Mark 8:27-38
Answering (and Living) the Jesus Question
James Sledge September
16, 2018
The
other day I stopped into the grocery store to grab a couple of items. As I looked
for them, I happened down an aisle that was filled with Halloween candy and
paraphernalia. I shouldn’t have been
surprised – it’s September after all, but I was. It was one of those sultry,
ninety degree days, and it didn’t feel anything like fall.
But
fall is almost here, which means the election is just around the corner. I’ve
been something of a political junkie for much of my life, but I confess that
I’ve grown tired of it. I don’t want to see all the political ads. I don’t want
to see candidates who wrap themselves in a Christian mantle while spouting
hatred and intolerance and outright racist ideas. I especially don’t want to
watch another round of church leaders doing irreparable damage to the image of
the faith by insisting that candidates who show not the tiniest inclination to
follow the teachings of Jesus are somehow God’s candidate. Wake me when it’s
over.
Of
course then the Christmas shopping season will be almost upon us, complete with
culture war skirmishes. Some of the same folks who touted God’s candidates will
insist that we “put Christ back in Christmas,” and they’ll get angry if someone
says “Happy Holidays.” Sigh… Wake me when it’s over.
It’s
amazing all the ways that Jesus or Christ or God or Christian faith gets
invoked to support all manner of things. There are churches that celebrate the
Second Amendment in worship and encourage members to bring their guns. There
are churches that loudly proclaim, “God Hates Fags.” There are churches that
say Donald Trump is God’s man in the White House, and there are churches that
stage protests against Donald Trump. There are churches that see same sex relationships
as an abomination and sin, and there are churches that marry same sex couples.
And all these churches, at least all that call themselves Christian, claim
Christ in some way.
When
people insist that we put Christ back in Christmas, which one do they mean? Is
it the one who blesses same sex marriages? Is it the one who says to love your
enemy and not to resist the one who strikes you? Or is it a different Christ? How
many of them are there? Sometimes it seems that we Christians have been given
the answer to the question, but we’re not at all sure what that answer means.