Monday, June 08, 2015

Holiness and Service

There is an inverse relationship between the degree to which we hold Jesus as a divine character and the degree to which we feel ourselves to be empowered by God's Holy Spirit. Surprisingly, if one thinks of Jesus as the divine Son of God, whose essential nature renders him able on Earth to do God's will, then we will tend to diminish the role of the Holy Spirit in ourselves. If we think of Jesus as a human being, just like each of us, who is empowered for his ministry and mission by the Spirit of his Baptism, then we will tend to understand that we are similarly, but uniquely, empowered by the same Spirit.

For those who take part in our twice-weekly Bible studies at Shiloh, the relationship can be understood as an inverse relationship between Christology and Pneumatology. Christology is an attempted definition of the one by whom we are saved, while Pneumatology deals with our understanding of the role of God's Holy Spirit. As it turns out, a high Christology results in a low Pneumatology. A low Christology equates to a high Pneumatology.

A more practical explanation comes organically, since we are in year B of the Revised Common Lectionary. Throughout year B, our concentration for the themes of worship come from the Gospel According to Mark. In Mark's Gospel, Jesus is drawn differently than in the other synoptics and John. Mark's Gospel begins with Jesus' Baptism. This is purposeful and meaningful. The author is making a very important point. His point is simply that Jesus' ability to do on Earth what God calls him to do is a function of the Holy Spirit, not of Jesus' essential nature. This is a low Christology and a high Pneumatology.

Throughout year B of the Revised Common Lectionary, we have the opportunity in the Church to examine the human side of Jesus, to see him as one of us, empowered uniquely by God's Spirit to accomplish what God directs. Mark does not deify Jesus. Instead, the author allows Jesus to wrestle with an unfolding awareness of the power of God's Spirit, and with means of utilizing the Spirit to do what is best for all and each person that Jesus encounters. The power to do God's will comes from God's Spirit in Jesus, not from his position as the Son of God. He is adopted to it.

Throughout the Season After Pentecost in year B of the Revised Common Lectionary, Mark's low Christology invites the Church to embrace a very high Pneumatology. We embrace a Holy Spirit that equipped Jesus and now equips us. We strive to understand and practice the ministry for which the Spirit enables us and to which the ministry of Jesus Christ calls us. As it did in Jesus, so the Spirit does in us.

If I may be so bold, I suggest that the contemporary Church of Jesus Christ struggles with a low Christology and a high Pneumatology, precisely because it levels the ground between Jesus' essential nature and ours. We have been conditioned to think of Jesus as "other," as unlike typical humanity, as being of divine origin and character. Mark's Gospel erases that distinction, or at least blurs its lines, to the point where we can see ourselves in Jesus. A careful reading of the text allows us to see ourselves both as equal to Jesus and equally empowered by God's Holy Spirit.

The Season After Pentecost becomes crucial in the liturgical calendar. The Church understands itself as the body of Christ, empowered, like Christ Jesus, by God's own Spirit, in order to establish God's will as an earthly way of life. The Church is completion of the promise that was made throughout history, and in Christ Jesus, to bring God's kingdom (forgive, please, the male imagery).

So, I invite every reader of The Shiloh Insider to entertain, at least for this liturgical season, the possibility that we are equal in essential nature to Jesus and equally empowered by God's own Spirit to accomplish God's will on earth.

No comments: