Jesus Christ
Jesus Christ
THE GOSPEL ACCOUNTS OF JESUS
THE REFLECTION OF JESUS IN THE LETTERS OF PAUL
THE SPREAD OF WITNESS TO JESUS
JESUS ON JUSTICE AND LOVE
JESUS IN PRAYER AND DOCTRINE
JESUS IN SOCIETY AND POLITICS
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Jesus of Nazareth, one of the most influential humans in history, lives on as Jesus Christ. One-third of the human race, almost 2 billion people, identify with his name, calling themselves Christians. He is influential and believers identify with him because most of them see him as not merely human but as divine, whether as “Son of God” or in some other way uniquely bearing divine nature. Beyond the circle of believers as well as within it, many admire him, cite him, and seek to apply his teachings—especially about love—in human affairs apart from what most Christians claim about his divine character or his deity.
This fame and acclaim are astonishing, given the humbleness of his circumstances, the obscurity of origins and details about his life, and the arguments from the beginning about the meaning of his ministry and his character as being both human and divine. As for the circumstances, he was born to Mary, a young woman of Nazareth in Galilee, probably from four to six years “before Christ.” That confusing calendar reference results from adjustments in chronology made in more modern times. The period found Israel, which was conceived—also by Jesus—to be God’s special people, under the rule of Romans, to whom they grudgingly paid taxes and against whom there were occasional revolts. Jesus himself came to be regarded as suspicious both by Jewish authorities in religion and in their relations to the Roman rulers as well as to the Romans themselves. In the mixture of loyalties and disloyalties, Jesus was executed by crucifixion. His dispersed followers regathered instantly, convinced that he was risen from the dead and that many among them had “seen the Lord” after his death. Forty days later they witnessed his Ascension and adored him as one who, in the words of the best-known Christian creed, “sits at the right-hand of his Father” in heaven and as invisible ruler of the world.
Historians know this information not because a single Roman or Jewish historian left a record of any sort before Jesus’ death, but because stories cherished by Jesus’ immediate followers, quotations of his sayings and parables, and ponderings of the meaning of his divine and human character inspired his followers, or disciples, to produce four documents called “gospels,” which were transmissions of “good news” about him. Three of them, called Matthew, Mark, and Luke, were edited into the forms contained in the modern Bible, probably a generation after his death. The authors or editors of these had slightly different intentions, depending upon whether they wanted to attract Jewish or Gentile readers, or for some other purpose. Yet, for all their variations and despite some conflicts in their accounts, overall they present a coherent portrait. The Fourth Gospel, called John, may have come around the end of the first century of the Common Era, and includes more reflection on the meaning of Jesus’ words and works. In the centuries that followed, numbers of other “gospels” appeared. While some of them have advocates in the twenty-first century, none of them were accepted into the canon, the authorized collection called the New Testament that was approved by church leaders in the second and third centuries.
Before the gospels appeared, however, reflection on Jesus, now called “the Christ,” which meant “the anointed one of God” who had been foreseen and promised in the Hebrew Scriptures—the “Messiah” whom devout Jews still await—was developed and spread most notably by Saul of Tarsus, called Paul the Apostle after his own conversion. In his letters collected in the New Testament and in stories within the book of Acts, which can be seen as “Volume Two” after Luke’s Gospel as “Volume One,” Paul describes himself as a persecutor of Christian believers until he had an ecstatic experience of Jesus, who called him to a new vocation. Paul’s letters make very few references to the life of Jesus as it is described in the Gospels, but they concentrate on the meaning of his death and resurrection. In such writings Jesus is no longer the rabbi, healer, and wonder-worker of Nazareth so much as the risen and exalted Lord of all creation. Through faith in the divine grace God gave to believers in Jesus the crucified and self-sacrificial Savior from sin and divine condemnation, these believers are gathered as a kind of mystical “Body of Christ” and are to be raised from the dead as he was.
The understandings of who Jesus was were vastly diverse. President Thomas Jefferson, almost eighteen hundred years after Jesus’ death, despised the assertions and beliefs about Jesus the miracle-maker and exalted divine Lord. Like so many other advocates of the Enlightenment in his century and many admirers of Jesus in the twenty-first century, he wanted to rescue Jesus from the priests and to see him as the greatest exemplar of love and teacher of justice. At the opposite extreme there have been through all of Christian history movements that can be classified as “docetic,” for in their vision Jesus only appeared to be a mortal. Attempts to reconcile the extremes, represented already in the first Christian centuries by those who stressed his “human nature” versus those who overstressed the divine nature, became the preoccupying agenda item for a series of church councils, whose influence extended from the fourth century into modern times and into Christian discourse and teaching on all continents.
