FROM JESUS TO JAMES MADISON
“Every man is free to embrace and
profess that religion which, guided by the light of reason, he shall consider
true.” - “Error” #15 in the Syllabus of Errors of Pope Pius
IX
The latter-day religious
apologists who clamor for some kind of official display of piety in public
life, would do well to ponder these words:
“Beware of practicing your piety before men in order to be seen by them;
for then you will have no reward from your Father who is in heaven -- But when
you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in
secret; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you” (Matthew 6: 1, 6).
Although he said “Let what you
say be simply ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ (Matthew 5: 37), Jesus of the Gospels did not at all
times go out of his way to avoid ambiguity, confusion and even deliberate
equivocation in his pronouncements, when simple decency would seem to call for
clarity. Yet in Mark 4:10-12, Jesus
openly and clearly states that he advocates the intentional ambiguity of
parables as a working principle in his ministry to the multitudes “lest they
should turn again and be forgiven.”
Matthew, Mark and Luke also record Jesus admonishing the beneficiaries
of his divine powers to tell no one about it, as well as charging his disciples
to tell no one he is the Christ, the implication being that, seemingly, he
is. Even the seemingly more forthright
Gospel according to John exuded such an aura of mystery and portentousness that
most people coming into contact with Jesus would likely have been sorely
perplexed about what to make of this human cipher (Matthew 9:30, 16:20; Mark
5:43, 8:29-30; Luke 8:56, 9:20-21 and practically all of John). This note of evasion, secrecy and mystery runs
throughout the Gospels, and given the extreme urgency of Jesus’ message, it is
troubling that hardly anyone has pointed out the problematic nature of such
portentousness and deliberate opaqueness from the point of view of our common
humanity. One might reasonably expect
that an all-powerful god intent on saving a pathetic race of creatures which he
himself created, could have, and would have, presented his message clearly and
distinctly, through his son or otherwise, in such a way that would have
compelled the assent of every single human soul, past, present and future.
As
it happens, the statements in Matthew denouncing public expressions and
affectations of piety are remarkably straightforward. However, it would be a serious mistake to view Jesus’ words here
as an echo of the prophetic ire of Amos and Hosea, Isaiah and Micah, all of
whom denounced people’s unseemly concern with ritual and the ostentatious
trappings of their religion while ignoring the social implications of the
sublime morality handed down to them from the time of Moses. The passage just quoted from Matthew is
based upon, and entirely consistent with, Jesus’ own mistaken belief that
“there are some standing here who will not taste death before they see the Son
of man coming in his kingdom” (Matthew 16:28).
Similar statements are found in Mark 9:1, and Luke 9:27, and they are of
cardinal importance for the Synoptic Gospels.
Jesus makes it quite clear that catastrophic events culminating in the
destruction of the world will precede the coming of the kingdom: “Truly, I say
to you, this generation will not pass away till all these things take place.
Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away” (Matthew
24:34-35). Again, this ominous message
also figures prominently in Mark (13:30) and Luke 21:32). Indeed, Jesus’ entire ministry makes no
sense apart from this dire prediction. Official or unofficial, public displays
of piety are obviously utterly worthless in the eyes of Jesus. What matters above all is whether you are
saved now from imminent eternal damnation by believing in Jesus Christ and the
coming of the kingdom of God, and “he who does not believe will be damned”
(Mark 16:16). It is highly doubtful
that any of the people who were standing around at the time and actually heard
Jesus’ prediction would survive for 2000 years or better, a state of affairs
that would have to obtain in order to make sense of 20th Century
Christian talk about the coming of the kingdom.
This
urgent note of salvation is sufficiently stressed by the Synoptic Gospels’
accounts of Jesus’ ministry, and it cannot be denied short of an egregious
misreading, and falsification, of Scripture.
That, however, has not deterred a large number of his more “enlightened”
followers from redrawing Jesus in their own image in a vain attempt to find a
way out of this dilemma without giving up their devotion to Christ. Some seem
almost embarrassed by this most important aspect of the Gospels’
“glad-tidings,” when they do not ignore it altogether. Many new, popular wines have been poured
into the old skin of the New Testament in sometimes grotesque attempts to make
Jesus’ flesh and blood, shall we say, more palatable to the tastes of one’s
contemporaries, and more relevant to one’s own current affairs. Most such attempts, however, are likely to leave
a bad taste in the mouths of responsible and objective scholars and historians,
whose sole agenda is the pursuit of truth.
Truth, of course, may sometimes leave the most unpalatable aftertaste of
all.