as the cosmos. 

The effect of such a belief should be to make redeemed humans more fully human. It should enable them to appreciate the creation and to work to transform the structures of this world rather than to produce a private piety or spirituality that attempts to cut itself off from the body, ignores the natural environment, and disdains culture. If reconciliation of all things in Christ is at the center of God’s purposes, then the pursuit of peace and acts of reconciliation by Christians serve those purposes. Working for a fair distribution of the world’s resources, being concerned for animal welfare, and struggling to prevent the collapse of the ecosystem through the pollution of air, soil, and water have everything to do with this passage’s celebration of cosmic reconciliation.

 

Lincoln is blowing the lid off of a small Christianity that is mostly about personal spirituality.  The Good News of Jesus of Nazareth, who fully embraced and modeled what it means to live anointed (Christ), is a lifelong, global project for Christians (literally little Christs/anointeds) to enjoy and advance.  As Richard Rohr notes (The Universal Christ, 67):

 

We must reclaim the Christian project, building from the true starting point of Original Goodness. We must reclaim Jesus as an inclusive Savior instead of an exclusionary Judge, as a Christ who holds history together as the cosmic Alpha and Omega. Then, both history and the individual can live inside of a collective safety and an assured success. Some would call this the very shape of salvation.

 

First Century Colossians had their faith rekindled. Their hearts swelled.  The remembered what they had signed up for, a Way the leads to the richest, deepest experiences of life now leading to the very source of life after our bodies wear out.  Rohr (201) distills the orientation and invitation like this:

 

The way things work and Christ are one and the same.

This is not a religion to be either fervently joined or angrily rejected.

It is a train ride already in motion.

The tracks are visible everywhere.

You can be a willing and happy traveler,

Or not. 

Questions.

1.     How closely did the opening paragraph describing the world of the early Colossains parallel your current experience?

2.     Bad origin stories come from lousy theology and cultural sources: what are some of the bad origin stories you were told to embrace and where did they come from?  If you give it some thought, you may be surprised just how many messages from various sources have informed you.

3.     The “Christ Hymn” isn’t talking exclusively about the human Jesus, but something much bigger.  How would you put the concept of Christ into your own words?

4.     Christ changes the origin story from deeply flawed and already condemned to inherently and eternally good.  How have you embraced this truth in parts of your lives?  Where have you not yet fully integrated this Good News into your life?  What’s keeping you from boarding the train?

 

 

*Nerd Note: There is ongoing debate regarding the authorship of this letter.  It clearly credits Paul, and at the end of the letter he apparently signs it personally.  For those who believe the Bible to be inerrant and infallible, ready to be taken at its word, the answer is clear: Paul wrote the letter.  However, scholars over the last 100 hundred years have challenged that assumption, noting that this letter and two others called the “prison” letters (because they were reportedly written by Paul while he was under house arrest in Rome) are composed with such different language from letters undisputedly written by him that it is highly unlikely that Paul was the author.  It was common practice for followers/disciples to write in the name of their leader – even signing their name – to give what they wrote authority. So, Paul may not have written the letter.  Does that mean we can’t trust the Bible?  No, it means we should examine our held assumptions about the Bible in light of good scholarship.  If Paul did not write the letter personally, those who canonized it probably knew it and kept it in the earliest Christian Bible anyway – it wasn’t a deal-breaker for them.  We hold an arrogance in our Post-Enlightment Western culture.  We need to get over ourselves and allow the Bible to be what it is, which is not an airtight, perfectly written collection of writings from God’s mouth. For simplicity sake, I am going to refer to Paul writing Colossians, even though I believe it was his disciples’ work.

  

Meditate on this: 

If your Divine Mirror cannot fully receive you in this way,

Then it is certainly not God.

Remember that regret profits nobody.

Shame is useless.

Blame is surely a waste of time.

All hatred is a diversionary tactic, a dead end.

God always sees and loves God in you.

It seems like God has no choice.

This is God’s eternal and unilateral contract with the soul.

If you cannot allow yourself to be fully mirrored in this way,

You will never fully know who you are, much less enjoy who you are.

Nor will you know the heart of God. Richard Rohr, The Universal Christ, 208

Pete Enns TheoEd Talk

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

This week we hear from a voice that may not be familiar to folk more accustomed to traditional theological perspectives or those not connected to theological and biblical study. For those from a traditional, classic Christian background, you will find biblical scholar Pete Enns’ assertions refreshing, disturbing, or both. My guess is that if you’re coming from a spiritual but not religious background, you will easily resonate with what Enns has to say here.

Enns’ talk is a good set-up for a short series that begins next week on the New Testament book, Colossians.

Enjoy!

On Death, Dying, and Living

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

This week we lost another CrossWalker, Roger Langley. He and his wife Andrea have been faithful members for many years.  We walk with Andrea now as she grieves our loss. The previous week we lost Larry McCart, a long-term member who remained active in serving through CrossWalk his entire journey.  His wife, Wanda, remains with us, and we walk with her through this valley.  A few months ago we lost Dot Hoover, a spit-fire of a lady who was a dedicated Jesus follower pretty much her entire life, was active in service, and was committed to lifelong learning (even from a heretic like me!).  We walk with her husband, Perry, as he mourns our loss. Bill Swanson passed away in March.  He was newer to CrossWalk and loved the church deeply for its truly proclaiming God’s love for everyone, and for our work in Kenya. All of them are and will be missed. All of them great people.

            Anytime someone dies we are faced with the question of our own mortality. As we continue to trudge forward through the COVID-19 global pandemic, we are reminded of death and dying every (damn) day.  All day.  The headlines will not let us forget that the virus is a real, lasting threat.  COVID has touched my family personally.  My wife’s elderly uncle got infected in a nursing home and died a few days later.  My brother’s family members living in the Kansas City area all got infected.  My brother’s wife had this in March, and now has it again.  It was a tough, eight-week battle for her a few months ago, and the battle is equally severe this go around.  This is personal to me.

            Studies have been done indicating that Americans are particularly in denial about death.  Google it. How about you?  How have you chosen to relate to the subject of our shared mortality?  How does it make you feel?  Are you at peace with the fact?  How at peace can we be?

            As a pastor, I deal with death regularly as part of my role.  It is a great honor to walk with people through the dark valley of grief.  Holy moments for sure.  When I preside over funeral and memorial services, I often refer to Jesus’ comments to his disciples near the end of his life:

 

“Don’t let your hearts be troubled. Trust in God, and trust also in me. There is more than enough room in my Father’s home. If this were not so, would I have told you that I am going to prepare a place for you? When everything is ready, I will come and get you, so that you will always be with me where I am. And you know the way to where I am going.”

     “No, we don’t know, Lord,” Thomas said. “We have no idea where you are going, so how can we know the way?”

     Jesus told him, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one can come to the Father except through me. If you had really known me, you would know who my Father is. From now on, you do know him and have seen him!” – John 14:1-14 (NLT)

 

Jesus flat-out told his disciples that there was something hopeful waiting for them after death, and that he would personally guarantee it.  This certainly carried a lot of weight.  

Not long after he shared these words he was arrested, tortured, falsely convicted, and killed.  Living in an era of heavily-practiced atonement theology, when it was believed that God’s vengeance needed to be appeased with blood sacrifice, early Christians began to identify his death as a substitution for all humanity – a final sacrifice that would satisfy God’s ledger so that we would know we are forgiven by God.  That carried a lot of weight.

Three days after Jesus died, he was experienced as alive again (though in different forms – he didn’t look the same and natural laws didn’t seem to apply).  According to the Gospels remembering Jesus’ life and ministry, hundreds of people had this experience and came to believe.  Even long after his death, the Apostle Paul had an encounter with Christ as a blinding light that forever changed him.  After-death experiences carried a lot of weight.

How much weight do these three things carry with you?  Are they equally meaningful, or does one carry more weight than another for you?  There’s no wrong answer, here.

I’ll never forget an exchange I had with Frank Daniel.  He came into CrossWalk later in life, a retired Fire Department Captain.  He was also a veteran who served in one of the worst battles of the Korean War.  Before that, he was a legitimate cowboy who left home as a young teen and made a life for himself.  He was a truly tough, self-made man. One Sunday I was teaching about love and grace as key characteristics of God’s nature.  I told stories from Jesus’ life that made it clear that we are forgiven even before we know we need to be, and even before we ask.  He came up immediately after the service ended, looked me in the eye, and asked me if what I said was true for him.  He had been a participant in horrors most people will never know because of his wartime military service.  When I told him that he was fully forgiven by God, Frank, one of the toughest guys I have ever known, wept. I bring this story to your attention because some people feel unforgivable.  Guess what?  God’s grace is bigger than your mistakes.  You are already forgiven.  Why not embrace this truth and live in freedom?  The asking for forgiveness is something we do to welcome grace, not to get God to grant it.  It is a gift from God that we won’t enjoy unless we choose to accept and unwrap it.

Because all of the above was and is so powerful, the hope for “heaven” has dominated the message that many hear from the Church.  I hope that you receive hope from it as so many have before us.  And yet, there is more to the Christian story than simply getting to heaven.  In fact, the much more is really important, because if all you are building your hope on is an intellectual head trip, you will find yourself waning regarding hope.  The good news is that faith is much more than a head trip.  If you have a moment, please watch Rob Bell’s short Nooma video, Rhythm, where he does an excellent job talking about how faith is so much more than an head trip.

