“Don’t
you believe in the Trinity?” a friend asked last week, after I reacted
negatively to a stranger saying that Jesus is God. I admit, I overreacted a
bit, calling the latter belief idolatry, though discretely not to the person
who asserted it. The person declaring Jesus their God did not affirm this in
the context of Trinity: Jesus apparently stood as “Lord” all by himself in this
man’s view.
I
believe Jesus would be horrified. As a good Jew, he might at best have believed
himself part of a chosen people, the children of God, and as a uniquely called
prophet. To the person who asked about the Trinity, I rather lamely replied that
I believed Jesus awakened us to the understanding that we are all beloved
children of God. I added that the Trinity wasn’t devised until centuries after
Jesus lived.
If
I had had my wits about me, I would’ve explained further that the Trinity as
three separate persons is not how I understand God. Previously on this blog I
implied that early Eastern Orthodox mystics’ Trinitarian thinking was more about God’s
activities than essence or personhood. To the extent we “see” the face of God,
it is by God’s activities in the world. This was also the understanding of some
Judaic and Islamic philosophers and mystics.
I
believe we may see God in creation, compassion, and inspiration—the actions
corresponding to what is designated Creator, Christ, and Holy Spirit. And the
writer of 1 John saw God as love, and I see God there too.
The
Romans thought of the first Christians as atheists because they didn’t believe
in the many gods that filled up their pantheon and the many cultures they ruled.
The Christian “pantheon” came to be populated in popular imagination by Father,
Son, and Holy Ghost.
But
to me, this limits our experience of God. Every time I write about God, I
realize how much I limit God. God has more than three “faces,” as evidenced by
the wide variety of religions and faiths there are on our planet alone.
Remembering
that in religion “myth” is—in the words of a child—“a story that is true on the inside,” the cross may be seen as a story of how “the powers that be” seek to
diminish God’s activity in the world. The resurrection may be viewed as a story
of how God’s activity in the world is renewed and refreshed. And Pentecost may
be understood as a story of how transforming God’s presence can be, making us
able to speak in the languages of strangers, share our possessions, and
proclaim God’s love to the world.
Over
the past year or so I’ve experienced a series of physical “issues” that remind
me I am not always going to be this body. Not going anywhere soon, mind you,
but I decided finally to read Sherwin B. Nuland’s 1993 book, How We Die: Reflections on Life’s Final
Chapter, which has sat on my bookshelves unopened since a friend left it to
me.
I
like Nuland’s frank admission that, though society and the medical profession
like to assign “causes of death,” sometimes we simply die of old age. The body
was not designed to last forever. It wears out!
And
I was fascinated to read a quote from Michael Helpern, the former Chief Medical
Examiner of New York City: “Death may be due to a wide variety of diseases and
disorders, but in every case the underlying physiological cause is a breakdown
in the body’s oxygen cycle.”
This
brought new meaning to the myth of the cross, that God incarnate suffered and
died. Crucifixion, as is commonly known, achieves its end by
suffocation: as the body weakens and sags, air flow is cut off, and the
crucified dies by asphyxiation.
Many
Christians have believed that Jesus or God suffered for us or in our place,
which to me diminishes the fact that we too suffer and we too will die. Others
of us have seen Jesus’ death on the cross as God’s suffering with us, the literal meaning of
“compassion”= “to suffer with.”
Now
to know that lack of oxygen is the cause of every death is to see the cross in
every death—to believe that, in compassion, God is with us as we part this
world.
Please support this blog
ministry by clicking here and scrolling down to the donate link below its description or by mailing to MCC, P.O. Box 50488, Sarasota FL 34232 USA,
designating “Progressive Christian Reflections” in the memo area of your check
or money order. Thank you!
Copyright © 2016 by Chris R. Glaser.
Permission granted for non-profit use with attribution of author and blogsite.
Other rights reserved.