Renewing Faith: Letting False gods Die, Letting God Live

Note: You can view this teaching on our YouTube Channel. Some people believe God is angry and ready to kick our butts if we get out of line.

Some people believe God is primarily known by love and is constantly working to help all of creation thrive in health, wellbeing, and harmony.

Both of these images appear in the Bible.

Jesus was clearly motivated by God’s love, probably because he experienced it powerfully and couldn’t stop talking about it. It changed his mission away from what his cousin John the Baptist was promoting toward wooing people into the loving arms of God. His teaching challenged the religious and civic authorities who preferred a God and paradigm that employed domination to control its subjects. Those authorities worked together to kill Jesus, but the Spirit that animated and motivated Jesus also resurrected Jesus after death - he was experienced alive (albeit in a new way). This gave his followers great confidence that what Jesus said was true. They went on to promote a loving, inclusive God. They couldn’t stop talking about it, probably because they kept on experiencing the love of God in their lives.

Maybe it’s time to let the God of wrath die, because maybe that God never existed. Perhaps that image in the Bible says far more about the culture it was written in and for, and far less about God’s character.

Maybe it’s time to let the love of God transform us more fully. When we do, we just might begin following Jesus more naturally, which will lead to a more abundant, thriving life for everyone.

Renewing Faith: From the Mountaintop to the Valley

Note: You can view this teaching on our YouTube Channel. The Transfiguration offered an abundance of fodder for Jesus’ disciples (then and now) to chew on.  The experience was one of those thin place moments when the veil was lifted and all involved could see and experience the nearness of God.  When people (including myself) have had thin place moments, they are left with a sense of awe and wonder that we cannot put into words.  Peter’s suggestion is sort of a reactive, “I should say something” example of this very reality.  Joining Jesus in the scene were two of the greatest characters from Israel’s past: Moses (leader of the Exodus and representative of the Law) and Elijah, considered the greatest Jewish prophet.  These two lives were separated by hundreds of years, and many more hundreds of years passed before Jesus was born. The past and the present faded into one scene.  The “more to come” is experienced, and the vision of being present at one time with those who precede us from earlier times is introduced to our imagination.  More humbling.  Jesus is there, of course, now representing the combination of the two – a teacher and a healing prophet – while God is heard saying, “This is my son.”  This alone doesn’t mean that God worked or works exclusively through Jesus.  Appreciate this statement as an incredibly powerful direct endorsement of Jesus. Such a powerful designation would be increasingly important as Jesus was entering a season that would take him through the valley of the shadow of death.  The disciples would need to continually remind themselves of this scene as doubts crept in: apparent defeat in the world says much more about life here and now that it does about the hereafter.  The scene ends with Jesus’s countenance filled with the glory of God – a final nod to his association with Moses.  Soon after this incredible experience – for all of them, I am sure – Jesus got right back into teaching and healing.

     This passage instructs me on three levels.  First, it affirms what I already know to be true, that there is more to our lives than our flesh and blood – there is another dimension that is eternal, marked and inhabited by all that is God, which is identified as love.  Love awaits us.  Our last struggling breath here will give way to endless breathing of the source of life itself.  Especially when we are facing struggles of many kinds, we need not lose hope, for the best is yet to come.  Whatever meal may be set before us in life, a dessert fork is part of our place setting, signaling that something delicious is coming.

     The second take away for me in this story is that hard parts of our journey do not indicate God’s absence but may be proof of God’s presence in our lives.  The disciples were very aware that Jesus wasn’t like all the other self-proclaimed messiahs in their day.  He wasn’t calling for a violent revolt, but rather a nonviolent, subversive approach to change.  Especially when things got ugly in Jerusalem, there would be innumerable voices calling Jesus’ veracity into question.  This scene and its implications would remain in the memory banks of the disciples: doing what God wants done in the world sometimes comes with sever pushback, which is itself sometimes a sign that we’re on the right track.

     The third thing about this scene is that soon after this celestial experience, Jesus got right back to work.  Right up until his last day on earth, Jesus was living his faith.  The practice of the faith is what keeps faith alive and growing, culminating in a robust sense of partnership with God.  Living out his faith also meant making the world a better place for those he touched.  We are all on this ride together, and the Good News really lives up to its name.  Faith was never meant to make us “so heavenly minded that we’re no earthly good.” Quite the contrary, we are called to liv out our faith, because faith taps into the source of life itself.  As Paul so aptly put it to his beloved church (Phil. 1:21), “to live is Christ, and to die is gain.”

 

Questions to think about...

1.     How has the thought of the afterlife affected your approach or response to life?

2.     What do you make of the Transfiguration and what it means for life beyond flesh and blood? If you were a witness to it, what would your take-away be?

3.     Knowing that this experience preceded Jesus’ final chapter of suffering and death, how does this shape your expectations of what faithful living and God’s blessing might be like?  How does the reality of struggle change your outlook?

4.     How do you mitigate from becoming “so heavenly minded that you’re no earthly good”?

Renewing Faith: Nonviolent Resistance

     Note: You can view this teaching on our YouTube Channel. This week’s lectionary text (which I have switched to Matthew’s version of Jesus’ sermon) provides an excellent opportunity to remember some important issues whenever we read the Bible.  First, it was not written by Americans living in 2022.  We are 2,000 years and a world away from their context.  Second, it was not written in English.  The Old Testament was written in Hebrew.  Jesus spoke Aramaic (a version of Hebrew), and never wrote any of his teaching down to be passed on.  His followers recorded their best recollection of his life and teachings in what we call the Gospels.  These biographies were written in Greek, as was the rest of the New Testament.  Aramaic doesn’t always translate well into Greek.  Greek doesn’t always translate well into English.  Third, when we read anything from our American perspective, we read from a position of great power given our nation’s military and economic strength.  Ancient Israel had not ruled their own homeland for centuries when Jesus lived.  The lived and dreamed not from a place of power, but oppression and despair.  Fourth, because of all of the above, while a casual reading of biblical text is always welcome, academics are especially helpful in helping us understand the ancient world and ancient language and context.  The particular passage we will investigate today is a great case in point, as we could casually read what Jesus taught and completely miss the critical undertone of what he was instructing.

     Jesus did not live primarily 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 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 wealthier) perspective.  More likely, he speaks from the perspective of those who feel overlooked, underrepresented, used and abused.  That’s who he was.  This is not the perspective of most scholars who have influenced Christianity since its inception.  Take a minute and let that really sink in.  For most of you reading this, Jesus did not look like you – he looked like those who have much less than you.

     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 will 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 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 was never 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.  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.

     Sometimes such publicly discomforting acts are exactly what is needed to wake people up. 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 do you suppose might be the long-term impact of such policies?  How much education was refused – and therefore advancement in careers and income?  How much generational wealth was prohibited – the impact of which lasts, well, generations?  How many people are ignorant about just these two critical pieces of our history that have impacted the shaping of an entire race of people in our country?  

     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.

     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.”55 The 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). Thus Guelich 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.”63 It 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 to grow 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.

Renewing Faith: The Way of Being

Note: You can view this teaching on our YouTube Channel. Garrett Morgan saved lives.  It is impossible to calculate just how many lives he saved – not just in his time, but even up until now.  He will continue saving lives into the distant future, too.  He invented the precursor to the modern stoplight that featured not just a red and green light for stop and go, but the yellow light, warning that the red-stop was seconds away.  Some interpret the yellow light as instruction to slow down, while others as a challenge to put the pedal to the metal before the red.  He invented the “stoplight with a warning” in response to deaths caused by people not being able to stop in time or others entering an intersection too soon.  Morgan also invented the smoke hood, the precursor to gas masks.  His hood was instrumental in saving lives when a tunnel collapsed on workers constructing a water pipeline under Lake Erie.  His initial design led to more and more ideas that have resulted in better and better aspirators, including, of course, the ones you are used to wearing throughout the pandemic.  Morgan invented other things as well, but these two are so easy to recognize for their global impact.  We have a way to know to avoid crossing into an intersection.  We have a way to breathe when the air is toxic. Health faith is like that.  It acts as a guide to keep you alive and well, and also helps you breathe when it feels like you can’t.

     The lectionary’s scriptures for this week are related, I think.  The prophet Jeremiah and the psalmist agree that those who choose the way of life aligned with the Spirit of God find themselves rooted, nourished, strengthened, at peace in the face of trial.  Jesus, in his great sermon, began with a related series of statements that do not make any sense at all to anyone except those who are fully invested in the way of the Spirit.  The poor are blessed because they are more likely to live in the Kingdom of God.  The hungry are blessed for they will be filled.  Those who weep will laugh. Even those who are persecuted for living in the Way may rejoice, for it associated them with the great heroes of faith who “got it right.” There is a way that leads to life abundant – yet a different abundance than the world offers.  So different that the world doesn’t know what to do with it.

     The Way that we’re talking about is life lived by faith.  As Marcus Borg notes in his book, The Heart of Christianity, the dominant way the word faith is defined does not reflect how it was understood by our ancestors.  He provides a broader historical understanding of the word that goes far beyond what is popularly referred to as faith:

·       Faith as Assensus.  The closest English equivalent for this would be mental assent.  This is how most people in the Western world interpret what it means to have faith: we believe in a particular doctrine, creed, dogma, etc.  While this feels like the way faith has always been understood, it actually developed over 500 years ago from two contexts.  First, Martin Luther, the father of the Protestant Reformation, detailed beliefs that needed to be challenged. Many new expressions of Christian community arose from that moment all the way up to today, with each group identifying what key beliefs represent their group.  Faith equates with belief, and belief is in the intellectual positions of the group.  The second context comes from science.  Until the Enlightenment, science and religion were BFF’s.  That all changed when science used its methodology on scripture and related doctrine, challenging heliocentricity and the story of creation itself.  Sensing its beliefs being challenged, the Church double-downed on its commitment to its creeds.  The idea of inerrancy and infallibility were born, and we’ve been stuck with it ever since.  Belief came to include ignoring scientifically based reality.  Luckily, faith as assensus was not the primary understanding for Jesus.

·       Faith as Fiducia. Perhaps the best dynamic equivalent for this word is trust.  Not trust in statements of faith, but trust in God to be God.  Metaphors are helpful here (yet always limited). We trust God like we trust the ever presence of gravity, or the buoyancy of water if we don’t flail around too much, or that seasons will come and go, or that there will be air for our next breath, or in the love of a mother for her child, or the love between two lovers who know the other’s love will not fade.  With this faith, we trust that God is with us, in us, surrounding us, and we trust that the character of God can be trusted as well.  God, defined by a deep understanding of love, can be counted on to be loving in God’s presence with us, care for us, guiding of us – everything.  We trust God to be fully God, which can give us a great sense of peace, strength, and hope.

·       Faith as Fidelitas.  The English equivalent here is faithfulness.  Not to statements about God, but in our lives centered in God.  The opposite is idolatrous infidelity – a choice to not be in or with God.  It’s about loyalty. About living in healthy, united relationship with God.  Loving what God loves – not simply loving God.  We probably have an idea about what engaging in the opposite of faithfulness looks like – the Ten Commandments offer a good starting point.  But what does loving what God loves look like?  I grew up with older sisters who controlled the TV remote.  On weekends when other boys were getting groomed to love sports, I was getting groomed to love musical theater.  My sisters loved musicals, and I came to love them, too.  My wife, on the other hand, grew up watching sports with her dad and became a true sports fan.  I like sports, and grew up watching a certain amount of football, basketball, and baseball.  Lynne’s exposure to musicals was minimal, but the few she saw, she liked.  When we got married and our kids were old enough to play on their own, the battle of the TV remote was on.  Except it wasn’t a battle at all.  I love Lynne, and I know she loves to watch sports.  So, we watch sports together and I have learned to love it more than I ever did.  Lynne loves me, and has learned to love musical theater, too.  Our motive was love for each other.  When we love God, we learn about what God loves and learn to love it, too.  It is a life of living in loving relationship with God.

·       Faith as Visio.  Vision, you might have guessed, is a close equivalent of this word, and refers to how we see reality. According to Borg, there are three ways we can see reality.  First, we can view reality as hostile and threatening, which leads us to live defensively.  Second, we can view reality as “indifferent” – the universe doesn’t care about your wellbeing one way or another – which will also lead us to live defensively (though not as paranoia-filled as the first).  The third way is to view reality as life-giving and nourishing, which leads us to be more open, trusting, and giving with our lives (without being naïve).

     The last three ways of faith are all more relationally focused than the first, although the assensus matters a lot because it tends to dictate the way we interpret the rest – especially in the Western world.  Believing and beloving are deeply related – what we believe in is what we belove. To believe in God is to belove God.  Jesus said that faith can be distilled to loving God and loving what God loves.  This way of embracing faith, for me, is incredibly invigorating.  It provides a basis for ethical living and is a breath of fresh air.

     Sermon on the Plain and Jeremiah.  The words of Jeremiah and Jesus are words of hope, especially for people going through difficult times.  What makes the words especially powerful, however, is that they really are true in the experience of people who have been through the most difficult circumstances that life can throw at us.  Jesus’ audience was extremely poor – almost everyone was – and worse, under Roman occupation.  How about some salt to the wounds?  The prevailing idea at that time – and now, too, in large measure – is that God’s favor could be recognized by material blessing.  The wealthy and powerful were obviously favored by God given their wealth and power.  This is still with us today, and some branches of Christianity promote it, too, with their leaders living in excess luxury as proof that God has blessed them.  The power of this worldview is pervasive and is inescapable.  I am sure that everyone reading this has felt it’s power at one time or another.  We feel a little better about ourselves if we have a certain amount of money, or wear the right label, or drive the right car, or have the right address, or have the latest phone, or...  And we feel a little less good when we don’t as the cultural pressure continues to rise. For many caught in this trap, Jesus’ words simply don’t make sense in the real world.  One popular podcaster was simply puzzled by Jesus’ statements about the meek inheriting the earth, and after researching a bit concluded that Jesus was talking about people who chose to leave their sword in its sheath – an act of self-control.  That helps some, but it needs to be recognized that the restraint noted isn’t because of some level of maturity on the part of the powerful holder of weapons, but the opposite – in Jesus’ context, a common person with a knife would not dare lift a finger against Rome lest they be immediately squashed like a bug.  There is no making sense of Jesus’ statement based on a worldview that primarily sees life’s value measured in performance, material, prestige, status, etc.  There is no reconciliation because it cannot be reconciled.

     Jesus is talking about another way of being, oriented from a different foundation and guided by a different star.  He is saying that those who don’t have what makes for success – who are left out and cannot even begin to build their lives around such things – have a capacity to experience the better, higher, deeper, truer way of the Kingdom of God because of their lack. We see glimpses of what he was talking about in the scriptures – disciples in a dungeon due to their faithfulness singing hymns to God out of their joy, for instance.  This doesn’t make sense.  Paul wrote that to live is Christ and to die is gain (Phil. 1:21) – this only makes sense if we understand that the Kingdom operates on a different level.  We see it expressed in the songs born from slavery in America’s history – a hope for the more of God out of desperation.  Indeed, we actually experience such divine seeing at certain times in our lives – moments where we are very aware of the importance and power of love, and that at the end of the day, nothing else really matters.  

     Garrett Morgan invented the modern stoplight and the earliest version of a gas mask, both of which served to help people live.  Good theology is like that, providing constructs to help us live, and fresh air to breathe when it feels like we’re suffocating. When we find ourselves (and God) living in the Way that Jesus taught and modeled, we are grounded and guided, we are consciously aware that we are not alone, we are motivated toward loving behavior and attitudes because we are aware of how much we are loved.  To live in that space requires discipline, however, because it is not the dominant way in our world, even though there is support.  The more we remind ourselves and build practices in our lives that foster the Way, the more we will know we are in the Way, live in the Way, and be sustained by the Way – no matter what is happening to us.  This is not a way of denial, this is the Way of truth and life, of reality itself.  It is the Way that turns the world upside down because it needs to be turned upside down.