The Apostle Paul certainly knew this.  He didn’t turn his life around because of an intellectual awakening.  He responded to a completely different paradigm for life, which generated a life experience filled with the presence of God.  He was so captivated by the living presence of God in his life that he wrote about it to early Jesus followers:

     For I fully expect and hope that I will never be ashamed, but that I will continue to be bold for Christ, as I have been in the past. And I trust that my life will bring honor to Christ, whether I live or die. For to me, living means living for Christ, and dying is even better. But if I live, I can do more fruitful work for Christ. So I really don’t know which is better. I’m torn between two desires: I long to go and be with Christ, which would be far better for me. But for your sakes, it is better that I continue to live.  – Philippians 1:20-24 (NLT)

     Do you see the paradigm shift?  There is a life that is filled with Christ – God in our midst – that is actually the True Life that our deepest selves desire.  Thomas Merton distinguished between our False Selves and our True Selves. He believed that our True Selves represent the greatest manifestation of who we really are when fully and completely alive, free of beliefs and behaviors that are not rooted in life, in God.  Paul, to a different audience, has something to teach about that:

 

     It is absolutely clear that God has called you to a free life. Just make sure that you don't use this freedom as an excuse to do whatever you want to do and destroy your freedom. Rather, use your freedom to serve one another in love; that's how freedom grows. For everything we know about God's Word is summed up in a single sentence: Love others as you love yourself. That's an act of true freedom. If you bite and ravage each other, watch out—in no time at all you will be annihilating each other, and where will your precious freedom be then?

     My counsel is this: Live freely, animated and motivated by God's Spirit. Then you won't feed the compulsions of selfishness. For there is a root of sinful self-interest in us that is at odds with a free spirit, just as the free spirit is incompatible with selfishness. These two ways of life are antithetical, so that you cannot live at times one way and at times another way according to how you feel on any given day. Why don't you choose to be led by the Spirit and so escape the erratic compulsions of a law-dominated existence?

     It is obvious what kind of life develops out of trying to get your own way all the time: repetitive, loveless, cheap sex; a stinking accumulation of mental and emotional garbage; frenzied and joyless grabs for happiness; trinket gods; magic-show religion; paranoid loneliness; cutthroat competition; all-consuming-yet-never-satisfied wants; a brutal temper; an impotence to love or be loved; divided homes and divided lives; small-minded and lopsided pursuits; the vicious habit of depersonalizing everyone into a rival; uncontrolled and uncontrollable addictions; ugly parodies of community. I could go on.

     This isn't the first time I have warned you, you know. If you use your freedom this way, you will not inherit God's kingdom.

     But what happens when we live God's way? He brings gifts into our lives, much the same way that fruit appears in an orchard—things like affection for others, exuberance about life, serenity. We develop a willingness to stick with things, a sense of compassion in the heart, and a conviction that a basic holiness permeates things and people. We find ourselves involved in loyal commitments, not needing to force our way in life, able to marshal and direct our energies wisely.

     Legalism is helpless in bringing this about; it only gets in the way. Among those who belong to Christ, everything connected with getting our own way and mindlessly responding to what everyone else calls necessities is killed off for good—crucified.

     Since this is the kind of life we have chosen, the life of the Spirit, let us make sure that we do not just hold it as an idea in our heads or a sentiment in our hearts, but work out its implications in every detail of our lives. That means we will not compare ourselves with each other as if one of us were better and another worse. We have far more interesting things to do with our lives. Each of us is an original. – Galatians 5:13-26 (The Message)

 

As Rob Bell noted in his video, we are being invited into a beautiful, compelling song that is founded in the heart of God, which is the very source of all that is.  Being deeply rooted in God doesn’t mean we will be totally free from fear and anxiety about death and dying.  We are human beings and this is part of the human experience.  Feel your feelings as they are.  When we are rooted in the depths of God, however, I have found that I am less prone to feeling despair and being overwhelmed because I know whose I am, I know who holds me, and I know that will never change.  It gives me peace that passes understanding, and invites me to live in step, in rhythm, with this eternal song.  I hope it does for you, too.

Over the past few months I have been meditating using the Lord’s Prayer as a framework.  Spend time on each phrase and allow it to shape your eyes into the Way, Truth, and Life which is God.

 

 

Questions.

How have you come to grips with the reality of mortality? What is your level of comfort with this?  What questions does the subject of death bring to your awareness?  What do you wonder about?  What are you worried about?

 

What aspect of the Christian story gives you hope for some experience of life after death?  In other words, why does the Christian story give you hope?

 

How has your level of hope regarding something “more” changed throughout your life?  When have you felt most hopeful?  What were the surrounding circumstances of your most hopeful seasons?  When have you experienced a hope deficit?  What were the circumstances revolving around that season?

 

What can we do now to maintain our level of hope?  What’s involved?  What’s at stake?

 

 

In Sync

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Many people are familiar with the story of creation in Genesis Chapter 1.  Despite what you may have heard before, the first chapter of the Bible’s first book was a poem expressing the Jewish people’s take on how things came to be.  It was never meant to be a scientific document.  It was meant to draw a contrast between how other cultures and religions thought about the cosmos and how the Jewish people understood it from their experience.  The dominant idea about the cosmos that prevailed in antiquity was that the gods above ruled over everything below on earth.  They didn’t care much about the creation itself or its inhabitants.  People were noisy nuisances that were barely tolerated, and sometimes wiped out for their bad behavior.  The Jewish rendition viewed God above as deeply, lovingly creative.  What God created was deemed good – everything. When God made human beings, who shared some similar creative traits as Godself, God declared them very good. Since Christianity developed from Judaism, this is also the beginning story for Jesus followers.

            Of course, everybody knows the story of Adam and Eve as well, a Jewish myth about the first human beings.  Most Christians view this as the entrance of sin into the world, therefore highlighting our need for some form of redemption lest we die forever. That idea, however, was not original to the story, but rather developed from a metaphor Paul used to convince Jewish Christians that non-Jewish Christians were equally loved by God.  The real gist of the story of Adam and Eve is that human beings are prone to give into their temptations, which always often come with painful consequences.  Yet God, despite our decisions not to follow God’s lead, comes to find us in our pain in order to help us heal and move forward.  That’s the original story’s primary meaning.  So, what do we learn from this?  God creates good and very good things and is interested in being a part of seeing that very good story unfold in very good ways.

            I think this is important to remember at times like these when it really feels like the wheels are coming off of the global bus given COVI-19’s ongoing threat and all the ways it is showing us where we are vulnerable. God is still good and so is the creation itself.  Rooting ourselves in this truth keeps us grounded and fed by the very Spirit which breathed life into creation itself and helps us get through times that don’t feel so good.

            I am named after my grandfather, Pieter Smit, who immigrated from Holland in the early 1900’s.  He was a cabinet maker by trade but felt a call from God to be a pastor in his early adulthood.  He devoted his life to serving churches primarily in Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, and California.  He was really good at it.  But in his early years it almost came to a screeching halt.  He had what we would call today a mental health crisis.  His doctor may or may not have called it a nervous breakdown.  He had been burning the candle at both ends and worked himself into physical, mental, and emotional exhaustion. He was ordered to dial his work way back in order to heal, which he did.  From that point forward, things changed for him.  He was no less devoted, but he was certainly more rooted in the creation story.  In particular, he paid attention to a key part of the story I left out.  After six days of creating everything (remember, this is a poetic expression not literal 24-hour days), the Jewish story says that God rested.  The seventh day was a Sabbath, a day off in order to become rejuvenated, to recreate.  For many faithful people, part of the Sabbath is attending a service.  Kinda sucks for pastors, because the day of rest for everyone else is the most energy-consuming day for them. My grandpa didn’t notice what was happening in him until it was nearly too late.  Even when doing very good, God-honoring things, we can get out of balance, out of sync, and find ourselves exasperated.

            Many of us today are experiencing this right now.  We are doing the best we can to survive all that COVID-19 has brought to our doorstep.  The race through this season has shifted from a sprint to a marathon where we are not sure exactly how long we will be restricted.  Most likely, normal won’t return until a vaccine is discovered.  We’re talking many months.  Mental health professionals are seeing the signs of stress this has caused.  Anxiety and depression are more pronounced.  Couples therapy is on the rise as this season wears on.  We are in a collective mental health crisis as we keep marching forward, and it is wearing us down.

            The Jewish people went through a range of troubling seasons.  One of the most storied is their journey out of Egyptian slavery and their long trek to the Promised Land.  Their season lasted 40 years.  The stress showed up in various ways again and again.  Moses, the one God called to lead them through it all, was not immune to the struggle.  At some point, Moses sent his wife and kids back to his father-in-law Jethro’s land so he could focus everything on his work.  Eventually Jethro, in good I-really-was-enjoying-the-empty-nest-phase-until-you-screwed-it-up, brought his daughter and grandkids back to Moses.  He heard about all the things God had done, and they partied together in celebration of God’s faithfulness.  And then Jethro caught a glimpse of Moses’ life up close and personal:

The next day, Moses took his seat to hear the people’s disputes against each other. They waited before him from morning till evening.

When Moses’ father-in-law saw all that Moses was doing for the people, he asked, “What are you really accomplishing here? Why are you trying to do all this alone while everyone stands around you from morning till evening?”

Moses replied, “Because the people come to me to get a ruling from God. When a dispute arises, they come to me, and I am the one who settles the case between the quarreling parties. I inform the people of God’s decrees and give them his instructions.”

