When Did we See You Naked?. Группа авторов
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Название: When Did we See You Naked?

Автор: Группа авторов

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Религия: прочее

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isbn: 9780334060321

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      I am therefore thankful for the courage of those initiating these conversations. I am also thankful for the Christian theological posture of hope. I therefore offer into the beginning of these conversations two things: the first, words spoken between some of the earliest followers of Jesus, from the Letter to the Hebrews 12.1–3; the second, a poem written many years ago, which was my personal response to Christ’s solidarity with those who experience sexual violation.

      Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight and the sin that clings so closely, and let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus the pioneer and perfecter of our faith, who for the sake of the joy that was set before him endured the cross, disregarding its shame, and has taken his seat at the right hand of the throne of God. Consider him who endured such hostility against himself from sinners, so that you may not grow weary or lose heart.

       Love is vulnerability

       Strength didn’t come in the shape

       I painted and pursued,

       but in the form of a humiliated man

       stretched out to die

       upon a splintered tree,

       Whose tears of love;

       pure vulnerability,

       flow endlessly and endlessly.

       In his outstretched, bruised

       and beaten embrace,

       that dusty cheek

       against my face

       is freedom.

       Freedom that no pain or shame

       needs to be explained or named

       to this friend who shaped them not,

       but wore them as his only clothes

       then shook them off

       to rise and dress us all in joy

      Notes

      Introduction: Acknowledging Jesus as a Victim of Sexual Abuse

      JAYME R. REAVES AND DAVID TOMBS

      To say that Jesus suffered, even suffered greatly, is uncontentious. Jesus’ suffering is firmly attested in Christian faith as we know it. The Apostles’ Creed explicitly acknowledges Jesus’ suffering with the phrase ‘suffered under Pontius Pilate’ (passus sub Pontio Pilato). The word excruciating (derived from the Latin crux) connects the cross (crux) with acute suffering in the passion narratives. The early Church at the Council of Chalcedon (451 CE) firmly condemned the Docetic heresy, which denied the reality of Jesus’ suffering. The ruling established that Christian orthodoxy included an acknowledgement of the reality of suffering on the cross.

      To acknowledge Jesus as a victim of sexual abuse, however, typically prompts a very different reaction: blank surprise, stony silence, scepticism, correction, or even offence. Some ask questions like, ‘Do you really mean that?’ Others say there is no evidence in the Bible to support such a claim. Some flatly declare, ‘You can’t say this.’ Jesus is readily spoken of as a victim of suffering, and there is little problem in describing his suffering as torture. But to speak of him as a victim of sexual abuse is shocking and meets resistance. Why? We have come to see the resistance to the idea of Jesus as a victim of sexual abuse as part of the key to understanding what sexual abuse means and why it could be so important to our understanding of both Jesus’ experience and our contemporary context.

      If our experiences over years of work with church and academic groups are an indication, there are often several stages that people go through as they consider this proposal. At first, it is likely to be viewed as speculative conjecture, without biblical or historical evidence to support it. Or it might be seen as a subjective reading imposed on the text and drawing on an agenda from a very different time and place, rather than being supported by the text itself. Why, people may ask, if Jesus suffered sexual abuse, has this not been recognized in 2,000 years of Christian history? If it were in the Bible, they may continue, surely it would have been more openly acknowledged before now? This stage is marked by a sense of the novelty of the claim, and the lack of familiarity with the biblical evidence that supports it.