As for these councils: According to the book of Acts and the New Testament letters of Paul, Jewish religious authorities in Jerusalem and Roman rulers there and elsewhere began to persecute followers of Jesus. Some saw them as subversive of Jewish temple practices and others as threats to Roman rule throughout the Empire. Very soon after Jesus’ death and resurrection, according to the book of Acts, a witness named Stephen was stoned to death in Jerusalem. According to tradition, in 64 CE both Paul and a leading disciple named Peter were executed in Rome. While many followers of Jesus in these times were basically nonpolitical, they refused to engage in simple acts of what to them looked like betrayals of Jesus, such as offering a pinch of incense on the emperor’s shrine, the emperors then being conceived themselves as somehow divine.
The boldness of the apostles, as early articulators and witnesses were called, and then the readiness of their followers to face whatever the authorities threatened because of their faith in Jesus, only added luster to his reputation and served to attract ever more followers. By the second century followers of Jesus, called not “Jesusians” or “Jesusists” but “Christians,” were spreading north and east beyond Antioch into present-day Syria and through Asia Minor, present-day Turkey. Early strongholds of belief in Jesus were in northern Africa, where notable “church fathers” held sway. In both Asia and Africa some followers took the call of Jesus to mean denial of the pleasures of the world, and went to the desert and other remote places, there in isolation of community to become monks. They pioneered in a practice that through the twenty centuries had led to special devotion to Jesus and self-sacrifice in his honor and following his commands.
Those commands, however, took their impetus from Gospel records that embody and impart some apparently contradictory impulses and commands. On one hand, the Gospel writers remember Jesus calling for drastic self-renunciation. Followers were to deny themselves, take up their cross—a reference to the mode of his death by crucifixion—and even to desert their families and familial obligations.
On the other hand, and just as emphatically, the Gospel writers depict Jesus as enjoying life and teaching others to do the same. His special form of discourse was in parables, short stories that usually included a kind of overturning of conventional ways of looking at reality. It has been said that one will not understand these preserved parables without recognizing that they turn everything topsy-turvy. The proud and powerful and respectable will be dumped and debased, while the humble and weak and outcast will be privileged in what Jesus announced as “the Kingdom of God.” Kingdom of God did not mean an early reign, since the Gospels have him saying that his kingdom was not of this world, but instead focused on the sovereign saving activity of God manifested in Jesus who was in their midst. So “the last will be first” and the first last; no one could enter the kingdom, he had said, unless they changed and became “like a little child;” the lost sheep matters more than those at home in the flock. More shockingly, Jesus favored the company at table of prostitutes, the hated tax collectors, and others seen as marginal or outcast by respectable people.
The Gospel portraits show Jesus as both an announcer of God’s justice and imparter of God’s love. As for justice, a series of sayings preserved as the Sermon on the Mount or, in another gospel, the Sermon on the Plain, called for radical adherence to the call of God to effect justice in the world. The discourse combines such stern language with words of blessing and comfort, sayings followers have cherished through the centuries. These announce that “blessed are” the peacemakers and those who hunger and thirst after righteousness.
It is not likely that Jesus would have remained such a powerful and attractive force to all conditions and sorts of people, from those in royal courts to those falsely imprisoned or abandoned by others, were it not for the Gospels’ portraits and preserved sayings about love. Jesus in these accounts showed extreme devotion to the law of God, also as it was believed to be condensed in the Ten Commandments and in many other laws preserved in the Hebrew Scriptures and declared as applicable in Jesus’ own time. He was even more extreme in declaring that this Law of God had its limits in the face of human need. He saw the value of the Sabbath, the divinely commanded day of rest, yet when his disciples were desperately hungry he allowed them to prepare grain for food, and when someone needed healing, he healed, scorning those who invoked the Law of God over the call to love. He was particularly confrontational when he faced religious authorities that overlooked human need in the name of their interpretations of divine commands. When asked to summarize all the commandments he drew them down to two: the love of God and the love of neighbors, or others. Every serious return to the teachings of Jesus focuses on both the seriousness of his demands for justice and the abundance of his calls to love, the love that followers saw in his giving of himself to death.