     May you grow in confidence about your intellectual faith, but may you so much more grow in the Way through being faithful to God, loving what God loves, trusting God’s nature and presence, and choosing to see the world the way God sees the world.  Such are the things of true and lasting faith.

Renewing Faith: Introduction

Note: You can view this teaching on our YouTube Channel. Today I begin a new series, Renewing Faith, where we will examine some key concepts that serve to form Christianity, determining which pieces are timeless and need to be honored and kept, as well as those parts that clearly need to be left in their historical context – appreciated to some extent, but no longer key to our belief.  February, being Black History Month in the United States, affords us an interesting intersection which I hope to take advantage of: how we think about race in our country also needs to be examined in ways similar to our theology.  I am going to work to make this a practical and helpful series that also assists with our ongoing deconstruction and reconstruction faith project.  May it be so!

Charles Richard Drew (1904-1950) is a man I don’t remember knowing anything about until I sat in on a Black History Month event.  His research and development of ideas led to our capacity to store blood.  How many WWII soldiers lived beyond their otherwise lethal wounds because his discovery allowed for blood to be wherever the wounded were tended.  Unfortunately, he was never admitted to the American Medical Association.  He also chose to part ways – in protest – with his association with American Red Cross.  Both of these were due to the fact that he was African American.  The AMA didn’t allow him membership, and the Red Cross didn’t allow the blood’s integration.  Yet his work and legacy impact lives now and forever.  Thank God for Charles Richard Drew!  He honored his passion, which served as a call of sorts that led him to make a massive, long lasting impact on our world.

This week’s collection of passages has us looking at Isaiah’s vision, hearing the call and passionately responding “Here am I”!  It also has Paul speaking of his vision, call, and response to God – an unlikely character given his previous vision for his life.  Finally, there is a scene of Jesus, first teaching the large crowd from a boat offshore, then instructing Peter and company to put out again and fish after they were exhausted and disheartened.  They honored Jesus’ request and were blown away by their experience, which led them to humbly bow before Jesus, when they heard their version of the call, followed by their decision to follow.

Three characters all blown away by different kinds of visions of God that brought them to their knees.  Paradigms blown.  New ways of thinking about how God was at work in the world.  All called.  All responded affirmatively.  All led to incredibly important, but also extremely challenging work that would alter their sense of themselves and the world.

God is still showing up in various ways – at the right moment, in the right way according to the person.  Are we aware of the presence of God right where we are?

God is still putting out the call to go forth, proclaiming the Good News, which truly is good but can come across as bad news to those who need to change.

Who will hear?  Who will go?

Sometimes the call seems very small an ordinary, yet exactly what we’re called to do.  Being willing and open to do what may or may not feel uncomfortable – to make the phone call, have the cup of coffee, to be honest about how you’re feeling with someone about something, to heed the call to introspection, to heed the call to action, to be humbled, to stand for something that makes you feel really vulnerable, to stand with someone who needs to know they are not alone, to clearly state when something isn’t right...  

The list of how God is at work and inviting us into the work is endless.  It seems that in each instance there is a recognition of God’s presence.  A humility in light of God’s presence.  An understanding of God’s call in some way.  A decision to say yes.  A discovery that it was going to be different than we thought, tougher than we imagined, yet more compelling and important than we could dream.

May you be inspired by the stories of Isaiah, Peter, and Paul who heeded the call to move forward with God even though it was very hard and met with resistance.  May you be inspired by Charles Richard Drew who lived at a time when he was not fully appreciated, yet used his skills to serve humanity in ways that far outlived him, even while challenging the status quo.

Open and Relational Theology: God is Present

Note: You can view this teaching on our YouTube Channel.

Theology matters.  What we believe manifests itself in what we do.  If what we believe is off, what we end up doing will be off, too.  Conventional Theology separates God from creation, quite literally, even if paradoxically.  The creation poem found in the first chapter of Genesis has God creating the heavens and the earth out of a formless void – chaos, actually – breathing-speaking all of creation into being.  While the description of creation being good every step of the way with humans being very good was in sharp contrast to other theologies competing for allegiance, it was still primitive.  God was “up there” beyond the metal-dome-firmament that God would occasionally open to pour down rain in its season.  Or not open it for a long time, if people were especially naughty, or keep it open way too long if people were really, really, really naughty for a long period of time.  And yet, it was the breathy word of God that made creation, creation.  God was necessarily infused into all of it as animating, life-giving presence.

     Chasms.  Conventional theology gave us the Four Spiritual Laws used for evangelism.  The first law?  We are separated from God because of sin.  Two: the wage of sin is death.  Three: while we were sinning, Jesus died as a final sacrifice to pay for our sins (somehow it makes sense).  Four: all who call on the name of the Lord will be saved. Apart from a literal interpretation of Jesus’ death as substitutionary atonement, the metaphor can be good and helpful.  Unfortunately, conventional theology took it in the wrong direction – a path Jesus would not have directed.  Paul, whose writing is used to generate this Roman Road, would not agree with its application.  He was writing primarily to Jewish Christians, who naturally assumed God was intimately with them, who needed to see that God was equally with Gentiles.  Instead, we weaponized the verses to create a binary which can very easily get off track and even cause significant destruction, distinguishing some as “in and loved” and others “out and damned”.

     Who moved away? We feel the distance of God not because God ever left, but because we have shut ourselves off.  Sometimes willingly, sometimes due to misunderstanding.  If God is Spirit, and we experience God when we open ourselves to God, we can very easily understand why we feel the absence of God when we are closed to God.  It also makes sense that when we open ourselves to God after a long time of being closed, it feels as if God has come back, come near.  But not because God ever moved.  God was simply welcomed back into our consciousness, our inner dialogue, our lives.

     Creation care.  When God is viewed as a “removed other” and we are viewed as totally depraved creation, we very naturally disregard creation – the planet itself and its inhabitants great and small.  Throw into the mix a horrible, non-metaphor-respecting approach to interpreting the book of Revelation that prophesies that God will destroy the earth and create a new heaven and earth, and a massive group of the Church no longer cares what we do with the planet because “it’s all going to burn anyway...”  A good friend of mine who I respect a lot shared a quote from highly influential now-retired mega church pastor, Rick Warren, regarding the COVID pandemic.  He said that we need to remember that we are all in God’s waiting room.  While hope is the obvious truth Warren wanted to communicate, there is an insidious dark side to the theology behind the statement.  Nothing happens in the waiting room except waiting.  And the waiting room has no value or purpose except to hold people until their appointment.  The ugly truth that the statement also communicates is that this place sucks and all we can do is wait.  I’m sorry, but that’s unbiblical nonsense that I am certain is insulting and offensive to God and in no way reflects the life, teaching, and mission of Jesus or the fullness of the Jewish tradition that formed him.

     Isms.  This rendering of God also sets up a framework that allows people with power to subjugate people with less power.  Women.  People from other races.  People with differing sexual orientation from the majority.  People with developmental disabilities.  People with less money, education, citizenship, etc.  It’s a long list of people who have been treated poorly by those who hold power.  I know people of faith who live with conventional theology who declare devotion to Jesus and at the same time diminish others based on any number of criteria.  

     Panentheism, which is deeply biblical, corrects the errant view that God is removed and that we and creation itself are totally depraved.  It states that God is deeply part of all creation, and is in a unique relationship with sentient beings, namely humans. Panentheism means that all is in God, and therefore God is in all.  While most of creation simply operates based on their design, human beings are afforded the capacity to be aware on the relationship between ourselves and God.  Jesus certainly recognized that God is a present Spirit everywhere when he spoke to a Samaritan woman at a well boldly declared that true worshippers worship in spirit and truth – not tied to a particular Temple (or religious tradition).  Immediately before Jesus began his public ministry, he endured a spiritual battle that forced him to come to grips with the internal egocentric forces that would demand allegiance and radically change his trajectory.  In another space, Jesus told his disciples that wherever two or more were gathered he would be present, and that he would somehow be with them even after his death, suggesting that there is relational interplay between each other and the divine.  He said that the Spirit would be a source of comfort and guidance after he died, which certainly came true.  The whole point of what we call the incarnation of Jesus is that God’s location was no longer to be understood as separate, but as deeply entwined in Jesus, and the same is possible for us.

     Far Reaching Implications. How might we live differently if we really believed that God was all around us and in us and in all others as well?  How might this radically shift us toward compassion toward all other human beings and creation itself? How might this change the way we think about worship and prayer, and how we speak about God?

Questions.

  1. How did you understand God’s location throughout your life?  How did the language of your prayers serve to shape your understanding – what does referring to God as “Heavenly Father” do to our placement of God?

  2. How have you been impacted by a theology that supports God’s separation from us?

  3. How were you taught about creation – was it damned or divine?  How was your view of creation supported (or not) by your religious influencers?

  4. How have you recognized the abuse of creation (physical earth or inhabitants) rooted in a view influenced by total depravity?

  5. What parts of panentheism resonate with you?  What parts are hard to integrate?

  6. How does panentheism affect the way you think about the impact of your life choices?

Evil, Suffering, and God

Note: You can view this teaching on our YouTube Channel.

We are in the middle of a series based on Tom Oord’s book, Open and Relational Theology.  Today we are going to talk about God’s power and control, which will quite naturally take us to the subject of evil and suffering as well. Should be a fun time.  But first, a brief recap.

     The first week we talked about the idea of God being open.  While we have a lot of popular language that affirms the idea that God is unchanging, which we tend to equate with unshakable strength that can be relied upon, the idea comes with some problems.  If God is unchanging, it means that the future is essentially fixed, which means we don’t have free will whatsoever.  It also means that God is in no way affected by creation – including us – which means praying to God for help is pointless because God will not be moved.  An open stance views things differently.  Because creation – including us – are not living predetermined lives, the future is open, not-yet-written, and therefore unknowable.  An open stance also allows God to be lovingly responsive to creation, which is an expression of change.  God’s essence is a constant, yet God’s experience is in related response to whatever creation is doing.  More like a jazz combo playing with-and-in-response to each other than a symphony playing notes written centuries ago.  Like a parent who loves their child but interacts and responds to them based on their developmental needs.

     The second week we talked about God being relational, that God is in dynamic relationship with all creation including humanity.  This means that God is affected by us and that God seeks to influence us as well. Most people who are reading this are comfortable with this idea of God, even though it does conflict with some major writers and thinkers from antiquity.  When people say they are spiritual but not religious, they are supporting the idea of a relational God.  The Bible is full of stories when they experience God being with them, nudging them, and responding to them.  I have experienced this personally and am confident that God really is at work in us and all creation, influencing everything without controlling anything, which brings us to our next topic.

     We humans have free will – more than any other creature given our level of conscious awareness.  Obviously, there are limitations to what we can choose.  Oord gave a lecture talking about our free will and pointed out that we cannot wake up one day and decide to be a chicken, or the President of the United States, or the reigning three-point shooting champion in the NBA.  Also, none of us are truly working with a blank canvas – we all have lots of layers of background that has shaped us into who we are, how we think, and therefore the choices that we will see and consider.  Oord, in another lecture, noted that Richard Dawkins once wrote that we have no free will because we are simply programmed to do everything that we do based on our genetic make-up.  Dawkins, however, as Oord points out, concluded his book encouraging everyone to choose wisely for their sake and the sake of the world...  Hmmm.  The voices suggesting that we do not have free will are waning.   For more on the logic regarding free will, read Oord’s chapter which we are looking at today (“Amipotence,”Open and Relational Theology).

·       God is loving.  God is referred to as being the very essence of love, and honors love above all.

·       God honors free will for every human being.  Let the fullness of what that means sink in.  Free will is directly tied to God being loving because love without free will isn’t loving.

·       God is the most powerful presence in the universe, yet God’s loving nature which drives everything God does including supporting free will means that God does not override free will, because it would no longer be free, and such a move would not reflect love even if it is painful.

·       God, being driven by love, is always nudging everyone and everything that is capable of choosing toward choices that reflect the best outcomes.  That’s what love does.  Yet God cannot force a decision from us – only influence us.

·       Beautiful things happen when we choose among the best options toward which God influences.  God therefore influences all that is good and beautiful in the world.

·       Not-so-beautiful things happen – even awful things – when we choose varying degrees of lesser options.  God therefore is not a party to the awful and evil things that happen in the world – these things are a result of a combination of choices that depart from the best options God always supports.

     This framework helps make sense of why evil exists in the world and why God does not appear to be doing anything about it. The truth is that God is always influencing toward the loving best, but those who have agency to respond choose otherwise.  God does not choose or allow evil – God loves and honors our freedom to choose, even if we choose so poorly that other people suffer.  God is present all the while, always loving, always supporting, even joining us in our suffering.

     This framework makes sense to me and makes sense of my take on how the world actually works.  This framework also describes my own life.  I can identify times when I have chosen the loving best and beautiful outcomes ensued, and I can remember times when I defiantly chose at times among the worst options which created pain and suffering.

     All of this means that my life and my choices matter – not just to and for me but for everyone and everything I influence (which is broader than I can imagine – same goes for you).  I can be aware of all the shaping forces that made me and influence my decisions.  To ignore or deny such forces is irresponsible, immature, and ultimately destructive.  I am 100% responsible for the choices I make.  Will I choose among the loving best that God continually nudges me toward, or will I be more apathetic and unconscious about my decisions, or worse, willfully choose the destructive path?

     The story of Joseph in the later chapters of the Bible’s book of Genesis is a great case study of this phenomenon – lots of people making choices that determine how the story unfolds, at times causing immense despair but also joy and hope.  By the way, the story isn’t simply about one brother among twelve.  It’s about a nation.  And it’s about us.  Take time to read the story with this framework in mind, wondering about what influences were present, what God was influencing, and what ensued.

     May you wake up and realize that you have always been influenced by many, many forces from the moment you were born.  May you also realize that God has been there with you all along, nudging you toward the loving best.  May you, with your eyes wide open, choose to follow the nudge of God.

 

Extras...

 

Conventional Views of God’s Power

·       God is in absolute control of everything.  You really don’t have free will, and everything is predestined.  This is John Calvin’s view and some local churches completely embrace and teach it. Why do bad things happen?  It’s all part of God’s plan, and once we see it we will all agree with God about it.  This is hard to swallow, but, if you really buy it, what choice do you have except to be glad you were one of the lucky ones to make the cut for heaven.  Keep your mouth shut to avoid problems.

·       God sometimes decides outcomes singlehandedly, but not very often.  Sometimes God nails it, sometimes God doesn’t.  It’s a crapshoot.

·       God exerts no power at all.  This is called deism and is reflected in Bette Midler’s song From a Distance. There is no relational love from God in this view, and no love, either.

·       God’s actions are radically unknowable.  God’s actions are totally incomprehensible – don’t even try!

 

 

St. Francis’ Prayer

Lord, make me an instrument of your peace:
where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
where there is sadness, joy. 

O divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console,
to be understood as to understand,
to be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive, 
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned, 
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
Amen.

 

For those who want the world to remain as it is have already acceded to its self-destruction and, consequently, betrayed the love of God and its restlessness before the status quo. – Dorothee Soelle, The Silent Cry: Mysticism and Resistance

God is Relational

Note: You can view this teaching on our YouTube Channel.