“This is not good!” Moses’ father-in-law exclaimed. “You’re going to wear yourself out—and the people, too. This job is too heavy a burden for you to handle all by yourself. Now listen to me, and let me give you a word of advice, and may God be with you. You should continue to be the people’s representative before God, bringing their disputes to him. Teach them God’s decrees, and give them his instructions. Show them how to conduct their lives. But select from all the people some capable, honest men who fear God and hate bribes. Appoint them as leaders over groups of one thousand, one hundred, fifty, and ten. They should always be available to solve the people’s common disputes, but have them bring the major cases to you. Let the leaders decide the smaller matters themselves. They will help you carry the load, making the task easier for you. If you follow this advice, and if God commands you to do so, then you will be able to endure the pressures, and all these people will go home in peace.”

Moses listened to his father-in-law’s advice and followed his suggestions. He chose capable men from all over Israel and appointed them as leaders over the people. He put them in charge of groups of one thousand, one hundred, fifty, and ten. These men were always available to solve the people’s common disputes. They brought the major cases to Moses, but they took care of the smaller matters themselves. – Exodus 18:13-27 (NLT)

 

Moses, who was so close to God through this whole event, missed a key part of the creation story: rest is required in order for us to re-create.

            Jesus apparently got the point of this from the very beginning of his ministry.  Instead of jumping immediately into the work, he took time away to get his head on straight – 40 days of camping in the wilderness. Note: “Forty” anything was a way the Jewish writers would communicate an extended period of time, not necessarily 40 literal days away.  Jesus knew he needed this at the beginning, and he continued his practice of re-creating regularly throughout his ministry, taking time away from his routine demands to re-create in solitude, stillness, and silence. He was able to live the life he led, teach the things he taught, and heal the maladies he healed because he stayed in sync with the God of creation, the God who cannot help but create, the God who sees the good and very good all the time, and the God who cannot help but come to the aid of those in need.  Staying in sync, making sure it was a part of his rhythm, is the secret sauce Jesus used to be the person he was.  This was part of the Way of faithful life he taught people to embrace.  The Way itself was the salvation, the hope, the life that people were looking for.  When they followed in Jesus’ footsteps, they found themselves rooted in the very heart of God.  The Way is filled with choices to follow – to be life-long learners, to kneel in service to others, to gracefully stand for justice, to go deep in relationship with people through the ups and downs of life, and to connect with God.  I’m focusing on that connection piece today – breaking away to reset yourself, taking Sabbath.  Maybe the missing ingredient for you has more to do with learning, or serving, or standing up for justice, or going deeper in relationship.  All combined, we find ourselves swimming in the presence of God, buoyed in waters that save and nourish us.

            By the way, this story we find ourselves in is going somewhere.  At the beginning of the Bible, we heard about a beautiful creation.  That’s how it ends, too – a very good, abundant creation marked by the goodness of God providing nourishment and healing for all who want it.  What you need is already here.  The grace and salvation you seek has already been provided.  The question is, will you reach out and embrace what is freely given?

 

Praxis Questions…

1.     Have you ever found yourself overcome with despair while surrounded by beauty?  In retrospect, what kept you from seeing the beauty that was there?  What helped you see it again?  What impact did seeing the present beauty have on your experience of despair?

2.     Have you ever been in a season related to Pete’s grandpa’s, where your pace of life was unsustainable, and it began to catch up to you?  In retrospect, were there any warning signs leading up to that moment? If so, what kept you from heeding the warnings?  What take-away lessons did you keep after the crash?

3.     Why did it take Jethro to clue Moses in? It seems like he should have been able to see it by himself, or that other key leaders may have noticed, too.  What do you imagine was required for Moses to actually take Jethro’s advice? How well do you think Moses did keeping his balance?

4.     If Jesus was so incarnated, why did he need to break away to reset himself?

5.     In the Gospel of John, we can identify five practices that contribute to the life Jesus modeled: lifelong learning, serving others, gracefully standing up for justice, connecting with God intentionally, and going deep in relationship with others.  Which of the five come really easily for you?  Why?  Which are harder?  Why?

 

 

 

Declarations

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

July 4th is a holiday celebrated by many Americans with backyard barbeques, parades, and vacation getaways.  During non-COVID-19 periods, Disneyland would be absolutely packed, and wait-times for rides would soar.  Have you been to Disneyland?  If so, what’s your favorite ride?  One of my favorites in Splash Mountain, where you ride in log down a river, moving through a storyline where a bunny outwits a fox, all leading to the climax: a 52.5-foot drop that gets you up to 45 mph and usually wet.  It’s a fun ride.  But I digress…. Back to July 4th!

            Thomas Jefferson didn’t wake up July 3rd and think that writing the Declaration of Independence might be a fun, cathartic journaling exercise.  He wrote it with the encouragement of his leader-peers after years of injustice.  The Declaration lays out the reasons why the colonies were leaving Great Britain:

 

·      He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.

·      He has forbidden his Governors to pass Laws of immediate and pressing importance, unless suspended in their operation till his Assent should be obtained; and when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them.

·      He has refused to pass other Laws for the accommodation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of Representation in the Legislature, a right inestimable to them and formidable to tyrants only.

·      He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their public Records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures.

·      He has dissolved Representative Houses repeatedly, for opposing with manly firmness his invasions on the rights of the people.

·      He has refused for a long time, after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected; whereby the Legislative powers, incapable of Annihilation, have returned to the People at large for their exercise; the State remaining in the meantime exposed to all the dangers of invasion from without, and convulsions within.

·      He has endeavored to prevent the population of these States; for that purpose, obstructing the Laws for Naturalization of Foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their migrations hither, and raising the conditions of new Appropriations of Lands.

·      He has obstructed the Administration of Justice, by refusing his Assent to Laws for establishing Judiciary powers.

·      He has made Judges dependent on his Will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.

·      He has erected a multitude of New Offices and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people and eat out their substance.

·      He has kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies without the Consent of our legislatures.

·      He has affected to render the Military independent of and superior to the Civil power.

·      He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws; giving his Assent to their Acts of pretended Legislation:

·      For Quartering large bodies of armed troops among us:

·      For protecting them, by a mock Trial, from punishment for any Murders which they should commit on the Inhabitants of these States:

·      For cutting off our Trade with all parts of the world:

·      For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent:

·      For depriving us in many cases, of the benefits of Trial by Jury:

·      For transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences

·      For abolishing the free System of English Laws in a neighboring Province, establishing therein an Arbitrary government, and enlarging its Boundaries so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into these Colonies:

·      For taking away our Charters, abolishing our most valuable Laws, and altering fundamentally the Forms of our Governments:

·      For suspending our own Legislatures and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever.

·      He has abdicated Government here, by declaring us out of his Protection and waging War against us.

·      He has plundered our seas, ravaged our Coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people.

·      He is at this time transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to compleat the works of death, desolation and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of Cruelty & perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the Head of a civilized nation.

·      He has constrained our fellow Citizens taken Captive on the high Seas to bear Arms against their Country, to become the executioners of their friends and Brethren, or to fall themselves by their Hands.

·      He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us and has endeavored to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian Savages, whose known rule of warfare, is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions.

It’s a long list.  It took a long time before the colonists were willing to make such a declaration.  Jefferson even noted our human tendency to put up with a lot until we simply cannot take it any longer: 

“Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly, all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.”

The breaking point had been reached, and the rallying call went out: Colonist Lives Matter!  I don’t know if CLM ever actually caught on…

            One of the most powerful lines that we Americans love to celebrate is at the beginning of the Declaration: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.  This is part of the American Dream that makes us proud of our melting pot country.  The reality is, however, that not all of the ingredients in the American Stew were willing participants, and some were clearly celebrated while others systematically sidelined, used, and abused.

            Jefferson himself embodied the paradox.  The one who penned that all men are created equal is said to have owned 600 slaves over the course of his lifetime and had 130 slaves on hand to keep up his Monticello property – many of the slaves there were multi-generational.  Some call Sally Hemings his mistress but make no mistake – she was Jefferson’s slave whose primary job was to bring him “comfort”. Six children she bore evidenced his debauchery and the pain she surely endured. Thomas Jefferson, while trying to end slavery in the United States for reasons unrelated to equality and equity, died having actually strengthening it in part because he never really woke up to the deeper reasons why slavery needed to end in the US.  

Jesus lived with a similar paradox.  There is a story remembered about him when he was outside of what we call Israel (Mark 7:24-30, The Message):

From there Jesus set out for the vicinity of Tyre. He entered a house there where he didn’t think he would be found, but he couldn’t escape notice. He was barely inside when a woman who had a disturbed daughter heard where he was. She came and knelt at his feet, begging for help. The woman was Greek, Syro-Phoenician by birth. She asked him to cure her daughter.

He said, “Stand in line and take your turn. The children get fed first. If there’s any left over, the dogs get it.”

She said, “Of course, Master. But don’t dogs under the table get scraps dropped by the children?”

Jesus was impressed. “You’re right! On your way! Your daughter is no longer disturbed. The demonic affliction is gone.” She went home and found her daughter relaxed on the bed, the torment gone for good.

What we may have here is evidence that Jesus really was a human being and was shaped by his Jewish culture to despise non-Jewish people.  Thus, he uses the term “dogs”.  Make no mistake, when he uses this term, he is not thinking lovingly of family pets and cute Facebook posts.  This was a term of great degradation which the woman fully understood.  Jesus, here, is prejudiced.

