Monday, September 29, 2008

An Exercise to Exorcise

This post is a culmination of several things I have been pondering lately, including previous posts, books I'm reading for classes, conversations with my peers, etc. What sparked my idea for this post, however, was an article e-mailed to my by my grandmother. It's by Terry Mattingly and it discusses the comment made on the House floor by Steve Cohen (a Memphis democrat representative) that "Barak Obama was a community organizer like Jesus...Pontius Pilate was a governor." (click on the quote to watch video of Cohen making the remark).

Now this statement obviously upset many people, comparing Obama to Jesus and VP candidate Sarah Palin to Pontius Pilate. I recognize that it was insensitive in that issue, but I must say first that when listening to Palin's first speeches, I did not particularly appreciate the belittling of Obama's previous occupation as though it was something that doesn't matter, than we could live without. That's flat out meanness.

Instead of going on about presidential political theatre (you can find PLENTY of blogs that will reiterate what smarter people say each day), however, I wanted to do a little more thinking about Jesus as a "community organizer." I think this is a very appropriate term to describe Jesus. Unlike many community organizers today, however, Jesus didn't go into an impoverished pre-established community to help build it up. Instead, he took various outcasts and low class people from all over his Galilean ministry to form a new kind of community.

The community Jesus organizes doesn't resemble political systems we have, either totalitarianism, democracy, various forms of republics, Democrats or Republicans. This community does not maintain the social norms that our worldly communities do. All are equal at the banquet that Christ sets. Jesus doesn't even recognize our worldly ideas on time, as he breaks into our neatly patterend world to declare that the Kingdom of God has arrived and continues to arrive wherever his communities seek to follow him.

We often call Jesus' organized community the church. We operate in the world but strive to maintain and further that Kingdom that Jesus brought and organized to his own peril. His death shows us that his exercise in community challenges the established order of our world. This is primarily because the church, when it is at its best, exorcises the demon on which almost all human decisions are made, Self-Interest.

In a time when we see the peril of our economy that stems from self-interested homebuyers and self-interested investment banks, when recognize great leaders for their ability to promote themselves and their personal achievements to us, it is important to recongize that the church does not work in this way. Our excerise in the community of Jesus is intended to exorcise our self-interest. This is enacted by seeking out those that the world ignores and helping them. This is done through living joyfully in all circumstances, knowing that all our gifts come from God and that we possess to "right" to anything we own. I'm sure you can think of plenty of other examples.

I use the words exercise and exorcise to acknowledge, though, that the church is an ongoing and growing development. We will never fully, no matter how hard we participate in the exercise of a Jesus community exorcise our self-interest. Giving will still hurt, sacrifice will still be hard, saying no to our whims will cause frustration. But we see the cross before us, that symbol of Jesus' love for his broken world; the cross is the response of the broken world to his exercise in community. With that cross before us, Christians seek to exorcise that self-interest/pride/demon/Satan (choose your description) in ourselves through exercising in the community of Christ in the world, striving daily to bring about his kingdom.

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