2-16 The Radical Acceptance Of Jesus
His demands upon those who would follow Him were radical- to take up
a cross and follow Him, to hate father and mother, to sacrifice all
worldly ambition for Him. Jesus often spoke of breaking with ones
natural family; and His own example showed as ever what He meant. Yet
the family was the primary social unit in 1st century Palestine, the
basis of identity and security. The man who wanted to first bury his
father before following the Lord was rejected by the demanding Jesus-
when to properly bury one's dead was among the most sacred obligations
of Judaism. His standards were sometimes unbelievably high. Whoever
called his brother a fool (Gk. more-a moron, but implying a
rebel, an apostate- Ps. 78:8; Jer. 5:23 LXX) was liable to eternal
condemnation by Him. When struck on the right cheek- which was a
Semitic insult to a heretic(1)-
they were to not respond and open themselves up for further insult
[surely a lesson for those brethren who are falsely accused of wrong
beliefs]. And yet the compassion of Jesus shines through both His
parables and the records of His words; as does His acceptance of people
for who they were. People were relaxed with Him because they could see
He had no hidden agenda. He wasn't going to use them for His own power
trip. He kept saying, His concrete Kingdom was yet to come. He wasn't
going to heap criticism and guilt upon them. And so people came to Him.
Today people are wary of joining a religious group because they feel
they cannot be themselves, that they will be forced into positions that
do violence to their integrity. But Jesus didn't treat people like
this; and that's just why they came to Him. And this surely must be a
lesson for us, never to institutionalize the body of Christ so that we
turn people away from Him rather than bring them to Him. His
sensitivity to people was and is simply stunning. Sensitive people
today, living as we do in this hard world, can find life unbearably
difficult. Every encounter with others can become excruciating. Yet
Jesus, the most sensitive man who ever lived, went through all this.
Victoriously. The way He forgave the thief on the cross, who had just "
cast the same [abuse] in His teeth" as had the unrepentant thief, is
an essay in this. Jesus was sensitive enough to understand the tortured
spirit and pain which gave rise to peoples' unkind behaviour. Jesus saw
the man's anguish, and had pity rather than anger with Him. And
somehow, in perhaps only His body language in response to the abuse
from the two thieves, the one thief was motivated to repent and dare to
ask for salvation.
Consider how He asks Zacchaeus to
eat with Him- a public sign of religious fellowship in first century
Palestine. This acceptance of the man for who and where he was,
inspired Zacchaeus to then start changing his life in practice- he then
offered to give back what he had stolen. When quizzed as to why He ate
/ fellowshipped with sinners, the Lord replied that He had come to call
sinners to repentance (Lk. 5:32). Think through the implications of
this. He fellowshipped with those who were so weak within the ecclesia
of Israel so as to bring them to repentance; His eating with them was
like a doctor making a home visit. The religious attitude of the
Pharisees was that one only fellowshipped someone who was repentant;
whereas the Lord said that He fellowshipped with people to bring them
to repentance. Note how in Lk. 19:1-10, the Lord offered salvation to
sinners before they had repented. It’s the same idea.
Time
and again His parables sought to justify His association with outcasts
(Lk. 14:15-24; 15:1-32; Mt. 18:23-25; 20:1-15; 21:28-32). When the
nobleman came to ask Jesus to cure his son, Jesus agreed; and the man
went home. But it was only on the way home that he really believed. He
came to faith spontaneously, and not because Jesus insisted on it. Or
remember the woman who had had five men in her life, and presumably a
number of children to go with each of them. Her face and body would
have reflected the story of her life. She was living with someone not
her husband. Jesus didn't tell her to break up with the guy. He knew
full well that if a woman left her man, she had nowhere to go. Here was
a woman who had been 'married' five times. Who would want her? There
were children involved. Probably even her family had rejected her.
Jesus accepted the real life situation, and human failure to rise up to
higher standards. One wonders whether the very lack of specific demand
from Jesus maybe motivated her to somehow normalize her life. The
gentle way Jesus treated these cases shows not so much approval, but an
understanding of the frailty of human nature. And this is what enabled
Jesus to be so unwaveringly committed to His own perfect standards, and
yet be so natural and at ease with the lowest of the low.
Notes
(1) Joachim Jeremias, The Sermon On The Mount (London: Athlone Press, 1961) pp. 27,28.