Grace to you and peace from
him who is and who was and who is to come, and from the seven spirits who are
before his throne, and from Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, the firstborn
of the dead, and the ruler of the kings of the earth. To him who loves us and
freed us from our sins by his blood, and made us to be a kingdom, priests
serving his God and Father, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever.
Amen. (Revelation 1:4b-6)
Jesus
Christ—the one who “made us to be a kingdom”—a kingdom, but what type of
kingdom? What type of government operates in this place?
At
first glance, we might say an “absolute monarchy” of course. Jesus is king. What
Jesus says goes! That’s what it’s all about—autocracy—one king, one ruler, one way
of doing things, one will which commands and all are forced to obey.
There
are 2 problems with that, well actually 3. Firstly, what happens with the other
2 persons of the Trinity if Jesus is that kind of king? The very nature of our
God is to be relational. The nature of God is not to have one part of God
reigning absolutely over another; but that God, God’s self, is actively engaged
in relationship all the time—and calls the people of God to be similarly
engaged. The nature of God is not to be an absolute monarch—the Creation would
have been a very different place if that were the case.
The
second problem with the idea of absolute monarchy as the government of the
kingdom is that we know that Jesus is not that kind of king! That kind of king
does not make himself vulnerable to the vagaries of the world by giving up what
he has and undergoing the kind of passion that Jesus undergoes. That kind of
monarch does not enter the world of his subjects as an ordinary child, at the
mercy of the will of others. That kind of monarch does not seek to persuade
through love and mercy and openness and vulnerability, because only love and
mercy and openness and vulnerability can bring about the type of kingdom that
Jesus in on about. An absolute monarch rules absolutely and no dissent is
permitted, because dissent and unrest are a threat to the reign. Jesus is not a
king who is worried about such a threat to his reign.
The
third problem we have with the idea of Jesus as an absolute monarch is that we
know that we are not those kind of subjects. God did not create us to be
automatons—robots to follow directives without any thoughts or initiative of
our own. We are rebellious and dissenting and God does not bring us under
control with water cannons and riot shields, but with invitation, and care, and
love. No, the imagery of Jesus as absolute monarch is not the way to understand
the kind of governance model operating in the kingdom made by Christ.
So,
then is governance in the kingdom of Jesus democratic. Do we all get our say
and the majority rules? Is it just what you or I think is good as long as we
have the numbers? That idea doesn’t sound right either. Majority rule doesn’t
guarantee that the reign of Christ is in place. We are a varied and disparate
people. We are a stupid and wayward people. Democracy is a secular system of
government that assumes that the collective opinion of people will give us the
best possible governance result and perhaps that is true for nations of people
(as long as popularism doesn’t hold sway), but it doesn’t help us to understand
the kind of governance that operates under the reign of Christ.
Right
now, you might be wondering why we would even want to persist with the
question. Isn’t government in the kingdom of Christ some kind of future reality
that really has no bearing on what we’re doing now? Isn’t it just an esoteric
question—something akin to how many angels can you fit on the head of a pin?
Well,
no, the question of governance in the kingdom of Christ is a question of what
we are called to be engaged in now as the foretaste of that kingdom which is
the body of Christ, the church. And we only need to look around at our sister
and brother Christians to be reminded that the church chooses to operate under
a variety of human governance systems, because the question is not so much how
we organise ourselves as what we think we’re engaged in as we do so.
Whether
a particular part of the church chooses to operate under an episcopal system (a
system of personal authority) or a conciliar system (a system of collective
authority) or some kind of combination of both is not what is at stake here. What
is at stake is, “How is it that Christ reigns in our hearts, our lives, our
communities, our families?” And that has almost nothing to do with the question
of who gets to vote! It has everything to do with what we think we are aiming
to achieve.
In
the Uniting Church’s Manual for Meetings
(Section 1.1), we are reminded that “When a council of the church makes
decisions, it is aiming to discern the guidance of the Spirit in response to
the word of God.”
Our
deliberation and decision-making as the people of God is never made in a
vacuum, or from off-the-top-of-our-head how we are feeling now. Our
deliberation and decision-making as the people of God is always done in the
context of our understanding of who God is and who we are before God. In that,
we are guided by our theological tradition—the church’s understanding of God
and everything in relation to God. We are guided by good and deep reflection on
that tradition in the light of “the inheritance of literary, historical and
scientific enquiry which has characterised recent centuries” in the words of
the Basis of Union Para. 11, i.e. in
the light of our contemporary human experience also reflected upon deeply and
critically.
When a council of the church makes
decisions, it is aiming to discern the guidance of the Spirit in response to
the word of God... [The Manual for Meetings
continues] discernment is not something for which we can set down the rules.
But the processes we use to create
community and communicate in our meetings can themselves assist in the
discernment process. This will be enhanced if people come expecting to be open
both to the Spirit and to each other. By creating and sustaining effective
communications in the context of a Christian community, we will be more likely
to discern the guidance of the Spirit and reflect this in our decision-making.
That is not to say that community
should be ‘nice’ all the time. We will struggle through pain and difficulty
together as well as experiencing the joy of open and honest communication,
being unified in our brokenness and our common identity under God. When members
are left hurt or the community is broken, poor decisions are likely to be made
and the church has failed to be true community. (Manual for Meetings Section 1.1)
A professor
of mine used to talk about this type of governance as “Christocracy”. It cannot
be brought about by any particular kind of human system of governance. It can
only be the product of the work of God amidst a people who earnestly and
sincerely submit themselves to the task of seeking God’s will and not just the
expression of their own desires. Its presence is not determined by whether you
or I like the outcome of any particular deliberations or decisions. As the Manual for Meetings says: “In retrospect
…some decisions are considered to have been visionary and innovative, others
inappropriate and destructive, whether or not they were seen that way at the
time.” (Section 1.1) Nor is the presence of the reign of Christ determined by
whether you or I have had “our say”. The presence of the reign of Christ is
signified in our midst by our willingness to participate in the process as
determined by our church for the sake of the community of Christ, in pursuit of
God’s will for our world, and under the promise of God’s reign. And that is
what we are called to do today, as we meet as one of the councils of the
Uniting Church, the Congregation.
Grace to you and peace from
him who is and who was and who is to come, and from the seven spirits who are
before his throne, and from Jesus Christ, the faithful witness, the firstborn
of the dead, and the ruler of the kings of the earth. To him who loves us and
freed us from our sins by his blood, and made us to be a kingdom, priests
serving his God and Father, to him be glory and dominion forever and ever.
Amen. (Revelation 1:4b-6)
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