“Jesus is Lord”
(Romans 10:10) was proclaimed by the early church as their most
concise creedal statement. No one ever told me this was a political and
subversive statement, until I studied the Scriptures. To say “Jesus is Lord” was
testing and provoking the Roman pledge of allegiance that every Roman citizen
had to shout when they raised their hand to the Roman insignia: “Caesar is
Lord.” Early Christians were quite aware that their “citizenship” was in a new
universal kingdom, announced by Jesus (Philippians 3:20), and that the kingdoms of this world were
not their primary loyalty systems. How did we manage to lose that? And what
price have we paid for it?
Jesus showed no
undue loyalty either to his Jewish religion nor to his Roman-occupied Jewish
country; instead, he radically critiqued both of them, and in that he revealed
and warned against the idolatrous relationships that most people have with
their country and their religion. It has allowed us to justify
violence in almost every form and to ignore much of the central teaching of
Jesus.
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