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A very odd sort of king
âAs Jesus was going along, people kept spreading their cloaks on the road. When he came to the descent of the Mount of Olives, the whole crowd of disciples began to celebrate and praise God at the tops of their voicesâ (Luke 19.36â37). The crowd went wild as he got nearer. This was the moment theyâd been waiting for. All the old songs came flooding back, and they were singing, chanting, cheering and laughing. At last their dreams were going to come true.
But in the middle of it all their leader wasnât singing. âWhen he came near and saw the city, he wept over itâ (v. 41). Yes, their dreams were indeed coming true. But not in the way they had imagined.
He was not the king they expected. He wasnât like the monarchs of old who sat on their jewelled and ivory thrones, dispensing their justice and wisdom. Nor was he the great warrior-king some had wanted. He didnât raise an army and ride into battle at its head. He was riding on a donkey. And he was weeping, weeping for the dream that had to die, weeping for the sword that would pierce his supporters to the soul. Weeping for the kingdom that wasnât coming as well as for the kingdom that was.
Jesusâ arrival in Jerusalem a few days before his death is one of the best-known scenes in the gospels. But what was it all about? What did Jesus think he was doing?
I have a clear, sharp memory of the moment when that question first impinged on my consciousness. It was the autumn of 1971. It was a month or so after our wedding, and I had just begun my training for ordination. New worlds were opening in front of me. But I hadnât expected this one. A friend lent me the album Jesus Christ Superstar.
I had known about Jesus all my life. Indeed, I venture to say that I had known Jesus all my life; better still, perhaps, to say that he had known me. He was a presence, a surrounding love, whispering gently in scripture, singing at the top of his voice in the beauty of creation, majestic in the mountains and the sea. I had done my best to follow him, to get to know him, to find out what he wanted me to do. He wasnât an undemanding friend; he was always a disturbing, challenging presence, warning against false trails and grieving when I went that way anyway. But he was also a sigh-of-relief healing presence; like Bunyanâs hero, I knew what it was to see burdens roll away. I had been many times around the cycle we find in the gospels in the character of Peter: firm public declarations of undying loyalty, followed by miserable failure, followed by astonishing, generous, forgiving love.
But as my bride and I moved into our basement apartment, I listened to Superstar. Andrew Lloyd Webber was then still a brash young pup, not a Peer of the Realm, and Tim Rice was still writing lyrics with real force and depth. Some were worried about Superstar. Wasnât it cynical? Didnât it raise all kinds of doubts? I didnât hear it that way. I heard the questions: âWho are you? What have you sacrificed? ⌠Do you think youâre what they say you are?â These were the proper next questions, the other side of the story I had learned (or at least another side of the story).
It was as though all the energy of the popular culture of the 1960s had suddenly swung around, away from its preoccupation with sex, drugs and rock ânâ roll, and was looking again at the Jesus it had almost forgotten. There was a sense of, âOh, youâre still there, are you? Where do you fit? What was it all about anyway?â Western culture bounced back at Jesus the question with which he had teased his own followers. Instead of âWho do you say that I am?â we were asking him, âWho do you say that you are?â
Rice and Lloyd Webber didnât give an answer. That wasnât their aim. I often point out to students that they come to a university not to learn the answers, but to discover the right questions. The same was true of Superstar. And the question it asked was, I am convinced, right and proper. Itâs not the only question about Jesus, not the only question we should ask of Jesus, but itâs utterly appropriate in its own way. And necessary. Unless you ask this question (âAre you who they say you are?â), your âJesusâ risks disappearing like a hot-air balloon off into the mists of fantasy. This problem remains enormously important.
It is the question of who Jesus actually was. What he did, what he said, what he meant. It is, by implication, the question that any grown-up Christian faith must address. Is our sense of Jesus as a presence, disturbing but also healing, confronting but also comforting, simply a figment of our imagination? Was Freud right to see it as just a projection of our inner desires? Was Marx right to say that it was just a way of keeping the hungry masses quiet? Was Nietzsche right to say that Jesus taught a wimpish religion that has sapped the energy of humankind ever since? And â since those three gentlemen are now a venerable part of the cultural landscape in their own right â are todayâs shrill atheists right to say that God himself is a delusion, that Christianity is based on a multiple mistake, that itâs all out of date, bad for your health, massively disproved, socially disastrous and ridiculously incoherent?
Faced with these questions, whether from Rice and Lloyd Webber, Richard Dawkins or anybody else, Christians have a choice. They can go on talking about âJesusâ, worshipping him in formal liturgy or informal meetings, praying to him, and finding out what happens in their own lives and communities when they do so â and failing to address the question that has been in the back of everyone elseâs mind for the last century at least. Or they can accept the question (even if, like many questions, it needs redefining, the closer you get to it) and set about answering it.
