A lot is happening in the world around us, much of it very troubling. Even more troubling is that some of it is being done by those who claim the name of Christian. So even though I know it’s summer and the living should be easy, here’s a bit of homework—a refresher course in who Jesus Christ was and what he did:
- Jesus was born into poverty, as a part of an ethnic and religious community under the oppression of the Empire.
- Even before his birth, his parents were displaced people, who had to leave their hometown of Nazareth on the order of that Empire.
- After his birth, due to violence in his homeland, his parents fled with him, crossing to the border into Egypt for his safety.
- His cousin John was imprisoned and then executed by a quasi-religious king, put in place by the Empire.
- Jesus himself was executed by those same imperial powers. As Dean Harold Attridge reminded us recently, it was a political execution, driven by fear of Jesus’ challenge to the Empire.
- Throughout his ministry, Jesus respected and valued women, often affirming them in roles outside the cultural norms of the time.
- He also respected and cared for people of diverse ethnic, religious, and cultural backgrounds. He healed the daughter of a Rabbi, the servant of a Roman centurion, and the daughter of a Syrian-Phoenician (aka “mixed-race”) woman.
- He stayed true to the commitment “to love God and love neighbor,” rooted in both the Levitical and Deuteronomic codes of his Jewish faith. He consistently reached out to those who were outcast (lepers, tax-collectors and other “sinners”) and cared for the poor, widows (i.e., vulnerable women), and orphans (vulnerable children).
- Jesus never hesitated to speak his mind when it came to the sin of economic oppression. Yet he said absolutely nothing about homosexuality. Hmmm—what does that tell us about his view of the “sin” of homosexuality?
Bottom-line, Jesus showed us God’s way in this world—the way of love and justice that even our ways of death could not and cannot defeat.
This is the Jesus I seek to follow. I believe you do, too. I also believe that unless you and I get over our reticence to talk about our faith and instead start talking about this Jesus to our friends and acquaintances, others will continue to define Christianity and Jesus in ways that are harmful to others and to this world.
I know it’s summertime. I also know the stakes have never been higher. If we care about this world that God loves, then we need to share what means to follow in the ways of that love, ways shown us by Jesus the Christ.
Well said! Important and timely words!
Thank you! Blessings, Talitha
Thank you for this piece. You write so eloquently about the Jesus I want to follow. Your words mean much to me in my faith journey.
Thank you, Talitha, for reminding us who we are and who we choose to serve in the midst of a chaotic country led by people who have no moral compass. I hope that everyone reads this and that we continue to make a strong statement unapologetically about redeeming the moral fabric of our country based on our faith and hope.
Talitha, your words are so well chosen. You are both bold and consoling. I will look for your blog.
In Christ’s love,
Pam