To believing Christians in all cultures, Jesus is not merely an historical figure, written about and admired after twenty centuries. Most of them regard him as a living presence. The Gospels hear him saying that when two or three followers are gathered in his name, he is there among them, so they regularly worship in his name. Some pray to him, but the main interest for Christians is to pray through him, following his word that they are to approach God, the one he called “Abba,” an endearing word for “Father,” in his name. Catholic Christianity in many denominational forms is sacramental, and its adherents believe that Jesus is especially present among them in the sacred meal described in the Gospels as occurring first the night before he was killed and which he commanded that they should repeat.
Second, Jesus has been present in visual representations. No one knows what he looked like, and in all societies and cultures artists portray him as an ideal figure in their own. In the Eastern Orthodox churches he appears in very formal guise in icons. In Latin (in Europe, in Spanish cultures; in the Western Hemisphere, in Latin American cultures), he is usually portrayed as a whipped, bleeding sufferer on the cross. In other cultures he is domesticated and portrayed as a kind of bourgeois comforter of children and quiet teacher.
Third, Jesus lives on in doctrine or dogma. While the gospels show him uninterested in abstractions and distant from formulations, it was natural that as Hebrew-speaking Jewish followers of Jesus moved into the larger culture today called “Greco-Roman”—the Gospels about Jesus and other speakers of Aramaic and Hebrew were themselves written in common Greek—teachers found it important to define how Jesus differed from others for whom divine claims were made. They had to show how he related to his divine Father and, since the New Testament writings made much of this, to the Holy Spirit. In the early church councils leaders combined Hebrew biblical testimony and simple stories with Greek philosophical themes. They had to show how to make sense in their world of their belief that the human Jesus was also the exalted Lord. They were pressed to show to Jews and others that and how they were monotheists, believers in one God, and not in two or, with the Holy Spirit, in three. Out of this grew the doctrine of the divine Trinity, in which Jesus is “of one being” with the Father and is also a true human.
Those interested in the social sciences—history, sociology, and political science—may be aware of the other three modes but they also study how devotion to Jesus inspires ethical response among those who want to be numbered as his followers. They pay attention to the movements and church bodies that exist because of the desire by believers to respond to his calls and promises. In his name leaders helped guide the persecuted believers to situations of power. After Constantine in the fourth century, both in the Roman West and the “Constatinopolitan” East, Jesus, as represented by bishops and other church leaders, shared earthly power with emperors and magistrates. The name of Jesus was invoked by his followers against their and, they believed, his enemies. His cross appeared on the banners of Crusaders who more than a thousand years after Jesus carried on campaigns against those who occupied lands in which he lived or sites devoted to worship of him and to his memory. In both the Christian West and East, both sides invoked his blessing on their troops and, when victorious, credited him, however all these military doings seemed to have departed from the humble portrait of one who called them to be peacemakers.
No portrait of Jesus and invocation of his memory would be fair, however, did one not notice that more than the warrior, Jesus remains the peacemaker and bears the image of the healer. He called disciples to treat the homeless, the hungry, the imprisoned, and the ill, as if they were treating him—or even because they were treating him, as he lived in people of need. In prayers and hymns his name lives on as someone to be relied on and invoked by those who are troubled, ill, or dying. If these invocations seem far removed from those that see him as a ruler through representatives on Earth, as the leader of “Christian soldiers, marching as to war,” the anticipations of both are present in the writings of Paul, the portraits of the Gospel, and the many efforts through the ages by believers to come to terms with someone they believe is obviously human and, in faith, adored and often followed as divine.
SEE ALSO Christianity; Fundamentalism, Christian; Liberation Theology; Religion
Pelikan, Jaroslav. 1985. Jesus through the Centuries. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
Martin E. Marty
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Breakwater Enters Into Qualifying Environmental Trust (QET)
Newspaper article from: CCNMatthews Newswire; 12/21/2007; 608 words
; ...ONTARIO--(Marketwire - Dec. 21, 2007) - Breakwater Resources Ltd. (TSX:BWR) (Breakwater) is pleased to announce that it has entered...Mining Ltd., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Breakwater, which owns the Myra Falls mine. The...
|
|
Breakwater Security Associates Awarded Government Services Administration (GSA) Contract; GSA Contract Simplifies Acquisition of Breakwater Services for U.S. Government Organizations.
