This first post for the construction of A Party of Concord has to try to dispel an ancient lie that, not always in the open, divides our political parties and divides the world.
The lie is that "the Jews" killed Jesus.
The historical truth is that the Jewish - and Roman - elites manipulated We the People of Israel and killed Jesus.
And on what basis?
Please, listen to this. Listen to the rest of the truth. Listen carefully, because it still influences our political actions. It still divides our political parties; it still divides countries; it still divides the world.
The sad truth is this: The Jewish and Roman elites were utterly mistaken.
The Jewish and Roman elites were convinced that Jesus was a threat to their power and wealth. Not so. Many friends of Jesus were rich and powerful people.
Jesus was concerned only about how power and money are used.
We still have to learn how to acquire and to use power and money properly.
This is what we are going to learn while - together - we create our Party of Concord.
The lie is that "the Jews" killed Jesus.
The historical truth is that the Jewish - and Roman - elites manipulated We the People of Israel and killed Jesus.
And on what basis?
Please, listen to this. Listen to the rest of the truth. Listen carefully, because it still influences our political actions. It still divides our political parties; it still divides countries; it still divides the world.
The sad truth is this: The Jewish and Roman elites were utterly mistaken.
The Jewish and Roman elites were convinced that Jesus was a threat to their power and wealth. Not so. Many friends of Jesus were rich and powerful people.
Jesus was concerned only about how power and money are used.
We still have to learn how to acquire and to use power and money properly.
This is what we are going to learn while - together - we create our Party of Concord.
An earlier version was published
at http://www.spectacle.org/0511/gorga.html
An Easter Meditation
In my heart of hearts I am a political scientist, so my Easter
meditation is focused on this question: How can a man, acclaimed by throngs of
people on Palm Sunday, be sentenced to die on a cross by those same people on
Holy Friday—and if these were two different groups, another troublesome question arises that might be worthy of thorough investigation: "Where was, on Friday, the crowd that shouted 'hosanna' on Palm Sunday"? The stakes must have been extremely high for these complex acts to
occur so fast. If you believe, as I do, that this man, Jesus, was also God,
these events become even more astonishing.
The
stakes were indeed so high that the consequences of that switch are still with
us. First of all, it seems we are still confused as to whom to blame. A
misguided hurtling
about of shame has blinded us
to the enormity of that event for the human race. Some people have blamed the
Jews. Some people have held the Romans as complicit.
This bouncing of the blame has been so steady and so ferocious as to be vicious
in its consequences. The fact that no agreement on the ascertainment of a
simple truth of this sort has yet developed is proof positive that something
has gone terribly awry.
It is
not “the Jews,” it is not “the Romans” who have to be held accountable for the
fateful events of the Holy Week. By implicating a whole people, the blame is so
diluted as to become impossible of clear and definitive assignment. This
traditional line of historical investigation leads only to obfuscation of what
occurred that sad week.
The
facts are clear. On Palm Sunday, the people exulted in Jesus. On Holy Friday,
they demanded His death. How was this turn of passions engineered? That is the
question.
To
answer it, we have to backtrack. We have to acquire a more comprehensive
understanding of the events of Palm Sunday. Clearly, the Jewish people exulted
on Palm Sunday. They laid palms in front of Jesus as He entered Jerusalem on a donkey. And yet, members of the
Sanhedrin, the elite, were so stunned, they were taken over by so much fear as
to plot the end of Jesus’ ministry on earth.
One
can imagine them looking over the scene from dark chambers. Was it in the
middle of that first night that they sent secret messages to relatives and
friends among the Jewish and the Roman ruling groups?
The
question is: What was their fear?
The
political answer that is traditionally given covers the entire gamut of fear of
forfeiting their power, prestige, and wealth: in a word, their
authority. And, yet, that is not fully satisfactory
to cover the enormity of that tragic event. It is the depth of the gap between
their fear and the challenge posed by Jesus that needs to be explained.
The
answer resonates loud and clear during an Easter meditation. The powers-to-be
discovered that they were not going to lose power and prestige and wealth.
Jesus did not appear on a horse, sword unsheathed, and followed by menacing
hordes of armed marauders. They discovered a deeper reality: Jesus challenged
their belief system. He challenged the
base on which their authority stood; Jesus challenged the foundation of
their intellectual and spiritual existence.
They
believed they had authority by virtue of their institutional position on top of
a belief system that granted them the right to command the use of force to
their advantage. If it can be said that by the time of Moses the elites were
exercising rights in the context of well-defined responsibilities, by the time
of Jesus they preserved their rights but felt no sense of responsibility—either
toward man or toward God. In the end, they believed that Might-makes-right.
