We must not define Jesus and his kingdom by fitting them within conventional understandings of kings and kingdoms. Rather, we must judge and deconstruct those conventional definitions in light of Jesus and his example.
This is a book about getting naked__ot physically, but spiritually. It__ about stripping away the symbols and status of public religion__he Sunday-dress version people often call __rganized religion._ And it__ about attending to the well-being of the soul clothed only in naked human skin.
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This is a book about getting naked__ot physically, but spiritually. It__ about stripping away the symbols and status of public religion__he Sunday-dress version people often call __rganized religion._ And it__ about attending to the well-being of the soul clothed only in naked human skin.
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Growing numbers of us are acknowledging with grief that many forms of supremacy__hristian, white, male, heterosexual, and human__re deeply embedded not just in Christian history, but also in Christian theology. We are coming to see that in hallowed words like almighty, sovereignty, kingdom, dominion, supreme, elect, chosen, clean, remnant, sacrifice, lord, and even God, dangerous vices often lie hidden. . . . We are coming to see in the life and teaching of Christ, and especially in the cross and resurrection of Christ, a radical rejection of dominating supremacy in all its forms.The theological term for [this] is kenosis, which means self-emptying. . . . Rather than seizing, hoarding, and exercising power in the domineering ways of typical kings, conquistadors, and religious leaders, Jesus was consistently empowering others. He descended the ladders and pyramids of influence instead of climbing them upwards, released power instead of grasping at it, and served instead of dominating. He ultimately overturned all conventional understandings of . . . power by purging [it] of violence__o the point where he himself chose to be killed rather than kill.
Belief can be manipulated. Only knowledge is dangerous.