Last week we looked at the idea of God being open.  While we have a lot of popular language that affirms the idea that God is unchanging, which we tend to equate with unshakable strength that can be relied upon, the idea comes with some problems.  If God is unchanging, it means that the future is essentially fixed, which means we don’t have free will whatsoever.  It also means that God is in no way affected by creation – including us – which means praying to God for help is pointless because God will not be moved.  An open stance views things differently.  Because creation – including us – are not living predetermined lives, the future is open, not-yet-written, and therefore unknowable.  An open stance also allows God to be lovingly responsive to creation, which is an expression of change.  God’s essence is a constant, yet God’s experience is in related response to whatever creation is doing.  More like a jazz combo playing with-and-in-response to each other than a symphony playing notes written centuries ago.  Like a parent who loves their child but interacts and responds to them based on their developmental needs.

     This week we will consider the relational aspect of God.  

     Some people claim to experience God in such weird ways that I wonder what they may have been smoking prior to their experience. I’m not sure that is a God I am interested in being in relationship with, and definitely not if I have to get it through a substance.

     Some people claim to experience God in ways that affirm their ideologies that support hatred, violence, and injustice, to the point that they feel that God is endorsing them.  If God is like them, I don’t like God and don’t want to be in relationship with such a God.

     Some people claim to experience God in ways that just don’t add up with science.  If God is real and true, it seems that God would largely abide by the laws of nature that God apparently brought into being.  Frustrated by the lack of logic, some folks simply walk away from the pursuit of spirituality and faith altogether.

     Some voices from antiquity, like the Catholic theologian Thomas Aquinas and the Jewish theologian Maimonides suggest that God, being unchangeable/immutable, is not relational in any way whatsoever.  Most people nowadays don’t agree with them.

     As part of the name suggests, Open and Relational Theology supports that idea that God is relational, involved in a personal way with creation.  Evangelical pastors have promoted the idea of having a personal relationship with God – supporting this idea.  And yet the “personal” denotation has some downsides that need to be addressed.

     What do you think?  Is God relational?  Does this matter?

     The Bible is a collection of books that serve as the core documents representing the beliefs of ancient Jews and the earliest Christians.  These beliefs were in flux – not fixed – which is itself an encouragement for us to keep “fluxing”!  There are many accounts in these texts of people experiencing God relationally.  God apparently wanted to be known and discovered relationally rather than dropping a multi-volume written systematic theology on us.  Thank God for that! Here are just a few examples of when God was experienced relationally.

·       Adam and Eve experienced a graceful, loving, nurturing God after they ate the forbidden fruit.

·       Noah experienced a God who cared about creatures and the survival of humanity through the flood.

·       Abraham sensed God calling him to a new location, and along with it a new way of thinking about God.

·       Hagar experienced God as a loving, providing being who saw her in her despair after she was mistreated by Sarah and Abraham.

·       Jacob experienced God in a vision that helped him see that God was more interactive in creation than he could have imagined.

·       Moses experienced the presence of God in burning flame to call him to return to Egypt to demand freedom for Israelite slaves.

·       Elijah experienced God in silence when he was overwhelmed by the noise of his fear, and also learned that he was not as alone as he thought.

·       Jesus experienced a relational God as his baptism – the Holy Spirit descending on him like a dove (not an eagle!). During a solo retreat, Jesus experienced temptations to help him clarify who he was and what he would be about (he was going to be driven by his principles and not his passions, he would remember that he was following God and not telling God what to do, and that his goal was not personal power and glory but to simply follow God).

·       Peter experienced a vision from God that blew his mind and blew open the doors for Gentile inclusion.

·       Paul experienced a vision of Christ as a blinding light, transforming him from an enemy of Christians to their greatest champion.

     Christian history is littered with stories of people experiencing God relationally, showing up in all sorts of ways. Christian orthodoxy tried to make sense of it by inventing the idea of the Trinity and codifying it as a way to express the relationality of Godself.  Unfortunately, we went too literal with it and largely missed the point so much that other monotheistic traditions called us out for creating three Gods. Let’s remember that the Trinity was a metaphor that was meant to help, and that’s what it should remain.

     Far more than anything else, it has been my experiences with God that have kept me in the faith.  God has shown up at times to first open my eyes to God’s relational aspect.  God has shown up as grace and love when I felt like Adam and Eve.  God has shown up as encouragement as I have taken leaps of faith personally while leading the church at the same time.  God has shown up as affirmation when I have stood up for others. God has come alongside when I have felt weak and given me strength. God has been with me when I was convinced God should not, blowing away my binary mindset that would restrict God from gracing the unworthy with God’s presence. God has been a source of hope in the face of despair.  God has been a giver of a Merton-like unitive vision that only later I would be able to name as panentheism.

     For a lot of people of faith, the relational aspect of God is an easy sell.  For those who are on the skeptical side, I would encourage you to not be dissuaded by some of what you’ve heard that sounds like nonsense. It’s possible that for some of the stuff you’ve heard or been encouraged to believe that it is, in fact, nonsense!  And yet there are voices from the scientific community that are beginning to have fresh perspective on how connected everything is relationally.  In fact, the essence of creation is relationship at the smallest level we can see.  Perhaps this relationality is part of a greater whole that we call God?  Perhaps there are people just like you that can be instructive for you on this journey.  I would recommend a couple of titles that may be helpful in this regard.  Andrew M. Davis’ and Philip Clayton’s how I found GOD in everyone and everywhere is a wonderful collection of “testimonies” of discovering God from a wonderful range of people including scientists and spiritual leaders alike. Rob Bell’s What We Talk About When We Talk About God is also holding up well, in my opinion, for those who geek out on the science side of things.  Don’t give up – there is good reason not to believe in the God you don’t want to believe in, but what if much of that is erroneous constructs?  Maybe there is more to be discovered that you haven’t heard of.  It seems that the scientific mind is one of endless, humble curiosity – confident in what is known and yet open to what remains to be discovered.

     Oord provides a really cool metaphor about God’s relationship with creation that I found to be quite provocative and helpful in his book, Open and Relational Theology:

     Imagine an empty room large enough to seat five hundred people. Fifty people enter and space themselves at varying distances, in no particular order. 

     Bring to this room an enormous ball of string made of a single strand. Ask the fifty people to pass the ball among themselves in random order so everyone holds a point on the string. Eliminate slack. The result might look like a spider web or Native American dream catcher. 

     Now have one person in this interconnected web give a firm tug on the string. Ask others if they felt the tug. If the string is tight, dozens of people would feel at least something. If we added sensitive measuring devices, every point on this interconnected web would feel some movement.

     Now imagine someone capable of touching this string at every point on the web. This person could touch 100,000 points, maybe millions. If she had a sensitive touch, she could feel every vibration. 

     Only someone able to touch all points simultaneously could feel the full influence of the one tug. Of course, touching all points at once would require the toucher to be in all places. The only one capable of this amazing feat would be omnipresent. And the One who feels every movement would be the most influenced. 

     An omnipresent, relational God is the most moved of all.

     God is literally in touch with all of creation!  Aware of all that we are feeling at all times, everywhere.  God feels the tug from us when we find ourselves experiencing every kind of emotion and therefore is experiencing them with us.  How can God not be moved as one who is tied to absolutely everything and everyone?  Since we are all tied to God, we are, therefore, connected to each other.  Let your mind go for a while with the yarn ball image – it’s pretty amazing.

     Relationships are two-way streets.  Sometimes I wonder if we treat our faith more like a one-sided relationship where God may as well be a fence post or a journal, where we are saying everything that comes to mind and then leaving no time to listen or receive from God.  There are things that God wants to “say” to you – are you able to receive the message?  If you are receiving the messages, are you embracing them?  God speaks through all sorts of means – the Bible, community, circumstances, etc. – yet will be generally consistent with the mega themes found in sacred text.  God will not ask you to jump off a cliff (unless you are well equipped and are doing it for sport).  God will tell you that you are deeply loved (every day, in fact).  Do you have room to hear that you are loved by God?

     On that last note, be aware that we human beings have a tendency to believe that we were created in the image of God as is stated in Genesis, and then we turn it around and create God in our image. When left unchecked, we can create a God who supports us in our ugliest, least godly attitudes and behaviors, further justifying some of the worst evils ever deployed.  I still hear to this day justification of atrocities based in such thinking.  American Slavery and Manifest Destiny are a couple of beauties from American history, and it’s effect is still with us to this day.  The holocaust is another.  The crusades another.  And there are personal evils that are largely unspoken that are carried out every day.  I say this simply to remind us to beware of our tendency to create our own echo chambers and eventually conclude that God was endorsing us when God has been left out of the conversation.  Is your god a fence post or an alive and responding benevolent Being?

Open and Relational Theology: God is Open

Note: You can view this teaching on our YouTube Channel.

 Synopsis: Why does openness matter? If God is not open to an unknown future, then we have no true freedom as everything has been predetermined.  We are stuck on a ride we didn’t choose and can never get off. People use phrases that are based in predestination to explain things, to bring comfort: when people die it’s their appointed time; when people meet and fall in love it was God’s will that they meet then and there; accidents, bad medical diagnoses, etc. are often met with this type of language.  It does bring some level of comfort.  When we feel out of control, such words can make us feel secure.  “God is in control” brings a sigh of relief in the moment.  For many, over the long haul of life, the phrase loses its power, and we don’t really live like it’s true with all our dreaming, planning, deciding, etc. Deconstructing this aspect of faith will allow a new component to be appreciated in the reconstruction processes which can result in a more meaningful, purposeful, impactful life.

     Are you a sun worshipper?  Not the kind that refers to trying to get a tan, but in a religious sense, where you worship the sun as God.  Why or why not?  My guess is that you do not worship the sun as God because you are aware that the sun is a star and not a magical being that flies across the sky each day. This is related to the same reason why you don’t worship the moon.  Yet sun worship was not uncommon in antiquity, when they simply watched as a massive orb watchfully visited them each day.  More information and experience have freed us from such notions, which is a very good thing.

     This series on Open and Relational Theology based on Thomas Oord’s book by the same name is meant to introduce you to the life-changing ideas the subtitle suggests.  New ideas usually haven’t surfaced because older ideas dominate.  An older, conventional idea we will look at now is that of God as a being who does not change, and who also knows the future with great specificity.  The two issues are quite related, because only a God who does not change can possibly know a future that is certain. If the future changes, that requires a change on God’s part.  If God doesn’t change, neither can the future – it all must be known in advance.  Some folks are very comfortable with this, especially when they go through major shifts in their lives like falling in love, having a child, the death of a loved one, etc.  These are times when it can really feel like God is in control of every part of creation: all the timing had to work out to meet that someone special; more timing had to be right to get pregnant; and how many times have you heard that when a person dies, it was their time appointed by heaven? There is a certain level of security and comfort with this way of thinking.

     I wonder though, especially considering our moving into 2022, do you have any goals for the upcoming year?  Notice I didn’t say resolutions – nobody imagines keeping those, right?  But how about goals?  We all do, whether we can articulate them or not. To wake up another day. To survive. To get ahead.  To be healthier. To take care of some things we’ve been putting off.  To successfully go to the bathroom every day.  To wash your dishes and clothes as needed.  Eat.  Sleep. Binge some Netflix.  Goals.

     Note that if everything is already written – a requirement of a future that God already knows – what’s the point of any of our dreams and plans?  Some take this to heart and sort of give up on caring about the larger world around them and even some things close to home because they conclude that “what’s going to happen is going to happen.”  This is a resignation to a worldview that sometimes feels accurate, and yet might not be as airtight as is popularly taught.

     There are verses in the Bible where God appears to be “quoted” as saying that God does not change (such statements coming from the pens of prophets and poets and other biblical writers or groups).  A strong and popular modern view of the Bible asks us to believe that the Bible is without error and incapable of being wrong (at least the original copy which no longer exists – so helpful!).  This means that if we read in the Bible that God never changes, we should simply take it at face value. But what if that position itself doesn’t tell the whole story?

     We don’t have to go very far in the Bible to find an example of God changing.  Below is a lift out from the very familiar story of Adam, Eve, and forbidden fruit:

     The LORD God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden to till it and keep it. And the LORD God commanded the man, “You may freely eat of every tree of the garden; but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you shall die.” – Genesis 2:15-17 NRSV

     But the serpent said to the woman, “You will not die; for God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.” So when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise, she took of its fruit and ate; and she also gave some to her husband, who was with her, and he ate. Then the eyes of both were opened, and they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together and made loincloths for themselves.

     They heard the sound of the LORD God walking in the garden at the time of the evening breeze, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the LORD God among the trees of the garden. But the LORD God called to the man, and said to him, “Where are you?” He said, “I heard the sound of you in the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked; and I hid myself.” He said, “Who told you that you were naked? Have you eaten from the tree of which I commanded you not to eat?” The man said, “The woman whom you gave to be with me, she gave me fruit from the tree, and I ate.” Then the LORD God said to the woman, “What is this that you have done?” The woman said, “The serpent tricked me, and I ate.”

     The man named his wife Eve, because she was the mother of all living. And the LORD God made garments of skins for the man and for his wife, and clothed them.

     Then the LORD God said, “See, the man has become like one of us, knowing good and evil; and now, he might reach out his hand and take also from the tree of life, and eat, and live forever”— therefore the LORD God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from which he was taken. He drove out the man; and at the east of the garden of Eden he placed the cherubim, and a sword flaming and turning to guard the way to the tree of life. – Genesis 3:4-13, 20-24 NRSV

     Do you see how God changed?  In the instruction to Adam, God says that if he eats the forbidden fruit he shall die.  Pretty straight forward.  The tempter/test-your-mettle-antagonist suggests otherwise, Adam and Eve take a bite, and... nothing.  They are still very much alive, and very much aware that they are naked and for some reason feel ashamed about it.  Their innocence died, for sure, but they still had a pulse.  When God shows up to talk about it, God does not kill them on sight, but walks them through what it will mean for their future.  Life in the garden is dead and gone, but their lives will continue.  God changed God’s mind in favor of grace.

     This pattern shows up throughout the entirety of scripture: God threatening doom if people don’t change their ways, followed by God being merciful when they do.  This clearly provides an important truth: God is not fixed, but rather flexible depending on what we do.

     As Oord notes in his book, in describing how our relationship with God works, we may be better served with the metaphor of jazz than a fully written musical composition.  Especially for a jazz combo with just a few artists, the music is fluid as the artists respond back and forth to each other.  The chord structure and melody line is fully present, but is being expressed in the moment, never to be repeated exactly the same way.  Human relationships are like this, and it appears that this is how God is with us. God moves with us responsively.  We respond and/or react to God’s influence in our lives (wittingly and unwittingly), and God is affected by what we do as is clearly the case throughout the Bible.

     This raises an unsettling question: if God is responsive, changing based on what’s happening in creation, can we trust God?  What if God changes God’s mind about being loving or graceful?  Doesn’t introducing an open framework destroy the foundation for God’s faithfulness?

     Process philosophers and theologians helped solve this problem by distinguishing essence from experience.  Essence refers to core character, while experience refers to how that character is expressed.  With this in mind, we can see that God’s character of holiness, love, grace, etc. – God’s essence – remains unshakable.  For example, we don’t see any major themes in the Bible where God chooses to go off on a weekend bender causing major messes for our lives. How God’s essence plays out experientially is always in response to creation.

     Oord uses an analogy from parent-coaching his daughters about soccer.  In their earlier years, he interacted with them on the most basic levels of soccer skills because that’s the most they could handle.  Over time, as they grew in skill, Oord interacted with them at higher levels of play based on their capacity.  Oord’s love for his girls never changed, but his experience with them did, based on their capacity and responsiveness to him.

     So it is with God and creation.  God’s character remains solid and trustworthy, yet God’s expression of character is quite fluid, improvising along with the other members of the combo who are responding in like manner.  We can count on God’s character, and we can count on God’s response to be related to our own (but always based on who God is more than who we are).

