Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Spiritual Hiccups - Assumptions

Why is it that so many "good, religious folks" who encountered Jesus dismissed him?  How is it that people who were trying to be faithful to God, saw Jesus as a threat to that faith?  These are hardly academic questions, and their answers say something about what might cause us to miss God at work in our midst.

How do we know when our religiosity (my spell check says that's a real word) draws us closer to God and when it actually pushes God away.  If we assume that this simply can't happen, then I suspect we find ourselves in precisely the same place as those Pharisees, priests, and other religious leaders who found Jesus so problematic.  Often we tend to minimize this problem by turning the Pharisees and  priests into dastardly villains, people of such wickedness that they are nothing like us.  But there is really nothing to support such a view beyond our desire for them to be nothing like us.

The fact is that many of Jesus' opponents objected to him not because they were terrible people, not because they set out to be enemies of God, but because Jesus acted so counter to their assumptions of what it meant to be good, religious folks.  If we try to view Pharisees as the good, church-going, upstanding citizens of their day, who winced at the immoral behavior of those who never darkened the door of a synagogue, who thought their society would be a lot better off if people were more serious about keeping the commandments, who worried about a culture that was becoming less attuned to the faith because of the enticements of Greco-Roman hedonism, we may see that they are not so different from some of us.  Which brings me back to the question of how such folks missed God at work in Jesus.

What are your religious assumptions about what it means to be Christian, about how we encounter God, about what God is up to in the world and how we connect to that?  And if Jesus showed up, would he fit those assumptions?  Would the Jesus who hung out with outcasts and riff-raff, who saved his harshest words for good religious folks, who never let a religious rule get in the way of helping someone, would he not offend good church folks like us?

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