Jesus As President: Politics For Ordinary Radicals, by Claiborne and Haws
Oct. 7: Introduction and Section One
1.
Why Jesus as President Is A
Contradiction; why Jesus wouldn’t and couldn’t be President, no more than he would
or could have been Caeser
2.
What do we mean by politics? Use the
word to mean Civics, Citizen, Civil Engagement with Others In and For The World…being
committed citizens to country party community but not giving them ultimate
allegiance so able to challenge and question while following.
3.
Are we ordinary radicals? They are
people who do extraordinary things on a daily basis in ordinary life, away from
positions of great wealth and power and influence, living life tapping into the
“root” (the meaning of radical) of God’s dream and values for the world, and by
doing so are seen as living very different kinds of lives.
4.
Our definition of Church, may be very
different from others definitions and mission of church: “the body of people
who make the God of Jesus visible in the world (for better or for worse).”
5.
Can we distinquish between (US) American
and what is Christian? The irony of having In God We Trust on our national
currency.
6.
God is continually forming a new kind
of people to bring light to the world: Genesis, Exodus, Exile, the role of the
prophets in Israel
7.
Temptations in the bible and in our
world today: to be like God, to possess all things, the most alluring,
beautiful, even peace, freedom, justice can be an idol that leads us to kill.
Temptation to power. Cain and Abel. The Tower of Babel.
8.
Abram and Sarah and small helpless
band of wanderers seeking new land come right after the Babel episode, a sign
of how a people is to be. Even in their/our dysfunction.
9.
The tension of King or No King for
Israel; of Temple or Tabernacle for Israel. Competing voices and visions in the
Hebrew Scriptures. Over and over kings oppressed; overturned; for every King
there is a Prophet. Some supported by people, some voices in the wilderness; “their
vocation is to interrupt the status quo.”
They were “always doing wild things—stunts, pranks, miracles—that exposed
and unveiled truth.” The story of Rizpah (2 Samuel 21). Desmond Tutu: The
oppressed are freed from being oppressed and the oppressors are freed from
being oppressors” and this is when God heals the land.
10.
Yahweh continues to be careful to choose the
weakest, most unlikely characters to be the heroes of the liberation story. We
were taught as children to sing songs of Noah and Abraham and little David and
Goliath but not about debt cancellation, land reforms, food distribution and
slave amnesty, about taking care of resident aliens and widows and orphans.
About taking just enough for your need, not your greed.
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