            But he didn’t stay that way.  As he moved forward, he became famous for being incredibly inclusive and promoting equality and equity.  The first person with whom he identifies himself as the anointed one was a Samaritan woman – a picture of the most hated group in ancient Judaism.  In addition to this woman and a hated non-Jew, he extended grace and welcome to everyone – people born with diseases, tax collectors, prostitutes, etc., and was greatly criticized for it.  His stands did not come easy.  In contrast to the tyranny of the prevailing culture in which he lived, he broadcast:

“Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on religion? Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly.” (Matthew 11:28-30, The Message)

 

            The disciples were slow on the uptake.  They struggled in predictable ways as their worldview was blown up by Jesus.  Their experience with Jesus and beyond reshaped how they understood God and what God was trying to do in the world.  They increasingly woke up to the Kingdom of God and its beckoning while they lived in a very Roman-occupied Jewish context.

            The Apostle Paul, who never met Jesus, was completely oblivious to the dream of God until he was stopped in his tracks with an experience of Christ manifest as blinding light.  It’s hard to say what happened, exactly.  Did the experience blind him?  Or did he realize that he had ben blind all along?  Either way, he was taught to see by the very Jesus followers he was bent on destroying and became the most influential voice of Christianity other than Jesus, writing two thirds of the books in the New Testament.

            Awake as he was, Paul lived in paradox.  He is the guy who declared the counter-intuitive and counter-cultural message of the Kingdom of God (Galatians 3:28-29, The Message): In Christ’s family there can be no division into Jew and non-Jew, slave and free, male and female. Among us you are all equal. That is, we are all in a common relationship with Jesus Christ. Also, since you are Christ’s family, then you are Abraham’s famous “descendant,” heirs according to the covenant promises. All men (and women) are created equal!  Hoorah!

            And yet, Paul lived at a time where slavery was a part of the economy and culture (albeit nowhere near as awful as American slavery).  When he had the opportunity to be a voice for emancipation, like Jefferson, asked a Christian slave owner (ahem), Philemon, to be kind toward the runaway slave, Onesimus, who found safety with Paul.  Here is the entire letter of Philemon (The Message):

I, Paul, am a prisoner for the sake of Christ, here with my brother Timothy. I write this letter to you, Philemon, my good friend and companion in this work—also to our sister Apphia, to Archippus, a real trooper, and to the church that meets in your house. God’s best to you! Christ’s blessings on you!

Every time your name comes up in my prayers, I say, “Oh, thank you, God!” I keep hearing of the love and faith you have for the Master Jesus, which brims over to other believers. And I keep praying that this faith we hold in common keeps showing up in the good things we do, and that people recognize Christ in all of it. Friend, you have no idea how good your love makes me feel, doubly so when I see your hospitality to fellow believers.

In line with all this I have a favor to ask of you. As Christ’s ambassador and now a prisoner for him, I wouldn’t hesitate to command this if I thought it necessary, but I’d rather make it a personal request.

While here in jail, I’ve fathered a child, so to speak. And here he is, hand-carrying this letter—Onesimus! He was useless to you before; now he’s useful to both of us. I’m sending him back to you, but it feels like I’m cutting off my right arm in doing so. I wanted in the worst way to keep him here as your stand-in to help out while I’m in jail for the Message. But I didn’t want to do anything behind your back, make you do a good deed that you hadn’t willingly agreed to.

Maybe it’s all for the best that you lost him for a while. You’re getting him back now for good—and no mere slave this time, but a true Christian brother! That’s what he was to me—he’ll be even more than that to you.

So if you still consider me a comrade-in-arms, welcome him back as you would me. If he damaged anything or owes you anything, chalk it up to my account. This is my personal signature—Paul—and I stand behind it. (I don’t need to remind you, do I, that you owe your very life to me?) Do me this big favor, friend. You’ll be doing it for Christ, but it will also do my heart good.

I know you well enough to know you will. You’ll probably go far beyond what I’ve written. And by the way, get a room ready for me. Because of your prayers, I fully expect to be your guest again.

Epaphras, my cellmate in the cause of Christ, says hello. Also my coworkers Mark, Aristarchus, Demas, and Luke. All the best to you from the Master, Jesus Christ!

 

Hmmm.  Paul was on the right track, yet not fully there, kind of like Jefferson.

            The reality is we human beings are complex creatures.  We live in our respective cultures and are generally unaware of how powerfully they shape our vision of absolutely everything. At some point, a combination of things takes place.  The reality of our existence in our multi-layered cultural context (personally and corporately) becomes so unbearable that we have to change, or we die (literally or metaphorically).  And/or, we become captivated by a vision of something so compelling that we willingly leave our present cultural context in favor of the new, different one.  Either way, we set out to make a change.  We plan our way forward and give it our best shot and discover what Peter Drucker famously noted: organizational culture eats strategy for breakfast.

            Change is often experienced as very difficult for good reason: it is very difficult.  In faith, becoming born again is just the beginning, the waking up – the growing up, living “woke” is hard and ongoing and evolving. In family systems and politics and the general culture, the same is true.  Sometimes we cannot see our blindness.  Sometimes we see it and don’t want to wake up as fully as we know we should.  The whole thing is a process.

            The early Jesus followers struggled through this yet prevailed – they kept moving forward.  

            The United States engaged civil war – Jefferson’s predicted fear – that resulted in emancipation.  Legal equality (on the books, anyway), didn’t show up for another century.  Experiential equality and equity still call us forward – a dream that beckons us to realize more and more in our time. Jefferson’s Monticello recognizes the paradox and shines a light on it rather than trying to keep it in the shadows so that we see our history in plain view.  It in no way celebrates Jefferson’s inhumane treatment of fellow equals.

            Disneyland, which keeps moving forward as a cultural mandate, is reshaping Splash Mountain, letting go of the Song of the South motif with all of the ugly characterizations it subtly perpetuated of slavery and slaves, and instead is investing in a new story that celebrates the accomplishment of Princess Tiana, and African American self-made woman who defeats those who worked against her.

            We will continue to hear cries of injustice in our nation whose pledge to pursue liberty and justice for all is not yet realized.  It will take time.  It will take longer if American citizens do not take their pledge seriously.  It will take longer if Jesus followers remain asleep toward the Kingdom of God and perpetuate the dominant culture that will not change on its own. It will be hastened if we allow the Lord’s Prayer to fashion us more and more into the likeness of Jesus, which means living primary in the Kingdom of God even as we exist here and now.  That prayer is one that is uttered globally, as evidence of something bigger and better than puny kingdoms and countries that, in comparison to the age of our earth, are but a breath.

            What are you going to do to become more awake to the Kingdom of God and it’s beckoning?  What steps are you going to take that are different than the culture that perpetuates the very ills that plague us?  How will you live more like Jesus?

Check out this site for resources specifically related to racism in the US: https://medium.com/wake-up-call/a-detailed-list-of-anti-racism-resources-a34b259a3eea

The Right Answer

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Today I am featuring another great voice in the Christian tradition - Barbara Brown Taylor. This video was taken a few years ago - sorry about the grannies - but I think you will agree that it is an excellent teaching. Enjoy!

Luke 10:25-37 (NLT)

One day an expert in religious law stood up to test Jesus by asking him this question: “Teacher, what should I do to inherit eternal life?”

Jesus replied, “What does the law of Moses say? How do you read it?”

The man answered, “‘You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your strength, and all your mind.’ And, ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’”

“Right!” Jesus told him. “Do this and you will live!”

The man wanted to justify his actions, so he asked Jesus, “And who is my neighbor?”

Jesus replied with a story: “A Jewish man was traveling from Jerusalem down to Jericho, and he was attacked by bandits. They stripped him of his clothes, beat him up, and left him half dead beside the road.

“By chance a priest came along. But when he saw the man lying there, he crossed to the other side of the road and passed him by. A Temple assistant walked over and looked at him lying there, but he also passed by on the other side.

“Then a despised Samaritan came along, and when he saw the man, he felt compassion for him. Going over to him, the Samaritan soothed his wounds with olive oil and wine and bandaged them. Then he put the man on his own donkey and took him to an inn, where he took care of him. The next day he handed the innkeeper two silver coins, telling him, ‘Take care of this man. If his bill runs higher than this, I’ll pay you the next time I’m here.’

“Now which of these three would you say was a neighbor to the man who was attacked by bandits?” Jesus asked.

The man replied, “The one who showed him mercy.”

Then Jesus said, “Yes, now go and do the same.”

Embracing an Alternative Orthodoxy: Moralism, Mysticism and You

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

This is the last of a five-session series featuring Richard Rohr as he presents an Alternative Orthodoxy.  The process questions below are from a small group resource entitled Embracing an Alternative Orthodoxy.*

As you’ve seen and heard, Richard Rohr names things as he sees them! In one moment he uncovers religious dysfunction and holds it up to the light; in the next he presents a vision of relationship with God that is transformative and inspiring. Given the breadth of the territory, it’s inevitable that Richard touches themes in your own journey of religious and spiritual growth.

From the 10 statements below, choose one or two that connect with your own story in some way. Share, either with one or two other people or with the members of your small group, how these statements in some way speak to your own experience or the experience of people close to you:

 

1.     People who are initially attracted to religion are people who like social order. They think that God came to earth to be a policeman. This attention to social order in religion has a place in the first half of life when the ego needs to be contained in boundaries. If you stay in this first half of life religion, you stay at the moralistic level.

2.     Scripture, Jesus, the mystics and saints recognized that the goal of religion is not a perfect moral stance, but union with God.

3.     Union with God is achieved by doing things wrong rather than by doing things right. Perfection is not the goal.

4.     Moralism is less concerned with love and more concerned with creating an ego identity that can hold the moral high ground. Too often the heads of religion are involved in finding sinners and in managing sin.