     This is why we can feel comfortable saying that God does not know the future with great specificity without taking anything away from God.  This also takes God off the hook for a lot of things we blame God for. This also makes a lot of sense in our human experience.  The primary thing holding us back may be fear of violating some long held conventional ideas that should have been taken out of circulation a long time ago, but their “holy cow” status kept them intact.  If you feel anxious about dropping the conventional view of God as unchanging and therefore foreknowing, where is the angst coming from?  Intellectual argument? Or fear?  Personally, as I have shifted, fear has been a primary force keeping me tied to ideas that need to die.  As a pastor, I can say the same for many others – we are afraid to let go of the conventional because of the threats levied by those who maintain the conventional structures.  The threats are very real.  The fear is justified.  But the threat is not coming from God.

     God’s essence is reflected in the fruits of the Spirit – love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, gentleness, generosity, and self-control.  This is God’s core, God’s heart, God’s ultimate foundation, God’s goal, God’s way of being in the world.  Shalom is a single word-basket that incorporates and holds all the fruits of the Spirit.  God is represented by shalom, is necessarily driven to create and foster more shalom in the world and does so reflecting shalom.  Founded in shalom, toward shalom, with shalom.

     All of this has implications for our lives.  We’re not chess pieces on a game board.  We’re not robots.  Nothing is predetermined except that God’s essence and MO will not change.  What we do with our lives and with God is our choice, and our choices have consequences. What we do with our lives matters more than just to us.  Creation matters. God influences and responds to creation, which includes us.

     When we pray, when we choose to deepen our understanding, when we serve others, when we advocate for shalom, when we walk deeply with others in joy, grief, and the mundane, we have an effect.  Would you like to see more shalom in your life and in your world?  You can affect that.  You can trust that the qualities of shalom are rooted in God and that when you pursue shalom, God is with you, responding in ways we cannot fully comprehend and making the most of it.

     Therefore, as we enter 2022, be filled with great hope!  The foundation of God’s shalom is unshakable and can be trusted.  God’s desire to bring more shalom is well attested throughout history.  God’s responsiveness means that when we choose to embrace shalom in our prayers, learning, service, advocacy, and intimacy with others, we can count on more impact than we might expect.  Despite the gloom of COVID’s Omicron strain, have hope and get going.  There is no time to waste.  You, for your own life’s sake, would be greastly served by leaning into shalom as it comes with all the fruit of the Spirit!  And the world needs you to lean into shalom, trusting God’s responsiveness, because hope is bigger than despair. We are not alone, and we can make a difference.  The music is playing, and we have our lives as instruments to join in.  Let’s make some beautiful music together.

“God who began a good work in you will bring it to completion...”

Quotes and Thoughts from Chapter 2, Open:

     Making a difference: meditation and prayer, study, service, advocating for the Kingdom, and genuine friendship bring their effect on ourselves, God, and creation.  Your life and your decisions matter, and not just for you. We have agency.  While we can be victimized by others’ choices, we are not victims because we can make decisions.

     Oord asks, “is life more like a vinyl record, each groove cut, and all songs prerecorded? Or an extemporaneous jazz session whose musicians improvise, exploring uncharted motifs?...

     “To explain ‘open’ well is to talk about the flow of time and the openness of the future.  Open and relational theology says life is more like the jazz session. Nothing and no one – not even God – prerecords history. The future is open and yet to be determined. We’re all in process.”

     “Over forty times, biblical writers say God ‘repents.’ This doesn’t mean God turns from sin; it means God has a change of mind. The Lover of us All planned to do one thing but alters course to do something else in response to creation. A timeless God can’t alter course, but a Living Go can. Scripture passages saying God chooses mercy, responds to needs, and liberates the oppressed make little sense if God is timeless...

     “Conventional theologies portray God as timeless, so they can’t portray God as a relational actor. These theologies don’t fit the way God is portrayed in sacred scriptures. They don’t fit our experiences as living beings.  And they don’t fit the reality and ways of love.”

     On Foreknowledge: “God can only be certain about some future even if that future has already been settled, fixed, or complete. It doesn’t matter how it was settled. Maybe it was the atoms, [cultural conditioning], evolution, or fate. Or some combination of these. What matters is that the matter was somehow settle beforehand...  If God foreknows all with certainty, what we think is an open future must be closed. Instead of a realm of live options, the future must be complete, decided, and settled.  Instead of being able to make free decisions about life and love, we’re merely experiencing a simulation, like the Matrix. A settle future is inconsistent with our freely choosing...  Knowing doesn’t force anyone. Instead, God can only be certain about some future event if that future has already been settled, fixed, or complete. It doesn’t matter how it was settled.  The point: God can only be certain about a future event if it has already been determined.”

     If God changes, doesn’t that impact our confidence and require us to limit our faith? “The solution [to this problem] distinguishes God’s essence from God’s experience. God’s essence is eternally unchanging; it’s stable and steadfast. But God’s experience changes moment by moment; it’s flexible and forming. The divine experience is like the growing universe. It changes.  God is unchanging in one respect but changes in another.”

     “Although the steadfast love of God never ceases, Lamentations also says it’s ‘new every morning.’”

     “In sum: conventional theologies portray God as timeless, so they can’t portray God as a relational actor. These theologies don’t fit the way God is portrayed in sacred scriptures. They don’t fit our experiences as living beings. And they don’t fit the reality and ways of love. By contrast, an open and relational God experiences time’s flow.”

     What do we do with this?  Does the fact that God changes make God unreliable and untrustworthy?  No. “The solution distinguishes God’s essence from God’s experience. God’s essence is eternally unchanging; it’s stable and steadfast. But God’s experience changes moment by moment; it’s flexible and forming. The divine experience is like the growing universe. It changes. God is unchanging in one respect but changes in another... God has an everlastingly unchanging essence and an everlastingly changing experience.”

     Prayer.  If the future is essentially fixed, there is no point in praying.  Yet most people believe prayer has some effect on God and circumstances. An open view believes that what we pray makes a difference to God and creation.  Unanswered prayer: Go dis always influencing and influential but never controlling.  Note: most people already pray as if God is open and relational – why not make it official and name it as such?

Open Relational God: Introduction

Note: You can view this teaching on our YouTube Channel.

     Monica was raped. Jimmy struggles with the threat of hell. Rochelle questions the relevance of prayer.  Kyler and his husband, Gary, adopted baby girls and wonder what to teach them about God. Chad lost his wife, Jenny, to COVID-induced complications. I bet you really don’t need many more details about these stories to recognize that they represent very difficult questions about the character and nature of God.  Many of the answers coming from conventional theology have left some people wanting and others walking away from faithful pursuits entirely.  What questions have you struggled with?  How many times have you had to play the mystery card, giving God a pass on tough questions?

     The reason I want to teach about Open and Relational Theology is because I think it could be extraordinarily helpful for your life. It has for mine.  There are very big questions about life and God that conventional Christian theology struggles to answer satisfactorily, leaving many people feeling unsure about themselves and God and life.  Our paradigms matter because they help us make sense of the world.  How we see the world shapes our vision for everything.  In the Church, sometimes certain questions have not been encouraged or even welcome, sometimes they are discouraged because the very question appears to imply doubt. A robust faith does not shy away from challenging questions, it runs toward them, not as enemies to be fought and conquered but as a new vista to behold. We can only play the mystery card for so long before we lose confidence in our faith.  Another major reason why I want to teach this is because the way we see God and everything else deeply affects how we think about ourselves and our place in the world.  There are some really valuable aspects of conventional theology which obviously resonate with a lot of people, and yet parts of it have also contributed to some of the most horrific acts of humanity ever committed, even with God’s “blessing.”  If large-scale atrocities can be mitigated against with some new ways of thinking, this venture is worth it.  Yet our individual lives can be deeply impacted as well.  We human beings tend to create God in our image, and then return the favor.  Parts of conventional theology may work to shape us into jerks more than Jesus.  If that’s the case, change is worth looking into.

     Theology is not fixed.  While there are some central themes about the character and nature of God in the Bible, there is no single, complete systematic theology offered in its pages.  Theology – the study of God – has always been fluid, shaped by new discoveries, insights, and experiences over time.  When popular models of theology are challenged, there is always a mixture of rejoicing and backlash.  Jesus certainly experienced this as he offered new ways to think about God and life.  When you feel a little anxious as certain tenets of comfortable theological are challenged, remember that such feelings are normal when new ideas are floated.  And remember that the author and perfecter of the Christian faith, Jesus, chose to push the envelope, discovering and proclaiming a bigger God so that we could, too.

     Over the next several weeks we will examine some conventional ways of thinking and consider some new ways.  The key components we will examine include the following:

·      Open. Our lives are not written. God does not know the specifics of the future.  Everything may “happen for a reason”, but it’s not necessarily God’s will or something predetermined.  The future is open and undetermined.  It doesn’t imply a lack of interconnectedness – on the contrary, it respects and is dependent upon it.  When we really believe that God is open, we become more empowered, not less. This is different than conventional views.

·      Relational. God is deeply engaged with all of creation because God is in all parts of creation.  The relationship is a two-way street – we are always affected by God and God is always affected by us. This means God is altered in some ways by creation itself. This is different than conventional views.

·      Amipotent. God is the most powerful force anywhere and everywhere, yet God’s power is self-limited by God’s uncontrolling love and our subsequent freedom. This is different than conventional views.

·      Present. God is in everything and everyone everywhere all the time and therefore deeply present with us in every moment, every experience – we are never alone.  This is very familiar and welcome by most people even if it is a departure from conventional theology.

·      Loving. The nature of God is uncontrolling love which we really love for ourselves, but don’t love as much for others.  This means we have freedom to do as we please, but it also means other people do, too. No matter what, God’s love prevails.  This feel like it should be part of conventional theology, but it is not.

     Each week we will consider the above subjects with the help of some biblical examples of each concept and the writing of Tom Oord in his book, Open and Relational Theology. On Wednesdays at noon and 7:00 we will work through the questions at the end of each of the respective chapters, where you will also find a link to content from Oord himself – podcasts, lectures, interviews, etc.  

     This matters to me.  I teach this because it is home for me.  It’s not like I found myself swimming in ORT one Tuesday morning a few years ago.  Over (decades of) time I gradually began to question the conventional views that had shaped me and began wondering about what “more” there might be.  I believe I am one of a large, growing number of people who are on that adventure.  Oord’s books have helped give me words to express what I’m thinking, feeling, and experiencing.  His work has provided a well-reasoned-and-articulated framework that makes a lot of sense and enlivens my faith.  I want that for everyone.  I hope you’ll join me for the ongoing conversation.

 

 

Open My Eyes That I May See

Open my eyes that I may see

Glimpses of truth Thou hast for me

Place in my hands the wonderful key

That shall unclasp and set me free

 

Silently now I wait for Thee

Ready my God Thy will to see

Open my eyes illumine me

Spirit divine

 

Open my ears that I may hear

Voices of truth Thou sendest clear

And while the wave notes fall on my ear

Everything false will disappear

 

Open my mouth and let me bear

Gladly the warm truth everywhere

Open my heart and let me prepare

Love with Thy children thus to share

God With Us: Oh Holy, Silent Night

     How many Christmases have you celebrated?  My answer is the same as my age, approximately 44 if you round things down correctly.  Or 52.  Whatever. For some, it’s not the same as your age, especially if this Christian holiday wasn’t part of your family of origin’s tradition.  Maybe you grew up Jewish or Buddhist or Muslim or something else.  Maybe there was a time in your life – maybe it’s now – that you really struggled to celebrate this holiday for one or more of a variety of reasons.  Perhaps you can’t believe the whole virgin birth story.  Or Christianity in general given its checkered history of doing some wonderful things in the world while sometimes – even at the same time – doing or promoting or silently endorsing some truly horrific things.  Maybe you don’t have room for religion at all – it seems so out of step given the advances of science, and may feel irrelevant in our area where we have so much – why do we even need God?  Or maybe you’ve distanced yourself because of the commercialization of Christmas.  I understand that next year Wal-Mart will start selling Christmas trees mid-January with a Martin Luther King Jr. Weekend Sale!  That may not be accurate, but I bet someone is thinking about it...  Jim Gaffigan highlighted some of the surprising things that have come to be associated with Christmas during his comedy segment on CBS Sunday Morning – anything resonate with you?  I hope this Christmas you can let yourself take a deep breath and hit pause on all those concerns, if just for 36 hours.  Because there are some great, hopeful messages that the Christmas story offers.

     Jesus’ birth narrative and his subsequent ministry represented the breaking of a new dawn for humanity. Paradigms about the character, nature, and location of God were shattered.  Ideas about who God would honor with a visit were obliterated as an old couple of little societal importance was invited into the story, as was a very young woman and her fiancé, plus lowly shepherds watching sheep deep in the night, and even foreign, non-Jewish scholars who noticed a new star that was not meaningful to Jews but surely was to non-Jews.  All these characters were invited to wonder anew about God and how they made sense of the world.  More, this God invited them into the development of the storyline – this wasn’t something that was simply happening to them – they got to choose to engage or not.  This meant that they had inherent power and agency even to say no to God. It is hard for us to appreciate how significant all of this was back then because we take so much of it for granted now.

     The whopper game-changing stuff happened in and through Jesus, however.  While there is still debate about the veracity of the birth narratives, there is little debate about the impact of the man whose birth we celebrate.  Most people basically like the person of Jesus even if they can’t stand his Christian devotees!  Why? Because he was best known for showing love, kindness, and support for those in his world who rarely received such things.  Jesus was a voice of equality, equity, and inclusion long before civil rights movements were moving.  His accessibility, teaching, healing, choice of venues, language and style – all of it communicated the message that God loves everyone equally, fully, and irreducibly.  More, Jesus claimed that the Spirit of God was what was behind all the wonderous things about him, that the Spirit was in him.  Pretty hard to argue with given all for which Jesus was known.  He went further.  He told his disciples (and by extension everyone else) that the indwelling Spirit was available to everyone – and in fact was already in residence, ready to be awakened and activated.  To actualize this relationship with the divine within had such transformative power that for those who did so it was as if they had been born again.  Such an inherent, innate gift from God further strengthened the power of everyone’s equality – if God chose to inhabit everyone, what does that say about how God feels about everyone? The idea that God was not in heaven “up there” but everywhere – even in creation itself – was not particularly new.  But the idea that everyone is anointed with the Spirit of God was very new.  This is hard for us in our time to appreciate when we sort of assume it.  It wasn’t always that way.

     Following the guide of the Spirit paved the Way for everyone to follow that leads to an abundant life for all.  Life lived guided by the Spirit leads to the fruit of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, gentleness, and self-control – all the sorts of things that are the foundation of all the desires we have for life.  What dawned with Jesus’ birth and subsequent life was possibility, capacity, knowing that our foundation is love and so is our unshakable destination.  This is still big news, still blowing minds, still shattering paradigms.

     How might we choose to enter the story this year and allow our minds to be stretched, our hearts warmed with the news that God is as close as the manger, for all people.  How might that soften our gaze toward each other and ourselves?  How might that truly bring more joy to the world when together we choose to welcome the Christ child – not just two thousand years ago but tonight, in our own lives, to be born in us.  With such openness in mind, hear the story again as if for the first time:

     At that time the Roman emperor, Augustus, decreed that a census should be taken throughout the Roman Empire. (This was the first census taken when Quirinius was governor of Syria.) All returned to their own ancestral towns to register for this census. And because Joseph was a descendant of King David, he had to go to Bethlehem in Judea, David’s ancient home. He traveled there from the village of Nazareth in Galilee. He took with him Mary, to whom he was engaged, who was now expecting a child.

     And while they were there, the time came for her baby to be born. She gave birth to her firstborn son. She wrapped him snugly in strips of cloth and laid him in a manger, because there was no lodging available for them.

