What do you think of Jesus? That's a question I've asked at times to
engage non-Christians in conversation about Him for the purpose of
witnessing. A fairly typical response used to be that He was a religious
teacher who did a lot of good, said many good things, and they usually
concluded with a belief that He was a very good man. I then could ask,
"Did you know that He claimed to be God?" When looks of puzzlement
followed, I would explain that He couldn't be a "very good man."
In
claiming to be God, He was either self-deluded or an outright fraud-that
is, unless He was telling the truth. More often than not, that thought,
raising the issue of being accountable to God, would bring our
conversation to an awkward end. At least it had provided the opportunity
to plant some seeds that I hoped would grow into conviction. Most people
aren't comfortable with the truth about Jesus.
Those who profess to be Christians quite often have ideas about Jesus
that are just as wrong as those people who are not Christians. For
example, Jehovah's Witnesses believe that Jesus is a created god and
that He is also Michael the Archangel. Mormons believe Jesus is the
spirit brother of Lucifer and that He was married and had children. The
followers of Christian Science and the Religious Science religions
believe that Jesus was simply a man upon whom the "Christ empowerment"
came. Roman Catholics believe that the bread and wine of the Eucharist
can be transubstantiated, or changed, into the literal body and blood of
Jesus, who is then ingested into one's stomach. Lutherans believe that
Jesus is consubstantiated, or present, "in, with, and under" the bread
and wine of communion.
Such unbiblical beliefs are a mere handful among
hundreds promoted by various Christian denominations and cults. Yet what
is even more appalling is that an inquiry about Jesus today among those
who call themselves evangelicals (Bible-believing Christians!) too often
reveals "another Jesus" and a "false Christ." How does that happen?
Let's start with how one comes to a true knowledge of, and relationship
with, Jesus Christ. It begins with a simple understanding of the gospel
that Jesus is God, who became a
man in order to save mankind from
everlasting separation from God that resulted from man's sin. Jesus
satisfied the perfect justice of God by His once-and-for-all payment
for the sins of humanity through His death on the Cross. His
resurrection from the dead assures the salvation of all those who
acknowledge before God their sin and their hopelessness in saving
themselves, and who by grace through faith accept Christ's sacrifice
on their behalf and His free gift of eternal life. This is how one
is reconciled to God and born again spiritually. This is how one's
relationship with the biblical Jesus Christ begins.
Although that relationship is supernatural in that every true believer
in Christ is indwelt by God, it nevertheless progresses, as any good
relationship does, by getting to know the person with whom one has a
relationship.
The primary way a relationship with Jesus develops is by reading the
revelation of Himself given in His Word. This is the only way to obtain
specific information about Him that is objective and absolutely true. In
addition, not only is the content of Scripture inspired by the Holy
Spirit, but that same Spirit of Truth is given to believers to
understand that content. How then could those who profess to follow
God's Word come up with erroneous ideas about Jesus?
Regrettably, many
are getting their information about Jesus from sources outside the Bible
or second hand from those who claim to be teaching what the Bible says
about our Lord.
To demonstrate how ludicrous a relationship dependent upon such sources
of knowledge is, consider what might happen to a husband and wife who
try to form an intimate relationship with each other by relying on the
insights of other people who claim to know them. That's a sure recipe
for failure, yet Christians often run to extra biblical sources for their
knowledge of Jesus.
The amazing popularity of the book The Shack among
evangelicals is just a recent example of someone depicting a Jesus who
is foreign to the Bible and worse. What does the author think about
Jesus? He characterizes Him in a way that may make some people feel more
comfortable with Him, yet the Jesus of The Shack is clearly a false
Christ. He's a "good old boy," who likes to fix things and takes
"pleasure in cooking and gardening." He laughs at crude jokes, is a bit
of a klutz, engages in trout fishing by chasing one down as He runs on
water, carves a coffin for the body of a little girl, and enjoys
kissing, hugging, and laughing with the two other members of the
"Trinity." The book is filled with dialogue from the characters of God
the Father (portrayed as an overweight Afro-American woman), the Holy
Spirit (a petite Asian woman), and Jesus. All three speak as the
"oracles of God," giving insights and explanations neither found in nor
consistent with Scripture. Some enthusiastic readers say the words and
interactions with the Godhead have comforted them, answered difficult
questions about their faith, and made the person of the Lord seem all
the more real to them.
