June 27, 2009 by Alan Hirsch
Comments (12)
Sorry all for being so absent. I am visiting my homeland and am a busy boy...think about having 16 Christmas DAys in a row and you you will get close to the experience!! Anyhow, I have neglected my blogging duties and I hope you forgive me.
Recently I got this manifesto developed by two friends Len Sweet and Frank Viola. If you have read mine and Mike Frost's new book reJesus, then you will understand why I put it here. I sign!
A Magna Carta
for Restoring the Supremacy of
Jesus Christ
a.k.a.
A Jesus Manifesto
for the 21st Century Church
by Leonard Sweet and Frank Viola
Christians have made the gospel about so many things … things other than Christ.
Jesus Christ is the gravitational pull that brings everything together and gives them significance, reality, and meaning. Without him, all things lose their value. Without him, all things are but detached pieces floating around in space.
It is possible to emphasize a spiritual truth, value, virtue, or gift, yet miss Christ . . . who is the embodiment and incarnation of all spiritual truth, values, virtues, and gifts.
Seek a truth, a value, a virtue, or a spiritual gift, and you have obtained something dead.
Seek Christ, embrace Christ, know Christ, and you have touched him who is Life. And in him resides all Truth, Values, Virtues and Gifts in living color. Beauty has its meaning in the beauty of Christ, in whom is found all that makes us lovely and loveable.
What is Christianity? It is Christ. Nothing more. Nothing less. Christianity is not an ideology. Christianity is not a philosophy. Christianity is the “good news” that Beauty, Truth and Goodness are found in a person. Biblical community is founded and found on the connection to that person. Conversion is more than a change in direction; it’s a change in connection. Jesus’ use of the ancient Hebrew word shubh, or its Aramaic equivalent, to call for “repentance” implies not viewing God from a distance, but entering into a relationship where God is command central of the human connection.
In that regard, we feel a massive disconnection in the church today. Thus this manifesto.
We believe that the major disease of the church today is JDD: Jesus Deficit Disorder. The person of Jesus is increasingly politically incorrect, and is being replaced by the language of “justice,” “the kingdom of God,” “values,” and “leadership principles.”
In this hour, the testimony that we feel God has called us to bear centers on the primacy of the Lord Jesus Christ. Specifically . . .
1. The center and circumference of the Christian life is none other than the person of Christ. All other things, including things related to him and about him, are eclipsed by the sight of his peerless worth. Knowing Christ is Eternal Life. And knowing him profoundly, deeply, and in reality, as well as experiencing his unsearchable riches, is the chief pursuit of our lives, as it was for the first Christians. God is not so much about fixing things that have gone wrong in our lives as finding us in our brokenness and giving us Christ.
2. Jesus Christ cannot be separated from his teachings. Aristotle says to his disciples, “Follow my teachings.” Socrates says to his disciples, “Follow my teachings.” Buddha says to his disciples, “Follow my meditations.” Confucius says to his disciples, “Follow my sayings.” Muhammad says to his disciples, “Follow my noble pillars.” Jesus says to his disciples, “Follow me.” In all other religions, a follower can follow the teachings of its founder without having a relationship with that founder. Not so with Jesus Christ. The teachings of Jesus cannot be separated from Jesus himself. Jesus Christ is still alive and he embodies his teachings. It is a profound mistake, therefore, to treat Christ as simply the founder of a set of moral, ethical, or social teaching. The Lord Jesus and his teaching are one. The Medium and the Message are One. Christ is the incarnation of the Kingdom of God and the Sermon on the Mount.
3. God’s grand mission and eternal purpose in the earth and in heaven centers in Christ . . . both the individual Christ (the Head) and the corporate Christ (the Body). This universe is moving towards one final goal – the fullness of Christ where He shall fill all things with himself. To be truly missional, then, means constructing one’s life and ministry on Christ. He is both the heart and bloodstream of God’s plan. To miss this is to miss the plot; indeed, it is to miss everything.
4. Being a follower of Jesus does not involve imitation so much as it does implantation and impartation. Incarnation–the notion that God connects to us in baby form and human touch—is the most shocking doctrine of the Christian religion. The incarnation is both once-and-for-all and ongoing, as the One “who was and is to come” now is and lives his resurrection life in and through us. Incarnation doesn’t just apply to Jesus; it applies to every one of us. Of course, not in the same sacramental way. But close. We have been given God’s “Spirit” which makes Christ “real” in our lives. We have been made, as Peter puts it, “partakers of the divine nature.” How, then, in the face of so great a truth can we ask for toys and trinkets? How can we lust after lesser gifts and itch for religious and spiritual thingys? We’ve been touched from on high by the fires of the Almighty and given divine life. A life that has passed through death – the very resurrection life of the Son of God himself. How can we not be fired up?