     That night there were shepherds staying in the fields nearby, guarding their flocks of sheep. Suddenly, an angel of the Lord appeared among them, and the radiance of the Lord’s glory surrounded them. They were terrified, but the angel reassured them. “Don’t be afraid!” he said. “I bring you good news that will bring great joy to all people. The Savior—yes, the Messiah, the Lord—has been born today in Bethlehem, the city of David! And you will recognize him by this sign: You will find a baby wrapped snugly in strips of cloth, lying in a manger.”

     Suddenly, the angel was joined by a vast host of others—the armies of heaven—praising God and saying,

“Glory to God in highest heaven and peace on earth to those with whom God is pleased.”

     When the angels had returned to heaven, the shepherds said to each other, “Let’s go to Bethlehem! Let’s see this thing that has happened, which the Lord has told us about.”

     They hurried to the village and found Mary and Joseph. And there was the baby, lying in the manger. After seeing him, the shepherds told everyone what had happened and what the angel had said to them about this child. All who heard the shepherds’ story were astonished, but Mary kept all these things in her heart and thought about them often. The shepherds went back to their flocks, glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen. It was just as the angel had told them. (Luke 2:1-20 NLT)

God With Us: So what? Now What?

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

     We began this Advent series recognizing that we human beings struggle with a tension when it comes to our understanding of God.  We resonate with paradigms, but with time discover that every construct/metaphor has its limits, and we move into mystery – this is the dance between the kataphatic and the apophatic traditions.  Part of this tension is on full display in the birth narratives of Jesus.  For the three centuries leading up to Jesus’ birth, people assumed that God was silent and distant.  If God were going to speak, God would do so through the expected channels – prophets, priests, and kings – and surely in the Temple.  The characters that paved the way for Jesus’ birth experienced God in unexpected ways.  On old couple long past child-bearing years is told they would be expecting.  They had to be on board for that to happen – they had to do their part for the child to be conceived: a “leap” of faith (keeping it clean here!).  Mary was also told that she would conceive, and that God would not be absent in the process but rather very much involved.  Her response was one of deep, reverent submission to the controversy that lie ahead.  Her fiancé, Joseph, was inclined to walk away from Mary given what he knew but was invited to trust that God was somehow in the process, and invited him to be, too – an act of deep, humble obedience.  The lowly shepherds in the field tending their flocks were the last to expect God to show up, especially with a choir of angelic warriors!  They were invited to be the first visitors of the newborn, and therefore the first messengers of his birth.  None of the characters expected God to show up in these ways.  None of them expected God to be so intimately involved, so present in their lives.  None of them could have imagined such invitations extended by God, either, yet they were.  Each character had to be open.  Each character had to have faith.  Each character had to embrace the invitation, or the story wouldn’t be what we remember today.

     I don’t think it was much different for Jesus, regardless of how you determine how he was conceived.  Even if much more, he was still flesh and blood, still human, still needing to be open, to have faith, to be able to perceive what he was being invited to embrace, and embrace it.  If we roll with the story, we would assume that he was more aware than most of how present God is in everyday life and would therefore have greater sensitivity to what God was doing in the world and in his life.  We should naturally expect him to have a leg up on most human beings given his faith-filled upbringing.  It makes sense that he would have greater insight, greater capacity to be a conduit for the Spirit, and greater flexibility since his origin story was such a mind-blower.  Identifying how incredible Jesus was is important. In the Christian tradition, identifying him as our pioneer and perfecter of our faith is central to how we perceive God.  But Jesus never taught that the point of his life was that we would simply come to utter a belief statement or ask for forgiveness so that we could go to heaven someday.  His whole agenda was to advance the Kingdom of God by modeling the Way of walking with God, of displaying what it meant to be incarnated with the presence of God, so that humanity would not simply believe in him intellectually, but to follow that Way.  The Way is radically different than the MO of the world, so much so that Jesus said it was like being born again.  It is a way of life that honors the incarnation in each of us, seeing ourselves and others as holy, worthy of dignity and respect, and seeks to live responsively to the flow of the Spirit of God that resides within each of us.

     Why would anyone do the hard work required to live according to the Kingdom of God, to walk in the Way of Jesus, the Way of faith, the Way of the flow of the Spirit?  Why bother?  Do you want more love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control in your life and in the world?  The Apostle Paul called these the fruit of the Spirit, byproducts of living life in response to the Spirit’s ever-active presence in and around us. What does the Way look like and how do we learn more about it?  Learn everything you can about how Jesus lived his life and emulate it.  If you are paying attention, you will realize that you will never outgrow it or come to the end of the depths of the Way as it gets deeper as we grow deeper.  It is as simple as following in the footsteps of Jesus, which is only difficult because it is so counter-intuitive and counter-cultural at times.  Yet it delivers on abundant life, meaning, hope – everything worth actually living for.  You are invited to live in God With Us.

     To recap, we need to be open to how we think about God because our constructs are helpful but also inherently limiting.  We need to be open to how God might interact in the world – God is everywhere, in everything, in us – this is the panentheistic view which replaces a more common dualistic view where God is separated from us.  Jesus grew into his understanding of being one with God and achieved it as much as humanly possible.  His prayer was that his followers experience the same, which means it is not only possible, but also the longing of God.  In order to experience the responsive, abundant life-in-the-Spirit like Jesus did, we need to follow his example, not simply believe in him.

Need a little inspiration? Listen to this song Voctave’s This Is My Wish. You’re welcome.

Questions to consider...

1.     How are you affected by the fact that Jesus prayed that you would be one with God as he was one with God, which means it is both possible and longed for by God?

2.     How have you already experienced this reality in part?  Are there areas of your life where you began to follow Jesus more closely and it resulted in some of the fruits of the Spirit showing up in your life?

3.     What areas of your life do you know you need some of the fruits of the Spirit sooner than later?  How can you follow Jesus more closely in that area of life?

4.     Who do you know that would appreciate this Good News?  How might you begin to share it with them in word and deed?

Resources to use for reflection...

Galatians 5:13-26 (MSG)

     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.

Philippians 2:1-15 (MSG)

     If you've gotten anything at all out of following Christ, if his love has made any difference in your life, if being in a community of the Spirit means anything to you, if you have a heart, if you care— then do me a favor: Agree with each other, love each other, be deep-spirited friends. Don't push your way to the front; don't sweet-talk your way to the top. Put yourself aside, and help others get ahead. Don't be obsessed with getting your own advantage. Forget yourselves long enough to lend a helping hand.

     Think of yourselves the way Christ Jesus thought of himself. He had equal status with God but didn't think so much of himself that he had to cling to the advantages of that status no matter what. Not at all. When the time came, he set aside the privileges of deity and took on the status of a slave, became human! Having become human, he stayed human. It was an incredibly humbling process. He didn't claim special privileges. Instead, he lived a selfless, obedient life and then died a selfless, obedient death—and the worst kind of death at that: a crucifixion.

     Because of that obedience, God lifted him high and honored him far beyond anyone or anything, ever, so that all created beings in heaven and on earth—even those long ago dead and buried—will bow in worship before this Jesus Christ and call out in praise that he is the Master of all, to the glorious honor of God the Father.

     What I'm getting at, friends, is that you should simply keep on doing what you've done from the beginning. When I was living among you, you lived in responsive obedience. Now that I'm separated from you, keep it up. Better yet, redouble your efforts. Be energetic in your life of salvation, reverent and sensitive before God. That energy is God's energy, an energy deep within you, God himself willing and working at what will give him the most pleasure.

Do everything readily and cheerfully—no bickering, no second-guessing allowed! Go out into the world uncorrupted, a breath of fresh air in this squalid and polluted society. Provide people with a glimpse of good living and of the living God. Carry the light-giving Message into the night.

Philippians 4:8-9 (NLT)

“Fix your thoughts on what is true, and honorable, and right, and pure, and lovely, and admirable. Think about things that are excellent and worthy of praise. Keep putting into practice all you learned and received from me—everything you heard from me and saw me doing. Then the God of peace will be with you.”

Annotated Lord’s Prayer

By Nadia Bolz-Weber

     Our Father, Our Mother, Our Holy Parent, The Source of All Being from whom we came and to whom we return, You who knows us better than we know ourselves. Jesus called you Abba and so shall we, even as we may have an ambiguous relationship with parenthood - Be to us our Holy Parent, the one who loves without condition. 

     Who art in heaven… Our Father who art in everything. Our Father who art in orphanages and neonatal units, and jail cells and luxury high-rises, who art in law offices and adult bookstores, and in rooms alone with suicidal people. Our Father who art in the halls of Congress and the halls of tenements. 

     Hallowed be thy name. Holy is your name.  Ever since the beginning we have attributed our own sin and ego and wishful thinking and greed and malice and racism and ambition and manipulations of others to you and to your name – and yet your name remains holy. We print “In God we trust” on the US dollar and then worship that dollar and the power that dollar brings us, and yet still, your name remains holy. 

     Thy kingdom come… God, right now we beg you to bring more than just a small measure of heaven to earth because, if you haven’t noticed, we are in the middle of a global pandemic and millions are sick and dying, not to mention, the Earth is on fire. It’s a mess down here Lord, so we need your Kingdom to speed the hell up. We need wise leaders, and just systems and an extra dose of compassion for all of us.

     Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven. Thy will and not ours be done. Forgive us when we use prayer as a self-help technique by which we can get all the cash and prizes we want out of your divine vending machine if we just kind of bug you to death through ceaseless prayer, because when it comes down to it, we know better. You are our Father whose name is holy and whose love is boundless and who wants, as our holy Parent, to hear our prayers.

     Give us today our daily bread. Give us today our daily bread, our daily naan, our daily tortillas, our daily rice. Lord, give us real bread, even when we keep reaching for those literal and metaphorical Krispy Kremes. Give us the gift of enough-ness. May our response to perceived scarcity always be increased generosity for we are your children and from you we receive everything. Give us today our desire for the neighbor to be fed. Give us today a desire for a good that is held in common.

     And forgive us our sins. As we forgive those who sin against us. Forgive us when we hate what you love. Forgive us when we would rather anesthetize ourselves than feel anything. Forgive us for how much we resent in others the same things we hate in ourselves Forgive us for the terrible things we think about our own bodies, bodies you have made in your image. Forgive us for thinking we know the hearts of our enemies. 

     And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Deliver us from the inclination that we too do not have evil in our hearts. Deliver us from religious and national exceptionalism. Deliver us from addiction and depression. Deliver us from self-loathing. Deliver us from self- righteousness. Deliver us from high fructose corn syrup. Deliver us from a complete lack of imagination about where you are in our lives and how you might already be showing up. Deliver us from complacency. Deliver us from Complicity. As Jesus taught us, we are throwing this bag of prayers at your door. We are not asking nicely, Lord. We are your children and we are claiming your promises as our own today. Some of us are holding your feet to the fire, some of us don’t know if we believe in you, some of us are distracted and just going through the motions, some are desperately in love with you.... but all of us are your children. Use these prayers to hammer us all into vessels that can accept the answer when it comes (Fred Craddock). 

     For Thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever and ever. 

     And the children of God say, AMEN. 

St. Patrick’s Breastplate Prayer Song/Video:

Christ with me
Christ before me, Christ behind me, Christ in me

Christ beneath me, Christ above me
Christ on my right, Christ on my left
Christ when I lie down, Christ when I sit down, Christ when I arise
Christ in the heart of every man who thinks of me
Christ in the mouth of everyone who speaks of me
Christ in every eye that sees me
Christ in every ear that hears me

God With Us: Word. Jesus. Christ.

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

Some problems take time to sort out, some issues take a while to resolve.  If we are lifelong learners, we can be confident that as we come to grips with new information and as our perspective changes with maturity, we will forever be in process.  The process seems to be one where we construct ways of thinking, eventually deconstruct them as necessary given new information and experience, and reconstruct our paradigms based on the process we’ve undergone.  We enjoy our newly constructed schema for a while until – uh oh – we are introduced to new information and experiences that start the process all over again.  This has been called “the perennial tradition” by Richard Rohr and others, and I think it’s accurate.

     My understanding of Jesus has gone through several rounds of this process. I am very familiar with the range of perspectives about Jesus – kind of important for a Christian pastor.  Earlier in my life I simply accepted the birth narratives as literal fact.  In time I heard about scholars who challenged the virgin birth, but I dismissed them because it seemed like they were challenging the authority of scripture as reliable and true, and therefore they were suspect and probably heretics as far as I was concerned.  Over time and with more study, however, I began to understand the Bible differently – its own series of the perennial process – and had room to entertain the ideas I had previously rejected.  We generally don’t have Eureka moments where we shift from one perspective immediately to another – major shifts take time because that level of change is very complex.  Today I want to tell you how I understand Jesus this Christmas, knowing that in time this will change if I am open to new information and experience.  Before I begin, I want to assure you of two things that I generally get questioned about: the Bible and Jesus.  While I do not believe the Bible to be inerrant or infallible – these more modern concepts were foreign to Jesus and Paul and the entire rabbinical tradition and therefore should be challenged – I absolutely engage the Bible as sacred text.  For Christians it remains our primary text to understand first the development of Judaism, and how the first followers of Jesus thought and lived so that we can think and live faithfully today.  But because I don’t ascribe to the Fundamental/Evangelical doctrine of the Bible, I sometimes get dismissed as not teaching the Bible.  I have been a pastor for over 26 years.  I earned my doctorate studying the soteriology based on the Gospel of John.  Between Sunday sermons, memorial services, weddings, and other special events, I have offered over 1500 original teachings, each averaging 16-20 hours of research and preparation. I don’t repeat a teaching.  With literally only a handful of exceptions when I may have given a talk on another religious tradition, I have taught strictly from the Bible, even when offering a series that dovetails with a book.  I am a Bible-teaching pastor.  If anybody doubts it, they are welcome to view hundreds of hours of teachings on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel to try to prove me wrong.  If you can do so, I will buy you an ice cream cone from McDonalds.  As far as Jesus goes, I chose to follow in his footsteps at age 10, had a profound experience of the Holy Spirit at age 15 which amped up my relationship with God exponentially, sensed a call to become a pastor the summer before my Sophomore year of High School, had another dramatic experience of the Holy Spirit in college which further refined my faith and passion, and have remained an ordained pastor since July 23, 1995.  My commitment to following the Way of Jesus has never been stronger or deeper.  I will go to my grave proclaiming my faith even if that proclamation leads to the grave.  I say these things because I do not agree with some classic views of Jesus that developed hundreds of years after his ministry that stuck for various reasons, or some newer revisions over the last few hundred years that have also gained traction.  What I have resonated with more and more has been the original Jesus and those who experienced the power of his Gospel over the centuries.  Many who challenged orthodoxy when it went against the grain of Jesus were silenced or killed. What I believe may be new to some of you, but it is not new.

     Jesus was born and raised by Mary and Joseph. Was there divine intervention of some sort?  Of course. Does that mean that Jesus was born of a virgin Mary?  Not necessarily.  Such a birth does not need to be literally true in my understanding.  Could it be?  Who am I to say?  Yet I join the likes of Marcus Borg and N.T. Wright (and many others) stating that my faith is not deeply shaped by the birth narratives.  At minimum, Matthew and Luke’s authors were signaling to the readers that God was up to something in Jesus’ birth, and it required the cooperation of both Mary and Joseph to pull it off – that’s a powerful message to proclaim.  Jesus grew up and when he was in later adulthood for his time, he began his public ministry for which he is best known.

     What was so special about Jesus is his relationship with God and his modeling of faith that allowed the Spirit to have full sway over his life as much as possible.  It was this responsiveness to the Spirit that gave him insights that blew people’s minds about the scope of God’s expansive love, gave a new view of scripture, gave him power and courage to challenge political and religious authorities, allowed him to be a conduit of healing and forgiveness from the Spirit in unprecedented ways, allowed him to silently resist torture and death as a form of peaceful protest, and opened his followers’ eyes to his life after death.  There has never been another who opened the Spirit of God to others like Jesus did. Therefore he is called Christ, or Messiah – we’ve never seen one so anointed as we have in Jesus.  His life, death, and teachings opened the door for everyone else to welcome the Spirit into their lives as well and respond in similar ways toward similar ends.  Jesus was the great witness to what living in fully open relationship with God looked like.  This was very new. It marked a shift in consciousness that was not lost on his closest followers who learned the way and followed.  He certainly validated his title of Christ, and his birthday is surely worth celebrating.