The reality is that out of his own imagination the author has put his
words into the mouths of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, which are then
perceived by multitudes as "thus saith the Lord."
This is not only a
bogus secondhand source but the arrogance of false prophecy at least and
blasphemy and idolatry at worst. It is man, making God in his own fallen
image.
More influential among evangelicals than The Shack is Mel Gibson's The
Passion of the Christ, which became a huge box-office success, thanks
mostly to evangelical support. Available now as a "definitive edition
DVD," it features, for those who want the official Catholic theology of
the film explained, a discussion with director Mel Gibson, along with a
Catholic apologist and two Catholic priests who were the film's
theological consultants. The movie has a false gospel, a false Christ,
and is loaded with supposedly biblical scenes from the minds of Gibson
and a Catholic nun given to mystical hallucinations. Yet it continues to be used extensively by evangelical
churches, especially during Lent and Easter week.
In response to "What do you think of Jesus?" millions who saw the movie
now mistakenly believe that: He was confronted by Satan in the Garden of
Gethsemane; He was thrown from a bridge by His captors and dangled from
a chain; His image was captured for posterity on the veil of a woman
named Veronica; as His cross began to fall, it levitated to keep Him
from hitting the ground, and, most contradictory to the gospel, it was
the merciless scourging He suffered that paid for the sins of humanity.
These are only a few of the unbiblical images that the world and many in
the church have added to their perception of Jesus.
Movies are today's
most popular form of disseminating superficial information and
misinformation. Feature films about Jesus and God have put erroneous
ideas about them into the hearts and minds of the masses: Jesus Christ
Superstar; The Last Temptation of Christ; Bruce Almighty; The Da Vinci
Code; Judas; Oh God!;Oh God, Book II; Jesus of Nazareth, to name but a
few.
What about "more biblically accurate" Bible movies-those that take the
words directly from Scripture, for example? When you have an actor
portraying Jesus who says only the words of Jesus that are found in the
Bible, does that make the portrayal more accurate? More accurate than
what? Does the actor actually look like Jesus, or talk like Jesus, or
reflect the godly demeanor of Jesus? More critically, can he accurately
imitate the God-Man, the Creator of the Universe, the One in whom all
things consist? Even if he could, which is impossible, it would still be
an imitation! Furthermore, he will leave millions, including believers,
with an image of a false "Christ."
A few such movies are sincere attempts at communicating the content and
stories of the Scriptures through visual media. Although sincere, they
are doomed to failure regarding truth. Why? In addition to what was
noted above, the Bible is an objective revelation from God given in
words. All attempts at visually translating those words abandon
objective revelation in favor of subjective interpretation. Take a
passage of Scripture, for instance, and have five people give their
understanding of the verse based upon the context, the grammatical
structure, and the normal meaning of the words. More often than not, the
interpretations will be quite similar. Should one of the five come up
with something very different, it can be corrected by simply checking it
out objectively against the context, grammar, and accepted definitions
of the words in the passage. On the other hand, what if five artists
were to translate the passage visually? The result would be five very
subjective and quite different renderings. Even if only one artist
visually translated the verse and four people tried to interpret the
image, you would likely have four different views because the medium has
no objective criteria comparable to that of words. Are you getting the
"picture" here? Imagery is not the way to communicate objective truth.
God did not draw pictures on the tablets He gave to Moses. His continual
command to him and to His other prophets was to write down His
instructions. Visual imagery was at the heart of pagan worship used by
people whose lives centered around idols-the chief by-product being
unbridled superstition. The same was true of the medieval Roman Catholic
and Orthodox Churches, who fed their followers images rather than
teaching them to read and write (as the Jews had done successfully from
the time of Abraham). Even today, superstition continues to be rampant
within those visually oriented religious systems.
Where does the world get its ideas about Jesus? Most non-Christians only
know what they've picked up from sources they regard as Christian,
although rarely is the content biblical. More than a billion Muslims,
for example, hold a view of Jesus that Muhammad gleaned from
questionable Christians. The Qur'an states that Isa (Jesus) is not the
Son of God because Allah has no son. Isa's birth took place under a palm
tree, and, while still a babe, he cried out from his cradle that he was
a servant of Allah, who had given him a revelation and made him a
prophet. He did not die upon the cross; someone took his place-all in
contradiction to the Bible.
