thomstark.net
apply liberally to prevent infection
apply liberally to prevent infection
Somebody asked me today, “What are we exactly saved from and what does the death and resurrection of Jesus mean in relationship to that?” This is a significant question. Evangelicalism preaches that you need to “get saved from your sins!” By this, Evangelicals typically mean that we need to enter into a personal relationship with Jesus in order not to have to go to hell as a result of our (individual) sins–sins like adultery, lying, fornicating, or the biggest sin of all: not being an Evangelical.
But that’s not what “being saved” or “sin” generally meant in the New Testament. A biblical understanding of these themes would run (just on a cursory level) something like this: The primary sins of Israel were idolatry and systemic injustice. These are the two things that the prophets preached against, time and time again. The punishment for these sins was eventually, exile, and Jesus came onto the scene at a time when Jews were still in a very real way in exile, even though they lived on their own land. They were still under the category of “exile” because they were under the hegemony of foreign powers (in Jesus’ time, Rome).
The concept of “forgiveness of sins” in this period, and in the NT, is not primarily about the forgiveness of individual sins (although it includes that), but “the forgiveness of sins” refers specifically to the restoration of Israel in two ways: (1) to internal structures of justice, and (2) to hegemony over the other nations–to its “rightful place” of prominence. Jesus’ ministry needs to be understood as the proclamation of the forgiveness of sins in both of these two ways. Jesus opposed the systemic injustice within Israel and called for a radical reorientation of the politics and economics governing the people of God. The politics of exploitation governed Israel, from Rome, through their puppet temple regime, down to the retainers who did all the dirty work. The masses of Israelites were taxed by three sources: Rome, Herod1 and the (Roman approved) temple, so that anywhere between 60-80% of their income was taken from them each year. This left them with not enough to live on, so they would take loans from moneylenders. The moneylenders would then strip them of everything they had when they couldn’t afford to pay back their loans. Land was expropriated from the people and then, in poverty, they were paid meager wages to come back and work on the land they used to own. This is the context into which Jesus came up.
It also needs to be remembered that Jesus was from Galilee, not Judea, and Galileans had a fundamentally different way of looking at the religion coming from Jerusalem. They looked at it with suspicion and hostility, to say the least. So Jesus comes on the scene preaching the year of Jubilee (Luke 4) when all debts are forgiven. He gives the poor masses strategies for resistance (share, don’t hoard) and strategies for exposing the injustice of their oppressors nonviolently. For instance, if someone, namely a moneylender, sues you for your cloak in a public court (which is what they did as a surety when a debtor couldn’t pay back a debt), Jesus says, “give them your tunic as well.” In other words, strip down naked in public, give them everything! This was a nonviolent protest, exposing the exploitative nature of the economic system.
Jesus was thus heavily involved in the political and economic policies of his world, and he was a resistance leader against the structures of exploitation. He was, in other words, a prophet preaching covenant renewal, which is that first ingredient in the “forgiveness of sins.”
He also preached the coming of the Son of Man in judgment against the nations, and the unfaithful (exploitative elites) of Israel (the elites being an extension of Rome, rather than authentic Jews). This was the second ingredient—the deliverance of Israel from foreign hegemony and its restoration to a place of prominence among the nations. Jesus believed this final judgment was imminent (he said it would happen before all of his disciples died off).
Jesus therefore opposed the temple regime in Jerusalem. They, as Roman puppets, had a vested interest in preserving the status quo. Jesus was their enemy, and they were his. He preached judgment against the temple, correctly predicting its destruction, and claiming for himself and for his followers the authority to forgive sins. This wasn’t a claim to divinity as we often hear. What it was was a direct threat to the temple, saying that God was no longer operating through the temple regime because they were corrupt. God was now moving through the Jesus movement, and that’s where “forgiveness of sins” would come from. So when Jesus went around forgiving the sins of various people, those were microcosmic signs of the fact that the great big “forgiveness of sins” (those two things we talked about: internal justice and liberation from exile) was about to happen, and that it would happen through this Jesus movement.
Jesus was crucified because he represented a real political threat to the authority of the temple, and therefore a threat to Rome—because Rome used the temple as a way of keeping that region of their empire pacified. The meaning of the crucifixion is that Jesus opposed the powers that be and so they killed him for it. The resurrection suggests that the powers that be did not win. God will have the final say, and God vindicates Jesus from the shame of defeat by Rome in order to show that ultimately Rome will be defeated by God’s Righteous One (the true Lord and King, over against Caesar) Jesus.
