Monday, July 25, 2011

The Road to Redemption – Jesus’ Messianic Ministry Game Plan

    Last week we looked at the slow but steady rise of messianism (the belief in a messiah) over the centuries prior to Jesus' birth. We also noted that there was during the Second Temple period no real consensus as to the nature or role of the messiah. All of this meant that when Jesus arrived on the scene the messiah field was wide open for interpretation. This can be seen in the wide array of messianic pretenders who came and went before and after Jesus. Each offered their particular slant on the messiah concept. Most, though not all, were leaders of armed gangs who tried to start a people's rebellion (something that succeeded after Jesus' death and ultimately led to the destruction of Israel). Jesus, as we will see, chose a very different tack in his short but world changing ministry.

    Jesus' ministry began in about his 30th year with his baptism by John the Baptist. While his baptism, proved to be a slight embarrassment (It is embarrassing because the church claims that Jesus was sinless…so why did he need a baptism for remission of sins? It is also embarrassing because the greater baptizes the lesser…so why wasn't Jesus baptizing John?) the church understood that this event was Jesus' "coming out party." It was in his baptism that Jesus received his commission and call to messianic ministry. Jesus' baptism
was followed by his being driven into the wilderness in order to be tempted and tested. Such tempting and testing was a rite of passage for all who would live as prophets of God. The wilderness was that place where prophets learned dependence on God and God alone.

    The Jesus story told by the Gospels diverges at this point. Matthew, Mark and John move directly to Jesus calling disciples. Luke on the other hand has Jesus lay out his ministry game plan before calling followers. For the moment we will go with Luke because the messianic ministry game plan laid out in Luke fits with the work of Jesus in all four gospels. So what is this messianic ministry game plan? It is God's plan for the reclamation of creation. We know this because Luke tells us that Jesus lifted it right out of the words of the prophet Isaiah, who was echoing not only God's word to himself, but was reconfirming what God had been about since the calling if Abram. This longstanding plan was to remake the world into the "good" creation that God had originally designed it to be.

    Jesus' game plan for this work was as follows. He was to preach good news to the poor; proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind; set at liberty those who are oppressed; and to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord's favor. In other words Jesus was going to set right the world that humanity had mucked up. I say this because if we turn to the Torah, to the most basic statement of God's plan for humanity, what we see is that God's desire for creation did not look much like the world into which Jesus was born. God's desire was that there be no poor (Jesus' world was filled with them), that there be no captives (Rome was all about captives and slavery), that all people know what God desired of them (the people around Jesus were being sucked into a Greco-Roman world with different beliefs and codes of moral conduct), that there be no oppression (the rulers, whether Jewish or Roman used force to keep the people in their place) and finally that the Jubilee year when all debts were cancelled and all land that had been bought was returned to its original owners would be proclaimed (this had never happened though the Torah says it should be done).

    As you can see Jesus' ministry was not simply about "spiritual" matters. Jesus was about restoring the political, economic, religious and social realities of the world in ways that would be God honoring. It is little wonder then that Jesus quickly ran afoul of those who sought to either maintain the status quo or who desired to change the status quo in order to impose their vision of life on the people of Israel. Nevertheless Jesus maintained his course even in the face of persecution and death. Over the next several weeks we will look at how Jesus went about accomplishing this mission.

    

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