Tag Archives: Jesus

Jesus the Ikon of Justice – part 1

All of humanity dreams of justice, not many however are willing for justice to live with them. For the Christian, justice can be a confusing word. Illustratively, a recent London conference that I participated in, saw our group want to focus on the externalisation of justice. Justice as politics, as public morality, justice as legal constitution or the criminal justice system and its restorative or retributional elements.

Certainly in Britain we have a strong tradition of Christians invading the public arena and ushering in social change for the betterment of the poor and society at large. Trade Unions, The Christian Socialist Movement, the Social Reformers like Shaftesbury and Cadbury, the abolitionists like St Patrick and Wilberforce. The creation of the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and the founders of the National Health Service all give witness to the power of an individual or a groups conviction in Gods justice giving rise to social change that led to a more equitable society.

Interestingly the one area of the public arena where Christians seem to be left behind is in shaping the global environmental movement, but even here, there are exciting developments emerging that may just puncture the British narrative and begin to drive the agenda. This narrative being rooted in the confession that God is the Creator and we as the created have a due diligence to care for, not exploit, our world for the common good. However these are the fruits, not the roots of the great river of justice that flows from heaven to earth.

For our group, the default position  concerning justice was to digest the word justice as though it was an external reality, a law, a rule that I must obey and be imposed. The ultimate sanction being the removal of civil freedoms and in some cases state sponsored executions. The role of the Christian in this process was to act as a mitigating force for the extremes of injustice, and to in some way campaign for our beliefs. Yet when pushed we struggled to land a definition of what makes our view of justice distinct and unique for both personal life as well as a major force in the shaping of a just and equitable society.

As a follower of Jesus, this challenge of pursuing Gods justice has been a defining expression of what I believe God has called me to be. It has equally at times, become a burden, idol and obstacle to my maturing in my faith. How does one fulfill this primary mandate to ‘follow Christ’ whilst maintaining a just interaction with the world? Below I will aim to outline some of the understanding that I have gleaned over the years of working alongside people who are very much at the front line of out working Gods justice in countries as diverse as Colombia, Ethiopia, India, Sierra Leone and the UK. Drawing primarily from St Johns Gospel, I want to demonstrate the idea that without a contemplative foundation to ones spirituality, activism cannot find its fullest expression in whatever arena we may be active.

The Incarnation of God in the man Jesus is an extension of the Divine personhood and presents me with an immediate window through which to understand Justice. I should of course caveat this point with a basic assumption, that Jesus is the Son of God (John i v18, 34) as John the Baptist confessed. As a member of humanity (John i v14) he was equally divine  (John i v1-2) and I have come to understand this to mean that to be God is also to be fully human. Jesus as a human, must be the distinctive and unique authority in all matter of social and creational ethics. For him not to be authoritative in these matters would be to deny the divinity and humanity of Christ.  He fully inhabited this planet and a body. Jesus is the centre of worship, faith and of course practice.

Assuming this as I do, I reflect on the incarnation of God as an act of intentional communication as to these social and creational priorities. The word becoming flesh and living among us (John i v14) shows us that Jesus is the Word and the two are inseparable (John i v1) How God chooses to do something is as authoritative for the follower of Christ as the fact of God being God and due our devotion and adoration. What does this teach me in regards to Gods justice and perfect plan for redemption and cosmic reconciliation?

At this point I find myself having to reflect on the Holy Trinity. St John’s discourse throughout chapter one gives me one of clearest visual illustrations of the perfect community that is the Godhead (John 1 v32-33). Here I have a picture of God’s perfect world of mutual love, appreciation, submission and creativity. To use a negative theological approach for a moment, there is no fracture, social alienation, abuse, crime, power distortion or use of coercion and violence in what John the Baptist witnessed at the baptism of Jesus. There is no injustice in the character and nature of God.  It is creative mutuality at its most intense and sublime. As God breaks into the world that moral consistent signature is extended to the world we inhabit (Colossians 1 v19-20).

The arrival of Jesus is therefore both illuminating of the world that receives Him as well as authoritative for us who wish to worship God in the light and truth of the Son of Man.

In a separate post I will look to develop this incarnational principle.

The Rule of Columba – Rule 2 – Be naked in your imitation of Christ.

In this series of short reflections on the Rule of Columba my aim is to explore the wisdom of Columba’s life in Christ and creation and to seek to apply this ancient rule, this daily walk to my own personal exploration of the life of the Spirit. In doing so I hope that in some way the principles of the Columban rule can find a newer expression and vitality in the modern era.

Rule 2.

Quite a number of years ago I came to an obvious realisation that it is was not enough to believe in Jesus, but I needed to believe in the things that Jesus believed in. I am sure for many people this is a rather obvious statement, but for me it was an important moment. It altered the course of my journey from becoming a word based person, where my relationship with God was defined by the levels of information I took in and what I could regurgitate through intellectual discourse, to a person who was intentionally seeking to understand what Jesus believed in and then trying to outwork that in my life. To be honest I am not convinced I have done a particularly good job of this, but the shift in my way of viewing the life of the Spirit was subtle yet profound for me. It led me to a series of changes that although turbulent at the time, I am now glad I took.

The first was moving away from evangelicalism, not an outright rejection of it. Evangelicalism became for me an interesting form of understanding The Trinity that seemed to be more about Father Son and Holy Bible than a honest encounter with the Triune God. In my simplistic world I could not reconcile the Scriptures claims that Jesus is the Word of God, as John so eloquently writes in the first chapter of his Gospel and the preachers claims that the Bible is the word of God. Are there two words? Is the bible Jesus? Is Jesus a book? Have we reduced Jesus down to a book? The questions however naive were very real to me and I plumped for Jesus being the eternal word and the Scriptures helping me to understand this.

