“SCARIER THAN THE WALKING DEAD: JESUS AS A HUMAN BEING!”
Those of us
in the church spend a lot of energy seeking to deny the reality and the
importance of the life of Jesus. The
idea of Jesus being a real, live human being frightens us deeply. We prefer the Crucified and even the
Resurrected Jesus to the living Jesus.
To paraphrase Clarence Jordan, one of the principal founders of Koinonia
Community in south Georgia, we have thoroughly de-humanized Jesus. In so doing we have done a much better job of
getting rid of him and his message than the Crucifixion did.
There are
two main reasons for our dismissing the humanity and the ministry of
Jesus. First, if the importance of Jesus
is to be found in his Crucifixion and Resurrection, then we don’t have to worry
about the ministry of his life or about his teachings and message. Most especially we don’t have to worry about
our lives and our actions. It is the
reason that attorney general Jeff Sessions, while claiming to be a Christian,
could order the kidnapping of children from their parents. He quoted the Bible on this, but he did not
quote Jesus, because he could not justify his actions if he looked at the life
and ministry of Jesus. It is the reason
that people can exploit others for greed while claiming to be Christians. It is the reason that people claiming to be
Christians could hold other people as slaves.
We so prefer that Jesus be the walking dead rather than being the
walking live.
There is a
second reason that we prefer to diminish or even deny the humanity of Jesus. We don’t want Jesus to be a human being like
us – we don’t want to believe in the idea of the incarnation, the idea that God
and humanity are fused in the life, death and resurrection of Jesus of
Nazareth. We will go to just about any
depth to prevent our having to consider that Jesus was a human being like
us. Caroline and I are doing a dialogue
sermon this Sunday at Susan’s church in Baltimore, and we are using Matthew
15:21-28, where Jesus learns something about being a neighbor from a Gentile
woman. In this story, Jesus calls this
woman a dog (wasn’t that image used again this week in the White House?). This Gentile woman refuses to yield to this
image, and in her engagement with Jesus, he learns more about her humanity and
about his own. When he begins the
dialogue with her, he tells her that he can’t help her because he was sent only
to the “lost sheep of the house of Israel.”
But, she teaches him that they are neighbors, and that they belong in
the same house. By the end of the gospel
of Matthew, he sends his disciples out, telling them to go to all people, not
just to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. I’d like to think that he
learned this from the Gentile woman.
When I
preached on this passage at a Presbytery meeting in 1998, one church Session charged
me with heresy because I indicated that Jesus was a human being by
participating in the cultural prejudices that he received as a child. There was shock and a big outcry over the
idea that Jesus might really be a human being.
The heresy charge did not go very far because it became clear that those
attacking me were actually committing heresy themselves by saying that Jesus
had no humanity, that he was never prejudiced.
Who cares
about all this theological turnings?
Those who are oppressed and dominated and marginalized – they care. They care because the life and ministry of
Jesus took him to the margins and indicated that God has a preference for those
who are oppressed and exploited. It’s
why folk often talk about the black Jesus, using the term that indicates in
American culture that Jesus was black.
“Blackness” here doesn’t refer to his skin color but rather to his
economic status. He was marginalized and
oppressed, and his life and ministry were based there. This theme runs all through his life – born
out of wedlock on the streets, chased by government soldiers to be executed,
fleeing as a refugee to Egypt (we’re glad that Sessions was not in power then),
having no income, associating with people at the margins, challenging rich people
to stop worshipping their money, and finally executed as a revolutionary. Taking these themes seriously in our
individual and communal lives would radically change everything, and it is why
the living, human being Jesus scares the daylights out of us – we prefer him as
the walking dead.
Whew, that was great!
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