Jesus - Disturber of the Peace
Reza
Aslan’s basic thesis in Zealot:
The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth is that Jesus was a failed revolutionary who was
willing to use violence to overthrow the political and religious order to bring
in God’s kingdom.
He
rejects outright the many teachings of Jesus about nonviolence, peacemaking,
and love of enemies and dismisses as irrelevant Jesus’ refusal to resist his
own capture and execution. Instead, he focuses on a few passages where Jesus
says he didn’t come to bring peace:
“I
came to bring fire to the earth, and how I wish it were already kindled! . . .
Do you think that I have come to bring peace to the earth? No, I tell you, but
rather division! From now on five in one household will be divided, three
against two and two against three . . .” (Luke 12:49-53).
Aslan’s
argument can be easily refuted by historical scholarship, but we are still left
to wrestle with Jesus’ teaching in the above passage. What is Jesus talking
about?
Reconstruction
involves deconstruction. For God’s kingdom to come, our kingdoms have to go.
God’s kind of peace is at first disruptive and divisive. Before Jesus can
mediate God’s peace, he must overturn and disturb our false and shallow notions
and expressions of peace.
Jesus
disrupts our systems of meritocracy when he makes true religion a matter of the
heart expressed through love of God and neighbor.
Jesus
disturbs our sense of self-righteousness, of what is pleasing and displeasing
to God.
In
the first church I pastored out of seminary, a deacon charged me with not
preaching enough on sin. I told him I would. So I started talking about greed and our love of
possessions, the arrogance of thinking that we alone
have the truth and alone are right. I talked about the sin of judging others
and trying to control others. I found out rather quickly that these were not
the kind of sins he wanted me to preach against.
Jesus
overturns our nationalistic and exclusive views of God. He upsets and
challenges all tribal and national gods. Instead of carrying the banner “God
bless Israel ”
Jesus says, “God bless the whole, crazy messed up world” (see Luke 4:16-30).
Jesus redefines who’s “in” and who’s “out.”
Jesus
shakes up our materialistic views of worth and our sense of what constitutes
success. Jesus speaks of the dangers of affluence, not the benefits. In God’s
kingdom the last will be first and the first last. He redefines a person’s
worth independent of position, power, or possessions and talks about how difficult
it is for a rich person to enter the kingdom
of God .
Jesus
disturbs the nice little ways we package our faith. Many of us look to our
faith to add another layer of security to our already secure lives. But Jesus
calls us to a kind of commitment that thrusts us into dangerous and risky
situations.
Jesus
knows that our allegiance to his cause, to his vision of nonviolence,
forgiveness, and social justice, to his faith in a large, compassionate God who
champions the plight of the poor and marginalized will be divisive, even within
our own families.
Jesus
calls for honesty, integrity, and humility in all our relationships and that
can be inwardly disturbing. We like to steer away from our failures, but the
Spirit targets them. Not because God wants us to wallow in feelings of guilt or
condemnation, but because any true relationship with God and others must be
grounded in truth and rooted in honest, humble reality and confession.
Are
we willing to allow Jesus to disrupt, disturb, and divide in order that we
might embrace and embody a holistic vision of life? It doesn’t sound to bad
until we remember that the way of Jesus led to the cross. But it is here where
ultimate reconciliation is found (Eph. 2:11-22).
Comments
Post a Comment