John’s Jesus

“In the beginning was the word…”

“In the beginning, when God created the heavens and the earth, God said…”

john-icon

The Gospel according to John opens with a fresh, bold interpretation, a re-reading of the opening Genesis story.

In the beginning :Logos.

Reading the sacred Hebrew Scriptures through the lens of the Christ brought John to startling new insights. In his understanding, in some unfathomable mystery, the eternal creative energy and wisdom of Divinity had been enfleshed in Jesus of Nazareth.

“The Word became flesh and dwelt among us…”

John’s Jesus is always both-and. Both human and divine. Both mortal and eternal. Both limited and infinite. In their own ways, the other three gospels also tell the Christ story with this both-and perspective but John weaves heaven and earth together in a unique and intriguing narrative.

John’s Jesus can tell the future and reads people’s minds. He is fully in charge of his own death, walking determinedly to the cross: the Good Shepherd “laying down his life” for his flock.

Even so, The Gospel according to John most pointedly speaks of his humanity: this Jesus becomes tired and thirsty; he bleeds and dies like any other human who is placed on a cross.

M. Eugene Boring describes how John uses double-entendre to help communicate this both-and reality of John’s Jesus.

In the story of Nicodemus, for example, Jesus explains that one must be “born again/born from above.” The Greek phrase means both either/or and both/and; Jesus and Nicodemus were using the same words but comprehending different aspects of reality.

Later in that same conversation, Jesus says he will be “lifted up” – the meaning of which, we come to discover, is both lifted up on a cross and lifted up by God in exaltation.

Boring says: “There are numerous such cases in which the pre-Easter characters in the story understand Jesus’ words at one level, when the narrator, with a knowing look and stage wink at the post-Easter reader, intends them in the other way.”

M. Eugene Boring, An Introduction to the New Testament: History, Literature, Theology (Louisville: Westminster, John Knox Press, 2012).

We “post-Easter readers” must always keep in mind this dual vision of the gospel storytellers in order to read appropriately. The Jesus of the gospels is always both-and: always both human and divine, always both the Jesus of Nazareth and the exalted Christ.

We call Matthew, Mark and Luke the “synoptic” gospels because their vision and version is similar to one another (syn = similar + optic = seeing). But John’s gospel is different; it has its own unique chronology, geography, theology and style.

Probably Mark laid out the original one year chronology in which there is only one final Passover when Jesus’ passion occurred. But John suggests a three-year ministry based on his description of three different trips to Jerusalem for three different Passovers.

  • While the Synoptics locate most of Jesus’ ministry in the northern province of Galilee, John’s Jesus teaches mostly in the southern realm of Judea.
  • The Gospel according to John has no birth narrative, no shepherds (Luke), no wise men (Matthew) and significantly, no story of a miraculous virgin birth.
  • There are no parables in John and all of Jesus’ teaching is concentrated in the final chapters before his passion.
  • There is no talk of the coming “kingdom of heaven;” rather John’s Jesus points to himself as the present presence of God, doing the works of God in order to accomplish the “glory” of God.
  • There is no last supper with breaking the bread and taking the wine in remembrance; instead John’s Jesus spends his last supper with the disciples washing their feet.

If I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet.

John 13:14

John’s early chapters are sometimes referred to as the “book of signs” because it is in these stories that the narrator designates Jesus’ acts of wonders as “signs” rather than “miracles.”

A sign points to something.

A sign signals something that is coming or symbolizes something unseen. And the signs that John highlights, the acts of wonder he describes delve into the core of Jesus’ identity and the nature of the Christ.

For John, the signs demonstrate the Creator’s remarkable, hands-on intersection with creation.

John’s Jesus is the I Am

The signs suggest the mystery of God’s being present in the being of Jesus: “I Am” – John’s Jesus tells us repeatedly.

I Am the Light of the world – spoken in the context of the healing of a blind man. I Am the Resurrection and the Life – spoken to Mary grieving the death of her brother Lazarus. I Am the Bread of Life – spoken to those whose stomachs were filled with the multiplied loaves and fishes.

tetragrammaton

The very use of “I Am” is a theologically bold sign, hearkening back to Moses’ encounter with the bush that burned but was not consumed when the voice of the Holy One spoke its own name: I AM. (Exodus 3) Ever since then, among the descendants of Israel, The Name is held to be too holy for humans to utter.

