20-20 The 21st Century Jesus
It was so hard for the Jewish mind to conceive that a man walking down
a dusty Galilee street was the awesome God of Sinai manifested in flesh.
And it's hard for us too. This is why the whole struggle over the trinity
has come about; people just can’t find the faith to believe that a real
man could have been the just as real perfect Son of God. It’s our same
struggle when we come to consider the cross; that a body hanging there,
covered with blood, spittle, dirt and flies, an image as palatable as
a hunk of meat hanging in a butcher’s shop... was and is the salvation
of the world, the real and ultimate way of escape for us from the guilt
of our iniquity. The life the Lord Jesus lived was 'the sort of life that
was in the Father's presence' (1 Jn. 1:2 Gk.). The sort of life God Almighty
lives, the feelings and thoughts He has, were the life and feelings and
thoughts and words and deeds of the man Jesus. This has to be reflected
upon deeply before we grasp the huge import which this has. That a Man
who walked home each day along the same dusty streets of Nazareth was
in fact living the sort of life that was and is the life of God in Heaven.
And so we must try to image Him as He might be today. If He lived in
your town, how would He be? 'Jesus' was a fairly common name in
first century Palestine. So the Anglo-Saxon 21st century
Jesus would be called Steve, or a Russian one Vladimir, or a Hispanic
one Jose. He'd be a manual worker, maybe a mechanic at a gas station,
living in some dumb village. Talking with a rural accent, but with
gently piercing eyes set in a smiley, bearded face. Anyone who worked
with Him was struck by His intelligence and sensitivity, yet nobody
in the workplace felt threatened by Him in any way. Remember how
the Lord grew in favour with men; He was popular, and yet nobody
guessed that He was the perfect, sinless Son of God. There were
no girlie posters in the mechanic's workshop. Not because Jesus
had asked for the guys to take them down. But they just sensed His
feelings, and somehow felt His eyes looking right through them (consider
how often the Gospels mention how Jesus turned and looked at people).
So they'd taken them down. He rode to work on a bike [or did He
drive to work in a beat up Honda Civic?]. Sometimes His bike got
a puncture and He had to push it home in the rain. He did the shopping
for His mum, a reclusive figure with an unclear past, and balanced
the bags on His handlebars. Once they fell off and the eggs broke...but
His body language exuded a patience and almost enjoyment of being
human as He cleared it all up. This essential joy within Him is
perhaps reflected in the 30 or so passages which record the Lord’s
use of humour in His teaching(1) .
He sometimes forgot the number of his mobile; once He sat on it
and broke a key. When some guy stopped and asked Him for a light,
He'd grin and say He didn't smoke; but then He got into carrying
a lighter just in case He was asked. And forgetful old Joe used
to say He just loved asking Jesus for a light because you just got
into such a nice chat with Him. He wore faded Levi's jeans, which
He passed down to His kid brothers. Whenever they lost something
(like the house keys) and got frustrated, He'd help them look for
it until it was found. He helped them with their homework- them
kids considered Him a real brainbox. Sometimes He'd hang out with
them, He'd be goalie up at the recreation ground while a bunch of
village kids played soccer, 4 against 4, with goalposts made up
of piles of jackets. Even though He was busy, so busy... and part
of His mind was in Heavenly places, on spiritual things. But that
never, ever, not once, I am convinced...showed.
Notes
(1) See Elton Trueblood, The
Humor Of Christ (New York: Harper and Row, 1964).
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