A personal comment to start this section - as I considered afresh the implications of the "reversal of fortunes" that Jesus' kingdom society brings, I saw in a new way that this "good news" isn't necessarily heard as "good" news by those in power in earthly kingdoms (which is why Jesus was put to death). Ultimately all people are blessed by living according to the values of God's kingdom but fear of scarcity hinders the powerful from seeing this.
Chapters 6-12 "Good News" (Jesus Before Christianity)
The third section is comprised of
seven chapters (chapters 6 through 12) about "Good News" in which the
author focuses on the "kingdom of God" and how utterly different it is
from all of the kingdoms of this world.
In chapter 6
Nolan writes of how Jesus understood the kingdom of God; the most
common ways Jesus talked about the kingdom of God was through the
pictures of a household or a walled city: "The fact that his way of
speaking about the 'kingdom' is based upon a pictorial image of a house,
a city or a community leaves no doubt about what he had in mind: a
politically structured society of people here on earth. A 'kingdom' is a
thoroughly political notion...The difference is between a community of
humankind in which evil reigns supreme and a community of humankind in
which goodness reigns supreme...Jesus was convinced that the 'kingdom'
of God would eventually triumph over the 'kingdom' of Satan and replace
that 'kingdom' here on earth."
The next four
chapters are chapters dealing with the value system of God's kingdom and
how radically different God views these matters; the author presents
all of this in light of the world Jesus lived in and gives insights to what Jesus' words and actions meant in His day:
Chapter 7: The "Kingdom" and Money: "(Acts 2; 4:32, 34,35) This then is what selling all one's possessions means: giving up the surplus and treating nothing as your own...Jesus did not idealize poverty. On the contrary his concern was to ensure that no one should be in want, and it was to this end that he fought possessiveness and encouraged people to be unconcerned about wealth and to share their material possessions...Jesus dared to hope for a 'kingdom' or world-wide community which would be so structured that there would be no poor and no rich."
Chapter 8: The "Kingdom" and Prestige: In Jesus' world prestige was even more important than money. "Status and prestige were based on ancestry, wealth, authority, education and virtue..."
In Mark 10:14 Jesus says his kingdom will be one of "children" or "of those who are like children because in society they are insignificant; they lack status and prestige."
Chapter 9: The "Kingdom" and Solidarity: Group solidarity - loyalty to those in our group - is something that all societies understand, even our western individualistic society. "Jesus extended one's neighbor to include one's enemies. He could not have found a more effective way of shocking his audience into the realization that he wished to include all people in this solidarity of love. The saying is almost unbearably paradoxical: the natural contradiction between neighbor and enemy, between outsiders and insiders must be overlooked and overcome so that enemies become kin and all outsiders become insiders!"
Chapter 10: The "Kingdom" and Power: "Society and power are inseparable. A society must have a structure and that structure will have something to do with power. The issue of power and the structures of power...is what we today call politics." Jesus' words in Lk. 6:20; 14:11; 12:32; 22:29,30 all indicate that "there is going to be a reversal in fortunes...The power of this new society is not a power which has to be served...It is a power which has an enormous influence in the lives of people by being of service to them."
Chapter 11 deals with the idea of "time". This is a
fascinating chapter in which Nolan contrasts the way Westerners view
time (more quantitative) with the way a Hebrew views time (qualitative).
"For the Hebrew, to know the time was not a matter of knowing the
date, it was a matter of what kind of time it might be...Time was the
quality or mood of events...When individuals reach a fixed point, for
example, the Passover festival or a time of famine, they become in a
sense contemporaneous with their ancestors and their successors
who have passed or will pass through the same qualitative time. The
individual's ancestors and successors share the same kind of time, no
matter how many intervening years there happen to be between them."
Jesus was announcing that there was coming a time qualitatively different from anything that went before. "It will be a qualitatively new time, not a new measurement of time" (as we westerners would assume)...The newness of Jesus' time can hardly be exaggerated." We are not to confuse John the Baptist's message (of doom) with Jesus message (of good news). "Goodness
is triumphing over evil." This can be seen in all that Jesus did and said: "God
has come down from the heavenly throne, the highest position of
prestige in the world, to be intimately close to men, women and
children, who may now address God as abba...The success of the
cures and of all Jesus' liberating activity showed him that God felt
with those who suffer, that God wanted to live in solidarity with
humanity and to use the godly power to serve them and protect them."
In chapter 12 Nolan concludes this long section on "good news" by talking about the coming of the 'kingdom' as miraculous: "In
view of the extraordinarily high values that are supposed to reign
supreme in this 'kingdom', it should not be difficult to appreciate that
its coming would be a miracle...This kind of 'kingdom' can only
come, it cannot be built...The 'kingdom' itself cannot be achieved, it
must be received - as a gift."
Although Jesus didn't know the time of the coming kingdom, the urgency
in His preaching was because He understood that if there was no
repentance, for sure a catastrophe would come; and the catastrophe did
come with the destruction of Jerusalem and the temple in 70 CE, to be
followed with a merciless massacre in 135 CE when the Romans completely
destroyed the nation of Israel and expelled the Jews from Palestine.
Nolan
ends the chapter by saying that in order for us to recover what Jesus
meant to the people of His day (before Christianity), we need to read
the gospels without the "apocalyptized" process being applied to them.
He attempts to do this in the following chapters.
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