WEBVTT
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[inaudible].
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Welcome to the Project Zion Podcast.
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This podcast explores the unique spiritual and theological gifts Community of Christ offers for today's world.
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Hello and welcome to the Project Zion podcast.
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I'm your host, Carla Long and I am thrilled to be bringing you another episode of God Shots from our Percolating on Faith series where I interviewed two of my favorite people on the planet and not just because they feed me delicious food, although that definitely helps.
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Charmaine and Tony Chvala-Smith.
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Hey, you too! Welcome back.
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Hey Carla, really good to hear from you and you need to come visit us so we can feed you.
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Uh, amen, sister.
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We've got all kinds of new recipes to try out on you, so.
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I love being your Guinea pig so much.
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Ah, okay.
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So today we are continuing down our systematic theology path by talking about dun, dun, dun....
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Jesus Christ! I mean, he is actually controversial, isn't he?
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Like people have a lot of feelings about Jesus, right?
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I mean, and I am super interested to see where this conversation is going to go, but before we jump into dun, dun, dun, Jesus Christ, uh, let's, um, why don't you to talk about like where we are in the series, why we're doing this series, the God Shot part of our Percolating on Faith.
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Sure, sure.
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Well, the reason why we're doing this series is, um, it started last summer when we were at a reunion and where someone, um, was saying, you know, I'm coming to community of Christ.
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I'm leaving where I had the, the tradition that I had come out of and I, and I'm realizing I can't just switch out one piece of information here and there for another piece of information and that I really need to scratch it all and start over.
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And I need to have some way of understanding what is the basic Christian view of Jesus and God and creation and humanity and all of those things?
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And so Tony got the idea, oh, we could do something on, on Christian systematic theology.
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And so in a systematic theology, what you're doing is you're looking at the components that make up a theology and you're digging deep into them.
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And so that's what we've been doing over the last, I don't know how many installations and we'll be doing a few more yet, um, is looking at different aspects of Christian faith and saying, you know, what is it that that has been the evolution of this concept or idea within Christianity?
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So, yeah, so, you know, systematic theology, as we've said before, is a discipline that has origins in preparation for baptism in the second and third centuries of the church's history, where people coming from a completely different tradition from Judaism or Christianity that is from, you know, Greco Roman religious traditions.
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Uh, they not, they're religious house not only had to be stripped down to the studs, it has, this does have to be replaced too.
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In other words, the systematic theology arose as a way to, to help people prepare for baptism into Christianity.
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And so, uh, as we've said, uh, one of the tools that arose to help people do that was, was, uh, these baptismal confessions, which later became creeds.
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I believe in God, the Father Almighty, creator of Heaven and earth, and in Jesus Christ, his only son and in the Holy Spirit.
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And so systematic theology is a kind of explication of each of those elements of Christian faith.
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Uh, so that's, that's where this all came from and we still do it today.
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In fact, the book that we're working off of Migliore, uh, introduction to Christian theology, Faith Seeking Understanding is a very straightforward and elegantly written systematic theologies.
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And, uh, so that's, that's how we got started on this journey.
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And I just realized that I said stripped down to the studs.
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That may be the only time in any of these podcasts that the word studs has been[ laughter].
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Oh, well, hopefully not the only time.
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I'll try and slip a little stud in there when I can now that I know that's a goal.
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Yeah.
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You mean I haven't, yeah, you used it in reference to you Tony?
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[ l aughter].
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Yeah, we laugh!
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A lright, sorry.
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No, I like this.
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So this is the chapter on the person and work of Jesus Christ.
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And um, it seems like this is kind of like, and from what you said earlier this is might be like the linchpin.
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This is a really, really important chapter.
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Of course they've all been important, but can we talk about why this chapter is super important?
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Yeah.
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Um, there's, I mean, what is it that makes Christians Christian, it's what they believe and how they act based on, um, who Jesus is to them or what it is that, um, following him requires us of them or, or calls them to.
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And so, who we perceive Jesus to be, uh, what part of the story that has been handed onto us, we highlight.
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Which pieces we let go deeply into ourselves and shape us or reshape us are really crucial to what it means to be Christian.
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Um, and we've really appreciated, we've, um, on this journey through a systematic theology, we've been using Migliore's book, Faith Seeking Understanding.
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And he does an amazing job in this chapter.
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And in the subsequent chapter as well.
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Um, the chapter that we'll be looking at next time is going to be on different kinds of Christology in context in our time.
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And so, um, you know, it's looking at an African American Christology and a feminist and womanist theology and, Latin American and Asian Christology.
