The ethical imperative of the...
Illustration
The ethical imperative of the Christian life is urged in this passage. There is a strong sense of the "already" transforming power of the Spirit to shape lives redemptively. Hearing the passage, I am reminded of Father Elias Chacour and his efforts to promote transformed relationships in Israel.
In Blood Brothers, Father Chacour shares a pivotal moment in this understanding that occurs during a visit to the Mount of the Beatitudes. He states: "Suddenly I knew that the first step toward reconciling Jew and Palestinian was the restoration of human dignity. Justice and righteousness were what I had been hungering and thirsting for: This was the third choice that ran like a straight path between violent opposition and calcified, passive nonresistance. If I were really committing my life to carry God's message to my people, I would have to lift up, as Jesus had, the men and women who had been degraded and beaten down." (Baker Book House: Minneapolis, 1984, p. 146)
-- Frye
In Blood Brothers, Father Chacour shares a pivotal moment in this understanding that occurs during a visit to the Mount of the Beatitudes. He states: "Suddenly I knew that the first step toward reconciling Jew and Palestinian was the restoration of human dignity. Justice and righteousness were what I had been hungering and thirsting for: This was the third choice that ran like a straight path between violent opposition and calcified, passive nonresistance. If I were really committing my life to carry God's message to my people, I would have to lift up, as Jesus had, the men and women who had been degraded and beaten down." (Baker Book House: Minneapolis, 1984, p. 146)
-- Frye
