I’m in a 2 week long intense class on the Gospel of John. Conequently, any new material probably will not surface until July. But because I like to keep new(er) ideas appearing on the front page, I’m going to recycle a few posts on the (un)offensive gospel of Jesus, the notion that the good news of Jesus is not inherently offensive as many Christians believe and declare, but is rather good and hopeful and inheretly wonderful to those who need what Jesus offers. And properly presented and explained, people should

About a month ago I put out this question: “How Does Jesus Define the Gospel?”

I left it open for people to sound-off and try their hand at articulating Jesus’ articulation of the gospel. Not Piper’s or Paul’s, but Jesus’. In our emerging, postmodern culture we need to recapture how Jesus defined his own gospel. And the reason I posted this question is really for this post. I wanted to get some ideas about how people defined the gospel in relationship to Jesus, because I wanted to write about something that’s been churning in my heart for 2 years or so that resulted from an experience in ministry a few years ago.

Let me paint a scene for you:

I was at a ministry retreat for congressional staffers where I was suppose to train them to share the gospel. Afterwards for dinner at a seafood restaurant that served the best crab-cakes outside of Maryland, I was at a table with some staffers, friends, and a coworker and we were having a discussion about the evening and other rather “progressive” notions of Christianity. We began talking about the Kingdom of Heaven and what that meant, and then we got talking about radically following Jesus and the gospel.

The conversation was going real well until I chimed in with: “and you know what really bothers me? When people say that the gospel is offensive. I hear people saying, ‘oh they are not rejecting you the evangelist but the gospel and Jesus, because the they are offensive. That’s ridiculous!”

Then nothing but crickets and blank stares… It was one of those awkward moments when the whole place sorta fell silent all at once and every eyeball was fixated on me and my brilliant idea.

So I continued, a bit hotter and sweatier: “What I mean is Jesus and his good news was not offensive. When you look at the Scriptures you see people flocking to him and wanting to be around him and touch him. The Jesus and his message doesn’t seem all that offensive to me…”

To which people sorta shifted in there seats and mumbled a “yeah” and quickly changed the subject. AWK-ward.

As I’ve thought about that experience more and wrestled with what the good news of Jesus really is and who Jesus was, I am convinced more than ever that, understood properly, Jesus and his news isn’t offensive, but more so to the people who need him and that message. We are the ones that offend as we be Jesus and share his message. Let me explain:

First, here were some great responses to my previous question:

“For God so loved the world that He gave His only son …”

Jesus wants us to unconditionally love each other, help each other, and be good to each other. This means feeding the poor, clothing people, helping to heal people, caring for people, and trying to help those that are (in the eyes of society, irreparably) screwed up, etc. Another part of the gospel is loving God. For me, this means trying to see the good in the world that God is/ could be responsible for, and also doing all of the things listed above for other people.

“The Kingdom of God/heaven is at hand”. In this way, Jesus offers us all a new way of being human, the way that we were created to be. The good news is that it is here, now.

All of these responses definitely capture the essence of the good news of Jesus. Now, here is, I believe, Jesus’ articulation of the gospel: “The time has come,” he said. “The kingdom of God is near. Repent and believe the good news!” (Mark 1:15). Much of this was brilliantly commented by George in the original post. And as Maria said, Jesus wants us to love others and love God, which is Jesus’ Creed and the way we live out this kingdom-movement God began by sending Jesus into the world as a blood-sacrifice.

Indeed, the good news that all of creation had been groaning for since after the dawn of Creation was this declaration by Jesus: “The Kingdom of Heaven has now invaded the world! My movement to re-Create the world anew is beginning. This is good news, and comes by denying and giving up the Way of this World and following me.”

Now my problem is this: how in the world is this offensive? If the whole world is groaning for re-creation as Paul says in Romans, and if all people are thirsting after Life and deep-down desire this re-Creation, why would anyone be offended by this?

Throughout the Gospels, wherever Jesus went this invading Reign Jesus spoke of followed. Throughout Galilee he restored their social dignity, he healed their diseases, brought sight to the blind, and made the lame walk. In fact, when John the Baptizer (noooo, he wasn’t a Baptist!) asked if Jesus was the Messiah, here was his response: “Go back and report to John what you hear and see: The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is preached to the poor.” These were the very words Jesus said were prophesied in Isaiah concerning Jesus’ ushering in of the Reign/Kingdom of God.

If everywhere Jesus went people found holistic (social, economic, physical, and spiritual) healing and restoration, and people followed him as a result of this restoration, who were offended? Were they not those in power who sought to destroy Jesus’ kingdom-vision and movement? To me, it seems like those who were offended by Jesus were the religious leaders of the day who were threatened by Jesus’ teachings and restorative power. Those in power sought to maintain power by killing the man who threatened that power, Jesus of Nazareth.

So what of this notion that people are offended by the gospel and Jesus? If the power inherent in this good news is the restoration and Life all people are seeking, why would we think people would be offended? Could there be ANOTHER reason so many are so turned off to Jesus and that good news?

In this emerging, postmodern culture, WE are the ones who are offensive; those whom Jesus has sent to be witnesses to him and his message are the ones who offend. Jesus isn’t offensive, the version of him we give to the world is. The gospel isn’t offensive, the version of that good news we tell to the world is.

How is this the case, you ask? Lets wrestle with this now and over the next week or two. Because as we enter into Advent season I want to show and tell the world about a Savior and Kingdom that is real and deep and magical, rather than fake and thin and drowsy let alone…offensive.