Rich Jesus, Poor Jesus
“What Rich Pastors Teach Their Church about Jesus
That Poor and Middle Class Pastors Do Not!”
What would Jesus be like if he walked
among us today in Singapore? How would Jesus dress, where would Jesus live,
will Jesus drive? Would he dress simply, stay in a rented HDB flat and use
public transport? Or, would he be speaking to us in designer suit, stay in a
waterfront house and drive a luxury car? Does it matter? Some rich prosperity
gospel* pastors are teaching their churches that it does.1
These pastors claim that, contrary to
the traditional view of mainline churches, Jesus was rich, i.e. materially wealthy!
They argue that Jesus was rich because he wore good (expensive) clothes. They
know Jesus had expensive clothes because the Roman soldiers at his crucifixion did
not tear his seamless tunic but cast lots for it. Jesus apparently also owned
two houses, including one in Capernaum2, a village by the
Sea of Galilee. “Mary and Joseph took a Cadillac to get to Bethlehem
because the finest transportation of their day was a donkey”, claimed another
prosperity preacher, “poor people ate their donkey. Only the wealthy used it as
transportation.”1
The hilarious hermeneutics by this
genre of preachers were matched only by their egomaniacal explanations of why
it was important that Jesus was materially rich. “If you believe Jesus is your
Saviour, you can be saved. If you believe Jesus is your healer, healing is
yours. If you believe Jesus isn’t poor, you (will be) able to (break) out of
poverty and come into God’s abundance and prosperity!”2
I almost fell off my chair!
“Because a servant can never be
greater than his master,” said the preacher, “we become like whom we worship. If
we worship a poor Saviour, we will always (be) poor but if you worship a Saviour
who we know to be rich and prosperous, and more than enough, we will be changed
from glory to glory!”3
I am on the floor.
“A poor man cannot teach you how to
prosper…only a rich man can show you. A poor Saviour cannot get you out of
poverty, only a prosperous Saviour can….”3
I crack up on the floor.
Because they teach wealth as a right
and a sign of God’s blessing, they pursue material prosperity to show that
God’s favour is on them. But any person on the street will recognise that an
excessive, luxurious lifestyle is an anomaly in a spiritual leader. They then
use a rich Jesus to sacralise their lifestyle.
Were Jesus
and the Twelve rich?
Fig. Graphic characterisation of a 'typical'agrarian society like that in 1st century Palestine |
The bible is not explicit on this. But knowledge of the social stratification of 1st century Palestine and a proper reading of the Scriptures gives a reasonable idea. They were not of the destitute poor. Those were the bottom 10% of society: the ‘expendables’ –beggars, cripples, lepers, criminals. Neither were they of the rich upper class. Those were the 10% of population who owned 90% of the wealth: the aristocrats – rulers (e.g. King Herod and his court), military leaders (e.g. the un-named Centurion), reli-gious leaders (priests, high priests, Sadducees) bureaucrats, scribes and merchants who provided luxury items to the ruling, retainer and priestly classes. Jesus and Joseph were described as tektōn (Mk 6:3; Matt 13:55) which mean wood worker or stone mason. These skilled artisans were thought to be at a level of what we call ‘blue-collar workers’ today. Evidence suggests that Jesus was most
Rich Jesus, Rich Disciples
Paul in 2 Cor 8:9 highlighted that our
Lord was rich and we are rich.
“For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich,
yet for your sake he became poor, so that you through his poverty might become
rich.” However, this is clearly a theological, rather than a
sociological, statement.4
Our Lord Jesus Christ was rich but
made himself poor
– “…being in very nature God… (he)made himself nothing, taking the very nature
of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a
man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death – even death on a cross.”
(Phil 2:6-8)
We were poor but He made us rich. Eph1:3 – 2:10
describe our new life in Christ. The following rephrasing of the passage attempts
to distill its essence.
God has
blessed us in Christ, with every spiritual blessing,
in the
heavenly places
In love, he
predestined us for adoption through Jesus Christ
In him we
have redemption through his blood,
the
forgiveness of our trespasses,
according
to the riches of his grace,
which
he lavished upon us.
In him we
have obtained an inheritance
In him you
were sealed,
with
the promised Holy Spirit,
who
is the guarantee of our inheritance,
until
we acquire possession of it.
The hope to
which he has called you
The riches of
his glorious inheritance in the saints
The
immeasurable greatness of his power toward us who believe
You were dead
in the trespasses and sins
But God,
because of the great love with which he loved us,
made
us alive together with Christ,
raised
us up with him,
seated
us with him in the heavenly places.
That he might
show the immeasurable riches of his grace
For by grace
you have been saved through faith,
this
is not your own doing,
it
is the gift of God,
so
that no one may boast.
We are his
workmanship, created for good works,
that we
should walk in them.
It is with this richness in Christ
that we are able to say, “I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is
to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every
situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want.”
(Phil 4:12) The Bible does not promise health or wealth as a guaranteed reward
for spiritual obedience. “But we do not lose heart because our light and
momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs
them all.” (2 Cor 4:17)
References
1. Passions over 'prosperity gospel': Was Jesus wealthy? Dec 25, 2009, John Blake, CNN (http://articles.cnn.com/2009-12-25/living/RichJesus_1_jesus-prosperity-gospel-teachings?_s=PM:LIVING, accessed 15/09/2012)
2. Was Jesus Poor Pt 2(1-2) (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s28skvVp1PM, posted 10/04/2011, accessed 15/09/2012)
3. 9 reason y Jesus is rich (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcOEBSmZbuQ, posted up 27/04/2010, accessed 23/03/2011).This video has been taken down. Transcript available.
4. Neither Poverty nor Riches. A Biblical Theology of Possessions. Blomberg,1999 Apollos
5. A Marginal Jew Vol I. John P Meier1991, Doubleday
6. Social Classes in Agrarian Society. Sheila E McGinn (http://www.jcu.edu/bible/205/Readings/LenskiSocialClasses.htm, accessed 18 Sept 2012)
7. Power and Privilege: A Theory of Social Stratification. Gerhard E Lenski , 1984 The University of North Carolina Press
*Glossary
Prosperity
Gospel - the teaching that believers have a right
to the blessings of health and wealth and that they can obtain these blessings
through positive confessions of faith and the "sowing of seeds"
through the faithful payments of tithes and offerings.(Definition from “A
Statement On Prosperity Teaching.” Lausanne Theology Working Group, Africa
Chapter, Akropong, Ghana, 8-9 October, 2008 and 1-4 September 2009)