Mark Vernon - Talks and Thoughts

Rendering to Caesar. Jesus on politics and the kingdom that is within

June 07, 2024 Mark Vernon
Rendering to Caesar. Jesus on politics and the kingdom that is within
Mark Vernon - Talks and Thoughts
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Mark Vernon - Talks and Thoughts
Rendering to Caesar. Jesus on politics and the kingdom that is within
Jun 07, 2024
Mark Vernon

I've been thinking about politics and disillusionment that seems most characteristic of now, in the West at least, and thinking about the prepolitcal  - what politics needs to work well.

I've thought about Plato on beauty and Aristotle on ethics in previous posts.

Now a third guide, Jesus on... which isn't immediately easy to say. And that's the point.

Some would say that Jesus and politics is easy to define.
- a preference for the poor
- the prosperity gospel
- or Christian exceptionalism and oppressive regimes.

But the heart of Jesus and politics is not in practical policies or polities, I believe. He was in the world but not of the world. He stood for something more than was immediately obvious or practical He constantly acted so as to respond to the moment but so as to allow more to come in.

That was why he talked of the kingdom that is near, revising apocalyptic expectations and ushering the transformation of the self.

I mentioned David Lloyd Dusenbury's book, I Judge No One - see here https://www.hurstpublishers.com/book/i-judge-no-one/

And my book, A Secret History of Christianity - see here https://www.markvernon.com/books/a-secret-history-of-christianity

Show Notes

I've been thinking about politics and disillusionment that seems most characteristic of now, in the West at least, and thinking about the prepolitcal  - what politics needs to work well.

I've thought about Plato on beauty and Aristotle on ethics in previous posts.

Now a third guide, Jesus on... which isn't immediately easy to say. And that's the point.

Some would say that Jesus and politics is easy to define.
- a preference for the poor
- the prosperity gospel
- or Christian exceptionalism and oppressive regimes.

But the heart of Jesus and politics is not in practical policies or polities, I believe. He was in the world but not of the world. He stood for something more than was immediately obvious or practical He constantly acted so as to respond to the moment but so as to allow more to come in.

That was why he talked of the kingdom that is near, revising apocalyptic expectations and ushering the transformation of the self.

I mentioned David Lloyd Dusenbury's book, I Judge No One - see here https://www.hurstpublishers.com/book/i-judge-no-one/

And my book, A Secret History of Christianity - see here https://www.markvernon.com/books/a-secret-history-of-christianity