Showing posts with label Body. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Body. Show all posts

Monday, 28 April 2008

In the embrace of the crucified

"For worshippers of a crucified Lord, embracing God requires embracing innocent suffering: the child dying on Peed Onk, the Alzheimer patient abandoned by his adult children, the Sudanese mother unable to feed her family. A visible reminder of this Christian reality can be found in the cathedral in Wurzburg, Germany, where a large crucifix stands in a recessed arch to the side of the nave. The battered body of Christ has gaunt, Gothic features, his eyes fixed upon the viewer, his hands, pulled from the arms of the cross, extended outward in a gesture of embrace, inviting the viewer to enter. In pulling his arms from the arms of the cross, however, this carved Jesus still carries the spikes that nailed him there, embedded in his hands. There is no way to enter that embrace without feeling the iron instruments of Jesus' torture. The loving embrace of God in the flesh necessarily involves entering the pain of that flesh. for Christians, this is how we become what God intends us to be." Shuman & Volck, "Reclaiming the Body", p45.

Monday, 21 April 2008

Fat Jesus

Imagine if we encountered the risen Jesus, and found him to be fat. He was picked on, after all, by being labeled a glutton and a drunkard. I'm not claiming he was fat - just wondering what issues it would raise for us.

I just read a review of a book called "The Fat Jesus" by Lisa Isherwood. It explores body issues from a feminist theological perspective. I found this so intriguing that I have ordered a book by Isherwood - but not the "fat Jesus" one... I've ordered her book "Introducing body theology" - because I think that "the body" is a topic surprisingly under-explored in Christian theology, and especially in my own area of Pauline studies. This is becoming more and more surprising to me, given that the body has such a prominent place in Romans, 1 Corinthians, Philippians, etc - the body of Jesus, the bodies of believers, the ecclesial body of Christ.

Have a look through the book of Romans, and you'll notice that sin, judgement, atonement, sanctification and future glory are all described using bodily terms...

- God gave them up... to the degrading of their bodies (ch 1)
- Their throats... tongues... lips... mouths... feet... eyes (ch3)
- Do not let sin exercise dominion in your mortal bodies (ch6)
- You have died to the law through the body of Christ (ch7)
- If the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he who raised Christ from the dead will give life to your mortal bodies also through his Spirit that dwells in you. (ch8)
- We groan inwardly while we wait for adoption, the redemption of our bodies (ch8)
- I appeal to you... to present your bodies as a living sacrifice (ch12)
- We who are many are one body in Christ, and individually we are members one of another (ch12)
etc...

...and don't get me started on 1 Corinthians!!

Friday, 28 March 2008

exalted in my body

If you come to the postgraduate study room for theology students at the University of Nottingham, you will discover that above the door on the way in, there is a little sign saying "The Ivory Tower" (actually, we are situated just beneath the clocktower in the Trent building)... and as you leave the study room, you will see a little sign above the door announcing your exit to "The Real World". The little signs were placed there a few weeks back by a particular Australian theology postgrad, as egged on by certain other inhabitants of this room.

Of course, the point is an ironic one... but it does provoke me to think each time I come in and go out. Why didn't Paul say what I wanted him to say: "It is my eager expectation and hope that... Christ will be exalted now as always in my study"... I'd be much more comfortable with that...

"In the bodily obedience of the Christian, carried out as the service of God in the world of everyday, the lordship of Christ finds visible expression and only when this visible expression takes personal shape in us does the whole thing become credible as Gospel message." Ernst Kasemann