5.     We see Jesus exposing ugly morality throughout the gospels. It’s always the same story: the one who is always wrong is, in Jesus’ eyes, revealed as right.

6.     What undoes moralism is a moment of unitive consciousness, a moment of grace, a moment of unearned love, a moment of forgiveness, a moment of unmerited consolation. That’s the only thing that breaks down the quid pro quo world of morality.

7.     God has come to save us all by grace. The mystics have no trouble surrendering to that. For Bonaventure, God is a fountain full of outflowing love, only flowing in one direction, always and forever. There is no wrath in God; there is no anger in God. There is only outpouring love.

8.     You will obsess about moralism if you don’t get to the mystical level. You become more anal-retentive the older you get when you haven’t experienced God. It’s not joyful; it’s not a wedding banquet; it’s not happiness. You get more desperate, more impatient, and you want more laws to obey.

9.     When you get moralistic, it’s not long before you get violent. When you are sure you are on higher moral ground than other people, it’s very quick that you have a right to torture them, exclude them, punish them, kill them and, as Jesus says in John’s Gospel, when you do it you will think you are doing a holy duty for God.

10.  The mind that emerges from mystical experience, from second-half-of-life maturity is the contemplative mind. You don’t calculate life; you contemplate life. If you want to grease the wheels to second half-of-life consciousness—to the mystical level—the best way is to contemplate.

 

THE WEAKER I GET, THE STRONGER I BECOME!

Richard spoke enthusiastically about Paul in Session 3 and returns again with glowing affirmation of Paul’s understanding of the mystery of the cross. Here are some key lines to remind you of what Richard said about Paul:

 

·       If you take the whole corpus of Paul, it’s 90% mystical.

·       Paul reveals that all these constructs to create order in the world are doomed to failure.

·       Paul’s key for creating order in the universe is by introducing disorder at its center. That’s what he means by the mystery of the cross.

·       Your only ordered world is your ability to deal with disorder and failure.

·       Paul introduced a new order that is recognizing, honoring and using disorder for good purpose.

         

Below are three passages from three of Paul’s letters. Read each of these aloud and discuss:

Where in his writing do you see Paul giving expression to the interplay between moralism and mysticism that Richard is uncovering in this session? Feel free to go to other passages from his letters that come to mind.

Paul may not have anticipated that his letters would be read not only by the folks in Corinth, Rome and Galatia, but also by us. What would you say to Paul in response to the passion and vulnerability of his writing?

 

Galatians 2:19-21 (The Message)

What actually took place is this: I tried keeping rules and working my head off to please God, and it didn’t work. So I quit being a “law man” so that I could be God’s man. Christ’s life showed me how, and enabled me to do it. I identified myself completely with him. Indeed, I have been crucified with Christ. My ego is no longer central. It is no longer important that I appear righteous before you or have your good opinion, and I am no longer driven to impress God. Christ lives in me. The life you see me living is not “mine,” but it is lived by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me. I am not going to go back on that.

Is it not clear to you that to go back to that old rule-keeping, peer-pleasing religion would be an abandonment of everything personal and free in my relationship with God? I refuse to do that, to repudiate God’s grace. If a living relationship with God could come by rule-keeping, then Christ died unnecessarily.

 

Romans 7:4-6 (NRSV)

In the same way, my friends, you have died to the law through the body of Christ, so that you may belong to another, to him who has been raised from the dead in order that we may bear fruit for God. While we were living in the flesh, our sinful passions, aroused by the law, were at work in our members to bear fruit for death. But now we are discharged from the law, dead to that which held us captive, so that we are slaves not under the old written code but in the new life of the Spirit.

 

2 Corinthians 12:7-10 (The Message)

Because of the extravagance of those revelations, and so I wouldn’t get a big head, I was given the gift of a handicap to keep me in constant touch with my limitations. Satan’s angel did his best to get me down; what he in fact did was push me to my knees. No danger then of walking around high and mighty! At first I didn’t think of it as a gift, and begged God to remove it. Three times I did that, and then he told me, “My grace is enough; it’s all you need. My strength comes into its own in your weakness.”

Once I heard that, I was glad to let it happen. I quit focusing on the handicap and began appreciating the gift. It was a case of Christ’s strength moving in on my weakness. Now I take limitations in stride, and with good cheer, these limitations that cut me down to size—abuse, accidents, opposition, bad breaks. I just let Christ take over! And so the weaker I get, the stronger I become.

 

GROWING MYSTICS

Doug opens up an exploration of how churches can both be a barrier to the experience of God as well as a community to open up that experience when he asks:

Essentially, you’re saying that the destiny of every Christian is to be a mystic. That seems so implausible that we put it off to the next life! I say to folks (half joking) that I set out to be a mystic and then got ordained. The sheer busyness of the job rendered it nearly impossible. I can see individuals and small groups coming together to enter into that kind of unitive consciousness and I can see that having an effect in action, but how in the world do you make it a bigger phenomenon?

Richard responds:

When I say mystical, I mean experiential. It is possible if we get out of the realm of law and doctrine. Most people have God experiences but there’s no one to tell them, “You just had it!” We’ve made it a churchy thing as we ministers well know: you’ve had it when you’ve been around candlesticks and vestments. This is why we get back to this need for spiritual direction—wise people who can say, “That moment of communion you had with your little baby while you were breast feeding today—that’s it! That moment of enjoying that wildflower and feeling that jerk of joy in your heart—that’s it!” We need to un-churchify the gospel. It’s just too darn churchified! People are having religious experiences and don’t know it.

In the conversation that follows Richard’s reflection, the members of the group open up various aspects of this matter of church as a block to mystical experience or church as a guide in that process. Allow their conversation to be a source of reflection for yours:

Raymond asks:

Can church be a place where people are helped to identify the presence of God in their everyday lives, a place where people can talk together about how their everyday lives are an experience of God?

 

What would it take for church to be more like that? What success have you had in creating

that kind of opportunity?

 

Suzanne asserts that people can have experiences of God in any moment quite apart from the presence of a priest, rabbi or preacher. The other members of the group support that, and Richard speaks about “the training into subtle consciousness” that is required as individuals move to this deepening practice of Presence. The group recognize the power of community in this process, and Richard underscores the need for communal support of the individual:

 

If there isn’t community holding you accountable to what you say you’ve experienced, helping you unpack your experience, it doesn’t go anywhere. I could be heard to be encouraging individualism, but I’m not. That doesn’t go anywhere. We’re social beings. Unless I let your holiness rub off on me, I won’t experience my own. As Jesus said, “Where two or three are gathered in my name, there I am.” We have a total promise of presence, just as strong as in the bread and the wine.

 

Talk together about the power of community (whatever size) to be a place for holding you accountable in the growth of your mystical consciousness, as well as a setting in which you become ever clearer about the daily presence of God in your life.

 

NO MORE COUNTING

Richard offers this final reflection at the end of the five sessions:

Here in this second half of life—

the mystical, the contemplative, the adult Christian—

you stop counting and let God stop counting.

The counting game is over.

The ego counts; the soul experiences.

It lets it be and learns from it, but it doesn’t weigh and measure.

Here in this American culture of entitlement—

people counting what they deserve

and think they have a right to—

entitlement creates unlikable people.

We worry about our children growing up

in an entirely entitled society.

But then there’s the world of grace—

the world of the gospel,

the world of mercy.

It’s all gratitude and confidence, the confidence

given by God’s gratuitous choice and love

to use you as an instrument,

to dwell in you.

Validated at the deepest inner level:

no need to be rich,

no need to be famous,

no need to be good-looking,

no need to think that I’m better than you.

The need itself is taken away.

If you can just notice in your own mind and emotions

whenever you’re counting

or thinking God is counting,

that’s not where you want to be.

It’s a waste of time.

It’s finally self-defeating.

Organized religion creates membership requirements,

and then you’re right back into counting.

The gospel

is a great leveling

of the playing field.

All of us equally carry that divine image.

All you can do is give thanks, because it’s totally undeserved.

It has nothing to do with you: gift, gift, gift, gift, gift.

The grace of God freeing us

from the burden of counting.

 

What insights and practices will you take away from this series that will help you give up counting?

How will you support yourself in being in the culture of entitlement without being of that culture?

 

BE THOU MY VISION

Be thou my vision, O joy of my heart;

naught be all else to me save that thou art,

thou my best thought, by day or by night,

waking or sleeping thy presence my light.

 

Be thou my wisdom, my calm in all strife;

I ever with thee, and thou in my life;

thou loving parent, thy child may I be,

thou in me dwelling and I one with thee.

 

Riches I heed not, nor vain empty praise,

thou mine inheritance, now and always;

thou and thou only, the first in my heart,

great God of heaven, my treasure thou art.

 

Great God of heaven, after victory won,

may I reach heaven’s joys, O bright heaven’s sun!

Heart of my own heart, whatever befall,

Still be my vision, O ruler of all.

Irish ca. 8th century; translated by Mary Elizabeth Byrne, 1905;version by Eleanor H. Hull, 1912.

* Adapted from Embracing an Alternative Orthodoxy: A 5-Session Study by Richard Rohr with Tim Scorer, Morehouse Education Resources, 2014)

Embracing an Alternative Orthodoxy: Orthodoxy and Orthopraxy

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Below are process questions from the small group series* featuring the teachings of Richard Rohr.

LIVING YOURSELF INTO A NEW WAY OF THINKING

Here are some memorable statements from Richard as he speaks about the priority of orthopraxy over orthodoxy:

1.     You do not think yourself into a new way of living; you live yourself into a new way of thinking.

2.     Every time the church split, we lost half the gospel. The half we lost in 1054 at the Great Schism was contemplative practice.

