I
Believe
Two years ago I had an email from someone who asked me why I believe
Jesus was the Christ. Although I never heard from this inquirer again I
want to share my response with you. I simply wish to give my statement
of faith.
Dear (Inquirer),
Thank you for your email. I don't know if any of what I am about to say
will satisfy your question, but I will give you my reasons for
believing Jesus told the truth about himself. I also want to
acknowledge that my reasons today are different from my reasons of well
over forty-five years ago when I first became a believer. My
understanding has shifted greatly over the years and I suspect that
will continue to be the case. So, if in the future you still are
curious, let's try this again!
That I today believe Jesus is the long-awaited Christ and a full
disclosure of God is a statement of faith that has fully engaged my
reason. So I have not come to faith apart from the activity of God and
the historical testimony of the Christian community. In other words, I
am led by God's grace to accept the historical faith delivered to me
through Scripture, tradition, reason and experience. All of these paths
are important but none are adequate without the desire of God to be
known. I believe Jesus is the ultimate statement that God desires to be
known to humanity. Jesus, a historical person, is the picture of God
that makes known to us the love, commitment and desire of God for each
of us. This I believe.
How did I get there? First, I do accept the testimony of the disciples
and the early Christians as having integrity. I cannot imagine, in the
case of the disciples, these followers of Jesus not turning away and
literally disappearing from the social scene when Jesus was crucified.
If history is accurate at all, then they maintained their commitment to
Jesus in the very face of death and destruction by Rome. Yet, even at
the risk of death to themselves and their family they testified
publicly that Jesus was the Christ. Their witness is compelling for me.
Their behavior at the trial and death of Jesus fits a historically
believable pattern of fear and intimidation. However, that fear and
intimidation is eliminated by their encounter with a resurrected Jesus.
They had no reason to hatch up a resurrection story and place
themselves at risk for something they knew to be untrue. Therefore, I
believe they are reliable in their historical testimony that Jesus not
only died but was raised from the dead by God. The meaning they
attached to the historical event of the resurrection became the message
preached by the disciples and the earliest Christian Church. I believe
Jesus is the Christ, that he was crucified and raised from the dead,
because the historical witness is utterly believable. Were I to
discount the testimony of these eyewitnesses who placed themselves at
risk for greater harm to declare their message, I, too, would have to
discount the role of other historical accounts, including even that
Nero ruled in Rome. For me, the history is that compelling.
However, history alone does not lead to faith. Faith is response to the
ongoing activity of God to be known to us and to bring us to a mature
realization of our full humanity. I realize that is a theological
statement but to speak about God is theology. Theology, in this case,
is an activity of reason influenced by historical faith. Theological
reasoning offers me the best way to view the world, life and all
aspects of life and community. The biblical witness is that God has a
hope for our world that is both present and future. That hope is my
guide for living a full and rewarding life in the present as well as a
partnering with God that reaches into the future. Briefly stated,
believing allows me to make sense of my world and to envision a future
world that is consistent with love, peace and justice, all essential
attributes of God.
We none come to faith alone and we none create our own faith. We are
recipients of a faith handed to us by faithful witnesses from the past.
Yet, our faith does not simply face the past but rather stands in the
confident assurance of God's love in the present and anticipates a
future in which all will know God.
In summary: I believe Jesus is the Christ because faithful witnesses
(some of whom were eye witnesses) have passed on to me through the
Church that which they and I call good news. That good news is the
story of the God who loves us, came to us in Jesus, was crucified and
was raised from the dead in a defeat of evil, and who actively seeks to
be known to us. The God who seeks us enables us to believe that this
story is true, confirms that truth to us by love, and imparts to us the
gift of meaning or purpose. If I am wrong about every historical detail
and mistaken about every theological conviction, I am still aware that
my highest and noblest aspirations have been awaked by thoughts of God.
That I cannot deny. If there is any good in me, I am so because God has
made me so. If I have any strength for the present or hope for the
future it is because God has given it. I know too, that without God in
my life I would be totally inclined only toward my own interests,
become utterly self-centered, cut off from others and fail to realize
the joy of my own humanity. It is truly in this sense also that I can
say "Jesus is my Savior." Through Jesus I am freed from a meaningless
existence.
I hope this comes somewhere near to what you asked me. Thank you for
writing.
Grace and Peace,
David Reed