Yet here is John’s Jesus, again and again, speaking the piercing words: “I Am.”

The “I Am” sayings accomplish something else: Gentiles could also relate to the Christ whose very being provided “a comprehensive metaphor designating the human quest for life and salvation.” The concepts of Word and Wisdom, of Logos and Sophia, communicated a multilayered complex of meaning to those from the Hellenistic religions.

The Christ event, which is celebrated throughout the world is presented [by John] as the fulfillment of the universal human longing for authentic life, however it is expressed.

both quotes from MEB

Early on in John’s story, there is an intriguing account of Jesus countering the Pharisees who questioned his credentials.

You search the scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; and it is they that testify on my behalf. Yet you refuse to come to me to have life …

Do not think that I will accuse you before the Father; your accuser is Moses, on whom you have set your hope. If you believed Moses, you would believe me, for he wrote about me. But if you do not believe what he wrote, how will you believe what I say?

John 5:39-47 edited

Here again is what Richard Hays describes as “reading backwards:” Jesus is claiming that the patriarch Moses had written about him!

We recall that Luke’s Jesus had a similar understanding of his relationship to the Hebrew Scriptures: the Scriptures give witness to Messiah, to the Christ, to Jesus himself.

In his parting gift to his disciples, Luke’s Jesus said:

“…everything written about me in the Law of Moses, the prophets, and the psalms must be fulfilled.”

Then he opened their minds to understand the scriptures…

Luke 24:44
This explicit connection between Torah, Psalms, Prophets and Jesus is the brilliant interpretive work of our earliest Christian theologians.

I think many Christians don’t understand the significance of this hermeneutic of reading the Christ into the Old Testament because this particular interpretive approach was not a given. Early Christian communities pondered deeply how the faith that had been handed down to them from Israel might now connect and collaborate with their new found faith in a living Lord.

Discovering, discerning, describing the compatibilities was the work of a faithful, prayerful people. This re-interpretation of their holy Scriptures was a sacred undertaking.

Paul’s Jesus

We recall that in the canonical chronology of our New Testament, Paul wrote his version of the good news of Jesus Christ first.

His letters to congregations proclaimed the gospel not in story, but rather in practical, lived theology. Paul wrote mostly to Gentile Christians and, although he understood Jesus to be the Christ, the Messiah of Israel’s hope, he talked about that Christology in ways which those who were not Israel could still grasp and embrace.

It wasn’t necessary for Paul to argue from the Hebrew Scriptures in order to convince Gentiles that Jesus was Son of God and Lord of all.

The synoptics’ Jesus

Mark came next, writing to Jewish Christians instead of Gentile believers; then Matthew; then Luke. Their way of proclaiming the gospel was different from Paul’s: their way was to craft it into story. It was a new and distinctive narrative theology that told the Jesus story by making connections back to the story of Israel.

Some of the connections are explicit (direct quotations and claims of “fulfillment”); much of the connection is more subtle, heard as suggestions and allusions.

John’s Jesus

Then finally, around the turn of the century, John wrote his gospel. Richard Hays notes the striking difference in how often John quoted the Old Testament as opposed to the three other gospel writers:

  • Matthew 124 times
  • Mark 70 times
  • Luke 109 times
  • John only 27 times

John’s way was to tell fewer stories and then to go deeper. There are not as many explicit quotations but John’s is a rich and complex application of the Hebrew Scriptures to the life of Jesus the Christ.

“Even more explicitly than the other Gospel writers,” Hays explains, “John champions reading backwards as an essential strategy for illuminating Jesus’ identity.

Only by reading backwards, in light of the resurrection under the guidance of the Spirit, can we understand both Israel’s Scripture and Jesus’ words.”

Richard B. Hays, Reading Backwards: Figural Christology and the Fourfold Gospel Witness (Waco: Baylor University Press, 2014) 85-86.
The gospels all “read backwards.”

So each gospel writer demonstrated his own way to “read backwards” into the Jewish Scriptures and apply a Christ hermeneutic.

God’s work of grace and salvation was now seen to continue in Jesus. God’s redemptive work for Israel was now understood to find its climax in the life, death and resurrection of Jesus. Such thoughtful, prayerful reflection is the origin of Christian theology.

But there is definitely a challenge to such a christocentric hermeneutic because there is a temptation to read the Old Testament as if it only has significance and meaning through Jesus.

