The Friday Edition
Was Jesus a Zionist? (continued)
Source: www.christianzionism.org
https://www.christianzionism.org/en/was-jesus-zionist
JAMES TISSOT [PUBLIC DOMAIN], VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
In Mark 12:13–17 (also Matthew 22:15–22 and Luke 20:20–26) the Pharisees and Herodians approach Jesus, asking if Jews need to pay taxes to Caesar. This is a political question. In AD 6, a man named Judas the Galilean (see Josephus, Antiquities, 18.1) started a political revolt. He declared that Jews should refuse to pay taxes to a pagan oppressor like Caesar. Such payment was, he argued, treason against God. The revolt was crushed, but this political resistance survived into the time of Jesus’ ministry.
In Mark 12:13–17 (and the passages cited above), Jesus is being tested, and we might paraphrase the dialogue thus: Jesus, do you agree with the political zealots who want to promote Jewish nationalism? Do you agree with the tax revolt as the way to do this? This is when Jesus delivers the famous line: “Give back to Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s” (Mark 12:17 NIV). Or to paraphrase: Gentlemen, I am not interested in these political goals. My kingdom is of a different order. Here Jesus is rejecting an ancient, misguided Zionist agenda.
For many first-century Jews, Israel’s return to political power was linked to the coming of the messiah. In Luke 19:11, as Jesus approaches Jerusalem, people believe that the kingdom of God (seen as a political entity) will appear immediately. They are incorrect. Something similar is described in Acts 1:6. Here the disciples see Jesus’ amazing resurrection glory, and immediately their minds are consumed with political questions. Will Jesus now restore Israel to its previous glory? This question is understandable. When Jesus talks about the Spirit (Acts 1:8) and the kingdom, we see the two ideas that gave first-century Jews their “restoration hope”: The messiah would establish a Spirit-filled kingdom, and this kingdom would be found in Israel’s political restoration.
But Jesus rejects these ideas. Instead, the mission of his kingdom is to transform the world (not Israel alone). First-century Jewish expectation is local (for Israel), but Jesus’ expectation is global (for all the earth). Jewish expectation is tribal (blessing Israel), but Jesus’ expectation is universal (blessing all).
Jesus separates himself from people who tie their political goals for the ancient nation of Israel to their personal faith. In announcing his messianic kingdom, Jesus states that the kingdom has deeper and more profound values than those of Caesar, of any nation-state, or of any political project. The Kingdom of God cannot be confused with the kingdoms of this world. Jesus had profound respect for his own Jewish culture and the land of Israel. But God’s purposes are not limited to one ethnicity or one land. There is no political exclusivism for Israel in the gospel. And, therefore, there is no room for a political theology like Zionism in Jesus’ teachings.
LATEST OPEN LETTERS
- 23-12Tens of thousands of dead children.......this must stop
- 05-06A Call to Action: Uniting for a Lasting Peace in the Holy Land
- 28-05Concerned world citizen
- 13-02World Peace
- 05-12My scream to the world
- 16-11To Syria and Bashar al-Assad
- 16-11To Palestine
- 24-10Japan should withdraw from the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations (UN), WHO's controlling parent body, to protect the basic human rights and lives of its citizens.
- 09-08Open Letter to António Guterres: Will the UN Protect Our Rights and End Our Suffering?
- 09-06Urgent Appeal
Latest Blog Articles
- 09-01Our Friday News Analysis | What the World Reads Now!
- 08-01Our Wednesday News Analysis | Genocide: The New Normal
- 07-01Genocide: The New Normal
- 07-01Jimmy Carter: A utopian dove or a shrewd driver of US empire?
- 07-01Israel cannot lose a ‘humanity’ it never had
- 02-01Our Friday News Analysis | What the World Reads Now!
- 30-12OUR NEW YEAR’S MESSAGE | HISTORY FAVORS PEACE
- 26-12Our Friday News Analysis | What the World Reads Now!
- 25-12Our Wednesday News Analysis
- 24-12I am living my own Nakba
- 24-12Inside ‘Greater Israel’: myths and truths behind the long-time Zionist fantasy