It’s the things you don’t expect that you have to watch out
for. Disruptive Thinkers usually sneak
up on society from the most obscure backgrounds.
Take the boy born in a manger over 2,000 years ago. He had been prophesied about hundreds of
years before by a people beset with ever present suffering. Bouncing from subservience under one Empire
to another, time and again, the people who called themselves Chosen sought the
one who would rescue them from servitude.
They wanted a Messiah.
When He finally arrived, and claimed the title, the
established order was incredulous. Under
the relatively stable, but chafing, rule of the Roman Empire, the Jewish
scholars of the day thought their Messiah would lead them to military victory
over their captors. Instead, he foretold
that their most sacred building, the Temple built under Solomon, would be
dismantled stone by stone within decades.
Much to their dismay, it was – in 70 A.D.
Shaking up the Status Quo |
He performed miracles on days of rest and preached a gospel
of love and forgiveness. He claimed that
He alone could intercede with the Almighty.
The traditions held to for many generations by followers of the One True
God were under assault by a radical carpenter from the backwater town of
Bethlehem. The Old Law was being replaced by a New
Covenant, unsanctioned and implemented in a way only an insurgency could keep alive.
After He was killed, at the age of 33, the true revolution
began. The followers of His teachings
began multiplying. They believed He had
risen from the dead, and eyewitnesses to the event wrote of what they saw. They
spread from the Levant to throughout the known world. Some went to Africa, some to Gaul, some to
Persia. They all carried the same
message – Individual Salvation was possible if you accepted the sacrifice of
the man who claimed He was the Son of God himself. Even more revolutionary was the concept that not only was God
interested in a relationship with the Jews, but now all Peoples were included in
His community.
The authorities throughout the Empire were not pleased. All but one of His twelve primary companions, known as
the Disciples, were martyred for their belief in this strange religion. The other, John, was
banished to the barren Isle of Patmos. Phillip was skinned alive, Peter crucified
upside down. Some were beheaded and
others drawn and quartered. .
His followers were persecuted harshly as they began to spread. Roman patricians reveled in watching wild
animals tear the flesh off of suspected Christians in the Coliseum, yet the
movement continued to pick up steam.
It's a special kind of revolution that inspires this kind of self-sacrificial ethos.
The upstart religion struggled to gain traction for a few centuries, but in 313 AD, the Emperor Constantine adopted it as the official religion
of the Roman Empire. The influence of
the Son of Man, born shunned from the world, would from that point forward be
immense. For good and ill, the world
order was irrevocably changed.
Christianity became the main religion of Europe following
the split and then collapse of the Western Roman Empire. Philosophers like Augustine began to parse out
the teachings of Jesus, setting the framework for the intellectual side of the
religion. World history was officiallyassembled around the presumed birth of the Messiah. “Before Christ” became the old epoch – Anno Domini
delineated the modern era. Even modern,
more politically correct historians use this dividing point to differentiate
the human timeline. The “Common Era” is
still defined by this one birth.
Whose brilliant idea was this, again? |
Love for one’s
neighbor morphed into something political and militaristic as the second millennium
AD dawned. King’s wanting glory but
professing piety sent Crusades to capture Jerusalem multiple times. They were successful for a bit, but
ultimately utterly crushed by military leaders adhering to another powerful
religion – Islam. This enmity would not
die for hundreds of years. It still helps define modern geopolitical struggles.
As Catholicism, Christianity's official standard bearer, became more powerful, the religion turned
theocratic. Corruption began to pervade
the upper reaches of power, and the infallibility of the Pope was soon questioned
by an upstart monk in Germany. Following
the posting of his 95 theses, Europe was plunged into sectarian war for
hundreds of years. Kings rose or fell
because of adherence to one strain of Christianity or another.
During this time, all was not warfare. Christian Monks were some of the foremost scientists and thinkers of their age. Their devotion
to piety allowed them much time to think, and they wrote tracts trying to
explain one phenomena or another. The
arts saw an explosion in genius, mostly around religious themes.
Soon, persecuted religious minorities began to leave their
native continent as a New World opened.
They too fought bitterly amongst themselves over religion, but in the
end found that tolerance and acceptance of differing beliefs made for a
stronger Union. Along with Democracy,
religious freedom became the norm in the Americas. The pulpits of the Revolutionaries were the first places where insurrection was discussed and widely disseminated.
Christianity was used as both a bulwark and point of attack
for the institution of slavery. Harsh
masters quoted some passages, brave abolitionists smuggled oppressed people out
of the South supported by other teachings. The leaders of the Civil Rights movement, most notably Martin Luther King, were men of the cloth. The teachings of Christianity helped unite disparate movements.
The remnants of Christianity remain in Europe – spectacular churches,
stunning art, entrenched traditions – even as personal adherence plummets. Meanwhile, developing countries in Africa
and Asian, both free and otherwise, are seeing rapidly increasing
grown in this once purely European venture.
Nearly every country in the modern world has some Christian presence.
Pretty good for a dude from Bethlehem |
It is one of the most remarkable, dramatic and long-lasting
movements in the history of humanity. It has morphed, adapted, and spun-off many denominations. The best selling book of all time contains its teachings. It
has been vilified, revered, caused many to die in its name, and many more to
find life and freedom in the same. All
this from a single Man from an obscure village in an ancient, tradition bound
society. Believe in his teachings or
not, there is no questioning the Disruptive nature of Jesus' life and the institutions he started.
So with all that in mind, Merry Christmas!
Excellent article brother. Geography and history of the world come to my mind.
ReplyDeleteIt is rather curious to see how all centuries BC led to the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob being exalted in Jerusalem. The echoes of Egypt and Rome and the East (with three famous representatives from there) where heard two millennia ago in Palestine, and the ties of the whole modern world to Israel are absolutely undeniable.
All in all, humanity seems less lost to me now. Thank you, and let the whole world praise Adonai! Glory to the King, for he alone will last forever. Elohai, Elohim.