The Way of Christ with Barnabas Smith
The gospel of Mark is structured like a Roman imperial proclamation. The opening line is taken straight from a Roman Evangelion. Except, instead of Caesar, Jesus the Christ is named, setting him up as the anti-Caesar. Using a quote from the Prophets, it leads into Christ’s herald, a desert vagabond named John. Again, subverting the empire. There are no generals or politicians here. The message that he proclaims isn’t one of imperial might and victory, instead, the message used is “repent!” In Greek – “metanoia!” “Change your thinking!” “Change the way you see everything!” John couples this new perspective with “sin.” In Greek – “hamartia” This is a relational term that means to “fall short of expectations or of a goal.” In a religious context, this means things we do to break our relationship with God. John’s message to pave the way for Christ is for people to change the way they look at their relationship with God. With the coming of the Christ, everything they think about God is about to get obliterated and the best way for them to prepare is for them to start looking at God, and their relationship to God, in a whole new light. This is where we need to start as well. Our ideas of God can often get in the way of that relationship. We often project our own faults or thinking onto the Divine. We start believing that God's attitude towards us is the same attitude we have toward ourselves. Or we let others dictate the relationship for us. We allow their rules and dogmas to define us and God in ways they were never meant to. This is nothing new. In fact, these two threads – projecting onto God or allowing others to define God – are exactly what John was addressing. "Someone is coming who will change everything. You need to change the way you think about God or you'll miss it."
4 episodes
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