I was not yet ready, in the autumn of 1971, to do the latter. But within a few years I had realized that I could no longer put it off. By then, in the late 1970s, I was ordained, preaching regularly, leading Confirmation classes, organizing worship. I was finishing my doctorate and teaching undergraduates. My wife and I had two children and more on the way. We were facing the challenges of âreal lifeâ on several levels. Why should I avoid the challenge of the real Jesus? Every time I opened the gospels and thought about my next sermon, I was faced with questions. Did he really say that? Did he really do that? What did it mean? There were plenty of voices around to say he hadnât said it, he didnât really do it, and that the only âmeaningâ is that the church is a big confidence trick. If I was going to preach and, for that matter, if I was going to counsel people to trust Jesus and get to know him for themselves, I couldnât do it with integrity unless I had faced the hard questions for myself.
Itâs been a long journey. No doubt there is much more to discover. But this book will tell you, as simply as possible, what Iâve found out so far.
The challenge to the churches
With Jesus, itâs easy to be complicated and hard to be simple. Part of the difficulty is that Jesus was and is much, much more than people imagine. Not just people in general, but practising Christians, the churches themselves. Faced with the gospels â the four early books that give us most of our information about him â most modern Christians are in the same position I am in when I sit down in front of my computer. My computer will, I am reliably informed, do a large number of complex tasks. I only use it, however, for three things: writing, email, and occasional Internet searches. If my computer were a person, it would feel frustrated and grossly undervalued, its full potential nowhere near realized. We are, I believe, in that position today when we read the stories of Jesus in the gospels. We in the churches use these stories for various obvious things: little moralizing sermons on how to behave in the coming week, aids to prayer and meditation, extra padding for a theological picture largely constructed from elsewhere. The gospels, like my computer, have every right to feel frustrated. Their full potential remains unrealized.
Worse, Jesus himself has every right to feel frustrated. Many Christians, hearing of someone doing âhistorical researchâ on Jesus, begin to worry that what will emerge is a smaller, less significant Jesus than they had hoped to find. Plenty of books offer just that: a cut-down-to-size Jesus, Jesus as a great moral teacher or religious leader, a great man but nothing more. Christians now routinely recognize this reductionism and resist it. But I have increasingly come to believe that we should be worried for quite the opposite reason. Jesus â the Jesus we might discover if we really looked! â is larger, more disturbing, more urgent than we â than the church! â had ever imagined. We have successfully managed to hide behind other questions (admittedly important ones) and to avoid the huge, world-shaking challenge of Jesusâ central claim and achievement. It is we, the churches, who have been the real reductionists. We have reduced the kingdom of God to private piety, the victory of the cross to comfort for the conscience, and Easter itself to a happy, escapist ending after a sad, dark tale. Piety, conscience and ultimate happiness are important, but not nearly as important as Jesus himself.
You see, the reason Jesus wasnât the sort of king people had wanted in his own day is â to anticipate our conclusion â that he was the true king, but they had become used to the ordinary, shabby, second-rate sort. They were looking for a builder to construct the home they thought they wanted, but he was the architect, coming with a new plan that would give them everything they needed, but within a quite new framework. They were looking for a singer to sing the song they had been humming for a long time, but he was the composer, bringing them a new song to which the old songs they knew would form, at best, the background music. He was the king, all right, but he had come to redefine kingship itself around his own work, his own mission, his own fate.
It is time, I believe, to recognize not only who Jesus was in his own day, despite his contemporariesâ failure to recognize him, but also who he is, and will be, for our own. âHe came to what was his own,â wrote one of his greatest early followers, âand his own people did not accept himâ (John 1.11). That puzzle continues.
Perhaps, indeed, it has been the same in our own day. Perhaps even âhis own peopleâ â this time not the Jewish people of the first century, but the would-be Christian people of the Western world â have not been ready to recognize Jesus himself. We want a âreligiousâ leader, not a king! We want someone to save our souls, not rule our world! Or, if we want a king, someone to take charge of our world, what we want is someone to implement the policies we already embrace, just as Jesusâ contemporaries did. But if Christians donât get Jesus right, what chance is there that other people will bother much with him?
This book is written in the belief that the question of Jesus â who he really was, what he really did, what it means, and why it matters â remains hugely important in every area, not only in personal life, but also in political life, not only in âreligionâ or âspiritualityâ, but also in such spheres of human endeavour as worldview, culture, justice, beauty, ecology, friendship, scholarship and sex. You may be relieved, or perhaps disappointed, to know that we wonât have space to address all of these. What we will try to do is to look, simply and clearly, at Jesus himself, in the hope that a fresh glimpse of him will enable us to gain a new perspective on everything else as well. There will be time enough to explore other things in other places.
Getting inside the gospels
Jesus of Nazareth was a figure of history. Thatâs where we have to start. He was born somewhere around 4 BC (the people who invented our present system of dating got it nearly right, but ...