Of course, as a Christian, I read all the Bible with my Jesus-lens; I can’t help it. But my Jewish cousins who read the same texts within the Hebrew Scriptures also find significance and meaning for their faith without reading Jesus into it.

A good Bible student will challenge herself to read the ancient text within its own historical and social and theological context and let it stand there. We can learn a great deal about its meaning and about the faith of the Jewish people who produced these texts by letting it stand within its own time and place for awhile before moving on to a christological application.

Mis-reading John’s Jesus

I point out these challenges of biblical interpretation in part because of the way the Gospel of John has been misused throughout Christian history to vilify the Jewish people.

Several times throughout the story, John’s Jesus speaks harshly and accusingly to “the Jews” as if there were an ethnic and religious difference between them. But of course everyone in the story is a Jew, even Jesus himself.

So we must understand that John’s telling is multi-layered: a story about Jesus of Nazareth sparring with the Temple leaders at the same time he is layering a story about Jesus’ Jewish disciples who, a generation later, were being ousted from their synagogues because of their Christian faith. There was a deep rift in this painful family feud and the bitterness of excommunication becomes obvious as John tells his story.

When we listen in to these sharp conversations, modern Christian readers need to remember these very important hermeneutical guidelines:

  • these stories are set in another time and place;
  • the stories articulate the tensions between opposing factions within the same ethnic and religious family;
  • the name calling and demonizing reveals the deep pain of those who had suffered damaged relationship with their family, their friends and their religious community.

Christians who misapply the internal conflict of this complex family group to justify their own anti-Semitism have misunderstood how to respond to God’s gospel of love and grace. Honoring our joint Scriptures, acknowledging our common heritage, recognizing our mutual connection to the Creator of all by way of the Bible with both its Old and its New Testaments can support respectful relationship between Jews and Christians.

Figural speech in John

One thing in particular Hays has helped me see anew is John’s brilliant and creative use of figural speech and metaphorical action.

The opening prologue of Logos sets the tone: we know this one who is Word will mystify and astound us.

Then very quickly, in chapter 2, John has Jesus in the Temple, challenging the merchants and the moneychangers. (Each of the other three gospels place this story near the end of the gospel alongside the Passion.) Situating the Temple story here at the beginning introduces John’s understanding that this one, Jesus, is now – figuratively – the new Temple.

The Living Temple – where God’s glory dwells. The Living Temple – where heaven and earth meet. The Living Temple – where redemption happens.

RBH

In the story of the cleansing of the Temple, John quotes Psalm 69 as if the eternal Word, the Logos was the speaker of the words of the Psalmist: “Zeal for your house will consume me.” Hays elaborates:

When John tells us that Jesus was “speaking of the Temple of his body,” a light goes on: the Evangelist…is teaching his readers how to read.

He is teaching us to read figurally, teaching us to read Scripture retrospectively, in light of the resurrection. Only on such a reading does it make sense to see the Jerusalem Temple as prefiguring the truth now definitively embodied in the crucified and risen Jesus.”

RBH page 86
Readers learning how to read.

This is always true of all our work within the pages of Scripture. There is no such thing as reading without interpreting!!

The Bible never “says what it means and means what it says;” it always requires wisdom, reason, discernment and the guidance of the Holy Spirit. And this principle of “learning how to read” is especially true of the Gospel according to John.

Jesus is Temple.

Jesus is Bread.

Jesus is Light.

Jesus is Door.

Jesus is Shepherd.

Jesus is Life.

Jesus is Truth.

Jesus is Vine.

Jesus is Word.

As we post-Easter readers continue to learn how to read; as we Enlightenment rationalists continue to rediscover figures and symbols and poetry; as we the Church continue to embody the presence of the Holy in our own flawed way – The Gospel according to John is rich resource indeed.

Richard Hays offers many helpful insights in his Reading Backwards book; I recommend it.

Interested students may also appreciate John Shelby Spong’s recent commentary, The Fourth Gospel: Tales of a Jewish Mystic (HarperOne, 2014).

Psalm 98

Sing to the Lord a new song, for the Lord has done marvelous things!

Psalm 98 recollects the salvation of the Exodus and offers hope for every impossible possibility.

Remember – the song sings. Remember the times in our history when we had no hope and then – completely unexpected – something new and marvelous came into being.

Remember!

Thus Psalm 98 offers hope for Israel as it waits in Exile. Along with the prophets of the Exile, this poetic prophet holds out hope for vindication and salvation (see the similarities of encouragement in Isaiah 52).

