The love of God includes all and excludes none. So teaches Jesus.
The unifying love of God strengthens us. God has chosen to be a plenitude of longing love, writes Sarah Coakley, who invites us into full and ecstatic participation in the divine, Trinitarian life. Life arises when we love God back and participate in the archetypal Love of which all worldly love is an expression. Paul prays that:God, out of the riches of divine glory, will strengthen you inwardly with power through the working of the Spirit. May Christ dwell in your hearts through faith, so that you, being rooted and grounded in love, will be able to grasp fully the breadth, length, height, and depth of Christs love and, with all Gods holy ones, experience this love that surpasses all understanding, so that you may be filled with all the fullness of God. (Ephesians 3:1619)
To be filled with the fullness of God is to live according to the intention of Abba, as exemplified by Jesus and inspired by Sophia. Together, the Trinitarian persons elevate us out of our selves into their selves.
Our parishioner Nicole Lawless had a very powerful experience of this elevation. Struggling as an adolescent with a potentially lethal illness, she received direct, concrete intervention from God:
I went through so much growing upit was some tough stuff. I also had a severe eating disorder. In bed one nightI thought I would diefor real. I swear that God, Jesus, the Holy Ghost came to metold me to get up and go eat a piece of bread. I was to think of myself as a separate personstep outside myself and see myself as a child and take care of her. This was Gods will for me. No one was going to take care of me, but it was an insult to God for me to disrespect myself. This is Gods child, I heard, I felt or sensed. I think of that a lot. Its tough love, but it works for me whenever I want to give up. God says noI made youI want you to keep trying. And when you learn how your pain can help others, then there is hope, there are reasons to stay open to lifes challenges.
The psalms refer to God as our refuge and strength, a very present help in times of trouble (Psalm 46:1). For Nicole, this passage offers a concrete description of Gods activity, not an abstract idea about the divine nature. God will help us to do what we cant.
Openness to divine assistance does not imply weakness. Jesus, the Child of God, had a very strong sense of self that he placed in service of others. The authorities feared him because he was strong, not because he was weak. Even more dangerously, he shared his strength with others. The powerful, sensing an increase in power among the powerless, responded with violence. They do the same today because tyrants always want us to have a weak sense of self. Unsure people are easily controlled, while confident people can disrupt the tyrants systems of privilege.
Healthy self-love is distinct from pathological self-love because healthy self-love opens us up to the otherdivine or humanwhile pathological self-love closes us off. The true self wants to live and give life, and it does so by giving and receiving love: We know that we have passed from death to life because we love our siblings; if we refuse to love we are still dead, writes John (1 John 3:14).
Too often we fear the wrong death. We fear the death of the old self for the new because we are the old self, and we are attached to ourselves as we are. To avoid transformation, we restrict ourselves to a love that we can manage. We are like caterpillars that are perfectly comfortable with their familiar tree branch and resolve never to fly.
Who, beyond ourselves, does God invite us to love? An expert in the Jewish law poses this question to Jesus:
The expert in the law wants Jesus to provide him with a categorical grid, a map of humanity that will tell him who is an ally and who is an enemy, who is in and who is out. Jesus, the preacher of the cosmic Creator who loves all their children, turns the question on its head. For the protagonist of the story, he selects a despised Samaritan, a resident of Judaea to whom many in his audience would have denied the status of neighbor, yet who acts neighborly. The villains of the story are the indifferent priest and Levite who are too rich, important, and busy to dirty their hands helping the unfortunate man.
Jesuss atypical cast of characters obliterates the questioners preexisting categorical grid and denies him the usual markers of ethnicity, religion, and social status by which to determine human value. But Jesus isnt simply trying to transform the mans categorical grid. Jesus is trying to transform the man himself by inviting him into the mind of the universal Parent who deems all humanity their children, who wants us to treat one another, not just as neighbors, but as family. John sums up the teaching rather bluntly: If you say you love God but hate your sibling, you are a liar. For you cannot love God, whom you have not seen, if you hate your neighbor, whom you have seen. If we love God, we should love our siblings as well. We have this commandment from God (1 John 4:2021).
As the symbol of God, Jesus loves those whom society deems unlovable, thereby restoring the unloved to society. At the same time, he frees society from its anxiety-producing stratifications and exclusions. In a world that declared some people pure and others contaminated, Jesus heals through touch (John 9:23; Matthew 8:13), defying contamination to reveal mercy. In so doing, he erases the false boundaries of inclusion and exclusion that have no place in the Vision of God, and he places everyone at the center of a new commonwealth that has no boundaries.
To be clear: in his healing, Jesus is not condemning disability. Jesus is condemning our rejection of the disabled. Jesus heals, not to show that these persons should be accepted now, but to show that their exclusion was always wrong. First and foremost, it is the self-righteous judgmentalism of the abled that Jesus is treating in these stories. God is love for all, as they arenot as we demand that they be. (adapted from Jon Paul Sydnor, The Great Open Dance: A Progressive Christian Theology, pages 188-191)
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For further reading, please see:
Coakley, Sarah. God, Sexuality, and the Self: An Essay On the Trinity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013.
Voss Roberts, Michelle. Body Parts: A Theological Anthropology. Minneapolis: Fortress, 2017.
PJMcK
(24,803 posts)raging moderate
(4,605 posts)Then shall the King say to those on this right hand, "Come, inherit the Kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world. For I was hungry and you gave me food; I was thirsty and you gave me drink; I was a stranger and you took me in; I was naked and you clothed me; I was sick and you visited me; I was in prison and you came to me.".... And they shall say, "When, Lord?...." And he shall say..."Inasmuch as you have done it unto the least of these my brethren, you have done it unto me."
PJMcK
(24,803 posts)Response to The Great Open Dance (Original post)
wcmagumba This message was self-deleted by its author.
murielm99
(32,723 posts)Go away.
I don't often comment here, but I do read the posts with interest.
Norrrm
(4,125 posts)Trump's evangelicals/political Christians are the public face of Christianity in America today.