To put it in a question: What was the engine, or the accelerator, of the Lord’s amazing life? What was the taproot or the headwaters of his outward behavior? It was this: Jesus lived by an indwelling Father. After his resurrection, the passage has now moved. What God the Father was to Jesus Christ, Jesus Christ is to you and to me. He’s our indwelling Presence, and we share in the life of Jesus’ own relationship with the Father. There is a vast ocean of difference between trying to compel Christians to imitate Jesus and learning how to impart an implanted Christ. The former only ends up in failure and frustration. The latter is the gateway to life and joy in our daying and our dying. We stand with Paul: “Christ lives in me.” Our life is Christ. In him do we live, breathe, and have our being. “What would Jesus do?” is not Christianity. Christianity asks: “What is Christ doing through me … through us? And how is Jesus doing it?” Following Jesus means “trust and obey” (respond), and living by his indwelling life through the power of the Spirit.
5. The “Jesus of history” cannot be disconnected from the “Christ of faith.” The Jesus who walked the shores of Galilee is the same person who indwells the church today. There is no disconnect between the Jesus of Mark’s Gospel and the incredible, all-inclusive, cosmic Christ of Paul’s letter to the Colossians. The Christ who lived in the first century has a pre-existence before time. He also has a post-existence after time. He is Alpha and Omega, Beginning and End, A and Z, all at the same time. He stands in the future and at the end of time at the same moment that He indwells every child of God. Failure to embrace these paradoxical truths has created monumental problems and has diminished the greatness of Christ in the eyes of God’s people.
6. It’s possible to confuse “the cause” of Christ with the person of Christ. When the early church said “Jesus is Lord,” they did not mean “Jesus is my core value.” Jesus isn’t a cause; he is a real and living person who can be known, loved, experienced, enthroned and embodied. Focusing on his cause or mission doesn’t equate focusing on or following him. It’s all too possible to serve “the god” of serving Jesus as opposed to serving him out of an enraptured heart that’s been captivated by his irresistible beauty and unfathomable love. Jesus led us to think of God differently, as relationship, as the God of all relationship.
7. Jesus Christ was not a social activist nor a moral philosopher. To pitch him that way is to drain his glory and dilute his excellence. Justice apart from Christ is a dead thing. The only battering ram that can storm the gates of hell is not the cry of Justice, but the name of Jesus. Jesus Christ is the embodiment of Justice, Peace, Holiness, Righteousness. He is the sum of all spiritual things, the “strange attractor” of the cosmos. When Jesus becomes an abstraction, faith loses its reproductive power. Jesus did not come to make bad people good. He came to make dead people live.
8. It is possible to confuse an academic knowledge or theology about Jesus with a personal knowledge of the living Christ himself. These two stand as far apart as do the hundred thousand million galaxies. The fullness of Christ can never be accessed through the frontal lobe alone. Christian faith claims to be rational, but also to reach out to touch ultimate mysteries. The cure for a big head is a big heart.
Jesus does not leave his disciples with CliffsNotes for a systematic theology. He leaves his disciples with breath and body.
Jesus does not leave his disciples with a coherent and clear belief system by which to love God and others. Jesus gives his disciples wounds to touch and hands to heal.
Jesus does not leave his disciples with intellectual belief or a “Christian worldview.” He leaves his disciples with a relational faith.
Christians don’t follow a book. Christians follow a person, and this library of divinely inspired books we call “The Holy Bible” best help us follow that person. The Written Word is a map that leads us to The Living Word. Or as Jesus himself put it, “All Scripture testifies of me.” The Bible is not the destination; it’s a compass that points to Christ, heaven’s North Star.
The Bible does not offer a plan or a blueprint for living. The “good news” was not a new set of laws, or a new set of ethical injunctions, or a new and better PLAN. The “good news” was the story of a person’s life, as reflected in The Apostle’s Creed. The Mystery of Faith proclaims this narrative: “Christ has died, Christ has risen, Christ will come again.” The meaning of Christianity does not come from allegiance to complex theological doctrines, but a passionate love for a way of living in the world that revolves around following Jesus, who taught that love is what makes life a success . . . not wealth or health or anything else: but love. And God is love.