     But I don’t think Jesus wanted to be worshipped as God.  He said as much during his life.  What is difficult for his original audience as well as today’s is differentiating where the physical Jesus ends, and the infusion of the Spirit begins.  There are statements that Jesus made that surely seem to reflect a first century context more than an eternally benevolent God – so there are moments of distinction on that note.  While an easy and honest mistake, I wonder if contemporary Christianity is guilty of Jesusolatry – worshipping Jesus instead of the God who inhabited him.

     This rendering of Jesus takes nothing away from him as far as I am concerned.  He is still special and deserving of allegiance.  One massive benefit of viewing Jesus in this way is that it makes his final prayer attainable – his dying wish that his disciples would be one with God just like he was.  If such union required a virgin birth, we’re all screwed!  If, however, what Jesus was getting at was that what he experienced was available to all people, then that means it is actually possible.  That is incredibly powerful news.  I can celebrate Jesus and worship God.  And, because Jesus was so inhabited, infused, open, and welcoming of the Spirit of God, I think we can still say that when we see Jesus, we see the face of God.  No demigod required. More, it means that we human beings can actualize the Spirit similarly, experiencing and exemplifying the presence of God incarnate, becoming united as one, as much as we are able, for the restoration of ourselves and the world in which we live.  May it be so.  May we do our part to be the answer to Jesus’ last prayer.

Some questions to process...

1.     How were you introduced to the historical person of Jesus?  Was he framed as a fully human and fully God character unlike any other human being in history, therefore making him sinless which paved the way for his death on the cross to become a final sacrifice for the forgiveness of sins so that we would be welcome in heaven one day (if we consciously accept the offer of forgiveness)? Or was he framed as just a human being, a Jewish reformer who spoke into his context in ways that so rattled those in political and religious authority that he and his threat were eliminated?

2.     The idea of a demigod was anathema to Jewish theology even if it was welcome and common in Roman and Greek mythology. If Jesus was a demigod, does this mean God went against Godself? If Jesus was not a demigod, how does that impact our view of who is was, what he had to say and do, and why he mattered?

3.     “Christ” isn’t Jesus’ last name, but a denotation that something especially God-anointed was happening in him.  It also may mean that we rethink the nature of Jesus and Christ as separate statements.  How does that mess with you?

4.     What if Christ is the eternal presence of God that is everywhere, in everyone, in every part of creation?  What does that mean for how you see yourself?  All other people? Creation?

Other Stuff to Consider…

Selections from John’s Prologue; Colossians 1:15-20 (NLT)

In the beginning the Word/Blueprint/Way already existed.

The Word/Blueprint/Way was with God,

and the Word/Blueprint/Way was God.

[Love] existed in the beginning with God.

God created everything through [Love]

and nothing was created except through [Love].

The Word/Blueprint/Way gave life to everything that was created,

and [Love’s] life brought light to everyone.

The Light/Love shines in the darkness,

and the darkness can never extinguish it.

The one who is the True Light,

who gives Light to everyone,

was coming into the world.

 

 

Christ/Love Incarnate is the visible image of the invisible God.

Love existed before anything was created & is supreme over all creation,

for through Love God created everything

in the heavenly realms and on earth.

Love 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 Love and for Love.

Love existed before anything else,

and Love holds all creation together.

Christ is also the head of the church,

which is Love’s body.

Love is the beginning,

supreme over all who rise from the dead.

So Love is first in everything.

For God in all Love’s fullness

was pleased to live in Christ,

and through Love God reconciled

everything to Godself.

God made peace with everything in heaven and on earth

by means of Love’s/Christ’s emptying/blood on the cross.

St. Patrick’s Breastplate Prayer: 

Christ with me
Christ before me, Christ behind me, Christ in me

Christ beneath me, Christ above me
Christ on my right, Christ on my left
Christ when I lie down, Christ when I sit down, Christ when I arise
Christ in the heart of every man who thinks of me
Christ in the mouth of everyone who speaks of me
Christ in every eye that sees me
Christ in every ear that hears me

Selected Sayings of Jesus from the Gospel of John*

     “Anyone who drinks this water will soon become thirsty again. But those who drink the water I give will never be thirsty again. It becomes a fresh, bubbling spring within them, giving them eternal life... The time is coming—indeed it’s here now—when true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and in truth. The Father is looking for those who will worship him that way. For God is Spirit, so those who worship him must worship in spirit and in truth...

     “I have a kind of food you know nothing about... My nourishment comes from doing the will of God, who sent me, and from finishing his work.”

     “I tell you the truth, the Son can do nothing by himself. He does only what he sees the Father doing. Whatever the Father does, the Son also does... I tell you the truth, those who listen to my message and believe in God who sent me have eternal life. They will never be condemned for their sins, but they have already passed from death into life.”

     “Anyone who is thirsty may come to me! Anyone who believes in me may come and drink! For the Scriptures declare, ‘Rivers of living water will flow from his heart.’”

     “I am the light of the world. If you follow me, you won’t have to walk in darkness, because you will have the light that leads to life.”

     “You are truly my disciples if you remain faithful to my teachings. And you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”

     “I am the resurrection and the life. Anyone who believes in me will live, even after dying. Everyone who lives in me and believes in me will never ever die.”

     “I am giving you a new commandment: Love each other. Just as I have loved you, you should love each other. Your love for one another will prove to the world that you are my disciples.”

     “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!’”

     “I have loved you even as the Father has loved me. Remain in my love. When you obey my commandments, you remain in my love, just as I obey my Father’s commandments and remain in his love. I have told you these things so that you will be filled with my joy. Yes, your joy will overflow! This is my commandment: Love each other in the same way I have loved you. There is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. You are my friends if you do what I command. I no longer call you slaves, because a master doesn’t confide in his slaves. Now you are my friends, since I have told you everything the Father told me. You didn’t choose me. I chose you. I appointed you to go and produce lasting fruit, so that the Father will give you whatever you ask for, using my name. This is my command: Love each other.

     “And this is the way to have eternal life—to know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, the one you sent to earth... “I have given them the glory you gave me, so they may be one as we are one. I am in them and you are in me. May they experience such perfect unity that the world will know that you sent me and that you love them as much as you love me.

*Jn 4:13-14, 23-24, 32, 34; 5:19, 24; 7:37-38; 8:12, 31-32; 11:25-26; 13:34-35; 14:6-7; 15:9-17; 17:3, 17-23 (NLT)

 Who Is Christ? By Richard Rohr (Meditation 12/2/2018)

     What if we’ve missed the point of who Christ is, what Christ is, and where Christ is? I believe that a Christian is simply one who has learned to see Christ everywhere. Understanding the Universal or Cosmic Christ can change the way we relate to creation, to other religions, to other people, to ourselves, and to God. Knowing and experiencing this Christ can bring about a major shift in consciousness. Like Saul’s experience on the road to Damascus (see Acts 9), we won’t be the same after encountering the Risen Christ.

     The Universal Christ is present in both Scripture and Tradition, and the concept has been understood by many mystics, though not as a focus of mainline Christianity. (See John 1:1-5, Colossians 1:15-20, Ephesians 1:9-12 if you think this is some new idea.) We just didn’t have the eyes to see it.

     The Universal Christ is Divine Presence pervading all of creation since the very beginning. My father Francis of Assisi (1181–1226) intuited this presence and lived his life in awareness of it. Later, John Duns Scotus (1266–1308) put this intuition into philosophical form. For Duns Scotus, the Christ Mystery was the blueprint of reality from the very start (John 1:1). Teilhard de Chardin (1881–1955) brought this insight into our modern world.

     God’s first “idea” was to become manifest—to pour out divine, infinite love into finite, visible forms. The “Big Bang” is now our scientific name for that first idea; and “Christ” is our Christian theological name. Both are about love and beauty exploding outward in all directions. Creation is indeed the Body of God!

     In Jesus, this eternal omnipresence had a precise, concrete, and personal referent. God’s presence became more obvious and believable in the world. The formless took on form in someone we could “hear, see, and touch” (1 John 1:1), making God easier to love.

     But it seems we so fell in love with this personal interface in Jesus that we forgot about the eternal Christ, the Body of God, which is all of creation, which is really the “First Bible.” Jesus and Christ are not exactly the same. In the early Christian era, only a few Eastern Fathers (such as Origen of Alexandria and Maximus the Confessor) noticed that the Christ was clearly historically older, larger, and different than Jesus himself. They mystically saw that Jesus is the union of human and divine in space and time; Christ is the eternal union of matter and Spirit from the beginning of time.

     When we believe in Jesus Christ, we’re believing in something much bigger than the historical incarnation that we call Jesus. Jesus is the visible map. The entire sweep of the meaning of the Anointed One, the Christ, includes us and includes all of creation since the beginning of time (see Romans 1:20). This Advent, let us wait in anticipation for the eternally coming Christ.

God With Us: Where, Exactly?

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

     The backdrop of the Christmas story is despair.  The few hundred years before Jesus was born was considered to be a time when God was silent. No new words from God spoken through prophets were being announced or published.  The state of Israel suggested that God had left the building: foreign oppressors ruled over them in their own land, and their Temple was in ruins until a bit before Jesus was born.  Even then, the Jewish tradition was tolerated more than celebrated.  The recitation of psalms and prayers and sacrifices seemed to fall flat, words of exasperation falling on deaf ears.

     And yet it was a time when the desperation of people was rising to fever pitch.  Some thought that God would act like God again (think Moses and the Exodus) if the people themselves would just show some faith and follow a leader courageous enough to sound a rallying cry.  Many did rise, faith-claiming the role of messiah, the anointed one of God who would be God’s agent to bring about the restoration they hoped for.  One by one those wannabe messiahs met their death at the hands of Rome.

     There was unrest.  There was despair.  There was crying out to God.  There was silence.  Where was God?

     Part of the brilliance of the stories surrounding Jesus’ birth are the inclusion of God showing up in surprising ways.  An old, childless couple long past child-bearing years is told that they could expect a bun in the oven very soon, and they were to name the child John.  In good male fashion, Zechariah offered solid “mansplaining” to the angel Gabriel, suggesting that this would be impossible due to their old age, and also that the kid would be named Zechariah, Jr.. Gabriel then did to Zechariah what women everywhere across all time have longed to do: he hit the mute button on Zech.  Nine months of peace and quiet surely helped Elizabeth enjoy her pregnancy!  Everybody wondered if God was up to something with them, and their suspicions were realized when, after the baby was born, Elizabeth named him John (to the shock of all), only to have Zechariah confirm it (at which point the mute button was turned off).  God was not distant, inactive, or silent.  God showed up.

     The birth narrative of Jesus is also incredible.  Instead of a highly respected elderly couple unexpectedly becoming new parents, the story of Jesus’ beginning starts from the other end of the spectrum.  Mary and Joseph are dirt poor.  They are engaged – likely a marriage arranged for some time – but aren’t together yet until Joseph can provide for her.  That could take a while since Joseph is a carpenter – not a high paying job, not much respect.  Their engagement was legally binding even if they weren’t allowed to consummate the marriage.  This is where the scandal comes in.  Mary is visited by Gabriel and told that she is going to get pregnant via the Holy Spirit – that her coming pregnancy would be anointed by God somehow – and that the child she would bear would be the messiah of God.  She visits her relative Elizabeth – now six months pregnant – and Elizabeth confirms that Mary must be telling the truth since baby John did a lot of kicking as soon as Mary showed up.  Or was it the spicy tacos she just ate?  Of course, getting pregnant out of wedlock – and not from your fiancé – is generally not ideal and caused a lot of problems with Joseph, their families, and their neighbors.  Who would believe such a thing?  One thing Mary (and eventually Joseph) learned was that God was not distant, but near.  God was not silent but speaking.  God was not inactive, but deeply involved.

     The night of Jesus’ birth, another set of undervalued people received a heavenly birth announcement.  Sometime later, astrologers from a distant land noticed a star that communicated to them that a new king was born and made the very long journey to pay homage.  The graveyard-shift shepherds under the stars that night found out that God was very much present – and with a massive heavenly host that could sing harmony – and that this God valued them despite their lowly state.  The astronomers discovered that God spanned vast distances of geography and was also willing to speak another religious language to communicate to them.  Not long after Jesus was born, more stories all along the same theme emerge – God is with us, right here, right now.

     If you have ever been in a place of despair, certain that God is not present, this comes as very comforting news.  Or not.  After all, God showed up for these few people while who knows how many people were still in the dark where all the anxiety gets stoked.  Perhaps there is more we need to consider.

     From what we have learned from the writings of antiquity around the time Jesus was born, the dominant theological framework revolved around theism, where God (or the gods) ruled the earth “down here” from the heavens “up there.”  There were certainly variations and nuances and different interpretations about what this all meant, but most people looked at the world through this faith lens.  The Jewish people believed God was very powerful, yet apparently not always willing to lend a hand.  Most of the time, when there was hardship, the assumption was that humanity had done something to offend God, explaining God’s lack of concern, which had to be appeased before God would act.  Lots of animals and a few people were sacrificed to that end.  Sound a little silly?  Yep.  Primitive, even? Yes.  And yet many people still hold the same view today even if we don’t think about sacrificing sheep or cows or people anymore.  Perhaps there is another way to think about God that makes more sense...

     The opposite of theism (where God is separate from creation) is pantheism (where everything is God).  In this view, I’m God, the trees are God, the rocks are God, the mailbox, the dog poop, the squirrels, everything (except cats – there’s no way cats are gods even though they act like they are).  Some folks resonate with this, but it tends to dilute God so much that God becomes so commonplace as to become irrelevant.  The Jewish and Christian scriptures, by the way, reject the notion of pantheism.  

     Another view that has been around forever and has been enjoying a rebound of sort for the last hundred years or so is panentheism, which literally translates “everything in God” and, by extension, God is in everything.  God, the animator, energizer, lover, restorer, renewer, redeemer, etc., is present all the time, everywhere, at work in everything.  God is never distant – and cannot be – because God is in everything.  God cannot be silent or inactive or unredeeming or unloving or uncreative or unrestoring or... because God remains God in everything. If this is true, it means that when we experience periods when God seems silent or distant, it may have more to do with our awareness, perspective, and perception than anything else.  Surely this was not entirely lost on people of antiquity.  There are too many experiences that are shared by humanity that support this idea even if we don’t know how to express it.  The feeling of joy and hope and love at the sight of a newborn child or animal.  The wonder of Spring, the fullness of Summer, the shift of Fall and the dead of Winter. Love.  Joy.  The majesty of creation.  Friendship. Solidarity.  The peace and calm that accompanies deep meditation and contemplation.  There are just so many instances and experiences where, upon reflection, we might say to ourselves, “I think there is more going on here than flesh and blood” (not to minimize flesh and blood which are also incredible examples of God’s presence). 

     Part of our hesitancy to embrace such an idea is that the dominant way of thinking remains stuck in theism, where we humans are not good and creation itself is doomed for destruction because it isn’t good, either.  Yet this runs counter to the very first utterances in our scared text, where everything is good and even very good, with God speaking it all into being.  The concept of the fall of man – which was not the original interpretation of the Adam, Eve, and Apple story – went too far, building on Paul’s work for a different purpose and becoming its own monster, giving license for people in power to wield it over those below them.  Theism needs to go.  It doesn’t reflect God well and does little to help us move forward into greater maturity.