3.     Let the institutional church maintain the superstructure of creed, ritual and doctrine; that frees us to worry about the structure of our daily lives.

4.     You can be perfectly orthodox and not understand the lifestyle of Jesus one bit!

5.     Begging keeps you at the social level of everybody else, in their lives and in solidarity with their pain.

6.     The great thing about orthopraxy is that there is really nothing to argue about until you do it! You don’t believe something until you have done it.

7.     We got lost in proving our metaphysics and then making others believe it. We spent all our time in enforcement, as if Jesus came to earth to enforce ideas.

8.     I don’t know a single example of any of our churches burning anyone at the stake for not taking care of the widows and orphans.

9.     We live in a wonderful time when we see that faith is not about belonging systems or belief systems. If Christianity is going to be renewed and reformed, it has to move to practice-based Christianity.

10.  The globalization of spirituality is making practice essential, because people don’t believe you any more until you’ve done it. Most of the things we said we believed were no skin off our back!

11.  The wonderful thing about orthopraxy is that it asks something of you. That’s why we’ve avoided it for so long!

12.  Going to a place in my daily prayers where for 20 minutes I have to go into this kenosis—this dying to myself, dying to my feelings, dying to my own angry thoughts—no one wants to do that!

13.  Orthopraxy asks something of you. Orthodoxy allows you to be a policeman of other people and never really do it yourself. This gives you a false high moral ground without deserving it for a moment!

14.  The word orthodoxy is not found in the scriptures. Jesus never encouraged this mentality, in fact, quite the contrary.

15.  Isn’t it ironic that a religion that believes that the word became flesh puts so much credence into words!

      

Imagine a line down the center of your meeting space. This is a continuum. At one end is extreme orthodoxy (#1) and at the other extreme orthopraxy (#10). Of course, there are many points on the continuum between the two extremes (#2-9). Choose a point that represents where you see the measure of your faith life in terms of these two ends of the continuum and go stand there.  Why did you choose that spot?  Are you where you want to be?  Why or why not?  If you want to be somewhere else on the continuum, what might it take to get there?

SOUP BOWL MUTUALITY

Suzanne shares her concern about churches that serve food to the poor and homeless but only on condition that they hear a sermon. She advocates for a principle that says, “In order to get a bed and a bowl of soup you don’t have to join my club.”

In response, Richard offers insight about true mutuality of relationship:

The need to have people join your group to convince you that you are right is much more love of self than love of God.

Christianity has largely been a belonging system instead of a transformational system. We have this attitude in our history that the best thing we can do for “them” is to present the gospel and get them to come to church.

The assumption is that I’ve got the truth and you don’t. I ensconce myself in a superior position. The great thing that our Catholic missionaries learned after they were in the mission for as little as three years can be summed up in this way: “I came to convert them and they converted me.” Until that realization comes, the I-thou relationship of the true body of Christ hasn’t happened.

When the other has as much to teach me even though I’m the one providing the bowl of soup, that’s mutuality. When I know what that other person has suffered and can hear their story and allow that story to influence me, that is the body of Christ re-formed. We can’t maintain this one-sided evangelism where one group ensconces itself as the giver and keeps the other group co-dependent on them as the receiver and call that being like Jesus. I’m sure many people do that with the best of intentions, but very often it preserves them in a kind of hidden egocentricity.”

1.     When have you had an experience anything like that of a missionary in which you were the one converted (transformed) in a situation where you thought that you were the converter?

2.     It’s quite possible that you have not risked the kind of vulnerability and transformation implied in this conversation. What yearning for personal change and growth emerges in you as you listen to Richard speaking about the challenges of the Way of Jesus and the promise therein?

3.     Perhaps your church is involved in service to the poor, to the homeless, to people in extreme economic distress. What practices are in place that ensure that the system isn’t one of co-dependence, conversion, superiority and egocentricity?

4.     Richard makes reference to a passage from the letter of James, James 2:14-18. What meaning does it have for you as you struggle with this matter of a life as envisioned by Jesus and the early Christian community?

 

GOOD THEOLOGY STILL MATTERS

The emphasis in this session on orthopraxy leads Doug to raise the critical matter of concepts and belief:

We are incapable of having a content-less mind. So, what difference does it make what we believe conceptually?

In affirming that good theology is important, Richard raises a historical situation in New Mexico that involved the Franciscans:

When they were withdrawn for political reasons, the Franciscans trained laymen to run the church with no priests. For more than 100 years these sincere, well-intentioned laymen ran the church without any infusion of good theology. In that time the church became very guilt-centered, punitive and moralistic. That’s an extreme example of how devolved Christianity can get if you have no content with good sources. What happens is you get charismatic, manipulative and dominant personalities taking over. It’s true in any institution: the loudest and most manipulative personality controls the show. So, you finally have a choice between good teaching and good thinking, or a cult of personality. I can talk this way because the Franciscans gave me excellent education in theology. You get to know the “big Tradition,” then you can critique the “small tradition.”

 

1.     How do you ensure that your practice is grounded in good theology?

2.     When have you been aware of situations where practice was grounded in bad theology?

 

WAITING FOR THE GOD EXPERIENCE

Richard offers some observations on why it is that most people who have no experience of Holy Presence are unable to sustain a contemplative practice:

The Center has been here 27 years now. I’ve seen the vast majority of people experiment with contemplation but not last. If you haven’t had a previous experience of an actual lover/presence/encounter/person you don’t know what you’re waiting for. You get tired of waiting for an energy or idea or “enlightenment.” If they haven’t had a Jesus encounter of any type—a baptism in the Spirit, as charismatics would call it—I find that by and large most people give up on contemplation.

I find again and again in my own experience here that people who stay with it are people who already know that there’s someone to wait for, that God is real. They’re not trying to manufacture God experience; they’re trying to deepen already existing God experience. It really gives me sympathy and patience for people who give up. They don’t know what they’re waiting for or if it’s worth waiting for. Contemplative prayer doesn’t give you a lot of pay-off if you’re not committed to the practice itself.

      

1.     How are people in your discussion group being sustained in their contemplative practice through a real experience of Presence or encounter with the Divine?

2.     And what about the absence of that experience? How have you been sustained in your desire for a deepening relationship with God even when there is no word? (The word of God was rare in those days; visions were not widespread. 1 Samuel 3:1)

 

FALL ING UPWARD

Doug says: “I’d like to hear you, Richard, talking more about keeping people engaged in pursuing that experience even if they haven’t had it.”

Richard responds:

The reason I wrote Falling Upward is because I feel for the vast majority the falling experience, which is inevitable if you are living a real human life, is the normal path of transformation. I say in Naked Now that great love and great suffering are the classic paths. You don’t fall into great love or great suffering without falling. You don’t go there intentionally. It’s always outside your control: I can’t succeed at this; I don’t look good; I just lost my house…my money…my marriage. We don’t want to wish these things on anybody but, again and again, you see these are the things that catapult people into the second stage of life, or unitive experience. We know we can’t program those, but we clergy were given the impression that’s what Sunday was about. We would program a religious experience.

      

1.     What do you understand to be the significance of the title of Richard’s book, Falling Upward?

2.     In what ways have you experienced this great truth of human life—that the falling experience is the normal path of transformation?

 

ACCOMPANIMENT

The conversation brings the group around to a consideration of the importance of accompaniment: There’s a task we have to accompany people so that they can give language to their experience in a way that leads them beyond the practice to deeper consciousness. We often don’t have the words.

Richard states:

We only have the language of faith as assent to doctrine. That’s totally inadequate to the inner experience. The ministry of spiritual direction (accompaniment) is growing broadly. There is a recognition of it in Buddhism and Judaism as well. In the matter of accompaniment, there have to be elders who are at least one step beyond you. I want someone to be a little ahead of me. Those kind of people as teachers and learners are just proliferating today. It’s wonderful.

 

1.     Who is it who accompanies you in enabling you to put into words and awareness your experience of the divine? What access do you have to someone who is trained as a spiritual director?

 

 

* Adapted from Embracing an Alternative Orthodoxy: A 5-Session Study by Richard Rohr with Tim Scorer, Morehouse Education Resources, 2014)

George Floyd, Race, Rioting, and Reacting Whitely

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Our country - and humanity - has come a long way, yet we have a very long way to go because of the depth and strength of the undercurrents regarding racism. When the violent rioting regarding George Floyd erupted, my wife and I had the same visceral reaction of dread. We know the riots and looting are in angry response to four centuries of unjust, inhumane treatment of people of color on American soil, where “the darker your skin, the worse the injustice” has been the unwritten rule of law. George Floyd was murdered, and even white people were upset. But as soon as the violent riots began, my wife and I knew that the worst caricaturization of people of color just got validated in white people’s eyes, and the care and curiosity regarding systemic injustice and inequity was eclipsed instead of piqued. Every time I have taught on race, at least some of the feedback I received were clear displays of white fragility. My white friends: please do not dismiss the riots because they are violent. Instead, lean in and wonder what the underlying story might be. Choose to learn about this more deeply instead of shrugging your shoulders in confusion. White Fragility is very sobering, as is So You Want to Talk About Race? Because white people dominate the power structures in the United States, it is incumbent on white people to recognize and address the problem in concrete ways. We don’t like to hear that racism is a “white” problem when the headlines sure seem to indicate otherwise. Welcome to Systems Theory: People of Color are not the problem but rather the symptom of a greater problem that they alone cannot correct. As white people, we need to lend our voice and inherent power to the long-term goal of true equality and equity - something we have taken for granted that others have never known. This is a stated ideal in our nation’s founding documents, and much deeper than that, is deeply connected to Jesus’ life and teaching.