Many Jews put stock in the alleged Talmudic stories that oppose the
gospel accounts. They have been taught that Jesus was an illegitimate
child who was born to a harlot and a scoundrel. Declaring himself to be
the Messiah, he performed healings by sorcery and consequently was
stoned and then hung on a tree for his magic and blasphemy for claiming
to be the Son of God.
Hindus have added Jesus as one more avatar, or god, among their 330
million gods. All of their gurus who have become popular in the
West-from Maharishi Mahesh Yogi to Rajneesh-preach their own "Jesus."
Buddhists, such as the 14th Dalai Lama, regard Jesus as a bodhisattva,
or enlightened god, among multitudes of gods reincarnated for the
service of humanity.
Incredibly, the above erroneous beliefs about Jesus are fostered within
professing Christianity by a popular practice among Emerging Church
fellowships. Some invite the followers of the world religions for
"conversation" in order to learn more about Jesus from a pluralistic
perspective. The goal seems to be to establish a Jesus who is acceptable
to people of all faiths-or no faith. A common refrain heard from the
Emergent communities is "We love Jesus but not His church." Certainly,
as the church has compromised with the world, there is much not to like.
Yet sadly, for many, it is neither the biblical Jesus whom they love nor
the biblical church that they support. Some are under the delusion that
Jesus is becoming more respected in our culture. That has never been the
case for the Jesus revealed in Scripture.
It is hard for anyone who has a personal, intimate relationship with
Jesus Christ to accept that the world hates Him, this One whom we love
so much. It was difficult for me, and I still struggle with that. How
could anyone reject the One who loves us more than we could ever
comprehend, and whose sacrifice for those He created is so wonderfully
unfathomable? Such hatred is often masked and develops progressively and
by stealth. It is found in Satan's strategy that began with "Yea, hath
God said...?" His dialogue with Eve provided a ripe opportunity to
subvert the truth about God and His command. Eve bought the Adversary's
lying alteration of God's character and his denial of the consequence of
disobedience. Her offspring down through the ages have done likewise.
Yet that reality in the guise of condescension and mockery nearly moved
me to despair as I reviewed a particular episode of Fox TV's The Family
Guy. The program (presented by the same network that created "Fox Faith"
to market movies to Christian families) featured a Jesus character who
left heaven to get away from his "nit-picking, overbearing father"; who
proves his "deity" by changing meals into ice cream sundaes and
enlarging a woman's breasts; who walks on water to fetch a five-dollar
bill; who appears on Jay Leno and an MTV award show; who goes Hollywood,
gets drunk at a party, and lands in jail, and who comes to the
conclusion that he's not mature enough yet to help the world. I
immediately searched for protests from Christendom against this Fox TV
top-rated program. There were found neither cries of outrage nor weeping
for those who blasphemed and ridiculed the only One who could save them.
Some Christians offered uneasy rationalizations that Jesus certainly
must have a sense of humor. That's the Jesus the world wants.
My mind raced to the Garden of Gethsemane, thinking about our Savior on
His knees in prayer before the Father, where in His anguish He sweat as
it were great drops of blood. He would become sin for us. Our Creator
would take our sins upon Himself and experience the eternal penalty due
every soul. Although He would be triumphant in paying for the sins of
mankind, He nevertheless cried out to the Father that if there was any
other way to save humanity, to let this cup of separation pass. But
there was no other way.
I thought of the Lord of Glory hanging upon the cross on Calvary's hill,
with the mockers about Him. Yet He died for them,
and for those who mock
Him still.
Pray that we who truly know Him would not drift from Him because of
"another Jesus" conjured up by the world, our own flesh, or the devil.
Pray also that the Lord will enable us to reflect the true character of
Christ in our words and deeds; that He will help us to show the world
the true Jesus, who, being God, came in the likeness of man, was treated
as though He were sin itself, and satisfied the divine justice of God by
dying upon the Cross, thus providing salvation for all of mankind.