Just as God “remembers” steadfast love and faithfulness, so God’s people must remember God’s faithfulness and hold on to hope.
Continue reading “Psalm 98”

A New and Living Way

I have to warn you: this Bible passage from Leviticus 21 is startling.

The LORD spoke to Moses, saying: Speak to Aaron, [the High Priest] and say: No one of your offspring throughout their generations who has a blemish may approach to offer the food of his God. 

For no one who has a blemish shall draw near, one who is blind or lame, or one who has a mutilated face or a limb too long, or one who has a broken foot or a broken hand, or a hunchback, or a dwarf, or a man with a blemish in his eyes or an itching disease or scabs or crushed testicles. 

No descendant of Aaron the priest who has a blemish shall come near to offer the LORD’S offerings by fire; since he has a blemish, he shall not come near to offer the food of his God. He may eat the food of his God, of the most holy as well as of the holy. 

But he shall not come near the curtain or approach the altar, because he has a blemish, that he may not profane my sanctuaries; for I am the LORD; I sanctify them.  Thus Moses spoke to Aaron and to his sons and to all the people of Israel.

Dare we say in response: The Word of the Lord?! Thanks be to God?!

There are several principles I count on whenever I do biblical interpretation and one of those principles is how important it is to take the Bible as a whole, not by piecemeal.

It is not possible to make sense of Leviticus for our time without also listening to the wisdom literature and to the prophetic writings.

We must hear the alternative voices; we must see the counter-vision that evolved within Israel’s own tradition that pictured glimpses when – unlike in the day of Leviticus – there would come a day when all people would be welcomed and included in the reconciling, redeeming work of God.

Listen to this word of the prophets of the Lord, how different it sounds from Leviticus:

Continue reading “A New and Living Way”

Psalm 110

Psalm 110  is the most widely quoted psalm within our New Testament.

The LORD says to my lord,
 “Sit at my right hand
until I make your enemies your footstool.”

verse 1

This royal psalm celebrates the king of Israel – an earthly lord who embodies the presence and will of the Sovereign LORD of heaven and earth. Not only did the king represent God’s presence on earth, but Jerusalem and the Temple represented God’s holy dwelling.

The “Anointed of God” ruling from Zion, the “city of God.”

The LORD sends out from Zion your mighty scepter. Rule in the midst of your foes!

verse 2

More than likely, this psalm originated during the time of the Davidic monarchy and parts of it may have been sung at coronations (consequently categorized as an “enthronement” psalm).

But by the time Psalm 110 was gathered into the psalter, Israel was in Exile. The land, the Temple and the monarchy were now gone, thus the scholars of Israel were challenged to look back at their story and re-interpret its meaning for a tragic new time.

Consequently within the psalter itself, we see theological re-readings and readjustments of Israel’s understandings and expectations. If the Davidic kings were no more, then (Jewish teachers pondered because of the Exile) this hope of God’s reign throughout the earth must be assigned to another “anointed one.”

This is how hope for the Jewish messiah was born.

Continue reading “Psalm 110”

As You Read. Weeks 14 and 15.

I have a friend from seminary who once tried to write a paper for a class that explored how Leviticus is the Word of God. He couldn’t write it. He worked on it for weeks and weeks and he never could figure out how to understand this odd, ancient book as “the word of the Lord.”

My friend is not the only one. Many of us struggle to understand these kinds of strange passages from the Church’s sacred texts.

  • Just how could it be “the word of the Lord” that people with various disabilities should be excluded from worship?
  • How could it be that people who are born a certain way should be excluded from the ministry of the priesthood?

I believe it is not possible for Christian readers of the Old Testament to make sense of Leviticus without reading it through the lens of Jesus Christ.

And that’s exactly what the writer of the Letter to the Hebrews did two millennia ago: he re-read and re-interpreted Leviticus through his understanding of the Christ Event.

This is why Living in The Story juxtaposes the book of Leviticus and the Letter to the Hebrews as we read during weeks 14 and 15.

Let us allow this Hebrew Christian theologian to help us with our interpretive approach to the Old Testament. Let him help us re-read our Scriptures.

Continue reading “As You Read. Weeks 14 and 15.”

Faith Seeking Understanding

When you read through Leviticus you surely will notice what an odd book it is.

