Do you know what Jesus looks
like? Would you recognize him if you saw
him pushing a cart at the Food Lion or walking down Division Street? Do you know Jesus?
I think I would recognize him – you
know, from the pictures. If he hasn’t
changed his hair, that is, his beautiful long wavy hair. And if he still wears those long flowing
robes, definitely I would recognize him.
If he hasn’t changed his style too much, I would know him. But even if he has I would know his blue
eyes, his beautiful smooth skin. You all
have seen the pictures, too, right? You
know. Our Jesus is beautiful.
So much so, in fact, that it has
become hard for us to envision the possibility that Jesus looked any different
than this. But we can be pretty sure he
didn’t actually look much like this European Jesus. Jesus was a Middle Eastern man.
Jesus has been reimagined by every
culture and era. There are Native
American Jesuses, Japanese Jesuses, African Jesuses, and Latin American
Jesuses. There is the Medieval Jesus,
the Renaissance Jesus, and contemporary Jesus.
Do you know Jesus? Which one?
In this reading from Mark’s gospel
today Jesus is wondering the same thing.
He asks his disciples. Who are
people saying that I am? What are you
hearing about me?
People were definitely talking about
him. Even though he was continually
saying to his followers, “Don’t tell anyone about this!” they are talking. As soon as he says, “Don’t tell anybody,”
they turn around and tell everyone within earshot. It’s a puzzling thing, this open secret about
Jesus’ actions and his identity. Perhaps
the secrecy was meant to say that his actions do not define him. Jesus is more than the sum of his miracles. Who is this Jesus?
His disciples report what they have
heard. Some are saying he is Elijah
returned, some say he is John the Baptist; some are saying he is another of the
prophets. There are many theories about
who Jesus is; all of them connected to the past. Then Jesus asks, “Who do you say that
I am?”
Peter says it first. You are the Messiah. You are the one we have been waiting
for. You are the Christ.
For the first time, we hear something
new. Jesus is not like anyone or
anything ever seen before. He is not a
reincarnation or reimagining of any other person. He is not to be put into a previously
established category of man. Jesus is
the one they have dreamed about, the one that has never before been seen; he is
the Messiah.
And Jesus say, “Don’t tell anyone.”
Because we don’t know Jesus that
way. We don’t know Jesus because someone
told us who he is. We know Jesus
differently than we know most things or people.
Do you know Jesus?
Our teachers and mentors in the faith are
charged with helping us – young and old alike – to know Jesus. And it’s not just a matter of telling us;
it’s a matter of walking alongside us.
It’s a matter of sharing and discovering and learning alongside us. Because getting to know Jesus is a lifelong
journey.
Do you know Jesus? Do you recognize him – not just the Sallman
version of him, but all the different iterations of Jesus, the Messiah?
We know him from his miracles, but he
is not just the miracles. He is more
than that. We know him from his parables,
but he is not just the parables. He is
more than that. We know him from his
acts of healing, but he is more than a healer.
We know him from his death and
resurrection, but he is even more than that.
Do you know Jesus?
Because he lives in our midst
now. He is found in the woman who waits
for a sandwich outside our kitchen door when HOPE is serving lunch. He is found in the homeless man who walks the
streets during the day and comes to the door of our building for shelter on a
winter night. He is found in the
refugees seeking a safe place to live, the ones who keep knocking on the doors
at the borders, no matter how many times we say no. We know him in the young child who tests our
patience and our love. Jesus pushes the
boundaries wherever he goes.
Do you know Jesus? It won’t do just to talk about him because
talk is cheap. That’s what Peter
found. Jesus is found in the taking up
of our own cross and following him with our lives. Do you know Jesus?
We know him when he moves us to
respond to the need in our midst. That
might be anything from the battered and disheartened woman who someone to show
her that there is love enough for her to live, that there is hope – to the
child who has been bullied so relentlessly that he is at risk of losing
himself, and needs to see that we recognize him as a beloved child of God. When we do this we know Jesus, we know him in
our hearts.
Jesus doesn’t just warm our hearts –
he stirs our hearts to reach out and give hope to others. When we act with kindness and humility we know
Jesus, we know him in our hearts.
We know Jesus by following Jesus, to
the cross and through death and back to life.
And we teach others to do the same by our example. Teach them love by loving them – whether or
not they are lovable. Teach them to give
as you give – whether or not you feel like giving. Teach them faith by your faith – something we
recommit ourselves to every single day.
This is how we come to know Jesus.
Knowing Jesus is the hardest thing and
the best thing we can do. Beautiful
Jesus – not because he has perfect skin and blue eyes. Beautiful Jesus – because there is nothing
more beautiful than the power of his love.
Do you know Jesus?
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