This teaching was part of an ongoing series based in part on Adam Hamilton’s book, Unafraid and originally published on April 22, 2018 as a part of a series dealing with fear.

Fear of difference creates a very constricted, exclusive, and small religion and life—the very opposite of the abundance into which God invites us. – Richard Rohr

Adam Hamilton and I grew up in the same neck of the woods – suburban Kansas City.  Being six years older than me, our life experience from our earliest years was very similar.  He grew up in Prairie Village, the suburb where my dad was pastor of Prairie Baptist Church, which enjoyed the vibrancy of being a church in the “new” part of town where all the professionals lived.  Our family lived further out in Overland Park, which is now a sprawling, massive suburb that extends way south of where it used to end.  Like Hamilton, while I grew up in a household that would never tolerate hate speech, I also did not experience much exposure to non-white people.  We had an Asian family at church who became good friends.  Some refugees from Laos.  Down our street lived my brother’s best friend, Billy, who was Filipino.  I can’t remember knowing anyone black my first eight years of life.

To give a concrete expression to the undercurrent of prejudice that existed in the state proud of its Underground Railroad heritage,  Hamilton offered a covenant from one of J.C. Nichols’ housing developments: “None of the said lots shall be conveyed to, used, owned nor occupied by Negroes as owner and tenants.”  Later, the covenant was extended to Jewish people, which meant, of course, that Jesus would not be allowed to live next door…  Racism lived in the community that raised me, written right into the neighborhood HOA.

Let’s get some definitions under our belt about this subject.  Racism is defined as “prejudice, discrimination, or antagonism directed against someone of a different race based on the belief that one's own race is superior.”  Prejudice is defined as “dislike, hostility, or unjust behavior deriving from unfounded opinions.”  And finally, xenophobia is defined as “intense or irrational dislike or fear of people from other countries.”  Do any of these descriptions describe you?  Lucky for you, there is a very quick, simple test to find out whether or not you are on some level racist, live with prejudice, and struggle to some degree with xenophobia.  Using your middle finger from one hand, place it on the wrist of the opposite hand (or on your jugular vein on your neck) and check for a pulse.  If you have a pulse, you struggle with all three of these things.  How dare I say such a thing about a good person like you?  Because it is human nature.  We are biased toward our own kind.  Interestingly, we are also biased toward the dominant kind of the culture we grew up in.  In the United States, this means there is an implicit bias toward Caucasians.  Move to a part of the world where whites are not dominant, and you will discover that the bias shifts toward the majority.  Calling BS on me?  Take a test from Harvard University that will open your eyes to what you see.

Hamilton suggests that the longest running fear in the Bible revolves around being afraid of “others” who are not like us.  While the story of Cain and Abel certainly is about much more than that, he makes the case that it may point to a division between herdsman who roamed the land feeding their livestock and farmers who tilled the land.  The disdain toward Gentiles (non-Jews) in the Old Testament is easy to find and extends into the New Testament as well.

Jesus’ first sermon poked the racist bear, so to speak, when he clearly spoke about how God’s favor is not exclusive to Jewish people, but extended to non-Jews as well via Israel’s most beloved prophets of old – Elijah and Elisha!  It nearly got him killed.  The sermon provided an allusion to what was ahead for Jesus’ life and teaching.  Above all others, Samaritans were the most loathed by Jewish people.  So, naturally, Jesus went on to befriend a Samaritan woman at a well, and probably his best known parable positioned a “Good Samaritan” as it’s hero while portraying Jewish religious leaders as severely lacking.  Very bold moves toward inclusion.

Peter, one of Jesus’ original disciples and key leader of the early Christian movement struggled with his racism even though he walked with Jesus where he never thought he would.  The account of Peter and Cornelius is a remarkable picture of two people who overcome their prejudice which led to inclusion soon thereafter.  Paul, who had plenty of implicit bias to work out, became a champion of inclusion as he started up church after church all around the Mediterranean from Israel to Rome.  His entire letter to the Roman church was in response to racist-based division between exclusive Jewish Christians and Gentile Christians who wanted a place at the communion table.  His letter to the churches in the region of Galatia  was in response to well-meaning but narrow-minded “Judaizers” who were trying to impose inappropriate laws on inferior Gentiles.  This is where Paul wrote the famous words:

“For you are all children of God through faith in Christ Jesus. And all who have been united with Christ in baptism have put on Christ, like putting on new clothes. There is no longer Jew or Gentile, slave or free, male and female. For you are all one in Christ Jesus. And now that you belong to Christ, you are the true children of Abraham. You are his heirs, and God’s promise to Abraham belongs to you.” – Galatians 3:26-29 (NLT)

These biblical examples serve to illustrate the fact that this human issue of fearing those who are not like us is clearly not new.  What we may not appreciate, however, is that it is still a serious issue here in the United States where we proclaim liberty for all.  It’s still an issue for me and you, even if we can’t admit it.  This is not to say that I believe you’re all a bunch of cross-burning KKK members looking to lynch anybody who isn’t lilly-white and blue-eyed.  What I am saying is that the issue remains – and will remain – but can be managed down in us and in those we influence if we know what to recognize as racist and learn how to live with different sensibilities.

Brene Brown, in her excellent book, Braving the Wilderness, identifies a method that humanity has used to enable racism to grow to its ugliest and most horrific expressions.  Dehumanizing is a primary way we step toward legitimizing mistreatment of “other” people.  She writes:

Dehumanizing and holding people accountable are mutually exclusive.  Humiliation and dehumanizing are not accountability or social justice tools, they’re emotional off-loading at best, emotional self-indulgence at worst.  And if our faith asks us to find the face of God in everyone we meet, that should include the politicians, media, and strangers on Twitter with whom we most violently disagree.  When we desecrate their divinity, we desecrate our own, and we betray our faith (58).

In her book she illustrates how dehumanizing is what enabled Nazi Germany to kill millions of Jews: they were systematically dehumanized.  Killing a Jew wasn’t killing another human being in their rhetoric – may as well have been a rat.  When we use derogatory, sweeping terms for entire people groups, we are engaging in dehumanization.  When we denigrate others by speaking of all Hispanic people as Mexicans or illegals, we dehumanize.  When we call the LGBTQ community “the Gays”, we dehumanize.  When we slur our way around using pejorative terms about women, liberals, conservatives, Muslims, Jews, the poor – fill in the blank here – we dehumanize, which allows us to treat them inhumanely.

To bring this up close and personal (and current), Brown bring up the Black Lives Matter Movement and the controversy around supporting police and all people everywhere.  She writes:

Shouldn’t the rallying cry just be All Lives Matter?  No.  Because the humanity wasn’t stripped from all lives the way it was stripped from the lives of black citizens. In order for slavery to work, in order for us to buy, sell, beat, and trade people like animals, Americans had to completely dehumanize slaves.  And whether we directly participated in that or were simply a member of a culture that at one time normalized that behavior, it shaped us.  We can’t undo that level of dehumanizing in one or two generations.  I believe Black Lives Matter is a movement to rehumanize black citizens.  All lives matter, but not all lives need to be pulled back into moral inclusion.  Not all people were subjected to the psychological process of demonizing and being made less than human so we could justify the inhumane practice of slavery (59).

So many times I have heard people who look like me say, “I just don’t understand why they…” protest, commit crimes, riot, etc.  Exactly.  We whiter folk just don’t understand.  We don’t get it because we’re not black, LGBTQ, female, Hispanic, Muslim, an immigrant, or any other form of other.  The best way for us to move forward, if possible, is to discover ways to meet people who are different than us so that we increasingly grow toward the conclusion that there is no “them”, only us.  Much of our fear is based in ignorance.  The sooner we can discover just how false our expectations have been, the sooner we can be free from the fear of people not like us.  We can do this by befriending someone different than ourselves, and we can do this by learning from their perspective (books, articles, movies, TedTalks, etc.)

One of the last letters written in the New Testament came from John.  Speaking to people who were struggling to discover how to live like Jesus amidst people who were “different”, he offered these words:

God is love. When we take up permanent residence in a life of love, we live in God and God lives in us. This way, love has the run of the house, becomes at home and mature in us, so that we’re free of worry on Judgment Day—our standing in the world is identical with Christ’s. There is no room in love for fear. Well-formed love banishes fear. Since fear is crippling, a fearful life—fear of death, fear of judgment—is one not yet fully formed in love.

We, though, are going to love—love and be loved. First we were loved, now we love. He loved us first.

If anyone boasts, “I love God,” and goes right on hating his brother or sister, thinking nothing of it, he is a liar. If he won’t love the person he can see, how can he love the God he can’t see? The command we have from Christ is blunt: Loving God includes loving people. You’ve got to love both. – 1 John 4:17-21 (The Message)

The Greek word used for love here is “agape”, which is not simply a loving feeling, but an active love that serves even if personal sacrifice is required.  Hamilton, building from John’s words above, gives us this rule to live with when faced with fear of others.  He encourages us to ask ourselves, “In the situation I find myself in, what is the most loving thing I can do?”  That’s good advice that helps minimize fear and serves to create a better world in which to live.  For everyone.

Embracing and Alternative Orthodoxy with Richard Rohr: The Cosmic Christ

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

TOUCHING THE COSMIC CHRIST

You’ve heard Richard Rohr talk about his understanding of the Cosmic Christ, a key element of alternative orthodoxy that is an aspect of the legacy of the early Franciscans.

