As
Christians, we believe Jesus is both human and divine at the same time, the
Great Paradox. (Paradox Sept 2014 post) If your thoughts are
similar to mine, I place Jesus on the divine pedestal, the untouchable miracle worker,
the savior, putting dimensions into which I cannot relate to His humanity. I fail to put the human and the divine in Jesus
together… and I fail to find it in myself.
Here in lies my problem; I distance Jesus beyond relational, inserted into a
hierarchical model, He with the upper hand delivering to lowly me. We have a dysfunctional
relationship. We have more of an
agreement to terms … terms I always fail to live up to and unfortunately His
position elevates to be unapproachable. If
this configuration existed with my spouse or dear friends, our relationships
would be unhealthy. When I consider my friendships and those I
love dearly in relationships, neither I nor those in relation have an upper
hand. We share without an element of
power to create genuine, sincere bonds.
So … where does this leave my relationship with Jesus, the Great Paradox?
“… through him, with
him, and in him” we proclaim the Great Amen desiring in sincerity to be part of His
divinity. I’ve heard too often that God
had Jesus die as payment for our sins. I
suppose this wouldn’t bother me so much if I held onto the Old Testament
concept of a dominant, often angry God, but I’ve never thought of our God as
needing some violent payment in return for his love. A Franciscan theologian John Duns Scotus
argued, “Jesus did not come to change the
mind of God about humanity (it did not need changing)! Jesus came to change the
mind of humanity about God. … God does not love us because we are good; God
loves us because God is good.” God
always loves richly, unconditionally, without limits or boundaries. Hopefully we’ve shared or experienced this at
some point in the presence of others.
I think if one considers life, it is filled with loss and
renewal. Jesus himself
was crucified between a good thief and a bad thief, between temptation and
salvation, between feast and famine, followers and dissenters, hanging between heaven and earth,
coexisting as human and divine. He lived
through life’s threats and losses to renew the face of the earth. To be entirely divine would negate his
humanity and to be totally human would negate his divinity. Each
coexists in Him just as they coexist in us.
The Holy Spirit breathes in each of us.
We, too, are forever human and divine.
This is why I find all life, all creation to be sacred. I need to internalize since the beginning of
time, the gift of creation has been a blending of the material with the life-giving divine. The Kingdom of God is at hand! I
know this to be true when I see divinity merged with my humanity working in those exceptional moments in my
daily life! (Kingdom Jan. 2015 post)
In our spiritual evolution, our Lord’s hope is that we
will recognize the divine dwelling within each of us and in all of
creation. It is not a question of
individual souls lost or gained. We by our
nature being children of God share in His humanity and divinity.
We, the community, as family, are the One Body in
Christ. My invitation … your invitation
to Jesus … matters profoundly in the actions, the choices, the decisions to love!
1 comment:
nice work Tim - always appreciate your perspective and fresh thoughts
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