What Kind of Reputation did Jesus have? Guest Post Jill Carattini
While many industries struggle during times of economic
downturn, the identity management industry, a trade emerging from the realities
of the Internet Age, continues to gain business steadily. As one company notes
in its mission statement, they began with the realization that “the line
dividing people’s ‘online’ lives from their ‘offline’ personal and professional
lives was eroding, and quickly.”(1) While the notion of anonymity or the felt
safety of a social network lures users into online disinhibition, reputations
are forged in a very public domain. And, as many have discovered, this can come
back to haunt them—long after posted pictures are distant memories. In a survey
taken in 2006, one in ten hiring managers admitted rejecting candidates because
of things they discovered about them on the Internet. With the increasing
popularity of social networks, personal video sites, and blogs, today that
ratio is now one in two. Hence the need for identity managers—who scour the
Internet with an individual’s reputation in mind and scrub websites of
image-damaging material—grows almost as quickly as a high-schooler’s Facebook
page.
With the boom of the reputation business in mind, I wonder
how identity managers might have attempted to deal with the social repute of Jesus.
Among officials, politicians, and soldiers, his reputation as a political
nightmare and agitator of the people preceded him. Among the religious leaders,
his reputation was securely forged by the scandal and outrage of his messianic
claims. Beyond these reputations, the most common accusations of his personal
depravity had to do with the company he kept, the Sabbath he broke, and the
food and drink he enjoyed. In two different gospels, Jesus remarks on his
reputation as a glutton. ”[T]he Son of Man has come eating and drinking, and
you say, ‘Look, a glutton and a drunkard, a friend of tax-collectors and
sinners!’”(2) In fact, if you were to remove the accounts of his meals or
conversations with members of society’s worst, or his parables that incorporated
these untouchables, there would be very little left of Matthew, Mark, Luke, or
John. According to etiquette books and accepted social norms, both from the
first century and the twenty-first, the reputation of Jesus leaves much to be
desired.
Ironically, the reputation of those Jesus left behind does
not resemble his reputation much at all. Writing in 1949 with both humor and
lament, Dorothy Sayers describes the differences: ”For nineteen and a half
centuries, the Christian churches have labored, not without success, to remove
this unfortunate impression made by their Lord and Master. They have hustled
the Magdalens from the communion table, founded total abstinence societies in
the name of him who made the water wine, and added improvements of their own,
such as various bans and anathemas upon dancing and theatergoing….[F]eeling
that the original commandment ‘thou shalt not work’ was rather half hearted,
[they] have added to it a new commandment, ‘thou shalt not play.”(3) Her observations have a ring of both comedy
and tragedy. The impression Christians often give the world is that
Christianity comes with an oddly restricted understanding of words such as
“virtue,” “morality,” “faithfulness,” and “goodness.” Curiously, this
reputation is far more similar to the law-abiding religion of which Jesus had
nothing nice to say. ”Woe to you, hypocrites! For you lock people out of the
kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 23:23).
When the apostle Paul described the kind of fruit that will
flourish in the life of one who follows Jesus, he was not giving the church a
checklist or a rigid code like the religious law from which he himself was
freed.(4) He was describing the kinds of reputations that emerge precisely when
following the friend of tax-collectors and sinners, the drunkard, the
Sabbath-breaker, the Son of God. Jesus loved the broken, discarded people
around him to a social fault. He was patient and kind, joyful and peaceful in
ways that made the world completely uncomfortable. His faithfulness was not a
badge that made it seem permissible to exclude others for their lack of virtue.
His self-control did not lead him to condemn the world around him or to isolate
himself in disgust of their immorality; rather, it allowed him to walk to his
death for the sake of all.
There are no doubt pockets of the world where the reputation
of the church lines up with that of its founder. The prophets and identity
managers of the church today pray for many more. Until then, in a world
deciphering, critically or otherwise, the question of reputation, “What does it
mean to be Christian?” perhaps we might ask instead, “What did it mean to be
Christ?”
Jill Carattini is managing editor of A Slice of Infinity at
Ravi Zacharias International Ministries in Atlanta, Georgia.
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