By Umm Abdullah
December
21, 2020
What is
Truer than Truth?
A story.
Once upon a
time, there was a man named Jesus, and the rest, according to Reza Aslan’s
book, Zealot, is just history. When historians like Reza Aslan treat us to the
un- romantic version of Jesus of Nazareth who walked on land, as opposed to the
romantic version of a Jesus Christ who walked on water, I have a blasphemous
urge to ask, what does history have to do with it?
When you
expose a reader to what goes on behind the scenes, you not only perniciously
destroy the magic, but you tend to destroy the meaning. It’s not unlike
watching a spectacular movie only to be given a play by play of how the special
effects were fabricated. And I just want to know, where is my happy ending for
Christ’s sake. No really, for Christ’s sake, not mine.
Because to
be fair, long before I read Reza Alan’s book, I already knew about the
historical Jesus. The Jesus that is human, not divine. The Jesus that was sent
to liberate the Jews from Roman occupation, and fulfil, not abolish the law. I
knew that the early Christian church transformed Jesus from a revolutionary to
a spiritual figure and memorialized him with universal principles like “love
your enemy.”
Ultimately,
the identity of Jesus became a contest between Paul, who dismissed the Law of
Moses as irrelevant to salvation, and James, who said that the law was a
requirement of belief in Jesus Christ. And although Paul had never met Jesus,
it was Paul’s version, which eventually prevailed, when the council of Nicaea
codified the teachings we now refer to as Christianity.
So why am I
so disenchanted? Because although I had already been introduced to the
historical Jesus, I never had the impulse to share this Jesus with anyone else.
I prefer to keep the historical Jesus on the dusty cobwebbed bookshelves of
academia where he belongs. I, by virtue of being a Muslim like Reza, am
obligated to believe in the Immaculate Conception but not the Crucifixion. Post
history lesson, I am now forced to contend with the immaculate misconceptions
surrounding a historical Jesus.
The truth
is, I love Jesus, not the man, but the metaphor, not the revolutionary Jesus,
but the spiritual one. And I do not like the idea that history can take that
away. After all religious truth is not about what actually happened, but about
what we believe actually happened. It’s about the story.
When the
council of Nicea issued its official creed, they were not stealthily doing so
to suppress political dissent, they were just upholding majority opinion at the
time. Paul was popular. He was popular because he divorced Jesus from the law
and provided gentiles with a theology they could embrace.
And who
could blame them. Jesus the metaphor of peace and love, minus the law is an
approachable Jesus. He is a Jesus that a Muslim like me not only loves but can
also channel, even if I am constantly reminded by my, ‘Jesus Loves You’, bumper
sticker wielding, bible belt community, that Jesus does not love me back.
That’s okay, because in the spirit of Jesus, Paul’s Jesus, I forgive them. I
can afford to forgive just as they can afford to forget that no one can or has
ever had a monopoly on Jesus, not even intellectual giants like Reza Aslan.
Jesus is as Jesus lovers do.
The irony
and perhaps the unintended consequence of a Reza Aslan’s attempt to uncover the
true identity of Jesus of Nazareth was the resurrection of Jesus the Christ.
Because only after we are done learning about Jesus the man, does this book
evolve from a history book, to a book about the human capacity to connotate
abstract concepts, like salvation, from concrete, otherwise mundane events,
like life and death. Only then does it become a book about how it is the
subjective consensus of the majority that determines the final verdict on
religion and God, and not history. Only then does it become about why big
truths can and do override inconvenient facts.
Although
Jesus came to re-establish the Law of Moses, when the Law of Moses stood in the
way of the bigger picture, Paul did away with the law, so that the bigger
picture may prevail. And what is the bigger picture?
The bigger
picture is that salvation is not about calculating ways to secure a piece of
heaven’s real estate. No, salvation is about the capacity of individual minds
to inspire the collective consciousness. It’s about delivering metaphors, which
will salvage us from the grim reality of life on earth. In the case of the
Christian narrative, the bigger picture is that Jesus the man, does not save,
but Jesus the metaphor, saves every single day and till the end of time. Jesus
saves by intervening in the hearts of men and women with his radical call to
mercy. Jesus saves by stopping us from perpetuating the vicious cycle of
vengeance which is the most common and destructive narrative in human history.
The fact
that we know less about Jesus the man, than we do about Jesus the metaphor; the
metaphor of mercy, the metaphor of unconditional love, the metaphor of poverty
and prayer, is in my opinion, what saved Christianity. Christianity would have
died out, if Paul’s version did not prevail.
For Jesus
did not fulfil the prophetic vision the Jews were expecting. He did something
far more radical. He taught us that religion is a metaphor; Not to be defined
by its history or its heretics, but by the collective and subjective
consciousness of its adherents. He taught us that religion is the art of
selective perception, where compassion should override conflict.
That Is
The Point Of Religion That History Cannot Make.
Religion
can only survive as long as it breathes through the hearts and minds of its
adherents. Ironically this book of history may have had the opposite of its
intended effect. For rather than demystifying religion by inundating us with
facts, it has served as a reminder that religion must depend less on facts and
more on the three R’s of religious jurisprudence: reality, revelation, and
romance, the rest dear reader, is (just) history.
Original
Headline: The Story of Jesus: The Man and the Metaphor
Source: The Patheos
URL: https://newageislam.com/islamic-personalities/jesus-the-man-metaphor/d/123866
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