As a result of this ultimate triumph of God’s faithful (read: socially just) people over the exploitative elite Jews and foreign power, the world would be fundamentally reordered (a recurring theme throughout the Bible of God combating chaos and bringing order) and peace and justice would reign on earth forever. That is the New Testament message of “salvation from sin” and the significance of the cross and resurrection within that matrix of thought.
So the next time some Evangelical tells you that you need to get saved from sin, tell them that you are looking forward, in fact, to getting saved, very soon, from the Evangelical churches’ systemic injustice and from the consequences of their idolatrous affection for Western imperialism. Tell them you hope they’re able to be saved on that day too!
December 3, 2009 - 3:36 PM
Wow.
A lot to take in.
Keep it up, Thom.
December 3, 2009 - 3:59 PM
Dang, that’s well written and interesting. Keep thinking and writing; it’s nice to have a fresh take.
December 7, 2009 - 3:24 AM
Way to sum up a LOT of historical background.
December 7, 2009 - 8:04 AM
Good summary. Sounds like N.T. Wright’s What St. Paul Really Said.
December 7, 2009 - 9:44 AM
Parts of it, yeah. Or JVG. But of course I differ with Wright sharply on a number of issues.
December 11, 2009 - 4:25 PM
Yeah. Wow.
I want to be saved from myself.
August 20, 2010 - 7:12 PM
Hey Thom! I have been reading much of what you have been writing, and must admit I really enjoy it. You write with exstencive knowledge and great fiercity. I especially like what you have written about the trinity and about nonviolence.
I, for my part, have been an Arian for quite some time now, but still (as always) open for new inputs. It seems like your writings have tipped me over the edge to becoming ….. (fill in the blank) whatever your view – maybe called something in line with the thorougly jewish messianic expectations.
Currently I am doing some research about nonviolence and Jesus, since I`m planning to write a book about it. (for that matter I don`t mind if you write some more on the topic!)
I was just wondering about to things regarding this post:
1. Where did you get the sources for the percent of taxation demanded from the jewish inhabitants and the many people living in great debt? I am aware of the many parabels Jesus are talking about these things. For that matter I am asking for the extra-biblical sources
2. About the sin of Israel and the people. You write that the issue of sin ” refers specifically to the restoration of Israel.” Why then (I am aware of your writing that it is not ONLY that) do the isrealites offer up atonement for sins while living in the holy land? (not talking of the Roman occupation)
By the way, sorry for my bad english. But I have an excuse since it is not my #1 language – I`m norwegian
Peace
August 21, 2010 - 1:28 AM
Eirik,
Thanks for the kind words, for taking the time to read the blog, and for your great questions.
Everybody in Palestine had double layers of taxation, plus poll and land taxes atop of them. They had the direct tax (tribute to Rome) and the temple and priest taxes, which together totaled about 35-45% of the average peasant’s produce or income (conservative estimates). In addition to that, they had day to day taxes, such as poll taxes, which amounted to about a day’s wages.
However, if you lived in Galilee, where Jesus lived and spent most of his time ministering, you were subject to a third layer of taxation. You also owed exorbitant taxes to Herod, in addition to both the temple and priest taxes and the direct taxes to Rome. These three layers came to about 60% of a Galilean’s income by conservative estimates.
You can find this info in Marcus Borg, Conflict, Holiness and Politics in the Teaching of Jesus, and in Richard Horsley’s Galilee. Just look up “taxation” in the index to both books for the relevant page numbers.
I’ll quote Horsley on the effects of these taxes upon the average Galilean:
For the strongest argument that “forgiveness of sins” meant return from exile in messianic contexts, see N.T. Wright, both The New Testament and the People of God and Jesus and the Victory of God.
Allow me to clarify: I am not claiming that forgiveness of sins did not also refer to ordinary sins in general. But within messianic contexts it referred to the restoration of Israel who was still ostensibly being punished for their former idolatries as evinced in the fact that they had been under the hegemony of foreign powers for centuries. When Jesus comes announcing the “forgiveness of sins,” taken together with his proclamation of the coming of the kingdom of God and his symbolic acts of twelve disciples and the restoring of outcasts to the community, in that context forgiveness of sins refers primarily to the restoration of Israel and her deliverance from Roman domination.