9. Only Jesus can transfix and then transfigure the void at the heart of the church. Jesus Christ cannot be separated from his church. While Jesus is distinct from his Bride, he is not separate from her. She is in fact his very own Body in the earth. God has chosen to vest all of power, authority, and life in the living Christ. And God in Christ is only known fully in and through his church. (As Paul said, “The manifold wisdom of God – which is Christ – is known through the ekklesia.”)
The Christian life, therefore, is not an individual pursuit. It’s a corporate journey. Knowing Christ and making him known is not an individual prospect. Those who insist on flying life solo will be brought to earth, with a crash. Thus Christ and his church are intimately joined and connected. What God has joined together, let no person put asunder. We were made for life with God; our only happiness is found in life with God. And God’s own pleasure and delight is found therein as well.
10. In a world which sings, “Oh, who is this Jesus?” and a church which sings, “Oh, let’s all be like Jesus,” who will sing with lungs of leather, “Oh, how we love Jesus!”
If Jesus could rise from the dead, we can at least rise from our bed, get off our couches and pews, and respond to the Lord’s resurrection life within us, joining Jesus in what he’s up to in the world. We call on others to join us—not in removing ourselves from planet Earth, but to plant our feet more firmly on the Earth while our spirits soar in the heavens of God’s pleasure and purpose. We are not of this world, but we live in this world for the Lord’s rights and interests. We, collectively, as the ekklesia of God, are Christ in and to this world.
May God have a people on this earth who are a people of Christ, through Christ, and for Christ. A people of the cross. A people who are consumed with God’s eternal passion, which is to make his Son preeminent, supreme, and the head over all things visible and invisible. A people who have discovered the touch of the Almighty in the face of his glorious Son. A people who wish to know only Christ and him crucified, and to let everything else fall by the wayside. A people who are laying hold of his depths, discovering his riches, touching his life, and receiving his love, and making HIM in all of his unfathomable glory known to others.
The two of us may disagree about many things—be they ecclesiology, eschatology, soteriology, not to mention economics, globalism and politics.
But in our two most recent books—From Eternity to Here and So Beautiful—we have sounded forth a united trumpet. These books are the Manifests to this Manifesto. They each present the vision that has captured our hearts and that we wish to impart to the Body of Christ— “This ONE THING I know” (Jn.9:25) that is the ONE THING that unites us all:
Jesus the Christ.
Christians don’t follow Christianity; Christians follow Christ.
Christians don’t preach themselves; Christians proclaim Christ.
Christians don’t point people to core values; Christians point people to the cross.
Christians don’t preach about Christ: Christians preach Christ.
Over 300 years ago a German pastor wrote a hymn that built around the Name above all names:
Ask ye what great thing I know,
that delights and stirs me so?
What the high reward I win?
Whose the name I glory in?
Jesus Christ, the crucified.
This is that great thing I know;
this delights and stirs me so:
faith in him who died to save,
His who triumphed o’er the grave:
Jesus Christ, the crucified.
—
Jesus Christ – the crucified, resurrected, enthroned, triumphant, living Lord.
He is our Pursuit, our Passion, and our Life.
Amen.
Wow, the JDD is brilliant and very true, here in Guatemala we had a pandemic of that.
Estuardo.
Jace and Estuardo 259 days ago
LOL, Al! I found the Manifesto on shapevine at lunchtime Thursday last week... printed out a few copies to take home to Andrew and pass around. No sooner I walked in the door but Andrew waves his copy in front of me all excited, saying we have to give one to each of our fellow Network Coordinators at the St Andrews Conference in a fortnight and tell all our workshop participants to subscirbe to Shapevine!!!! My daughter thought it was hilarious... she enjoys our "loving competitiveness" and had barely gotten over the amusement regarding the fact that Andrew had trumped me by 0.31% in our overall Masters subject results, but that I had surpassed him by 2% in the final essay. Fortunately, we both got Distinctions! :)
Back to Manifesto/Magna Carta: Interestingly enough, last night at our little APEST experimental "pre-church" in Redfern, I spent some time with a young Aboriginal woman pregnant with her 7th child. As a solo mother with 6 of her children in foster care, she is in a battle to get them back and has been coming to our group for the last 9 months, but not fully dedicated her life to the Lordship of Christ as yet. In the shabby downstairs gym where we meet, somebody had hung a picture - a poor imitation of Holman's The Light of the World. My friend pointed it out to me, saying she liked it. I was able to read to her the Rev 3:20 Scripture about Jesus knocking on the door of the church of Laodicea, explaining that often Christians and churches have done so much so far away from what Jesus intended, but at this little gathering, we were really trying to keep Jesus at head and centre of everything. Plus I also mentioned that Jesus was so polite that when it came to him asking to be acknowledged in our lives, it's like he knocks on the door of our heart and would never override our will, and from time to time gives us opportunities to choose.