  • In Leviticus you will read detailed accounts of which animals are clean and can be eaten countered by which animals are unclean and should not even be touched.
  • You’ll read specific instructions about which parts of the calf or goat are to be turned into smoke after they have been sacrificed and which parts are to be roasted and served to the priests and their families for dinner.
  • You’ll read the descriptions of the High Priest’s ceremonial clothing; even his linen underwear!
  • And you’ll read lots and lots about blood.

Why on earth does the church of the 21st century read this odd and ancient text? How on earth is this the “Word of the Lord” for us Moderns?

Continue reading “Faith Seeking Understanding”

Psalm 69

Save me, O God, for the waters have come up to my neck.
I sink in deep mire,
where there is no foothold;
I have come into deep waters, and the flood sweeps over me…

Psalm 69 is the longest and most complex of the laments.

As in all the psalms (as in all of life), there is juxtaposition of complaint and praise, of pain and confidence. This Both/And experience of crucifixion and resurrection reminds us that faith endures and sustains because of the eschatological hope for God’s promised redemption.

More in number than the hairs of my head
    are those who hate me without cause…

The images of this psalm are vivid as they describe the flood of overwhelming persecution. In the understanding of the psalmist, the tortures are unjustified and unjust. He remains faithful in the midst of the faithlessness of his tormentors and argues that his own troubles have come to him because of his trust in God.

Continue reading “Psalm 69”

Three Days in the Belly

On many an Easter morning, we wipe tears of joy as we share in the baptism of some of God’s precious children. Easter is a perfect time to celebrate baptism because for us Christians, it pictures death and resurrection.

That’s what this life with Christ is all about: dying to ourselves, admitting we can’t save ourselves, recognizing our own helplessness, giving ourselves over to the Source of all life – The Life that burst from the tomb on that Easter morn long ago – so that, in our own dying we too trust we will find new life.

Baptism gathers up all this multitude of meaning and symbolizes all this mystery.

Death.

Resurrection.

We see hints of it even in the little story of Jonah tucked away in our Old Testament.

You remember Jonah. It’s a wonderful story, a kind of parable about human folly and divine mercy. In the story, Jonah is called by God to preach repentance to his mortal enemies (not at all a pleasing assignment) so he promptly boarded a ship that was headed in exactly the opposite direction. But then a great storm rose up out of the chaos of the sea and threatened to swallow the ship and everyone on it, and Jonah figured out that he had not been very successful hiding from God. He convinced the sailors to toss him overboard so that they might save themselves. Sure enough – immediately the sea grew calm while Jonah sank into its depths.

But God had a surprise waiting for Jonah. A mixed blessing was ready for him.

A great sea creature gulped him down and saved him from drowning. And here is Jonah – in the belly of the beast – for three long days and three long nights.

images

And we hear Jonah’s prayer from the deep darkness: 

Out of the belly of Sheol I cried and the Lord heard my voice.

The waters closed in over me; the deep surrounded me, weeds were wrapped around my head at the roots of the mountains.

And yet you brought up my life from the Pit, O Lord my God.

When Jonah finally was able to die to himself and his own plans and schemes; when he admitted he couldn’t save himself; when he recognized his helplessness and gave himself over to the Source of all life, then the Lord spoke to the sea monster, and it spat out Jonah onto the dry land.

In the Gospel of Matthew, there is an odd exchange between Jesus and some religious folks who wanted Jesus to prove he was the Messiah. “Give us a sign. Give us proof that you are the Anointed One of God,” they demanded.

But Jesus answered them: …no sign will be given except the sign of the prophet Jonah. For just as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the sea monster, so for three days and three nights the Son of Man will be in the heart of the earth .

Matthew 12:39-40
The sign Jesus offers is an odd one, don’t you think?

Jonah’s sign – Jonah in the belly for three days. Jonah in the depths of the sea, at the roots of the mountains, with the seaweed wrapped around his head. This is a good sign? How can the sign Jesus offers as hope be something that comes from our most hopeless situations?

I’m guessing most of us live much of our lives in the belly of some monster or another. Disease that swallows up all our energy and sucks us dry. Broken relationships that break our hearts and overwhelm us with grief or anger or loneliness, A job that sometimes feels like a black hole with no glimmer of light and air. Financial worries that flood us with fear and anxiety. Death itself: those whom we have loved, hands we have held, lips we have kissed, sunken into the dark places of the earth.

But it’s there, right there in the despair that we find God at work.