     Next week we will look at Jesus and consider how he actually lived more from a panentheistic framework than a theistic one.  For now, take some time and wonder how it might be true that the presence of God is all around you and even in you.  God is neither distant nor silent.  Can you sense God?  Can you hear God?  Maybe we are all like Elijah, assuming God will show up only in the limited places we are looking.  Maybe we are all like the characters in the birth narrative of Jesus – feeling like we’ve been left behind only to discover that God is fully with us all the time if we’ll learn to have eyes to see.

In the live teaching I again featured Dr. Andrew M. Davis. Check out his book of spiritual memoirs from some well-known voices, How I Found God in Everyone and Everywhere - it will inspire!

God With Us: Let the Adventure Continue

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

How many Christmases have you lived through?  How has the meaning of Christmas changed for you over the course of your life? As we enter into another season of Advent (the waiting and anticipating of the birth of Jesus), what does it mean to you?

     Sometimes we get locked into a particular way of thinking about things.  That’s not a bad thing.  We need to know where our firm places are to stand.  When we land on what feels like good footing, we feel stable, confident, and able to build.  The problem sometimes comes when we don’t allow ourselves to wonder if there are other footings that may help us build in other ways.  Building on images of God for our spirituality and theology is wonderfully human and good.  This is called the kataphatic tradition.  Sometimes we get so limited by the images of God that we come to realize that no image is adequate, and we resort to not welcoming any images since they will be immediately limiting.  This is called the apophatic tradition.  These two traditions work together, of course, since they are opposites of one another. 

     The question is, how are you employing each tradition this Christmas season?  What images add to the richness of this time?  What images have you chosen to not employ as much?  How has the apophatic side allowed you to embrace more mystery in this season?

     Before we jump into the full Christmas story, I think it wise to spend some time determining where we’re “at”.  I know for fact that we are much less able to learn anything new until we identify what we know.  I hope this season will be wonderfully stretchy for you, which is a deeply embedded yet often neglected aspect of our faith tradition.  There is more to learn, more to imagine, more to write – this is a key part of the biblical tradition. The biblical narrative which includes the formation of the Jewish people all the way through Jesus and the early days of the church gives witness to the evolution of thought over many centuries.  The collective people of faith are still evolving.  Are you? Are we?

     Let the Advent-ure continue...

2021 Thanksgiving

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

This Thanksgiving, I offer three resources for you that I hope will help you experience a deeper, more reflective, and theologically rich time of gratitude.  Reading one or both of the writings below might be a great addition to include during your dinner.  And I hope this video featuring scholar and writer Diana Butler Bass will help you rethink what gratitude is really all about for you this season. Or, if you’re coming unglued, maybe this video will help. – Pete

 

A Brief Theology of Thanksgiving

The SALTProject.org Team 

I. Origins

     With apologies to the Pilgrims, the origins of the Thanksgiving holiday in the United States are more complicated than most people think. Was the first Thanksgiving meal in present-day Massachusetts, complete with buckled, wide-brimmed hats, in 1621? Or was it an English celebration (different hats!) on the shores of Virginia, in 1619? Or how about a Spanish gathering in what became Texas, in 1598 — or Florida, in 1565?

     The reasons for those celebrations varied, of course. The English colonists in Virginia, for example, declared the day a commemoration of their arrival, thanking God for safe passage across a forbidding ocean; likewise, the Spanish explorers thanked God for survival. On the other hand, after a 1637 massacre of Native Americans, the governor of Plymouth wrote that Thanksgiving Days would be “in honor of the bloody victory.” In 1789, President George Washington declared a national Day of Thanksgiving to thank God for the birth of a new nation. And the current annual date in late November — which is far too late, after all, for a “harvest festival” in New England! — wasn’t established until Abraham Lincoln’s declaration in 1863, explicitly giving thanks for the Union’s military efforts in the Civil War.

II. Thanksgiving Today. 

     So the holiday we inherit is a complex, morally ambivalent amalgam of different kinds of gratitude: for good harvest, for safe passage, for colonial conquest, for military victory. All of which only sharpens the question, How will we celebrate Thanksgiving today?

Remembering this history of immigration and cross-cultural connection and conflict, we may give thanks for the dazzling diversity of this land, including and especially Native American communities. Giving thanks in this way, our gratitude can spur us to reach out and work together to create a more just and equitable world.

     Likewise, remembering the holiday’s links to war, we may give thanks for times of peace: in our hearts, homes, neighborhoods, and between nations. Remembering the holiday’s links to creation, we may give thanks for that nourishing abundance. Here, too, our gratitude can serve as inspiration to redouble our efforts to be genuine peacemakers, serve the hungry in our neighborhoods, and care for God’s good Earth, all creatures great and small.

III. The Difference Gratitude Makes

     But there’s perhaps no better day than Thanksgiving to reflect on the astounding power of gratitude itself — and accordingly, to commit ourselves to cultivating it more intentionally in the coming year.  

     If we think of “gratitude” primarily as a kind of duty to discharge (Now remember to write that thank-you note!), we’re missing the boat entirely, effectively reducing one of life’s wonders to mere good manners. On the contrary, gratitude is vital force in the world, a profoundly dignifying act that builds relationships, communities, and healthy human hearts.

The science on this subject is overwhelming: in study after study, gratitude has been shown to lead to stronger relationships, better sleep, lower blood pressure, fewer trips to the doctor, fewer depressive symptoms, more patience, and more perseverance, among other benefits (check out these study summaries here and here). In one particularly intriguing study, gratitude turns out to be a powerful antidote to the “Headwinds/Tailwinds Asymmetry,” our all-too-common tendency to focus on the obstacles in our lives (headwinds) and overlook blessings (tailwinds), an imbalance that over time leads to feeling aggrieved and resentful. In short, focusing on headwinds breeds bitterness; focusing on tailwinds breeds appreciation — and the act of thanksgiving helps call our attention to the winds at our backs.

IV. Becoming More Grateful

     OK, so gratitude is powerful — but how to make more of it in our lives? It turns out that some of the most effective tools for increasing gratitude are also some of the simplest and most familiar. First, the basic act of not just counting our blessings but also recording them in a form we can revisit later — say, in a journal or notebook — has been shown to significantly enhance feelings of thankfulness over time.  

     Second, another simple action has been shown to be even more effective: writing a letter of thanks to a friend, family member, acquaintance, or even a stranger. That’s right — thank-you notes can change your life! Indeed, we should reconceive the humble thank-you note not merely as a way to inform others about how grateful we are, but also as a way to help strengthen how grateful we are in the first place. 

     And a third practice isn’t only effective, it’s downright fun, even and especially in a time of pandemic: connecting with a friend once a week for coffee (or tea, or lunch - by phone, online, or on a physically-distanced walk), and intentionally devoting at least part of the conversation to sharing what we’re thankful for these days. When it comes to gratitude, just “saying it out loud” to someone we like and respect, not to mention hearing what they’re thankful for, is a powerful step toward noticing — and more deeply experiencing — the blessings in our lives.

V. A Graceful Life

     The power of these practices makes sense: one of our most precious treasures is our time-and-attention, and how we spend that treasure will directly determine the health of our hearts (“For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also” (Matthew 6:21)). Will we spend it all focusing on “headwinds,” thereby creating the perfect petri dish for growing resentments and narratives of grievance? Or will we spend it focusing on “tailwinds,” thereby nourishing the soil for growing joy and narratives of appreciation? Gratitude journals, thank-you notes, and thankful conversations are simple, powerful, effective tools for investing our time-and-attention wisely.

     And so is prayer. Viewed from this angle, prayer is a kind of spoken gratitude journal, an intimate thank-you note or thankful conversation with God. And so is worship. Properly practiced, worship is an elaborate exercise — a whole gymnasium! — for cultivating thanks and praise, and at its best, the result is a swirl of palpable tailwinds, amazement, and joy. And so is the Eucharist (from the Greek for “thanksgiving”), the Lord’s Supper, the Communion meal. Gathered around a table of bounty, remembering an old story, giving thanks to God for safe passage, for life, for peace, and for the strength to continue the pilgrimage anew.

In the end, then, we’re “pilgrims” after all. So start (or revisit) a gratitude journal. Try writing a simple thank-you note once a week. Connect with a friend for coffee and (thankful) conversation. Recommit to a practice of prayer. And let this year’s Thanksgiving be not just a day of gratitude, but a springboard into a new life of gratitude, that most human and humanizing of gestures, the most graceful of all social graces.

 

Thanksgiving from an Open and Relational Theological Perspective

By Tom Oord

The uncontrolling love view has positive implications for prayer at Thanksgiving. Thanking an uncontrolling God makes a lot of sense. Thanking a controlling God doesn’t.

     Each November, Americans gather to celebrate the Thanksgiving holiday. Words of thanks sometimes enter the public news or get expressed at civic gatherings too. 

     It’s natural to wonder, “What do people mean when they say, ‘Thank you, God?’”

No God

     Some people don’t believe in God. Many of them feel thankful, but their Thanksgiving language has no ultimate Referent. In their view, no Divine Being exists to which their gratitude ultimately points. Giving thanks may be their way to admit they’ve enjoyed goodness the past year. 

     Sometimes, these people say, “Thank you, God.” But their disbelief in a Being to whom they should be grateful makes this confusing.

All God

     Those who say God controls everything — let’s call their view, “All God” — ​express gratitude at Thanksgiving. They believe God directly or indirectly controls everything. 

     In their prayers, All God advocates say, “Thank you, God, for ____.” They can insert any event whatsoever. Such events might be supremely joyful or utterly horrific. The God who controls everything is responsible for every act of respect and rape, for peace and pain, for havens or holocausts. 

     Most All God prayers focus on what’s good. Reminding All God advocates their God causes evil can dampen their holiday spirit!

The Allowing God

     Others who pray reject the idea God causes evil. But they claim God allows it. 

     When these people give thanks, they try to sidestep the problems that come with saying God allows evil. They might blame free agents or natural forces. But they try to avoid asking why a God who can stop evil singlehandedly permits it. The God who can control others fails to prevent the dastardly deeds we endure.

     The Allowing God permitted the pandemic, the holocaust, and your sister’s rape.

     When those who say, “God allows evil” pray at Thanksgiving, they could insert any event into the “Thank you, God, for _____” sentence. The Allowing God gets ultimate credit and blame for causing or allowing all things.

The Uncontrolling God of Love

     Thanksgiving prayers make better sense in the uncontrolling love perspective. Advocates of this view thank God for always giving freedom, agency, or existence to creatures and creation. And God presents a spectrum of possibilities to each creature in each moment. In giving and presenting, the uncontrolling God never controls. 

     The uncontrolling God is the gracious source for all that’s good. This God actively loves moment by moment by providing, inspiring, empowering, and interacting with creation. 

     Genuine evil comes when creatures fail to respond well to God’s call to love. Or evil comes from natural accidents and free processes of reality. In the uncontrolling love of God view, God does not cause nor allow evil.

A Thanksgiving Prayer that Makes Sense

     In her Thanksgiving prayer, an advocate of the uncontrolling love view can say every good and perfect gift originates in God. An active but uncontrolling God is the source of goodness and blessing. And this God neither causes nor allows evil, as if God could singlehandedly produce or prevent it. 

     The good we enjoy involves creaturely responses to God’s gracious action too. The uncontrolling love view supports our urge to thank creatures at Thanksgiving. God is not the only factor, actor, or force for good. Creatures can cooperate with God’s good work. As I say in Open and Relational Theology, an amipotent — not omnipotent or impotent — God exerts the power of love.

     Most believers thank other people at Thanksgiving. They know creatures can join with God to do good. It’s right to thank God as the source of goodness and those who cooperate with God. 

     At Thanksgiving, it’s right to thank the Creator and the cook!

 Widely Indebted

     The more we realize how interrelated the universe is and how much God loves in an uncontrolling way, the more we understand how widely we are indebted. A Thanksgiving meal is possible because of God’s action, a chef or chefs, farmers, those who transport food, those who make the plates, tables, and homes we use when celebrating, plants, animals, and so many more. 

     God inspires goodness throughout all creation. We have many reasons to be thankful… and many actors to thank!

 Thanksgiving Prayer. 

     In light of this, here’s a thanksgiving prayer that aligns with the view that God always loves in uncontrolling ways…

“We thank you, our loving God, for being the source of all that’s good.

You also empower and inspire the good we receive from others.

We’re thankful to humans and nonhumans for cooperating with your love.

We’re grateful people because you’re a good and loving God!”

 

Sexuality and the Immodesty of Love

In this session from An Interesting Conference on Sexuality hosted by Jonathon Foster along with Tom Oord, we hear from Elaine Padilla, an author and a professor of Philosophy and Religion, Latinx/Latin American Studies at LaVerne University. She's super interesting and I love what she talks about in her video. I will not soon forget the phrase she uses here, "the immodesty of love." Find some of Elaine's scholarly work at researchgate.net/profile/Elaine-Padilla.

unBlinding

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

When blindness strikes someone after they once had sight, they forget what they once saw.  The images once stored leave their memory.  Everything fades to black. Physically, the brain forgets how to see as well.  If sight is ever regained after being lost for a long time, it takes a very long time – years – for the brain to relearn how to see.

     Blind Bartimaeus got two miracles that day when he encountered Jesus.  His vision was restored – his eyes worked again – and his brain immediately was able to meaningfully process the information it was receiving. Something that should have taken a long time took just a moment.

     Jesus struggled with blindness.  We are not completely certain how long the process of regaining his sight took, but we can imagine that it took years – the long period of time leading up to his public ministry and beyond. We don’t have any reason to believe that his physical eyesight had ever been lost, but I am confident that he was very aware of the cultural blinders that he very naturally acquired as a man born into the context in which he lived.  This sort of blindness is very much related to the blindness we struggle with in our own time. It is a coming to awareness that our lenses have been very much affected by influences beyond our control and choice to see the world and everything in it in a particular way.  While we sometimes have moments when it feels like the veil has been removed, we later discover that it was just one veil of many that has impacted our ability to see clearly.

     As we’ve noted before, the crowd in the story likely acted just like crowds do today with those who are blind.  They treated the blind as if they were dumb.  They communicated in different ways that those who were blind were a burden on society, which shamed them.  And they communicated to those who were blind that surely their affliction was an indication of God’s wrath for something they did.  Note: similar attitudes and behaviors were held toward people who struggle with other afflictions: leprosy, paralysis, Gentile heritage, being female, being gender binary, being poor, as well as some afflictions of choice such as occupation (prostitutes and tax collectors come to mind). Overall, the culture Jesus was born into viewed all these people as “less than”.  To varying degrees, the “less than” attitude served to dehumanize these others, which then allowed the culture to treat them as less than equal human beings.  Their cultural lens shaped their vision to perpetually treat the “other” inhumanely.

     Jesus ventured into non-Jewish territory a little, but mostly he lived his life around the region of the Sea of Galilee, which was not the center of the Jewish or Roman universe.  He spent most of his time with Jewish people who thought just like the folks of Jericho.  We know that Jesus was able to recognize his cultural blindness because of what he did, what he taught, and the feedback he received.  He was considered radical because he treated the “others” as human beings instead of the labels the culture placed on them.  He didn’t simply publish books or articles or podcasts or YouTube videos or TED Talks about it – he actually lived according to his new way of seeing, with less and less of the cultural blinders that restricted him.  He took a lot of heat at times.  He was schooled by a non-Jewish woman asking for help for her daughter – can you imagine Jesus’ blinders being called out by a foreign woman, and he accepted it?!  Remarkable!  Religious leaders and the general public were stunned by his choosing to be with – up close and personal – all the “others” who had been dehumanized by the majority.  He treated them as human beings. There was a first time for all of these gracious moves closer to those who had been ostracized.  Especially the first few times, it had to be tough to swim upstream, to go against the crowd, to choose to see differently than everybody else around him.