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So who Christ is and how we perceive him.
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Um, and, and what it means to, it's all tied very closely to what it means to be Christian.
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And one of the things that Migliorei is really excellent at, in, especially the beginning of this chapter, is to just acknowledge that a lot of people have a lot of problems with how do we talk about who Jesus is?
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How do we make sense of it in our time when some of the things from the past, whether it be the creeds, which, you know, in our denomination is, are not, they're not, um, utilized in worship or sacraments, though they're in the background informing us as part of the Christian tradition.
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Uh, what, what does those creeds mean?
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And, um, what is, what is it that they're pointing to and what do we do with the foreignness of some of the things that are said that don't seem to be common sense in our day?
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And so how, how do we make something of this person that historians in the last few decades have said, oh, we don't know very much about this person really.
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And he could be completely different than what the Christian tradition has said.
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He's just really upfront about all of those questions that, um, cause people to say, well, what can we believe?
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How do we go about letting Christ be the focus, the lens through which we live our faith in God.
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So you asked why is this so important?
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And I mean, we could start with the New Testament.
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Every single book of the New Testament in some fashion focuses on the person, the identity, the significance of Jesus of Nazareth.
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And you know, the, the earliest, the earliest thing people said about Jesus who had come to believe in him was that Jesus is Lord.
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He, they use this politically and religiously charged word kyrios to describe who Jesus was for them.
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And by doing that they were elevating Jesus above Cesar who also like to be called kyrios.
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And they were, they were in some way equating Jesus to the God of Judaism.
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And so, um, right at the very start of this thing called Christianity is this confession, this, this proclamation, this belief that somehow in this person, Jesus of Nazareth, people found fulfillment, found deliverance, found hope, found salvation.
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And so, uh, in Jesus is a, is the heart of it all looking, you know, so, and Jesus, Jesus Christ is like the lens that focuses everything else that Christians, uh, ought or want to believe in practice.
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Um, Mueller is very clear about that.
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And also Community of Christ has been very, very clear about that, that, that, uh, we are a Christ centered church.
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That is, that, that Christ, his person, his story, his work, the things he did taught, the things that happened to him, his passion, his crucifixion, resurrection.
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His presence among us that Christ is, is the, the center of the heart of what we are about.
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And by the way, um, Joseph Smith Jr way back in, I think it's 1837 or 8 in Far West made a statement about that, that Jesus is, that he was crucified, raised, you know, ascended.
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That's, that's the essential stuff.
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And everything else is, is an add on.
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Um, it's a statement we wish that Joseph Smith Jr had had followed a a little more closely, more often.
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But nevertheless, right at the heart of our, our movement, both past and present is this deep instinct that Christ is the center of the lens that focuses everything else we do.
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And, uh, a simple way to, to state that is, is that for Christian theology and for Community of Christ theology in particular, Jesus is God's body language.
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This is, this is how God shows what God is about in wants in the world, in and through this person.
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Jesus of Nazareth.
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So Carla, that's, I mean we just offered you a couple of different perspectives on why this is so important.
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Um, for theology, it's, it's really like the word you use linchpin.
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It's the, it's the pin that holds everything else together.
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Without this, without Christology of some kind, everything else simply becomes meaningless and and f alls falls off into wayside.
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So that's kind of how we w ould respond to that.
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Well that's a lot to take in and a lot to think about.
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So you know, part of something that you just said about the Joseph Smith jr quote you talked about kind of bothers me and I don't know if we want to go in this direction or not, but there are some churches, different Christian denominations, non denominational and denominational that only focus in on Jesus's death and resurrection.
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And what I really like about Community of Christ is that we work hard on focusing on Jesus his life.
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And I mean, I don't know if we want to talk a little bit about that, but like we're doing it right, right?
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I'm focusing on Jesus's death is, is really just focusing on the afterlife.
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Something that, you know, we're not, we don't, we're not good people simply because we want to die and go to heaven.
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We try to be good people and do good things because that's what Jesus taught us to do.
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Yeah.
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And that, and that's one of the things that focusing on his death can, can help us understand.
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But there's actually other things too that are, that are really positive.
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But yeah, as a, as a movement, we have traditionally looked more at things like what is the Kingdom of God?
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What are the, and more recently, uh, with the mission initiatives much more focusing on what was it that Jesus did?
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Who was it that Jesus reached out to?
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Recognizing that it was often those who had been trot, downtrodden and rejected and tossed out of the society that Jesus intentionally reached out to.
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So we've, that fits really much with our idea of doing the, doing part of following Jesus.