PR Newswire; 3/3/2003; 684 words
; ...SEATTLE, March 3 /PRNewswire/ -- Breakwater Security Associates, Inc., a leading...Administration (GSA). The contract retains Breakwater as a preferred provider of information...professional security services, while Breakwater will realize the advantage of reduced...
|
|
Long Beach breakwater bringing waves of debate
News Wire article from: University Wire; 7/6/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...of one of the world's largest breakwater systems, located 1.5 miles...Surfrider's plans for the breakwater aren't what they used to be...trying to blow up or sink the breakwater anymore," said Gordana Kajer...
|
|
The breakwater debate
Newspaper article from: Press-Telegram Long Beach, CA.; 6/21/2005; 674 words
; The Long Beach breakwater returns to the City Council agenda...effects of reconfiguring the offshore breakwater. In 2001, after a three-hour debate...bizarre territory (such as how the breakwater protects Long Beach from a sea-borne...
|
|
Model studies on horizontal interlaced moored floating pipe breakwater with five layers.(Report)
Magazine article from: International Journal of Ecology & Development; 9/22/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...transmission depends on breakwater geometry, mass, and...mooring forces depend on breakwater geometry and mass. Mooring forces on floating breakwaters are caused due to wave...determination, and for breakwater structural integrity. The moored floating breakwaters may be used to create...
|
|
SEN. REED SEEKS FEDERAL FUNDING TO REPAIR BREAKWATER AT POINT JUDITH
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 9/11/2006; 590 words
; ...announced he will seek federal funding to repair the breakwater at Point Judith and will ask the Bush Administration...the U.S. Coast Guard a firsthand look at the breakwater. "The breakwater helps safeguard our shoreline and is important...
|
|
Lake County breakwaters crumbling // State marina threatened
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 8/19/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...to the south. The breakwaters also create currents...sand. "This kind of breakwater is supposed to last...foot-long outer breakwaters are contained in an...shifting and settling of breakwater stones will cease...overtopping" the breakwaters during storms and letting...
|
|
Andrew Titus Joins NTI Breakwater as Managing Director, Northeast Region; Titus Brings Extensive Legal Market, E-Discovery Experience to Leading Computer Forensics Consulting Firm.
Business Wire; 12/16/2004; 700+ words
; GRESHAM, Ore. -- NTI Breakwater, the computer forensics consulting division of Breakwater Security Associates, recently announced...Steve Dorsey, Chief Executive Officer of Breakwater. "His groundbreaking work at Applied Discovery...
|
|
Breakwater Security Associates Responds to Rising Cyber Threats and Offers Cyber-Attacks & Countermeasures Hands-On Lab.
PR Newswire; 3/3/2003; 662 words
; ...rising information security threats, Breakwater Security Associates, Inc., a leading...training on March 31 - April 3, 2003 at Breakwater's training lab in downtown Seattle. Breakwater is a leading provider of information security...
|
|
AUSTRALIA'S JUPITERS PROPOSES US$15.3 MLN BREAKWATER TAKEOVER.
News Wire article from: AsiaPulse News; 10/7/2002; 700+ words
; ...company which owns the Townsville casino. Breakwater Island Ltd (ASX:BRI) shares today...acquire the remainder of the company. Breakwater's principal asset is the Jupiters...first and final offers on the table to Breakwater unitholders. Investors can either accept...
|
|
breakwater
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...In the United States a breakwater commonly consists of a long...wave energy. A pneumatic breakwater consists of perforated pipes...to cause them to break. Breakwaters are also used to promote...which, depending on the breakwater's alignment, will infill...
|
|
coast protection
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...sediment in front of and beneath them. Breakwaters are long piers built offshore parallel...behind them called a wave shadow. At the breakwater off Santa Monica, Calif., the wave...producing a deposition of sand behind the breakwater and extensive erosion of the beach downcurrent...
|
|
Beach nourishment
Encyclopedia entry from: The Gale Encyclopedia of Science
...protect the shore from wave erosion. Fixed seawalls, groins, breakwaters, and jetties frequently result in net loss of beach area...techniques of shoreline protection, such as seawalls and breakwaters, have been recognized, issues regarding the environmental...
|
|
Mulberry
Book article from: The Oxford Essential Dictionary of the U.S. Military
...of June 1944. Each Mulberry harbor consisted of concrete breakwaters and pontoon jetties floated across the Channel from England...sunk in place and protected by old ships which were sunk as breakwaters. The Mulberry at Omaha Beach in the American sector was...
|
|
SIC 1422 Crushed and Broken Limestone
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of American Industries
...infrastructure because of its use in the construction of highways, airports, river locks and dams, railroad ballast, and breakwaters. It is, however, considered a "high-volume, low-value commodity" with relatively stable prices since the 1970s...
|