The central imperative
in the teaching of Jesus is to live in accord with God’s character: “Be
compassionate, as God is compassionate.” . . . We are to feel for others as God
feels for all of God’s children and act accordingly. . . .
The author of John’s
gospel speaks of God’s love for the world: “For God so loved the world . . .”
(3:16). Jesus, for John, is the revelation of God’s love, and so the imitatio
dei then becomes an imitatio Christi, an imitation of
Jesus. The Jesus of John’s gospel says, “I give you a new commandment, that you
love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another”
(13:34). The symmetry between the message of Jesus and the testimony of the
post-Easter community is striking: love one another because the character of
God as known in Jesus is love.
We move from how Jesus
saw the character of God to how he saw the passion of God. God’s character and
passion are not separate, but closely related, just as they are in people. Our
passion—our dedicated devotion, our consuming interest, our concentrated commitment—is
a major indicator of our character, indeed, flows out of our character. So it
is in Jesus’s teaching about God. God’s character and passion, what God is like
and God’s will for the world, go hand in hand.
God’s passion is
justice. . . . As the social form of compassion, justice is about politics [the
word “politics” comes from the Greek polis for “city”]. . . .
Politics is about the shape and shaping, the structure and structuring, of the
city and, by extension, of human communities more generally, ranging from the
family to society as a whole. . . . Justice is the political form of
compassion, the social form of love, a compassionate justice grounded in God as
compassionate. . . .
The way of Jesus was
both personal and political. It was about personal transformation. And it was
political, a path of [nonviolent] resistance to the domination system and
advocacy of an alternative vision of life together under God. His counter
advocacy, his passion for God’s passion, led to his execution. . . .
What would Jesus do in our context? He might once again disrupt
the temple—the unholy alliance between religion and empire. I think he would
teach the wrongness and futility of violence in human affairs. He would be
passionate about compassion and justice as the primary virtues of a life
centered in the God whom he knew. And of course, he would teach the importance
of a deep centering in God. - Marcus Borg
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