Synchroblog-Could That Be What Jesus Meant?
Of course, I was very behind in putting together my post. So late in fact, that I just pulled out a post from a few months ago that I thought fit perfectly with the subject of “Persecution, and
Suffering for Righteousness:”
Matt 10:22
All men will hate you because of me, but he who stands firm to the end will be saved
Mark 13:13
All men will hate you because of me, but he who stands firm to the end will be saved.
Luke 6:22
Blessed are you when men hate you, when they exclude you and insult you and reject your name as evil, because of the Son of Man.
Luke 21:17
All men will hate you because of me.
These 4 verses are thrown around in the US Christian culture a lot. It’s a “badge of courage”. The problem is that Jesus was not only talking to His disciples, many of whom were martyred, but also, across the ages to Christians in places like China, Sudan, and the Middle East. I do not think that Jesus was talking to us, here and now, to give us an excuse to be careless and unkind. If my basic understanding of the Scriptures is correct, those who were persecuting Jesus, and then the church, were the religious system and the empire of Rome. Persecution came as a result of challenging the Pharisees. Persecution came because Jesus challenged the empire that oppressed and abused those who were weak. I do not see evidence that persecution came because Jesus hated first.
“All men will hate you because of me.” How we love this statement. We love it because, if we can say it’s true, it somehow proves that we are genuine followers of Jesus. We love it because, if we can say it’s true, it puts us in good company. We love it because, if we can say it’s true, we will grow spiritually through the persecution. The problem is that most people that throw this statement around are taking it out of context and using it to be insufferably arrogant and cruel.
Think about the times you have heard one of the above Scriptures used. What was the context?
· People will hate you because they don’t like their sinfulness being exposed.
· People will hate you because they look pretty good until contrasted with true righteousness.
· People will hate you because you don’t laugh at their dirty jokes.
· People will hate you because you believe in 6-day creation.
· People will hate you because you picket at abortion clinics.
· People will hate you because you call homosexuality an abomination.
AMEN, Brother! REJOICE in the persecution!!! Now, perhaps the above examples are the far leaning “right” kinds of examples. However, I recall a conversation recently with a friend. This friend is not what I would call a fundamentalist. I was talking to him about Rob Bell, and how I love the fact that Rob focuses on the redemption of the world and Jesus’ love, the fact that Rob doesn’t use all the “churchy” language like “substitutionary atonement”. My friend replied, “It doesn’t matter how we talk, or if we change our approach to presenting the Gospel, because the world hates us.” It doesn’t matter. Really? It doesn’t matter…because all men will hate us. Then what are we doing? What’s the point? No wonder we all just sit around waiting to get to heaven. There’s no point doing anything in this world, because all men will hate us, anyway.
Isn’t this just a tired old excuse to be judgmental and hateful? Or an excuse to not have to examine the way we’ve been doing things in the Church? Or an excuse to stay locked within the church walls fraternizing with all the other Christians that the world hates? Could it be that when Jesus said the world will hate us, he meant that they will hate us because we are breaking the dominions, empires and structures of this world that oppress? That we are truly setting captives free, not just from their own sin, but also from the sins of others? That we are setting people free from religious institutions that keep people from the freedom that Jesus promised? Could that be what he meant?
Jesus challenged the power hierarchies. He challenged the hierarchies of kingdom, religious structures, wealth and social status. When Jesus said the world will hate you because of me, could it be that we would be hated because we;
· Love everyone, not just those we call our “brothers and sisters”.
· Invite the lame, poor, maimed and blind to our parties.
· Do not continue to amass wealth within an unjust system.
· Proclaim that in the Kingdom of God there are no slaves or masters, no men or women, no teachers or students.
· Challenge the systems that tie up heavy loads and put them on men’s shoulders.
· Have fellowship with outcasts, thus rejecting the views of those who demand separateness from an unclean world.
Could that be what Jesus meant?