Jesus
challenged that notion. Even in the case of expulsion of the moneychangers
from the Temple , Jesus did not challenge either power
in itself nor the forms through which power manifests itself, namely money and armies;
He challenged the lack of responsibility through which power is exercised and
money is used.
Jesus
said, “I am the way and the truth and the life.” That is what terrified the
elites on Palm Sunday. In Jesus they saw the falseness,
the emptiness—and some might even have seen the viciousness—of their lives. And
they could not stand the view.
With
His actions and teachings, Jesus stripped them of the fig leaf of
rationalizations that filled their heads and
set their hearts into stones. He
asked them to put themselves in the presence of our Father in Heaven with only
hope, faith, and love in their hearts and minds—with hope and faith, as the
apostle Peter said, centered in God, and love for oneself, for one’s neighbor,
and for God. In synthetic terms, Jesus requested of them a paradigm shift, from
Might-makes-right to Love-makes-right.
I am
not a theologian. I do not know of the remission of the sins and all other
theological reasons for the existence of Jesus. For me the reason is this. No
matter what God did for the human race and the Israelites in particular, it was
never enough; so God sent Jesus to Earth to remind us of the existence of the
Spirit.
At
this remembrance, the elites trembled. And plotted for His death. A majority of
Jewish and Roman elites tried to deny their nakedness by putting Jesus, the
messenger of truth, to death. This chain of events has been repeated over and
over again to this very day. What else do the variegated forms of Fascism and
Communism re-enact? The struggle is eternal, very human and very divine: The
struggle is between good and the unspeakable evil; the struggle is between God
and the Devil. The mysterious and exhilarating aspect of this drama is that
each one of us is part and parcel of this struggle.
The
efforts of evil were in vain. Jesus was resurrected. The spiritual Jesus is
still with us. He insists on His request for hope, faith, and love. Hence, He
begs us to rely on the power of the Spirit.
We
still cannot accept Jesus’ message. How else to explain the horrific events of
our days? Do those with power and prestige and wealth behave differently today?
If we yearn to avoid the stubborn repetition
of the horrid events of the Holy Week, we need to start with a
true understanding of Jesus. We need to understand that Jesus did not threaten
anyone’s power and prestige and wealth. People with power and prestige and
wealth were among His friends here on earth. He simply came to fulfill the
Jewish law, the Jewish prophecy, the incredible Jewish insight of the
prevalence of the spirit over blind energy and matter as repeated consistently
through the ages: “Cast away from you all the crimes you have committed, and
make for yourselves a new heart and a new spirit” (Ezekiel); “Return to me, says
the Lord of hosts, and I will return to you” (Zechariah); “Atone for your sins
by good deeds, and for your misdeeds by kindness to the poor; then your
prosperity will be long” (Daniel).
There
is one more step to be taken to be ready to foster the reconstruction of the
New Jerusalem. We have to comprehend the mechanics of the transformation of a
loving mob into a hateful mob. Members of the Sanhedrin were able to switch people’s
allegiances on the basis on a lie—a bold lie. They told the people that Jesus
planned to become their King, to rule over them; hence, they were going to
forfeit their freedom.
Was
that not a lie? Jesus did not conceive of taking away from anyone the freedom
that God gave to everyone. Jesus asked not even for a
prayer for Himself; the prayer He taught us is to Our Father, your father and
mine, the father of the Jews as the father of the Gentiles, the father of the
Indians of America as the father of the Indians of India, the father of all the
people on earth. Just as for the powers-to-be, Jesus came to give everyone
hope, faith, and love.
And
there is where the throngs of people are conjoined at the hip with the elites;
that is why, in the end, the people became so gullible as to believe a bold
lie. The majority of the people were not steadfast believers in Jesus’ message
of hope, faith, and love. We still do not believe; and if we do, we do so
fitfully and hesitantly.
This
is the meaning of Easter. This is the meaning of the Resurrection. The Spirit
sits in pained judgment. What we do is our test: We can either die or live in
the Spirit. It is not power and prestige and wealth that matters; it is how we
acquire, preserve, and use power and prestige and wealth that matters. We are
free to either die or live in the Spirit.
The apostle Paul got
it all—and expressed it tersely: "Acquire a fresh, spiritual way of
thinking. You must put on that new man created in God's image, whose justice
and holiness are born of truth."
Truth
is not easy to recognize; life is not easy to live. They are not supposed to.
Joy is found in the separation of truth from falsehood and the life lived
authentically; joy, enlightenment, reassurance, strength, and peace are found
in the presence of the Spirit.
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