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But I think we have shortchanged ourselves by not focusing very much on, on sometimes the death part because you know, one of the, uh, really powerful images of Jesus' death, um, that can be very helpful, especially today for those who are oppressed is the idea that, that God is willing to meet us in our suffering and that, you know, whatever is on the other side of death that, um, that God is there already for us.
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And so, you know, I think sometimes we've, um, neglected that side of things too, to our own imbalance sometimes and focus so much on the doing, um, that we've forgot the who that we're doing with and for and who were empowered by So, you know, it's always a balance in all of these things.
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Um, yeah, some, some Christians focus only on one aspect of who Jesus is.
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Some maybe only focus on the divinity part and others, uh, only on the human part is that's another way that who, who Jesus is, um, classically understood as in Christianity gets broken down, divided and, um, on underrepresented parts of, of who he is.
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And what he can mean with us and for us.
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So I appreciate you noting that.
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Um cause I think it points to one of our tendencies but also maybe sometimes some of our blind spots on, on Jesus because we've had the tendency, we may have talked about this before in our talk about the trinity, um, to not to say, oh well it doesn't really matter, um, how we understand who Jesus is in relationship to God or um, what, what Jesus, um, what salvation means in light of Jesus, u m, life and death and resurrection.
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So yeah, there's a whole bunch there to explore.
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So yeah, that what you're referring to Carla.
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I, it's a real weakness of, of all kinds of forms of American Christianity.
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I think, um, this constant focus on, uh, what's sometimes called the substitutionary atonement.
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It is, uh, in Christology by the way.
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We focused on two things.
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We focused first on the person of Jesus Christ who is this man?
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And then secondly on the work of Jesus Christ.
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What is his significance for us, his identity and significance, the two sides of Christology and a lot of American Christianity, especially in an evangelical soar tends to reduce all of this to a divine savior, died for your sins.
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He took it for you so you didn't have to take it.
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And if you believe this, you won't have to go to hell.
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And it's like this is such a complete, uh, uh, distortion and truncation of the Gospel Story.
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That is the, the person who was crucified?
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Well, why was he crucified?
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Um, well he was crucified for lots of reasons, but one is that he was teaching really revolutionary things about the reign of God and about the value of all people.
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And so, um, in Community of Christ theology and, and Migliore and lots of theologians like Migliore would totally agree with us on this.
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The death of Jesus is in material if it's not connected to his life, that is the incarnation of God in Christ is something that happens over the whole of Jesus' life.
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And so God is present in the conception, present in the birth, present in his childhood, present in his teaching and, and ministry.
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Present when he runs into problems with religious authorities, God is fully present in Christ, in the passion and suffering and, and you know, all of that.
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And so, um, yeah, I mean it's really important for a, we'll say a full bodied Christology to have the whole Jesus and not just part, not just the part that's on the cross.
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Um, um, but you know, I resonate completely with what Charmaine is saying about, you know, the, the cross matters for lots and lots of reasons.
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It's just you can't reduce Christianity simply to that.
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So yeah.
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Uh, Community of Christ, the message of God's reign that Jesus came to teach and embody and the way he dealt with the poor and with women and outcast, that's in the central part of the church's message to you can't just ignore that and kind of just focus on that, uh, crucify Jesus.
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Who Somehow, uh, takes it for you.
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Well then I guess my next question would be what should we be focusing on?
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Or if anything, you know, like it seems like there's a lot of these different parts of Jesus.
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There's a divinity divine part.
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There's the human part.
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What, where should we begin when it comes to yeah, and just take it and run with it.
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Just go.
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Sure.
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There's lots of places to begin.
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And one of the places I would, I think is productive to begin is, uh, first with the affirmation that Jesus is God.
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That what we see of Jesus, whether it's his actions, whether it's his teachings, his, the content of his teachings, whether it's his, um, willingness to die, whether it's his death, whether it'shis resurrection, um, that the really important thing to see is that each of those pieces is revealing something of the nature of God.
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And this makes, uh, looking at all of these things very rich and that makes all of these aspects of Jesus' windows into what is the nature of God.
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God is who is God for, uh, what does graciousness coming from God look and feel like?
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Um, it, it comes in the forgiveness of sins.
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It comes in the healing.
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It comes in those who have been rejected being noticed and being forgiven and being loved and being accepted.
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These are all signs of who God is.
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And, um, and I think that that's, that's a productive place to begin.
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Yeah, I, I totally agree with that.
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And I, I think that, um, when we say w when we confess that Jesus is God, what we're saying isn't the Community of Christ Christology statement, which is title We Proclaim.