A bit later on my dance-ministry-colleague and I danced Psalm 139 (sons of Korah track from their RAIN album) for her coming baby, for her children, for her, and for the baby "church"-in-the-making! Strange times but sweet experinces indeed!
It's so sad you and Deb are in country and we, in Sydney, are flying out to Europe etc Tues 7th...
We hope shapeviners will pray for us as we will have several opportunities to share both publicly and privately about TFW, ReJesus and the work of several other authors well-known to the shapevine community! Thanks!
Lucy J 259 days ago
Its extremely well worded and a very clear statement of faith. I think it would be useful to give it to people who aren't Christians as well. That's one thing I think I will be doing to create opportunities evengelistically and in terms of re-imagining Jesus's relationship with his disciples (us) and Church at large.
Jace & Estuardo, thanks for your messages. I tried to reply, but it got lost in the system - I think it timed out. I am still a CofC student - now with ACOM (Australian College of Ministries) which was formerly the NSW version of CCTC (Churches Christ Theological College, Victoria). Both are linked into Forge via current and former students.
Andrew Park 259 days ago
Hey, after a zillion attempts I was able to work out my username and retrieve a password!
Great post Al... really inspiring! See you soon!!!
Janet 259 days ago
Oh, soooo envious of you Janet... and we haven't even met you fully face-to-face in person yet, either!!!! Not from lack of trying, if I recall :) :) :)
Lucy J 258 days ago
Alan, simply amazing, this is what it is about, the challenge is to be able to help all see and feel and experience this truth.
I once gave an analogy of how the knowledge of God can be like a Snicker Bar.(I Passed out Snicker bars that morning) we can know the ingredients of the Snicker Bar, know how Snicker Bar is made, sing songs about the Snicker Bar, have seminars about the Snicker Bar, put up pictures about the Snicker Bar, Isolate the individual ingredients and talk about them, pass the Snicker Bar around and tell every one we have the Knowledge of Snicker Bars and never really know.
But then I unwrapped the Snicker bar, you could smell it and then to bite into it to really experience and KNOW the Snicker Bar
I am no Greek scholar but that is the kind of gnosis God is wanting us to know.
O Taste and see that the Lord is good
I loved the post and will work on what lifting Him up.
Jack Wolfe 258 days ago
Jack
Now you've got me theologising about snicker bars and there's not one in sight for me to eat.
Andrew Park 258 days ago
Hey Lucy... I think I could manage a pang of envy in relation to the adventure you're about to embark upon! I do pray every blessing on you for the trip.
We'll meet some day... definitely in glory, but probably sooner!
Janet 257 days ago
Yeah, Andrew and Lucy. All the very best with the adventure. Jesus is with you!
Alan Hirsch 256 days ago
Love this statement about Christ and his rightful place. Puts me in mind of Paul's concern in Colossians. It is eloquent and moving and, most importantly, has the ring of truth. Of course, it is still important to make statements like these, even though they are theological and, as a result run the risk of winning alegience to themselves rather than directly to Christ. It is also important to keep in mind, as the manifesto does, that we are still in need of a reliable truth source to tell us which Christ we are talking about who is at the center of our experience. We can't substitute propisitional truth for experiential truth, but neither can we substitute the experiential for the propositional. We need both. We need truth that is objective AND personal. Beautiful statement, Alan. I will be sharing this with everyone I know. Thank you.
Richard Clark 246 days ago
I shared this statement with participants in an early morning service at a creative arts conference in St Andrews. It was a very special moment for those involved.
I still meditate about the statement during my nightly prayer walks - most recently in Canada before arriving back in Australia yesterday morning.
Let me add that during a very difficult one month trip during which Lucy and I came down with an horrific virus, encountered hazards such as a tornado while in New York harbour, and several other hard things, this statement reminded me very clearly of the hope we share in Jesus as someone who is near to us wherever we go - whatever we encounter along the way.
It was good to be able to share this beautiful statement with friends of bi-lingual (English/Dutch, English/French) in Holland and in Quebec where we spent the last couple of weeks.
Andrew Park 220 days ago

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Wow. We've been waiting for this; the Church actually being connected to Jesus. How long we've been waiting for this. My family and I declare with you - Yes, Jesus is Living Lord and our Life.
Jace and Estuardo 260 days ago