Thursday, July 26, 2018

Today’s Theology

Jesus shunned no one as best I can tell from the Gospels.  William Stringfellow discovered the same thing. “He shunned no one,” Stringfellow wrote, “not even adulterers, not even tax collectors, not even neurotics and psychotics, not even those tempted to suicide, not even alcoholics, not even poor people, not even beggars, not even lepers, not even those who ridiculed Him, not even those who betrayed Him, not even His own enemies.”  Jesus shunned no one.  

The Bible, when really heard, speaks of this world in which you and I live—not some make-believe world, not some not yet existent world, not some imaginary world.  The Bible speaks of this world, the world we know and the world we live in, with all its goodness and beauty, with all its ugliness and filth, with all its confusion.  And—if heard—the Bible tells us, that it is in this world (and its history) where God is present and evident.  It is this world into which God comes, this world for which God cares, this world where God is with us, this world where God resides. It is into this world that Jesus came.  It is this world where Jesus has already lived our life, already died our death, and has already risen from our death.  God is here and may be known in the bedlam, in the ugliness, in the greed, in the goodness of this world where you and I live.  

God was in the world and the world knew Him not, but Jesus (the light that shines in all human hearts)  discerned God in our midst and helped us see what he saw and experienced.  What is God like?  God is like Jesus.  God shuns no one—not in the 1st century and not in the 21st century.  God does not shun Democrats or Republicans, not even Trump, Obama, or Putin, not even Hillary, not even immigrants, not even homosexuals or drug addicts, not even Stormy Daniels.  God  does not shun those who betray God or those who are enemies of God.  God shuns no one.


Jesus did not try to disguise anything about this world as it is.  He knew there was darkness and light, evil and good, and said so.  He knew there was war, suffering, peace, disease, security, pain, health, lust, hate, arrogance, forgiveness and love, and said so.  His followers know this too—for they are given the gift of Jesus:  the gift  to discern God’s presence in the world, to live in the grace of the Resurrection and to know the secret of life (which is all bound up in that unequivocal assurance that I am loved by One who loves all others which enables me to love myself and frees me to love another, any other, every other”). Whatever happens, wherever we go, wherever we look, wherever we turn, we shall discover that God is already there. 

Morning on the Baltic Sea

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