Chapter 19: "Faith in Jesus"
This is the final chapter of Jesus Before Christianity and the climax to Albert Nolan's book. After concentrating on
looking at Jesus' humanity in all of the preceding chapters (1-18), the author focuses his final chapter on Jesus' divinity and the
implications of His being God.
There are two primary implications to Jesus being God that the author proposes:
1) We must allow Him to define what God is like (i.e., the way Jesus lived shows us exactly what God is like).
2)
Acknowledgement that Jesus is God and Truth means to live like He
lived, understanding the world and times that we live in just as He
understood the world and times that He lived in.
Speaking of the early church's response to Jesus after his life and death and resurrection, Nolan says, "The movement was pluriform,
indeed amorphous and haphazard. Its only unity or point of cohesion was
the personality of Jesus himself...Everyone felt that despite his death
Jesus was still leading, guiding and inspiring them...Jesus remained
present and active through the presence and activity of his Spirit...Jesus was everything...Their admiration and veneration for him knew no bounds. He
was in every way the ultimate, the only criterion of good and evil and
of truth and falsehood, the only hope for the future, the only power
which could transform the world...Jesus was experienced as the breakthrough in the history of humanity. He transcended everything that had ever been said and done before. He was in every way the ultimate, the last word. He was on a par with God. His word was God's word. His Spirit was God's Spirit. His feelings were God's feelings...
"To
believe in Jesus today is to agree with this assessment of him...To
believe that Jesus is divine is to choose to make him and what he stands
for your God...By
his words and his praxis, Jesus himself changed the content of the word
'God.' If we do not allow him to change our image of God, we will not
be able to say that he is our Lord and our God. To choose him as
our God is to make him the source of our information about divinity and
to refuse to superimpose upon him our own ideas of divinity...Jesus
reveals God to us, God does not reveal Jesus to us...if
we accept Jesus as divine, we must reinterpret the Old Testament from
Jesus' point of view and we must try to understand the God of Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob in the way in which Jesus did..."
The author masterfully sums up the implications of Jesus being God: "We have seen what Jesus was like. If we now wish to treat him as our God, we would have to conclude that...
*our
God does not want to be served by us, but wants to serve us;
*God does
not want to be given the highest possible rank and status in our
society, but wants to take the lowest place and to be without any rank
and status;
*God does not want to be feared and obeyed, but wants to
be recognized in the sufferings of the poor and the weak;
*God is not
supremely indifferent and detached, but is irrevocably committed to the
liberation of humankind, for God has chosen to be identified with all
people in a spirit of solidarity and compassion.
If this is not a
true picture of God, then Jesus is not divine. If this is a true picture
of God, then God is more truly human, more thoroughly humane, than any
human being...
"Jesus was
immeasurably more human than other human beings, and that is what we
value above all other things when we recognize him as divine, when we
acknowledge him as our Lord and our God."
If we accept that Jesus is God then the way He lived His life on earth is how we must live ours: "In
the last analysis faith is not a way of speaking or a way of thinking,
it is a way of living and can only be adequately articulated in a living
praxis...The beginning of faith in Jesus is the attempt to read the
signs of our times as Jesus read the signs of his times...we can begin
to analyze our times in the same spirit as he analyzed his times. We
would have to begin, as Jesus did, with compassion - for the starving
millions, for those who are humiliated and rejected, and for the
billions of the future who will suffer because of the way we live
today...
"Searching for the signs of the
times in the spirit of Jesus, then, will mean recognizing all the forces
that are working against humanity as the forces of evil...We shall have
to try to understand the structures of evil in the world as it is
today. How much have we been basing ourselves upon the worldly values of
money, possessions, prestige, status, privilege, power and upon the
group solidarities of family, race, class, party, religion and
nationalism? To make these our supreme values is to have nothing in
common with Jesus."
Nolan concludes his book with one final challenge: "There is an
incentive that can mobilize the world, enable the 'haves' to lower their
standard of living and make us only too willing to redistribute the
world's wealth and its population. It is the same drive and incentive that motivated Jesus: compassion and faith...With
this kind of approach to the problems of our time one will surely come
to recognize the impending catastrophe as a unique opportunity for the
coming of the 'kingdom.'...God is speaking to us in a new way today. Jesus can help us to understand the voice of Truth..."
Such a God wins our hearts, our allegiance, our all!
Saturday, January 12, 2019
Wednesday, January 02, 2019
The Man Jesus (Part 8): Jesus' Silence - the Truth that Judges Every Human Being
Chapter 18 "The Trial" (Jesus Before Christianity)
This chapter is about Jesus' trial by Rome and the collaboration of the Jewish leaders with Rome. Nolan looks at the charges "which they could have brought against Jesus, the charges which they actually did bring against him and the real motives for wanting to destroy him...Jesus could have been charged with deliberately breaking the Sabbath or practicing magic (casting out devils by the power of Satan); he was actually charged with claiming to be the Messiah-king; and the real motive, according to Mark followed by Matthew, was envy or jealousy..."
