(image from http://www.anchor1611.org, item #4)
Jesus didn't die to appease God. Jesus died because he wouldn't appease men.
God sacrificed his ineffable infinity to become a
finite human with human limits in order to demonstrate The Way of Compassion
and a bottom-up society. He was killed "for our sins" in that the
society and culture we humans have created, ego-driven and top-down, couldn't
tolerate the radical and transformative message. Oppression sells. When the
oppressed rise up, the oppressors kill them. That is our collective human sin.
And that is what killed Jesus.
Penal substitution is one of the biggest lies
Christians tell themselves. When Christ “paid it all, all to him I owe” (as the
hymn goes), he wasn't paying a debt incurred by the individual sins of
believers (or the world, if you're a universalist). His sacrifice was not death
on the cross as some kind of late era human offering. His sacrifice was in
accepting the human limits on his infinite divinity in order to teach us compassion and equality. The human culture, created out of the blindly
ego-driven human desires for authority, hierarchy, and power-over, killed him
to save itself.
Despite the sincere efforts of groups like Anchor Baptist Church, who published the photo above, to establish that Jesus paid a debt to appease a deity whose holiness demanded perfection according to an impossible standard set by himself, the Bible actually never speaks of any debt owed to God (or even Satan, as one version of this doctrine states) nor that Jesus paid it. Nor does the Bible explain how failure to live up to the Ten Commandment standard, which standard even God himself couldn’t maintain in the Old Testament, incurs a debt, demands punitive justice, or is actually in any way responsible for the death of Jesus.
Despite the sincere efforts of groups like Anchor Baptist Church, who published the photo above, to establish that Jesus paid a debt to appease a deity whose holiness demanded perfection according to an impossible standard set by himself, the Bible actually never speaks of any debt owed to God (or even Satan, as one version of this doctrine states) nor that Jesus paid it. Nor does the Bible explain how failure to live up to the Ten Commandment standard, which standard even God himself couldn’t maintain in the Old Testament, incurs a debt, demands punitive justice, or is actually in any way responsible for the death of Jesus.
Sin is “having eaten of the Tree of the Knowledge of
Good and Evil”, or, having come to a state of consciousness in which duality is
possible, believing that separation from God is not only possible but the
inherent way of existence. Sin is living
in denial of the fundamental unity of All That Is. Sin creates the human conditions of
power-over and oppression, of hoarding resources and poverty, of In-groups and
Othering. The consequence of such belief
and behavior is death and degradation of most of the human race. And a nearly
irreconcilable poverty of spirit for those few at the top of the heap. There is reason to believe that the poverty
of spirit is so acute that the One Percenters indeed lack any capacity for
empathy or compassion at all. Sociopathy
rules.
Jesus’ death was not to justify some cosmic accounting
ledger for a tyrannically holy, fully Other, tortuously punitive deity. That story isn’t in the Bible. It’s a story modern Christians have made up
for themselves to keep the masses shame-laden and burdened with exalting the
few who manipulate the stories. Much
like the few who didn’t approve of the story Jesus was telling of a radical,
inclusive, egalitarian compassion.
Jesus told of unity and oneness and the inseparability of holy
and human. He taught that the weak and
the poor are as worthy and powerful as the rich and the strong. The One Percenters of his day had created a
society in which such talk wasn’t only heretical but treason. The social climbers and power-hungry and
would-be rich-and-famous colluded with the society of sin and degradation to
put that story to death.
We crucify Jesus again and all like him whenever we allow
oppression, hierarchy, poverty, or exclusion to occur. When we believe in the separation of sacred and
secular, when we ascribe to the few more worth than the many, when we deny the
holiness of all humanity.
No comments:
Post a Comment