     Jesus did this very thing when he stopped in his tracks, against the flow of the crowd, and treated Bartimaeus with humanizing dignity and compassion. Nobody else did.  Certainly not the crowd.  Apparently not the local religious leaders.  Not even his disciples who had journeyed with him so closely.  Not even Jesus’ disciples!  They were still learning to see and live by what they saw.  What strength and courage it must have taken Jesus to take a humane stand when everyone else just kept moving forward.  All the way to the end of his life, Jesus chose to take a stand for grace, dignity, compassion, love, all because he began to see differently and live by what he saw.

     Bartimaeus received his sight, and he chose to follow Jesus, to risk living on what he was seeing.  This is similar to the healing of a blind man in Jerusalem according to the Gospel of John. He is credited with the brilliant statement of faith, I once was blind, but now I see.  His new sight and insight led him to stand up against the inhumane bullies that treated him like he was dumb, a burden, and cursed.  When he chose to stand, he found himself alone, rejected by the leaders of the crowd. He was alone, until Jesus found him and invited him into his company.

     In the Christian tradition for the majority of Church history we have been told what it means to be a Christian based on easily identifiable scriptures – mostly from New Testament writings apart from the four Gospels.  The letters – mostly from Paul – were written to churches or regions to help people with their theology.  The new religion was a religion about Jesus. But this is not the same as the religion of Jesus – what Jesus believed and practiced.  According to highly respected Christian ethicist David Gushee, Christians have largely missed the core meaning of what it means to actually live like Jesus because so much emphasis has been placed on what to believe about Jesus. Read an excerpt from his book below, or go directly to the article from which the content below was taken.

 

     I have written a new book called After Evangelicalism. I claim that white American “evangelical” Christianity is fatally flawed, and probably has been from the beginning of its modern incarnation in the 1940s. It certainly has become a carrier of theological and moral beliefs and practices that fall far short of the way of Jesus, that deeply harm specific groups of people, and that are driving many away from faith. My book both attempts to diagnose what has gone wrong and to propose better ways forward for a post-evangelical Christianity.

     In thinking through these issues, I make my way to the question of Jesus. I explore who Jesus is for white American evangelical Christians, in contrast with who he is in Scripture itself.

     I suggest that white evangelical Christianity has produced four flawed versions of Jesus. Which version is presented in various churches depends a lot on who the preacher is and how local traditions develop; and undoubtedly sometimes multiple versions of Jesus are presented in one church.

     Here is my list of pseudo-Jesuses:

     Jesus the Crucified Savior. The primary function of this Jesus is to come into this dark world to die on the cross so that we believers might be forgiven our sins and go to heaven when we die.

     This was the primary version of Jesus I was first exposed to in Southern Baptist Christianity. Jesus loves you and died on the cross for your sins. This Jesus can easily be rooted in the New Testament, although not mainly in the synoptic Gospels. Paul’s writings are a central source of this vision of Jesus, as is John’s Gospel.

     This is a defensible Jesus, in New Testament terms. But there is a lot missed with this version of Jesus. Specifically, this Jesus has no necessary moral content. He doesn’t really ask anything of believers other than belief. He doesn’t really care about anything other than eternal salvation. This Jesus can produce churches filled with people who believe they are saved but have no particular idea about whether Jesus has anything to say about how we live now. This means we will need to look elsewhere for guidelines for personal and social morality. “Elsewhere” is dangerous territory.

     Hallmark Christmas Movie Jesus. This is the kind, attentive, ruggedly handsome guy we sing about sometimes. This is the Jesus whom we ask to “hold me,” one who is there “when I am weak and he is strong,” and “when I am down, he lifts me up.” This Jesus is the best (platonic) boyfriend or bro-friend I could possibly have, the one who is there for me all the time, my comfort and encourager. He also runs a really nice Christmas-related operation, so that’s a plus. (This is a joke about Hallmark Christmas movies, which always feature a lonely guy in a cute small town who runs something like a mistletoe shop or candy cane store and just needs a good wife.)

     This is a highly sentimentalized Jesus, whose main role is our emotional stabilization in a trying world. This is a Jesus who again doesn’t make moral demands. He doesn’t help me think about what faith requires in action. He just wants to comfort me and look good in flannel.

     Jesus Who Wants You to Succeed. This latest Jesus is a staple megachurch evangelical Jesus. In suburban evangelicalism, this is the Jesus who offers success principles for leadership and life to upwardly striving young professionals. In prosperity gospel land, this is the Jesus who wants you to be as wealthy, lovely and thin as the pretty leaders on stage.

     I see little contact between this Jesus and the New Testament. This is also not a Jesus who could help me understand why I can’t follow Hitler and Jesus at the same time.

     Vacant Jesus — Fillable with Any Content We Want. This Jesus, having been distanced so profoundly from his Jewish roots, his account of himself and any New Testament depictions, is a mere shell, symbol or totem. This is a Jesus always available to be filled with whatever content we might like to drop in there.

     The way you get to this Jesus is by systematically ignoring the Jesus one meets in the Gospels. Or, if he is not ignored, we find ways to evade what he said, to thin down his theological vision and moral demands as far as possible, to shave away anything that might make a claim on us.

     “Vacant Jesus is not just useless. He can be positively harmful.” This Vacant Jesus is not just useless. He can be positively harmful. This can be the Jesus of the KKK, the Race God Savior of My People Only, #MAGA Jesus or Football Jesus or Corporate Jesus or Straight White American Jesus. Vacant Jesus is always available to be the totem of my tribe, my class, my race, my party, providing ultimate religious justification for whatever I most strongly believe in.

     The most dangerous thing about Vacant Jesus is that we can deploy him to reverse the actual demands of the real Jesus.

 

Jesus according to Jesus

     For my book, I decided to see what New Testament scholars are right now saying about Jesus. I turned to a British scholar named James Dunn, a highly respected scholar who died just after I finished the book.

     In the last book Dunn ever wrote, which is called Jesus According to the New Testament, he acknowledges that the New Testament offers various pictures of Jesus — although none of them are Hallmark Jesus, Success Jesus or Vacant Jesus. He zeroes in on what he calls “Jesus according to Jesus” — the core depiction of Jesus himself as presented in the synoptic Gospels. This very core Jesus, the most basic Jesus, looked like this:

·       Jesus created and articulated the Love Command as the highest statement of moral obligation: love God with everything you have and love your neighbor as yourself.

·       Jesus placed priority on the poor. This was visible in his preaching, his parables and his actions.

·       Jesus offered welcome to sinners. He also taught that welcoming sinners is what God does. This drew criticism because it upset the expectations of those around him.

·       Jesus demonstrated openness to Gentiles. He taught that many will come from all directions to the messianic banquet, he ministered to many Gentiles, and he commissioned the disciples after his resurrection to go and make disciples of all nations.

·       Jesus included women among his close followers. He gave women a vital role in his ministry, including them among his band of followers, ministering to them just the same as to men, and appearing to them after his resurrection.

·       Jesus demonstrated openness and love to children. People brought sick kids to Jesus and he healed them. Jesus rejected the disciples’ efforts to shoo them aside. He elevated a certain kind of innocent childlikeness.

·       Jesus relaxed Jewish food laws and related regulations about purity. He emphasized inward rather than external cleanness.

·       Jesus instituted the Lord’s Supper. This unforgettable last meal with Jesus became an important part of the ritual life of the early church and provides a link between the ministry of Jesus, his death and the practice of his followers.

·       Jesus proclaimed the kingdom of God, which he understood as already evident in his ministry but also with a grand consummation lying ahead. He offered powerful, authoritative teaching and was notable for his striking parables.

·       Jesus healed and exorcised demons through the power of the Holy Spirit.

·       Jesus understood himself as commissioned by God for ministry, sent by God his loving Father, anointed by the Spirit, coming as messiah of Israel.

·       Jesus understood that, contrary to common expectation, his messiahship meant suffering, rejection and death rather than triumph. He expected to die in Jerusalem, and he did.

Take a second and consider this list against the background of the four evangelical Jesuses I started with. Might you join me in finding it a little troubling that there are few points of contact between any of those evangelical Jesuses and the accounts of Jesus that we have just reviewed?

     To drive the above home even further, I close with the following article by William Willimon. Don’t have nine minutes to read it?  Here is the gist: if you want to follow the real Jesus, expect a bumpy, adventurous ride where you are stretched in ways you did not know you needed to grow, where you get to learn to live the way Jesus lived, and also where you will most certainly experience the same kinds of pushback as Jesus did as well.  This Way, Truth, and Life is where the Spirit of God thrives and the world becomes a bit more like it was intended, and the people in it are able to live into their True Selves in all of their made-in-the-image-of-God glory.  Awesome.  Difficult.  Unblinded.  Let’s go.

 

Repentance, Conversion, and Faith: Jesus transforms, jolts, and disorders for the better every life he touches. By William H. Willimon

 

Repentance: Wising up. Turning to the God who, in Christ, has turned to you – to change your heart and life.

     Metanoia (Greek for repentance) is cousin of metamorphosis. When John the Baptist prepared the way for Christ, he told the crowds to hear the good news, get washed up, be drowned, give away surplus clothing, practice justice, in short, “Repent!”

     Although Jesus discourages us from showing off our goodness, he commends public admission (confession) of badness. Critics attempted to trap Jesus in a discussion of tragedy by asking, “Hear about the tower that fell and killed those people in Siloam [natural evil] or the Galileans whom Herod executed [human evil]? What did they do to deserve that?”

     Jesus responded with a non sequitur: “Unless you change your hearts and lives, you will die just as they did.” If we can’t repent of our temptation to keep God at a distance with our detached theological discussions of others’ pain and injustice (and maybe even our books on Christian vocabulary), we’ll never know much about God.

     Repentance is turning and facing in a different direction whereby we are enabled to see. Until we stand under the gospel, we can’t understand it. Faith is best known from the inside looking out. Salvation is free and very costly. Jesus transforms, jolts, and disorders for the better every life he touches. When God turns toward you, and you turn toward God, your life turns around.

Conversion: Detoxification. The God whom we wanted on our terms, taking us on God’s terms.

     Crabby Tertullian said, “Christians are made, not born.” Christians come from the church’s baptismal font, not people’s loins. Because Jesus and his kingdom fundamentally challenge everything we thought we knew for sure, conversion is part of the project. Paul didn’t know whether to describe what happened to him, when he met Christ, as birth or death. It felt like both at the same time.

     Christian is not synonymous with being born American. Conversion is mandatory. Rarely is the Christian life an orderly progression toward God. More typically, it’s a series of jerks and jolts, lurches to the left or right. Fasten your seat belts, you could end up miles from here.

Nobody ever gets so adept at being a Christian that you lose your amateur status. Seldom a one-and-done experience, as Christ told old Nicodemus, “You must be born again,” to which Wesleyans add, and again, and again, and probably again. Birth to death, darkness to light then, at the end, death leading to life.

     Warning: I’m not saying that the Holy Spirit takes advantage of us when we’re down, but if you are going through a particularly painful time in your life, know that Christ enjoys showing up at such moments and working them to his gain. On the other hand, if you are happy with the life you are living, pleased as punch with the person you are, happy with the world as it is, be careful hanging around Jesus. He may take you just as you are but never leaves you there. Everyone he touches, Christ transforms.

     Extreme makeover, like our salvation, is something that God does to you rather than something you do for yourself. Baptism is not a declaration that you’ve at last found a faith that works for you but rather your bodacious willingness to let this faith work on you. Christ’s baptismal promises: you are not doomed to plod along in the life your parents handed you. By the power of the Holy Spirit, anybody can be a saint, everyone can have fate transformed into destiny by God. You, even you, can hit the road with Jesus. “Come die with me,” he says, “that you might rise to the life I wanted to give you in the first place.”

     As Jesus headed down the road one day a man comes up and asks him a deep theological question: “What must I do to inherit eternal life?” One Gospel says that the man was a “ruler,” another that he was “young.” All agree that he was rich. Jesus brushes him off by telling him to obey all the commandments. Turns out this man is really good at being good; he’s been totally obedient since he was a kid, a hard-core success, both materially and spiritually. Then Jesus speaks those converting words that Christians like me have always wished he hadn’t: “Go … sell … give … follow me.”

     If you journey with Jesus, expect a rough ride.

Faith: Acknowledgement that what scripture says is happening, actually is. Willingness to be whom God has created us to be; readiness to be transformed and transfigured by someone who works beyond, beneath, and above things as they seem to our senses. More a welcoming wave than a stiff salute, when Christ turns to us. Paying attention. Overcome by light. Enraptured.

     Faith happens when reality, first experienced as mundane and speechless, overflows, so that we hear something and exclaim, “I believe.” Better than some innate human yearning, faith is our reasonable response to an occurrence that has happened to us, named Jesus Christ. More than intellectual assent, the Christian faith is about walking with Christ even when you aren’t sure where he’s taking you. Being faithful more than having faith.

     Faith arises when we begin to trust Jesus more than ourselves. Most of us come to trust the God that Christianity talks about before we sign up for the whole system. Once you take that first trusting step toward the God who turns to you, Christian teaching, beliefs, and behavior begin to make sense.

     Paul didn’t know whether to describe what happened to him, when he met Christ, as birth or death. It felt like both at the same time.

     Jesus asked a man born blind, whom he has just healed, whether or not he “believes” in the Human One (or Son of Man). Jesus isn’t asking the man if he thinks that Jesus exists – Jesus stands in front of him. Jesus is asking if the healed person is ready to trust the one he is staring at. The man responds simply, “I believe.” When a gang of religious scholars gives the man hell for saying he believes in Jesus, the man replies, “Don’t know much ‘bout theology. All I know was I once was blind but now I see.” This dynamic – believing before all the evidence is in – occurs in the souls of millions.

     We are saved “through faith,” which sounds to us pragmatic, mother-I’d-rather-do-it-myself Americans like another assignment for self-betterment. No, faith is a gift. Not what we should, ought, must but rather God’s having done, finished, given. If we can say, “I trust Christ,” it’s a sure sign that God has made good on God’s electing promise: I will be your God; you will be my people.

     Paul says that Abraham (who wasn’t a Christian) is the prime exemplar of faith. Old Abram saddling up the camels, his geriatric wife pregnant, heading out on the basis of a cockeyed promise from a God he had only recently, briefly met. Abraham and Sarah are about as good examples of faith as we’ve got.

     However, Jesus repeatedly rebukes his disciples for their lack of faith, little faith, slow faith, and inability to believe what prophets said about him. Fortunately, we don’t need much of it; faith the size of a mustard seed will do. Bring on those mountains.

     “Faith” categorized as a generic human tendency is insipid. Everything depends on what you have faith in. The bland expressions “people of faith” or “faith community” presume that all faiths are the same and that there are people who have “faith” and people who don’t. When someone says, “I don’t have faith in Christ,” it means, not that they are faithless but rather that they have put their faith in someone other than a Jew from Nazareth who lived briefly, died violently, and rose unexpectedly. When free-floating “faith” becomes “faith in Christ,” that’s when our lackluster little lives become adventurous and talk of “faith” becomes interesting.

     Have trouble trusting that Christ is the truth about God? Be patient. Faith comes to you rather than you to it. The God whom you have difficulty turning toward has promised to turn toward you. Besides, who wants a God who is no more than the one you chose?

Sexuality and Outcasts

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

In this session from An Interesting Conference on Sexuality hosted by Jonathon Foster along with Tom Oord, we will hear from James Alison, a Catholic theologian, priest and author, and one of the foremost Girardians (Rene Girard) in the world. James shares his thoughts here about how Jesus chose to occupy the place of those who've been cast out. The thought should not have been lost on us that it's the LGTBQ+ crowd who have been cast out by so many over the years. Find out more about James at jamesalison.com