Secondly it caused me to engage the plight of the poor and the Spirits’ cry for justice in the earth as a vocational calling. Justice stopped being the outworking of a law prescribed by God for all people to follow and to be punished if disobeyed, rather it became a doorway through which I could draw close to God and be embraced by the Spirit of Justice. Justice does of course transcend law as God is just and to pursue justice is to pursue God as Gods’ moral characteristic is justice. God can be nothing other than morally consistent and as the creator this moral consistency is what I have come to understand as justice.

Thirdly it caused me to reflect and to try to act upon this idea of Imitating Christ. Not easy and perhaps why Columba links the naked imitation of Christ with the evangelists as well, but more of that in a later post. Once again I found the inner journey more telling than the external one. Yet as with all things in the Divine the internal always has an external outworking. Nakedness is not a theological idea, it is a word that captures heart, spirit and compunction. It is a state of being. Naturally the practice of literal nakedness in the British climate would be an act of ridiculous stupidity and would mean death by exposure and certainly not a pleasant sight in the eye of the beholder. It became for me and what I believe to be the true intent of the rule, an idea of spiritual intent.

Nakedness is raw intimacy -  the sense of the immediate, the truly close, beyond the individual. Nakedness in relationship to Christ is a place of total vulnerability and exposure to the power of the Trinity. As I reflected on it, it became not only that child like state of natural innocence and uninhibited freedom, it also became that mature condition in adulthood of passion, climax and connectedness. So many of the relationships recorded in Scripture and mystical history have attempted to capture this full exposure to the immanent and invasive presence of God. Perhaps the pinnacle of this is the Song of Songs; a rich erotic love poem exposing the disarming power of love, the passionate sexual desire it calls out, the physically disabling nature of this when lost and the prudent reminder to everyone to beware arousing this condition if it cannot be fully satisfied.

I began to understand why Columba would order his rule for living in such a way as to ensure the follower of Jesus had secured their location and space to be ‘alone and separate’ first, before engaging in the pursuit of naked imitation of Christ. Once you open your soul to the surging motion of Gods’ creative passion and love, you must be in the place to fully immerse yourself in the relationship without distraction, as there is nothing that can compare to this exposure to the Divine fire and love. The naked imitation of Christ starts with the naked exposure that mirrors the Son with the Father. Alone and withdrawn on the mountain of prayer. Not the liturgical prayer of religious obedience, rather the open, vulnerable, relational union that fulled the core of Jesus and created within the Son of Man the humanity the world finds so divinely attractive.

Creation is the Cathedral of our worship.

I guess for many people who express a devotion to Jesus Christ and who identify with his message, the celebration of Easter will be the high point of the annual calendar. It is the time of year when followers of Christ focus on the core elements of their faith, belief and practice.

I’ve always been captivated by the message of Jesus, yet for me the drama of the entire story is the most compelling aspect. The longer I have tried to walk with Jesus, the less the abstract theological interpretations of his story have been relevant to me. What has motivated me to pursue the man was his willingness to demonstrate truth and freedom to all of us. A freedom that transcends death itself in the resurrection and a truth that liberates all the creation from the cruel subjugation of selfish motive and control.

An ancient icon

As a group of us stood in the circle of Stonehenge on Easter evening 2010, I was aware that I had very little to say to our small gathering. In recent  years I have come to a place in my walk with God where I am aware that I have nothing to say. The Jesus story has already been told and enacted, any additions I may make to it through words are of little substance at best and the egocentric ramblings of an insecure preacher at worst. God I have discovered does not have a problem communicating with people. The wonder of creation, the uniqueness of every person, the emotion of a moment, the hunger for justice and freedom, the hatred of evil, the healing power of a tender touch, the intimacy of love making are some of the myriad of subtle and powerful ways the Creator speaks and is a testimony to the pure genius of The Trinity and my deafness to the vitality of life.

In truth celebrating Easter at Stonehenge was the culmination of a journey I have been on for a number of years. A walk of discovery with Christ, in which the internal journey and narrative has been played out and echoes in the physical world around me. An internal journey away from the noise of religious expression and expectation and towards the stillness and silence of discovery in Christ. A discovery that the Kingdom of God is not about talk, but about power. Its been a journey that I have found deeply disturbing as I have faced my own prejudices, religious addictions, disconnection from creation, lack of rootedness in the earth of my home and landscape, shallowness of my faith and my weakness in allowing my head to be turned by any minor distraction so I can avoid engaging with the Holy Trinity.

Yet it has been a wondrous journey of new possibilities and expression. For me that is what Easter at Stonehenge was all about. The living picture of breaking of bread and drinking of wine in remembrance of Jesus by a rag-tag broken, dysfunctional group of people of whom not all would have said they are followers of Christ. On an Easter date (4 April 2010) that was one of the few days when the western and eastern (I include Celtic church as eastern) celebrated on the same day. Within the iconic British stone circle of Salisbury plain that is one of the world’s most ancient ceremonial sites. A site more associated with druidic practices than with Christ centred ones. And yet it was a unique coming together of all the strands of life; the ancient, the modern, openness to creation, celebration of life, friendship, prayer and spirituality all gathered around the person of Jesus.

There is no where in the world that is off limits to the Holy Spirit and for me Easter at Stonehenge has been like walking through a doorway that leads to a world of endless possibilities in the Spirit.