He points out that because these distinctions aren't maintained consistently by the gospel writers, there is confusion about this. The author also distinguishes between the part played by Rome and the part played by the Jewish leaders in Jesus' sentencing and death: "Jesus was tried, sentenced and executed by the Roman court. But the gospel writers, like all early Christians, endeavored to make it quite clear that, in spite of this, the Jewish leaders were more to blame for Jesus' death than the Romans."
In the confusing reports by the gospel writers, there is one thing certain, which is that Jesus' claim to be the Messiah or king of the Jews is the only thing that He was charged with by Rome and it was Rome that carried out the crucifixion. (The Jews had no authority to do this.)
Nolan describes how ruthless Pilate was and why he was eager to be rid of Jesus: Rome executed all "prophets and potential Messiahs" for fear of an uncontrollable uprising against the government. The Jewish high priest was appointed by the Romans for the purpose of helping to maintain the peace, especially during the festivals in Jerusalem. Though there are a couple of different reasons why the Jewish leaders sided with Pilate, "...In either case the decision of the high priest and his council was to collaborate with Rome. Political expediency demanded that this man be handed over and allowed to die. To attempt to save his life would be national suicide...they betrayed Jesus."
A remarkable thing about Jesus' trial is that He never defended Himself. No matter what He was accused of or who accused Him, He remained silent. "Jesus stood there without a word, putting everyone else to the test. The truth of the matter is that it was not Jesus who was on trial. His betrayers and accusers were on trial before him. His silence puzzled, disturbed, questioned and tested them. Their words were turned back at them and they condemned themselves out of their own mouths."
The chapter ends with a summary of all those who were tested and judged by the killing of Jesus:
- first, the High Priest Caiaphas and his associates who collaborated with Rome to save their nation and their own skin and positions rather than defend Jesus;
- next, the scribes, Pharisees and others who knowingly rejected His 'kingdom' of the poor;
- then, the disciples of Jesus who betrayed, denied, and forsook Him;
- finally, Jesus Himself was tested and tried severely in the garden before His death...
"Jesus alone was able to accept the challenge of the hour. It set him above everyone else as the silent truth that judges every human being. Jesus died alone as the only person who had been able to survive the test. Everyone else failed and yet everyone else was given another chance..."
This chapter is about Jesus' trial by Rome and the collaboration of the Jewish leaders with Rome. Nolan looks at the charges "which they could have brought against Jesus, the charges which they actually did bring against him and the real motives for wanting to destroy him...Jesus could have been charged with deliberately breaking the Sabbath or practicing magic (casting out devils by the power of Satan); he was actually charged with claiming to be the Messiah-king; and the real motive, according to Mark followed by Matthew, was envy or jealousy..."
He points out that because these distinctions aren't maintained consistently by the gospel writers, there is confusion about this. The author also distinguishes between the part played by Rome and the part played by the Jewish leaders in Jesus' sentencing and death: "Jesus was tried, sentenced and executed by the Roman court. But the gospel writers, like all early Christians, endeavored to make it quite clear that, in spite of this, the Jewish leaders were more to blame for Jesus' death than the Romans."
In the confusing reports by the gospel writers, there is one thing certain, which is that Jesus' claim to be the Messiah or king of the Jews is the only thing that He was charged with by Rome and it was Rome that carried out the crucifixion. (The Jews had no authority to do this.)
Nolan describes how ruthless Pilate was and why he was eager to be rid of Jesus: Rome executed all "prophets and potential Messiahs" for fear of an uncontrollable uprising against the government. The Jewish high priest was appointed by the Romans for the purpose of helping to maintain the peace, especially during the festivals in Jerusalem. Though there are a couple of different reasons why the Jewish leaders sided with Pilate, "...In either case the decision of the high priest and his council was to collaborate with Rome. Political expediency demanded that this man be handed over and allowed to die. To attempt to save his life would be national suicide...they betrayed Jesus."
A remarkable thing about Jesus' trial is that He never defended Himself. No matter what He was accused of or who accused Him, He remained silent. "Jesus stood there without a word, putting everyone else to the test. The truth of the matter is that it was not Jesus who was on trial. His betrayers and accusers were on trial before him. His silence puzzled, disturbed, questioned and tested them. Their words were turned back at them and they condemned themselves out of their own mouths."
The chapter ends with a summary of all those who were tested and judged by the killing of Jesus:
- first, the High Priest Caiaphas and his associates who collaborated with Rome to save their nation and their own skin and positions rather than defend Jesus;
- next, the scribes, Pharisees and others who knowingly rejected His 'kingdom' of the poor;
- then, the disciples of Jesus who betrayed, denied, and forsook Him;
- finally, Jesus Himself was tested and tried severely in the garden before His death...
"Jesus alone was able to accept the challenge of the hour. It set him above everyone else as the silent truth that judges every human being. Jesus died alone as the only person who had been able to survive the test. Everyone else failed and yet everyone else was given another chance..."
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