I recently mentioned my liking for reading history (at the time I was reading McGrath on reformation thought). I am happy to report that I progressed from reading about the Reformation specifically, to reading about just about everything else. Well, not quite. I’ve been reading Tom Holland’s “Dominion” (reviewed here in "The Critic") which covers from about 500BC to the modern day. His mission is to answer a question:
“How was it that a cult inspired by the
execution of an obscure criminal in a long-vanished empire came to exercise
such a transformative and enduring influence on the world?”
Interesting
as it is, this is Holland’s question and I don’t want to answer here. You can,
after all, read his book (which I recommend). But particularly given that
Easter has come round again, it is worth contemplating the particular execution
that Holland mentions - the crucifixion of Jesus of Nazareth by the Roman
administration in Jerusalem, around 30AD. As Holland goes to some lengths to
explain, there is no doubt that this was viewed in a particular way by those
who witnessed and heard about it originally. But today it is viewed completely
differently (even by many followers of Jesus). And in that change we’ve lost
something. Because, to many in the first century and for some time thereafter, the
mere idea of crucifixion was utterly offensive. Today we’ve somehow reduced the
cross to a silver trinket.
Crucifixion
wasn’t invented by the Romans, but it was developed and honed by them, and then
employed particularly for the execution of slaves and rebels. While it was
occasionally used on an industrial scale, its use in peacetime was more
targeted. Besides being a particularly painful and unpleasant way of dying (hence
“excruciating”), it was associated with humiliation, and was specifically
designed to be so. So if you had wanted to invent a religion that would be attractive
in a world dominated by Rome, having crucifixion at the heart of it would not be
a very bright move. As Holland says, it “….could not help but be seen by
people everywhere across the Roman world as scandalous, obscene, grotesque.”
That anyone would follow a leader who had been crucified was preposterous. To
claim that the leader in question was a god was beyond preposterous. The mere
idea was an insult to the Roman intelligence and offensive in itself.
There was
one other group that was likely to be even more outraged at the idea of a
crucified God than the Romans. Apparently plotting and then successfully driving
Jesus towards crucifixion was the Jewish religious leadership of the day. Their
apparent enthusiasm for the crucifixion of Jesus (as opposed to His stoning or
some other form of death) was perhaps because it would provide the most obvious
evidence that Jesus claim to be God was a complete and odious fiction. The idea
that the eternal God could die was a contradiction in the first place. But crucifixion
would provide the most brutal demonstration of Jesus’ folly. How, after that, would
anyone be able to claim that Jesus was anything other than an attention-seeking
fake of the worst kind, with no sense of religious, cultural or civic decency.
However, as
it transpired, the followers of this Jesus had the temerity not just to claim
that Jesus was God, but that this most horrifying of deaths had some central
role to play in God’s dealings with men and women. They preached not just Christ,
but Christ crucified. You could not come up with any proposition more likely to
offend the ancient mind, whether Jew and Gentile. And the offense was somehow
made worse by the idea that there was some necessity to Jesus dying in this
way, and that salvation was to be found by valuing what He was claimed to be accomplishing
on a cross of all things. This was to pile offense on offense. And the early
Christians knew it (see 1 Cor 1:23).
And yet,
time changes things. Holland plots how it took about 400 years before the cross
began to appear in art. And over the centuries, rather than something to be
appalled at, it became something to be contemplated, even admired. Emotions of
revulsion, moved through compassion to even attraction. I well remember visiting
Kelvingrove Art Gallery in Glasgow, where Dali’s “Christ of Saint John of the Cross” hangs; according The Guardian’s art critic “probably the most enduring
vision of the crucifixion painted in the 20th century”. No blood, no
gore, no pain and definitely no offense.
But we lose something important when we lose that original sense of offense. It alerts us to something.
It alerts us to an offended God, whose justice and holiness demand a response,
a reckoning, for the outrage of creaturely rebellion. How is the scale of such
offense to be communicated? How is its magnitude to be answered? God’s answer to
both is the cross. But there is a sort of counter-offense in the idea that I
need the cross. What has it got to do with me? How dare I be accused of rebellion,
and have some demand placed upon me. And for that demand to involve my personal
response to, or dependence upon, a man dying on a cross? Again, offense upon
offense. It all sounds as crazy now, as it did in the first century. And it
should strike us as offensive.
But my natural
protestations spring from the great lie that Paul talks about it in Romans
(1:25). The real offense is God’s not mine, and the answer to it has to be His
too. Such great offense required a response greater than any that humanity individually
or collectively was capable of. So the answer is found within the Godhead, and
the Father requires a price of the Son, who is glad to return it to the Father.
And it is returned by way of His death on a cross. There is a compelling logic
to all of this that some continue to find offensive. Nietzsche, of all people,
summed it up as “the horrific paradox of the ‘crucified God’”. But Spurgeon was clear that “..true ministry should be, and must be — a holding forth of
the Cross of Christ to the multitude as the only trust of sinners. Jesus Christ
must be set forth evidently crucified among them.”
Religious offense
of one sort or another is often in the news. But if there’s one religious group
that really has no place to protest about offense it’s Christians. Because right
at the heart of Easter is the most offensive event to occur in history. That is
rather the point.
No comments:
Post a Comment