“SETTING THE WORLD ON FIRE”
“I have
come to set the world on fire!” Those
are Jesus’ words about himself in the 12th chapter of Luke, where he
indicates that he has come to bring division, not peace. I want to suggest that this side of Jesus
comes from his relationship to the man on fire, John the Baptizer. But, before I do that, I must note that a lot
of the world is on fire, whether it is the wildfires in Australia, or the
rainforests in the Amazon River basin, or the wildfires in California, or the
drones falling from the sky in Iraq. The
world is on fire, and it is a scary time, especially with the kind of
leadership that we see in the White House and the Senate. Let us be clear here – it is not a lack of
leadership that is holding us back from dealing with climate change. It is a very deliberate style of leadership
that wishes to divert us from the problems of climate change, so that the rich
can get richer and build alternatives for themselves when the fires burn even
more out of control. If you want to know
how that turns out, read Octavia Butler’s novel “The Parable of the Sower.”
But now,
back to John the Baptizer. In Luke’s
gospel, he seems to be the cousin of Jesus.
In John’s gospel, he seems to be the rival of Jesus. In all four gospels, he is seen as the
forerunner of Jesus, the one who prepares the way for Jesus. John’s style and substance is about doing our
own individual soul work and in seeking justice as one of the main results of
that soul work. On one level, John
preaches repentance in the old-fashioned way that I grew up on in the white,
supremacist South. It emphasized that I
(and other individuals) needed to get right with God and stop drinking and
smoking and chasing hedonistic pleasures.
My religious upbringing not only denied that justice and community
equity have anything to do with salvation – it actively worked to put asunder
spirituality and justice. Like white
evangelical religion now in the USA, the idea is to maintain white patriarchy
and to deny the importance of justice in the eyes of God.
Even a
cursory reading of John the Baptizer’s life in the gospels will show how
ridiculous that kind of a notion, that kind of a split, is in relation to
John’s ministry. When the religious
leaders like Franklin Graham come out to hear John the Baptizer speak, they ask
him what they should do to get right with God.
Per my upbringing, I always believed that John answered by saying that
they should proclaim Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. Once I went back to actually read the New
Testament stories about John, this is what he gave as the answer: “If you have more than one coat, give the
second (or third and fourth) to those who have none; if you have more food than you can eat, give
it to those who are starving.” For John,
salvation was intimately connected to a life of recognition, repentance, and
reparations. No worries about getting
into heaven for John – the main emphasis was to be set on fire for God in this
life. Being set on fire for God meant
seeking equity and justice.
If you are
wondering if I am making this up or twisting the narrative, go back and read it
for yourself, as I did. And, please note
that John is also arrested and executed by Herod (not the same Herod of Jesus’
birth, but not far from him in temperament) for calling Herod’s ethics into
question. Jesus’ leanings towards
justice and equity in his movement are undoubtedly derived in part from his
relationship to John the Baptizer.
So, if you are like me and grew in
the stream of American Christianity that makes the goal of our lives seem to be
getting into heaven when we die, check out John the Baptizer. If you let him, he will set you on fire, as
he did Jesus. We need these kinds of
folk desperately in our time - folks willing to do soul work in an age of
superficiality, folks able to see the intertwining of justice and spirituality,
folks willing to be set on fire for the God movement, as were John the Baptizer
and Jesus of Nazareth. Let us listen for
John’s voice and John’s calling out, and let us find the fire within us, so
that the fires we set will be ones for justice and equity and not those of
greed and destruction of the earth and humanity.
This is so right on. Thank you!
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