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Uh, Jesus Christ says this too.
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We, we align with all Christians who say that Jesus as the word made flesh is both fully human and fully divine.
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And when we say that Christ is fully divine, um, we're, we're, we're speaking in language that is powerful, symbolic, metaphorical, and trying to capture the same thing that those first disciples were stunned by that in this person that they were following, that the attributes of deity kept coming forward.
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Um, who is this?
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That both the wind and the waves obey him.
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They say in Mark Chapter Four, and you know, as as Jewish, as Jewish guys, when they thought of wind and waves and calming seas and calming waters, who else would they think of?
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But, but the God of the covenant.
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And so somehow they were encountering the God of the Covenant in a very personal and direct way in this real human being, which was a stunning mystery and paradox to them.
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It's always been a stunning mystery and paradox, um, which makes it appealing, uh, and desirable.
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Um, so w when we say that, uh, Christ is fully divine, we're saying that, that God's character and attributes are focused for us in and through who Jesus is and what he does.
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Um, the term God, by the way, can be a totally meaningless term.
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Um, you can fill it in with all kinds of stuff like who and what is God?
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Um, you know, sometimes we'll, we'll, with students I'll take out a coin and I'll say, this coin says in God, we trust, you know, which God is talking about.
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And they still are obviously the Christian God.
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I say really?
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How obvious is that?
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No.
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Um, how has this coin connected to the story of Jesus in which God is revealed as a god of vulnerability, compassion, mercy, yearning for the loss to come home, yearning for those who are marginalized to be accepted.
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How does this, how does the in God, we trust connected all of that with you don't have the story of Jesus.
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You don't, you don't.
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You would never connect God to that.
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And so I think that's really, really important that we're saying that the things we see Jesus do and hear him teach and the ways he both confronts systems of religious injustice and makes room for those on the edges constantly.
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That's what God is like.
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And so that's really important for us to be able to declare.
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So that's, you know, one place you can go Migliore goes and that same kind of direction too.
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Now, if you asked it again, I might start in a different place because there's there are so many important aspects of who Jesus is.
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So, you know, there's also the idea that that Jesus is the example of a new humanity, one in which there's this, this level of intimacy with God, um, where it makes that, uh, uh, imaginable that we could have that kind of closeness, kind of, um, relationship with God.
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Uh, there's the, in this new humanity that Jesus represents.
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There's this the sense as Tony had mentioned about vulnerability but also the sense of solidarity with sinners and with the oppressed.
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Um, so that's an a whole, that's another area where even, you know, for people who say, you know, I don't even know what I can do with the idea of Jesus being divine.
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Um, you know, maybe he was a good person, maybe he was, you know, a profound teacher or wisdom, a person of wisdom or a sage.
00:24:43.309 --> 00:25:11.150
Um, this is a place that, that they can go to is that the idea of Jesus being this forerunner in a new kind of a human relationship with God, uh, uh, another depiction of God's kingdom being lived out in a and a new imaginable way.
00:25:11.960 --> 00:25:15.890
Um, so, uh, there, there is that piece as well.
00:25:16.630 --> 00:25:29.539
And, and that, you know, gives us examples, ways to, um, recognize our, our own ego, ego or our own anger towards others.
00:25:29.839 --> 00:25:41.539
And as we read the story of Jesus or hear the story of Jesus and it's like, oh, that situation that he's facing, oh, I can just, I can just feel my, ire arising here.
00:25:41.540 --> 00:25:48.319
I, I would want so much to smack them down with words or our fist or whatever.
00:25:48.829 --> 00:25:55.819
And you know, Jesus' response to it says, says to us, oh my gosh, there's another way.
00:25:56.240 --> 00:26:28.579
And so, um, you know, that's another place I might start is with, um, Jesus' example of what we, that we can choose a different way, that we can harness the heart and the mind in ways that, um, but God's love, but the idea of God's salvation, um, in our communities, in our cultures, in our families have room as well.
00:26:28.580 --> 00:26:32.930
So it shapes and reshapes the idea of salvation.
00:26:33.019 --> 00:26:33.470
So,
00:26:34.130 --> 00:26:39.500
Salvation is another, uh, big word that gets filled in with all kinds of stuff.
00:26:39.890 --> 00:26:43.039
But you know, just, we'll just use Matthew's gospel for a second.
00:26:43.619 --> 00:26:48.119
Um, which is the Gospel in which Jesus is identified as Emanuel.
00:26:48.960 --> 00:26:50.369
God is with us.
00:26:51.450 --> 00:26:54.359
Um, how amazing to read that story.
