Did Jesus come to defeat empires? Various scholars and activists seem to think so, ranging from John Dominic Crossan to Walter Bruggeman, to N. T. Wright, to emergent types like Brian McLaren and Brian Walsh. I hear it frequently among some of my PCUSA sisters and brothers. Some of my cyber friends who congregate at Scot McKnight's Jesus Creed also share this perspective. I'm not persuaded, and here is why.
Which of the two following characterizations is more accurate?
2. God' mission is the establishment of the Kingdom of God, and pursuit of that Kingdom unmasks idolatrous empires.
I reject 1 in favor of 2. The difference is subtle, but it has profound consequences for our discipleship. The focal point must be on what is to be created, not what is being opposed.
The oneness of the New Testament church resulted in Jews, Greeks, slaves, free persons, people of different classes, women, and men, all worshiping together. This was not a tactical challenge to the empire. It was the people of God simply being the people of God. Yet it deeply disturbed the Roman authorities. I'm sure Paul and the others knew it would do just that, but that was not their motivation for behaving that way. The driving energy was to be the Kingdom of God, not combat empires. Yet being the Kingdom of God would expose the idolatry of empires.
An adage says the best criticism of the bad is the practice of the better. All idolatry is a mixture of truth and deception. When the Kingdom of God is authentically present, it unmasks deception but also confirms and preserves the truth in the idolatry.
When the starting point is the empire and its defeat, then the empire becomes the measure (by antithesis) of our Christian discipleship. We are failing to the degree we bear the image of the empire. We are the Kingdom of God to the degree we do not bear its image. Yet because all idolatry is a mixture of truth and deception, we reject both the deception and the truth. By making ourselves unwitting opponents of some aspects of truth, we merely swerve into another idolatry that is oppositional to the idolatry we are rejecting.
This in no way suggests that we should be ignorant of empires and use our influence to oppose evil and seek justice. However, I typically see the "Christ vs. Empire" mentality working out in terms of iconoclastic, anti-capitalist, anti-Western critique. This is the present empire by which we should antithetically measure our discipleship. Too often, the "Christ vs. Empire" hermeneutic attempts to claim biblical legitimization for trendy intellectual critiques of contemporary culture. It's pretty heady to be among the elite who really know the score and know that you are on the frontlines of bringing down evil empires … just like the fundamentalists know they are protecting the Kingdom of God from corrupting influences and opposing evil empires.
When we read the gospels and Paul and other New Testament writers, we find almost no mention of direct opposition to Rome. Nor do I believe inferred attacks are as pervasive as advocates of the framework claim. On the contrary, we find admonitions to get along with others, to obey the authorities, and even to pray for enemies. While the consequences of being the Kingdom of God as aliens in a strange land are never far from mind, the empire isn't the focus. The Kingdom of God is … and no empire can withstand its prophetic witness.
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