Take some time to check out the other synchrobloggers
David Fisher - Be the Revolution
Fishing for Trouble - Phil Wyman’s Square No More
Mike Bursell - Mike’s Musings
Restoring Our View of Humanity - Eternal Echoes
Persecuting the Marginalized - JohnSmulo.com
The Ends Justify the Means - Calacirian
Billy Calderwood - Billy Calderwood
Seeking First Righteousness - Tim Abbott
Jamie Swann - More Than Stone
Persecution and Martyrdom - Handmaid Leah
“Don’t squash the counter-revolutionary/the plank in my own eye” - Jeremiah
The Martyrs of Epinga at Notes from the Underground
Terrorism in Christianity at The Rivera Blog
Persecution or Poor Elocution? “Hello,” said Jenelle



Preach it, brother!
Preach! Somebody get that man a handkerchief to wipe his sweaty forehead! In all seriousness, I think we might begin to see a bit of Western persecution if we as followers of Jesus began to strategically challenge the sytems of wealth with relational power. I recently read a book about this that rocked me: Transforming Power by Robert Linthicum. Lame cover, great book.
Girlfriend … next time you’re preaching I want to come and hear it outloud!!!
Rock the house and everybody said, AMEN!!
Steve,–Thanks, though you may want to say “Preach it, sistah!” LOL Thanks for “stopping by”.
Jenelle, I’ve not heard of that book, but will check it out and add it my ever increasing list of “must reads”
I think you are absolutely right. True persecution comes when we challenge the power structures….not when WE persecute others….
Oh Sonja, Ok, the next time I’m in your area, we ARE having coffee…or a beer…or a glass of wine. I come up your way about 4 times a year or so. ….
Jamie,
I love your list of challenges. It’s too bad that that list often challenges the church more than it challenges the world these days. Great post.
thanks jamie… i am challenged!
Well said.
Let’s be honest, the gospel is ‘offensive’ at it’s core, for it confronts our flesh and pride. So why do we add to it? Why do we make it more offensive? Why do we politicize it? Do we make it so people can be offended so we can display our battlescars? Fighting for our own self-righteousness, in the veiled disguise of truth, justice and the American Way?
Like you, I’m sick of it. Well spoken.
Doh! I’m so sorry…I meant “someone hand that incredible woman a handkerchief to wipe her forehead!”
You’re reading Walter Wink! Excellent.
Phil–Thanks. It is a sad state of affairs. I agree, indeed. Thanks for all you do!
Paul-I’m challenged too, my friend. God help us live it out.
David- “Fighting for our own self-righteousness, in the veiled disguise of truth, justice and the American Way?” That sounds like a blog post if you ask me….get to it….
I’ll pop over and read it tomorrow.
Thanks for the comments. I also am sick of it and pray that I never succumb again. Hang in there. You’re doing the right thing.
Jenelle,–LOL. that’s what I get for having a uni-sex name. It’s not the first time….
Wink rocks!
Someone already said, “Preach it sistah.” I saw a poster our youth leader was passing around trying to get people to go to a big Battlecry conference so we can all be culture warriors. PALEEESE! We’re the ones bowing to culture with our rock concert worship and hip clothes and big houses and SUVs and credit card debt. The world hates us because we’re cheap imitations of the true gospel. If they hated us because we were really subversive and turning the powers upside down, then we could whine.
Rock on! I hate it when I look around and see the body of Christ fortifying itself from those who it should be sheltering, though I’m far from perfect myself. Rock on!
Amazitha
I couldn’t have said it better. Love the title of your blog!!! Another NT fan–woo hoo!
Josh- I completely agree…we live in brick fortifications fearful of the outside world. It’s really horrible. I am guilty of this too and working to try to change it. I wish I had learned this stuff much earlier….
Absolutely. Persecution, or just plain being hated, is no measure of righteousness. Sometimes it’s more a mark of our insensitivity and lovelessness. No wonder the world struggles to believe in a God that loves them.
excellent post- raising some good questions, making good points.