00:26:54.799 --> 00:27:01.410
Uh, the story of Jesus as Matthew tells it and see that God is with us, wants to be with us.
00:27:01.411 --> 00:27:02.940
God wants to be with the poor.
00:27:03.240 --> 00:27:04.799
God wants to be with the broken.
00:27:04.800 --> 00:27:06.660
God wants to be with those who've messed up.
00:27:06.661 --> 00:27:17.519
God wants to be with even those who are represent religious authority, uh, not very well actually to God wants to be with them to be the change agent for them.
00:27:18.119 --> 00:27:19.920
God wants to be with us in suffering.
00:27:19.921 --> 00:27:21.480
God wants to be with us in death.
00:27:21.480 --> 00:27:24.809
God wants you to be with us in hope and in loss of hope.
00:27:25.230 --> 00:27:31.440
And so, um, how would we know that other than through the story of the Gospel Stories?
00:27:31.441 --> 00:27:37.859
So, uh, to me it's, it's very, it's, it's very empowering.
00:27:38.680 --> 00:27:38.680
Yeah.
00:27:38.681 --> 00:27:41.130
Especially in the world that we live in now.
00:27:41.640 --> 00:27:50.369
Uh, so marked by violence and cruelty and hatred, it's really important to know what kind of an ultimate I want to stand on.
00:27:50.940 --> 00:28:15.150
And um, that the, that the, the grain of the grain of the universe is running in the direction of the God of Jesus Christ, the God who loves the outcast, who reaches out to the broken, who makes space for the needy, um, a God who breaks down borders and barriers and an that's the kind of God that Jesus comes to embody.
00:28:15.630 --> 00:28:18.750
And uh, it's pretty, pretty revolutionary stuff when you think about it.
00:28:19.269 --> 00:28:22.559
Uh, so some ways to approach your question, Carla.
00:28:23.250 --> 00:28:24.059
Oh Gosh.
00:28:24.060 --> 00:28:35.609
I, I mean, I can think of about four people off the top of my head who would freak out at the idea of confessing that Jesus Christ is God.
00:28:35.880 --> 00:28:38.430
That would be really, really difficult for them.
00:28:38.779 --> 00:28:46.049
And I mean, just the idea that a man who walked this earth is the same as God.
00:28:46.079 --> 00:28:50.400
So, I mean, I appreciate you giving different, some different kinds of examples as well.
00:28:50.849 --> 00:28:55.900
Yeah, I mean, for me that doesn't seem like such a revolutionary idea.
00:28:55.901 --> 00:29:00.339
I'm not sure why and I'm not sure why exactly.
00:29:00.340 --> 00:29:02.859
It's such a huge deal for other people too.
00:29:02.920 --> 00:29:03.910
Do you know why?
00:29:04.329 --> 00:29:25.269
Well, I think some of it is that it seems so counter to all the ways that we live in the world where we believe in things we can see and prove and substantiate, um, where our loyalties need to make sense to us.
00:29:25.960 --> 00:29:37.569
Uh, what we commit ourselves to needs to have some, um, substantive pieces that we can manipulate and work with.
00:29:37.990 --> 00:29:59.529
And I, and yeah, I think it's, it's the, the spiritual side of this, the parts that we can't prove the parts that we can't, um, yeah, that we can't absolutely convince, be convinced of.
00:30:00.039 --> 00:30:18.009
I think in our, in our culture, in our time, um, wanting to have things that are, are sure and absolute, um, is, is not, it's not, it's not unhuman at all.
00:30:18.190 --> 00:30:20.829
It's, I mean, that's a very human tendency to want to have that.
00:30:21.160 --> 00:30:38.349
And as times become more, uh, difficult and unsure that the need to believe in things that are more concrete and, um, seeable touchable, um, becomes more important.
00:30:38.440 --> 00:31:14.589
And so the nebulous ideas about who Jesus, this Jesus person was in the past and, and projecting him into the now and saying he is still at work in our midst or that he is God or that God sometimes the question about could Jesus be God, um, people, it's also people struggle with what is God that is revealed there about, you know, is, is there a God who can do things?
00:31:14.650 --> 00:31:19.329
Is there a God who can intervene in some situations in life?
00:31:19.660 --> 00:31:27.579
And so that's coupled with, or that's pre the precursor to the questions about Jesus.
00:31:27.819 --> 00:31:28.150
I don't know.
00:31:28.151 --> 00:31:29.049
Does that make sense?
00:31:31.039 --> 00:31:32.599
Yeah, that helps me a little bit.