And sometimes we discover – like Jonah did – that the belly of the beast actually saved us, kept us, preserved us for a time and gave us a chance to see life from a different perspective.

It is good for us to stare death in the face, to acknowledge our finitude, to recognize the fragile and temporal nature of our living. It is good for us to be challenged to turn away from putting our trust in our own selves and to turn toward God – depending on God’s strength, God’s wisdom, God’s power for our living.

It is good to remember that God is God and we are not.

And it is good to remember that God is constantly at work creating life out of death. Sometimes we take life for granted; it’s hard to see God working on behalf of life when we are living pretty well and we think we have everything under control. But when we find ourselves in the belly of a monster, we know what dying feels like. We remember how hopelessness can wash over us like mighty waters as we sink deeper and deeper into despair.

That’s when we hold on to the sign of Jonah because if we are watching for the signs and signals Spirit is weaving into every hopeless situation, we will be able to see God’s glimmer of light in our every darkness; and we will be able to hold on to hope.

Jonah’s sign also reminds us that our own “three days” in the belly of the beast will not go on forever. In the language symbols of the Bible, “three days” means: “whenever the time is right.”

  • Whenever the soil and the seed discern it’s time for the sprout to push up towards the sun.
  • Whenever the womb and the baby discern it’s time for labor to begin.
  • Whenever the Spirit moves.

Whatever it may mean that God’s time is “right,” that’s when one thing passes and another comes into being. It’s good to remember that our days in the belly are not forever.

We can trust this because life itself teaches us that winter will pass and spring will always come; because the flowers bloom again and the frogs sing again and because the darkest night will always fade into the bright light of day.

But there is yet another reason we trust, we believe, we hold onto hope.

Because The Story of Scripture confesses that there was a time in human history when God broke in and disrupted the normal cycles of living and dying. There was a time that the sign of Jonah pointed to when the Spirit of Life reached into the tomb after three days in the belly of the monster and defeated its power. There was a time when – in the power of the resurrected life of Jesus Christ – death died.

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And so hope lives.

And so we are Easter People.

Whatever the belly of darkness and hopelessness that swallows us or those we love, we hold onto this hope – that the God of Life is constantly at work creating life out of every death.

Christ is risen.

Christ is risen indeed.


Living in The Story readings for Week 13

Jonah

Psalm 18

Psalm 66

Psalm 69

Matthew 26-28

2 Corinthians 12-13

Psalm 118

O give thanks to the Lord, for the Lord is good;

God’s steadfast love endures forever!

Let Israel say, “His steadfast love endures forever.”

Let the house of Aaron say, “His steadfast love endures forever.”

Let those who fear the Lord say, “His steadfast love endures forever.”

Psalm 118 begins and ends as several praise psalms do: alluding to the formulaic understanding of Yahweh’s steadfast love to the thousandth generation (i.e. forever.)

This affirmation of God’s steadfastness is followed by three stanzas recalling times of trouble, perilous times, events in which Yahweh intervened and “became my salvation.” Here is a psalm of New Orientation, a prayer of praise and confidence that – no matter what – God is at work in the world and in love with his people.

Continue reading “Psalm 118”

As You Read. Weeks 12 & 13. Esther and Jonah.

As you read the fascinating books of Esther and Jonah, think of them as within the genre of short stories or novellas. Watch the way the storyteller sets the plot and develops the characters. Listen for the historical context: they both are told within the real history of Israel.

Consider how these stories address the core eternal questions: Who is God? Who are we as God’s people?

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The story of Esther and her uncle Mordecai are tales from the Diaspora.

After the Exile, many of those who had been forced to leave their homes in Palestine made new homes in Babylon. After their release, many of the Jews returned to rebuild their devastated country but many Jews and their descendants built new lives in foreign lands all over the world.

(During the time of Jesus, there were probably more Jews living in Alexandria Egypt than there were living in Jerusalem. And remember the stories you’ve heard about the Jews Paul encountered on his missionary journeys; Jews were well-established citizens in cities all across the Roman Empire.)

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In spite of this wide spread presence and the good intentions of Jews to be good citizens in their adopted nations, history (as well as current events!) document repeated pogroms and periods of persecution against the Jews. A popular Jewish saying even in our day is: “They tried to kill us. We survived. Let’s eat.” That’s the Esther story in a nutshell.

Continue reading “As You Read. Weeks 12 & 13. Esther and Jonah.”