Faith, Leadership and Public Life. Preston Manning
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• Equip them to share with others what you will impart to them, so that 2,000 years afterwards more than one billion people will profess to be guided in some way by your teachings and example.
• Fiscal constraints require you to raise your own financial support for this assignment.
• Your initial base of operations will be a carpenter’s shop in a small town called Nazareth.
• You have three years to complete this assignment before you must leave the region and entrust the follow-up to your recruits.
Jesus of Nazareth undertook and successfully completed such an assignment, which is why, if for no other reason, I believe that his life and teachings deserve serious examination, especially by those of us who know from our own experience how difficult it is to create and sustain a public movement of any kind, even on a limited scale and for only a brief moment in time.
So, whether we are believers or not, if we are engaged in public life of any sort there is much to learn and profit from examining the public life of Jesus. And if we are operating at the interface of faith and politics this is doubly so.
1.1 INCARNATIONAL COMMUNICATION
To incarnate—to embody in flesh;
to put into a body, especially a human form.
Providential Positioning
Providential positioning refers to movements by God’s spirit whereby human beings (unbelievers as well as believers) are placed or moved into particular positions and situations to accomplish some aspect of God’s work in the world. The biblical record draws attention to such movements at work in the lives of Moses, David, Joseph, Daniel, Esther, Ezra, and Nehemiah as well as in the lives of an Egyptian pharaoh and the kings of the Medes and Persians. It was in reference to such providential positioning that the Jewish exile Mordecai posed the haunting question to Esther when she rose to the position of queen in Medo-Persia, “Who knows but that you have come to your royal position for such a time as this?”4
In the entire record of God’s dealings with humanity, however, there is no more dramatic and consequential instance of providential positioning than the positioning of Jesus of Nazareth in a particular human family and community within an obscure province of the Roman Empire at a particular time in human history.
The physician Luke begins his Gospel by describing the work of Jesus’ advance man, John the Baptist. He does so by positioning the time of their public ministry politically:
In the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar—when Pontius Pilate was governor of Judea, Herod tetrarch of Galilee, his brother Philip tetrarch of Iturea and Traconitis, and Lysanias tetrarch of Abilene—during the high priesthood of Annas and Caiaphas, the word of God came to John son of Zechariah.5
Jesus himself, speaking in the synagogue of his hometown of Nazareth, describes his positioning as fulfilling the ancient prophecy of Isaiah:
He went to Nazareth, where he had been brought up, and on the Sabbath day he went into the synagogue, as was his custom. He stood up to read, and the scroll of the prophet Isaiah was handed to him. Unrolling it, he found the place where it is written:
“The Spirit of the Lord is on me,
because he has anointed me
to preach good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners
and recovery of sight for the blind,
to set the oppressed free,
to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.”
Then he rolled up the scroll, gave it back to the attendant and sat down. The eyes of everyone in the synagogue were fastened on him. He began by saying to them, “Today this scripture is fulfilled in your hearing.”6
On several other occasions, Jesus implies that his decisions to refrain from certain activities also involved providential timing and positioning. “My hour has not yet come,” he tells his mother when she asks him to intervene miraculously at the wedding in Cana.7 “My time is not yet here,” he tells his brothers when they want him to publicly display himself at a feast.8
The apostle John, who seemed to be especially aware that the events and circumstances of Jesus’ life were providentially ordered, tells us that Jesus was acutely conscious of God’s timing and positioning just prior to his arrest, crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension: “It was just before the Passover Festival. Jesus knew that the hour had come for him to leave this world and go to the Father … that he had come from God and was returning to God.”9
With respect to all the events and acts of Jesus’ life one might ask, Why then? Why there? Why in that way? We can speculate, but only God knows the definitive answers to these types of questions. What is clearly taught in Scripture is that there was providential purpose in Jesus’ being placed at a particular place and time in the history of the world to say and do the things he said and did, just as I believe there is providential purpose in the placement of you and me in the particular places and times in which we find ourselves. The challenge for us is to discern that purpose and to live and act in the light of it, just as Jesus did.
Incarnation
How do you make the existence and nature of a being as lofty, mysterious, and spiritual as God real and understandable to human beings? God’s answer to that question, according to the New Testament writers, is through “incarnation”—by embodying deity in flesh, by incorporating deity into a body, in particular a human man, Jesus of Nazareth.
The apostle John describes it this way: “In the beginning was the Word … the Word was God … The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us … the one and only … who came from the Father, full of grace and truth.”10 Similarly, the apostle Paul: “When the set time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of a woman … to redeem.”11
It is at this point that I am in danger of losing the interest and attention of some of my political friends and others of you who simply cannot bring yourselves to believe in the deity of Jesus. He was a good man, you say. He may have been a great teacher. He didn’t deserve the cruel fate that he suffered. But he was not divine, you say, and those who believe so are deceived.
Rather than part company over the deity of Jesus, let me try to persuade you to linger a little longer in his company. Because if you are a person with any interest at all in learning how to be effective in public life, particularly in communicating substantive and complex ideas and propositions to ordinary people, there is much to be learned from Jesus of Nazareth and the concept, if not the reality, of incarnation.
To incarnate means to embody in flesh, to put into a body, especially a human form. In Jesus’ case, this included not only his physical birth, which Christians consider miraculous,