J.
R. Daniel Kirk (PhD), New Testament professor at Fuller Seminary Northern
California, is an author, and he blogs daily at Storied Theology
(http://jrdkirk.com). He will be speaking in April at the CBE Houston
Conference, “A New Creation. A New Tradition: Reclaiming the Biblical Tradition
of Man and Woman, One in Christ.”
In
last week’s Arise, I responded to John Piper’s description of Christianity as a
“masculine” religion.
Today’s
issue has to do with the significance of Jesus’ choosing of twelve men to be
his disciples. This is one of several issues I take up in Jesus Have I Loved,
but Paul?. The story within which this selection of the twelve is embedded
leads us to draw a very different point from Piper’s.
Jesus
chooses twelve men. These twelve Jesus specially commissions. Jesus came
preaching, casting out demons, and healing. The disciples are sent to preach,
heal, and cast out demons.
Jesus
comes proclaiming and inaugurating the reign of God, and these men are sent out
to participate in that coming. When Jesus feeds the 5,000, he hands the bread
to them. They are the chosen. They are the insiders.
In
contrast (let’s stick to Mark’s Gospel here), the women in the story are
marginal. There are small handfuls of nameless women. They touch Jesus’ robe,
they ask for healing for their daughters, they throw a few coins in a box in
the temple, they anoint Jesus’ head with oil.
So
while the women are coming in and going out, acting on faith and finding praise
for their faith, it’s the boys who are getting it done!
Getting
it done, that is, right up until the great, transitional moment in the story.
“Who
do you say that I am?” asks Jesus. “You are the Christ.” Ok, so far so good.
Then, Jesus begins to tell them what this title entails: “The Messiah must be
rejected, suffer, and die. Then he’ll be raised.”
Peter
rebukes Jesus. Jesus rebukes him back: “Get behind me Satan.”
What
happens then? Move on to chapter 9, and the disciples who had been empowered to
exorcise are unable to cast out a demon. The disciples who had been given the
charge to proclaim cannot overcome the mute-making spirit.
Later
in that same chapter Jesus again predicts his death. The disciples’ reaction?
They walk along debating with each other about who is going to be greatest in
God’s coming kingdom.
We
begin to see what they don’t get about Jesus’ ministry: the cross turns the
economy of the world on its head. They have a standard of greatness that
entails a certain kind of leadership and power, but Jesus wants to transform
their ideas. He wants them to see greatness in the cross and in the child.
As
if Mark, or Jesus, thought we might miss the point, we get the whole thing a
third time.
Jesus
predicts his death, and this time the subsequent response of the disciples is
James’ and John’s request to sit at Jesus’ right and left hand. Again, Jesus
has to combat not merely the request, but the wrongheaded assumption about what
greatness in the kingdom of God looks like:
“Jesus
called them over and said, ‘You know that the ones who are considered the
rulers by the Gentiles show off their authority over them and their
high-ranking officials order them around. But that’s not the way it will be
with you. Whoever wants to be great among you will be your servant. Whoever
wants to be first among you will be the slave of all, for the Human One didn’t
come to be served but rather to serve and to give his life to liberate many
people’ (Mark 10:42-44, CEB).”
In
the story, the disciples do not understand what is entailed in leading the
people of God. They think it is about greatness and power rather than service
and death.
The
twelve were committed to Jesus, and happy with him–but only as one who came
with power. They lacked faith to participate in his way of death. They did not
have eyes to see that the ministry of Jesus turned the economy of the world on
its head.
Shall
we return to the women now?
How
are we to assess these women who, in the narrative world, are outsiders, on the
margins?
Unlike
the disciples who are rebuked for being of little faith, Jesus commends the
nameless, bleeding woman for her belief: “Daughter, go in peace, your faith has
made you well.”
Moreover,
there is one episode where Jesus ties a human inseparably to the gospel story.
It is the episode of the woman who pours oil over Jesus’ head. This looks to be
a royal anointing! But when Jesus defends her he says, “Leave her alone, she
has prepared my body beforehand for burial.”
The
act of anointing prepares Jesus for burial: Messiahship and death are held
together, and here is the only person in the whole story to get it. This is why
“wherever the gospel is preached what she has done will also be told in memory
of her.”
What
does it mean to live at the margins, to be unnamed? How does this compare with
being the twelve, the guys, the insiders?
According
to the economy of the world, with its measures of greatness, to be the twelve
is to be exemplary, in the place to lead, to exclude others from leadership, to
stand close to Jesus and guard the gates of who else can draw near.
And
to the extent that we look to Jesus’ selection of them, and the apparent
marginalization of the women, as paradigmatic for male leadership in the
church, we show ourselves to be people whose minds have not yet been
transformed by the very story to which we are appealing.
It
is only by agreeing with the disciples’ way of assessing the world that we can
see their “insider status” as a true insider status, to be replicated by other
men in church history.
Jesus
offers another way: You guys don’t get it! It’s the rulers of the Gentiles who
lord authority over people. It shall not be so among you.
There
is another way. It is the way of the cross.
There
is another way. It is the way of the “marginalized” in the world’s eyes lying
closest to Jesus in faith and understanding.
Are
we really supposed to hold up as our model the “Satan” who denied the gospel of
the crucified Christ, and claim that Peter is paradigmatic of the place of men
as insiders and faithful leaders in the church?
Or
should we not seek out the one who did the good deed for Jesus, holding
together Messiah and death from her place at the margins? Should we not seek
out the one who sought out Jesus merely to touch the fringe of his garment and
learn from her what it means to walk in faith?
The
irony of appealing to the boys as insiders is that in so doing we show
ourselves to be adopting the boys’ understanding of power, privilege, and
leadership in the kingdom.
And
this view is roundly rebuked by Jesus in words of dissuasion and the work of
the cross.
Diretamente de Jesus Creed.
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