It may be a challenge for you to really grasp all that is intended by the term Cosmic Christ, but the presence of your group and its process can support you in coming to terms with this theological perspective. Discuss the four questions below as you work together to understand this concept. For each question, there are key words related to an aspect of this theology:

 

·       Key Words: the big bang—the first incarnation—the birth of the Christ mystery—the interplanetary Divine.

o   What are the implications of saying that the birth of Christ occurred at the moment of the creation of the material universe?

·       Key Words: a second incarnation—2000 years ago—an exemplar—for Christians—the mystery of God

o   What does it mean to use the two words Jesus and Christ together, not as two names for Jesus but as an expression of a mystical reality?

·       Key Words: Eucharist—elemental incarnation in a material universe—“Oh my God, I am the body of Christ!”

o   How might you now experience the Eucharist differently as you consider these insights about the Cosmic Christ?

·       Key Words: Nothing is secular—grace indwelling—mountains as cathedrals—Divine image

o   In unitive consciousness, how you love anything is how you love everything. How might your life be transformed if you embraced the Franciscan vision found in Richard’s teaching in this session?

 

PAUL GETS IT!

Richard Rohr encourages us to see the gift that Paul is to us as we struggle to grasp this vision of the Cosmic Christ. Read the following indented text then consider the questions that follow:

The personal incarnation happened 2000 years ago, we believe as Christians, which is Jesus. They became so infatuated with this person of Jesus that very quickly they seemed to call him the Christ, although there’s no evidence that he ever called himself that. The scriptural evidence is that it was Paul who got it. Paul gets it because Paul knew Jesus Christ the way we do. He never knew Jesus in the flesh. He hardly ever quotes him and yet he talks with such authority, such certitude. He met the Christ mystery and until you know that, you do not understand the mystic Paul. He is in love with this Christ mystery, which is the same Jesus Christ that you and I meet.

So when we introduce people to Jesus without the rest of the incarnation—the Christ—we end up with a moralistic religion. Moralism takes over whenever you don’t have mysticism. You will become more moralistic the less it touches upon unitive consciousness. The Christ is something you know mystically. When I say mystically, I mean experientially. Whatever happened to Paul on the Damascus Road, he knew experientially some universal meaning to this Jesus figure—and he universalized from that. His most common single phrase in his authentic letters is in Christo—in Christ. That’s his code word for this understanding.

We are living inside this incarnation. We are the Christ too! He’s not denying Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ is the holon, the exemplar of the whole, the stand-in for everybody. We can’t fall in love with concepts, energies, ideas and forces. You’re not going to give your life for a force. As 1 John says, we need someone we can see, and touch, and look into his or her eyes, and relate to. Persons love persons. That pulls our soul out of itself.

      

1.     When have you “experienced” the Christ mystery in the way that Paul seems to have done?

2.     Paul and Richard would have us see that we are living inside an incarnation—in Christ—but we don’t fall in love with a concept. What do you fall in love with in such a way that your soul is enlivened?

 

OUR GOD MAY BE TOO SMALL

If we follow Franciscan orthodoxy, which teaches that Christ is incarnated in all creation right from the big bang, then sooner or later we have to deal with the matter of other civilizations, cultures, traditions, revelations and religions in a way that honors the Christ mystery that is incarnate in the immense diversity of creation. Read Richard’s reflections on this matter and then consider the questions that follow:

Jesus is the personal personification of the eternal Christ mystery, but the Christ mystery was already available to the Stone Age people, to the Persians, to the Mayans, to the so-called barbarians and pagans. These were not “throw away people!” That’s what you came down to if you were Roman Catholic: God was waiting for the Pope to appear and everything else was throwaway. Imagine that! You’d have to say that this is a petty God, a small God.

If we don’t balance out Jesus with Christ, our very theology is going to become a very limited worldview. It ends up being in competition with other world religions instead of a vision that is so big, so cosmic that it includes everything and everybody.

When you return to a Trinitarian notion of God, it opens up interfaith dialogue, because you admit God is formless. You admit God is energy and spirit, which is the Holy Spirit. Suddenly we have all kinds of levels for dialogue. What happened when we pulled Jesus out of the Christ mystery and out of the Trinity? We overplayed the Jesus card apart from who Jesus really is. That made us unable to talk to Hindus and Buddhists, to respect the Jewish roots of this very Jesus.

Jesus then becomes in competition with Muhammad or Buddha. It becomes a personality issue: “Do you like Jesus. Well, if you don’t like Jesus, well then God doesn’t like you!” Come on! The question is, “Do you like the Christ Mystery?” I can see your answer to that in the way you walk down the street and the way you respect the person at the checkout counter. There are some Hindus that like the Christ mystery much better than a lot of Roman Catholics, Evangelicals, Lutherans and Episcopalians. I’m happy to be Christian, but that doesn’t put me in competition or a race with the other world religions to prove that I’m better.

We’re not trying to be rebels anymore; we’re not trying to be reactionary or heretics. We’re just trying to be honest about our experience. And that ability we now have to be honest about our experience is making us ready for an adult Christianity, for an adult notion of what’s really happening, without throwing out Jesus. You’ll go back and fall in love with Jesus more than ever before, but now you’ll recognize that this Jesus is not just the Savior of my soul, but he’s the naming of the very direction of history—the Alpha and Omega—this perfected humanity that he reveals in one moment of time and where we are all being seduced toward.

     

1.     In a creation of such awesome diversity, where the Christ mystery is available to all, what is it that gives you your Christian identity? What do you claim as a follower of Jesus Christ?

2.     Richard has a way of provoking more good questions even while answering the earlier ones. What questions would you like to ask him as part of deepening into a more adult Christianity?

3.     What would you like to talk about with people from other faith traditions now that we can acknowledge that they have something to say?

 

A LOT TO WRAP OUR HEADS AROUND!

For many who are listening to Richard, what he is proposing is nothing less than a shift in worldview at the deepest level. He helps us to appreciate the challenging journey of transformation by reminding us several times of the levels of consciousness that Ken Wilber has articulated: archaic—magical—mythical— rational—pluralistic—mystical (non-dual).

Jennifer gives voice to the kind of challenge involved in this intentional movement toward non-dual living:

It’s hard for me to wrap my head around it. It goes back to Richard’s definition of faith: the dichotomy of not knowing and knowing. A lot of it’s my upbringing in the scientific method and the emphasis on proof. I think that’s why the historical Jesus is so attractive at the rational level because there are things you can know and things you can understand. Yet, at the same time we don’t call ourselves Jesus-ians! We call ourselves Christ-ians. So we really need to understand what it is to be Christian and to understand Christ and God in all creation from the beginning. It didn’t just begin with “I”— incarnated here on earth. It’s a lot to wrap your head around!

 

Richard acknowledges Jennifer’s observation and hints at what the process of transformation might look like:

Your mind, your prayers, your songs, your reading of the scripture will almost have to readjust for two years; but then you’ll see it everywhere. Once you see it, you’ll know this isn’t my idea. It’s there, but no one told me to pay attention to it.

 

1.     Where do you find yourself in this process of growing consciousness? In what ways does Jennifer give voice to your thoughts and feelings? 

2.     Richard is hinting at a classic process of spiritual practice and discernment: “putting on a new mind” as Paul would say. What are your practices for opening yourself to a new way of seeing that would transform your life completely?

 

MOVING LIBERALS ALONG

Doug makes an observation that holds a mirror up to liberals, the very people who are likely to be using this study:

There’s a liberal temptation to focus so much on the historic Jesus until we can say X, Y and Z about the historic Jesus. When you get the cosmic aspect it blows open both the conservative and liberal paradigm.

 

Richard responds:

It critiques the liberal just as much as the conservative, because neither of us understands the Christ very well. Ken Wilber has pointed out in describing the level of consciousness that the downside of the pluralistic level—where most liberals are—is that they are so in love with pluralism that they hate any notion of hierarchy. When you go to the mystical level (the Cosmic Christ level), then you really appreciate hierarchy. Then you have a new criterion for critiquing the liberal just as much as the conservative. Liberals tend to be trapped because they are just smart enough to dismiss everyone below as superstitious and ridiculous and everyone above them as falsely religious in their mystical silliness. They stay there, many of them, the rest of their lives and can be just as dogmatic, authoritarian and dualistic while thinking they are not. You can really appreciate what Wilber calls hierarchy. Yes, there are things that are still needy of analysis and critique—not dismissal—and that includes the liberal mind, the pluralistic mind, which thinks that the goal of history is pluralism. The goal of history is union with God which honors pluralism but doesn’t get trapped there as an end in itself.

 

1.     Where do you find yourself in this analysis?

2.     How might churches with a liberal bias encourage their members to experience the goal of history as union with God?

 

BENEDICTION

 

Christ whose glory fills the skies,

Christ the true, the only light,

sun of righteousness arise,

triumph o’er the shades of night.

Dayspring from on high, be near;

daystar, in my heart appear.

 

Dark and cheerless is the morn

unaccompanied by thee;

Joyless is the day’s return,

till thy mercy’s beams I see,

till they inward light impart,

glad my eyes and warm my heart.

 

Visit then this soul of mine,

pierce the gloom of sin and grief;

fill me, radiancy divine,

scatter all my unbelief;

more and more thyself display,

shining to the perfect day.

-        Charles Wesley

* Adapted from Embracing an Alternative Orthodoxy: A 5-Session Study by Richard Rohr with Tim Scorer, Morehouse Education Resources, 2014)