Dec 30, 2016

Three Reading Responses about the Bible and Christianity, and Exegesis'

Reading response #1:
In “Revelations of Divine Love,” early female author Julian assumed that in order to achieve happiness, she must be like Jesus and with him, which would require the enduring of pain, suffering, and death.  Those assumptions correlated with a misunderstanding of the message of Jesus, and in her visions, she heard him lead her from her narrow scope of her understanding to her true purpose in life—especially at that moment in her life—the seeking of an all-encompassing joy.  Towards the story’s denouement, she reveals how she felt transformed after she witnessed his death and his message in an out-of-body experience: she did not want to look back anymore at her own suffering, nor did she ponder at why she should have sought pain, but instead, she wondered why she should feel pain at all if she was looking forward.  Indeed, she mainly believed that looking forward and not backward was the best method for interpreting Jesus.
            Another facet about Julian’s interpretation of God was that Jesus was the God, and while Christians may think that this is true, this belief is not accepted by everyone.  She made her beliefs clear: everyone who believed in the message of Jesus, essentially, would be saved, and those who did not love each other in their Christian community could not be saved; she qualified Jesus’ original message and assumed that in order to be saved she must be Christian.  This belief was assimilated by her in accordance to her religious community, though Jesus never said in order to be saved, his followers must be members of a church.  But if God is a merciful God, and the illiterate who does not know of Jesus’ life does not know a little of who he was, except whether Jesus’ message is universal, then God would judge that person based on that person’s devotion.  So, she contradicted herself early on in her essay though she fixes the fallacy in the denouement. 
Christians are informed of a heaven though Julian says that more than one exists: three exist and one in particular is for Jesus’s judgment.  In a way, Julian’s first-person, autobiographical narrator elevates herself to a prophetess though she does not attain that status nor claim it.  Julian revealed that her vision was not all that different than what Christians knew at the time about the Gospels.  Muslim influence regarding the nature of heaven on Western culture during her century may have provided a context for her visions since in the Gospels, Jesus had only mentioned just one heaven.  I believe he would have mentioned them if he had been spared crucifixion.
                        In Julian’s narrative, her community would have been Catholic church goers since Martin Luther, the theologian who started the Protestant movement, was not born until 1483 and her essay was written in 1413; Julian may well have been the first woman in print to not agree wholly with the Catholic church for various reasons because her life was “recluse” and at odds with the vision everyone had of a joyful life.  Even if it weren’t true, the Church did not adopt her vision into the Church’s orthodoxy.  Julian may have also been wholly against pagans and their rituals because they did not agree with the message of Christ, or they did not disavow their paganism since they aspired to mythologies.  After all, Jesus lived in another part of the world.   
            Since Julian admitted to not fully understanding the message of Christ, she assumed that reading the Bible was not important since it was a norm, and priests would not have read the Bible in any language she would have understood, unless she knew Latin. Julian may have not been as devout to begin with as she had herself believed, because when I was young I went to the Jehovah’s Witnesses meetings and I did not understand everything about the significance of the message Jesus had for me, yet I thought of myself as a Jehovah’s Witness.
Reading Response #2
The interpretive community, according to Stanley Fish’s “Vaviorum,” that I belonged to changed after I wrote the first essay and when I composed the second, although all along, I knew the Bible contained universal truths: these were about Jesus’s life.  I was informed that the Holy Bible contained some dubious and “man-made” truths that contradicted science and my own atheistic beliefs.  I had formed my own opinion without close-reading the Bible about the absence of God, mainly by adopting the criticism of “The Grand Inquisitor” by T. Dostoevsky that seemed to say: if Jesus returned, humanity would again not be ready for someone so pure and good, and (from the entire story of “The Brother’s Karamazov”) the question of why are some people allowed to live and others to die?  If God did exist and he played a role that we are all led to believe about him—this divine being that determines our fate is extremely unfair. 
I was born a Catholic who was baptized in MexĂ­co though not born there.  Part of my upbringing included listening to the sermons at a Jehovah Witnesses congregation in Ames, Iowa in the U.S., and during my H.S. years, I joined my mom, step-father, and grandparents, on my mother’s side, in becoming a Unitarian Universalist: I had all but rejected some Catholic doctrines, like sayings from Jesus picked up by ear.  I had been free up to the point of writing the first essay for this class.  My audience and I shared a humanness that said a lot about the abovementioned communities that I belonged to (Logic, p. 3, lines 7-8).  I believed that the Bible was a work of literature first and foremost and it can be understood in terms of narrative theory: the Bible is not a work of revelation (Logic, p. 1, lines 13-14).   Some proof of this, according to my first essay, is in the usage of foreshadowing in the plot.  The text was not that holy after all since it was created by an author who adhered to poetic tradition (Logic, p.2).  My interpretive community did not, however, explain to me that God had spoken to these authors, and I did not read the Bible as extensively as we did for class.  Like a typical novel that followed forms and that were created to cause an affect, I still did not understand the Bible possessed forward movement like a great novel designed to teach by evoking powerful emotions, given my interpretive community.  I knew, after reading an Exegesis about Chiasmus form, that it is used by the Bible in more than one way. (Hidden, p. 3, lines 12-22; p. 4, lines 1-3).
My interpretive community after I wrote the first essay  had changed because I had read more from differing perspectives.  Earlier on in the semester, I was convinced that the Bible was all in a giant “fractal” structure where an effect that occurred many or a few years ago would manifest itself later identically though to a different person.  Jesus was someone who considered himself to be part of this fractal view of life, because he saw himself as the next Jewish Prophet.  Jesus gained hypnotic power over the reader (Logic, p. 2, lines 13-23 and p. 3, lines 1-4).  I pondered whether the Bible was narrated by either a man or a woman, because my community contains many strong women aka., my mother, teacher for this course, and classmates (Logic, p. 3, lines 4-5).  At that point, I considered the Bible to be narrated by an individual or individuals who are able to maintain or create a sense of similar tone and diction (Logic, p. 3, lines 5-6).  But I had read, for myself, just the first two books of the Pentateuch. 
My interpretive community also included computer scientists who are heavily math oriented, which was why I mentioned the highly symbolic use of certain numbers that fit into some kind of numerology (Logic, p. 5, lines 11-18; p. 6, 1-8).   The Bible’s prophecies and the interpretation of these prophecies and realization of them suggests there is a magical, logical and infallible truth to the Bible, though after writing my second essay about hidden messages in the Bible, but in retrospect, “magical” is hardly the word I would use (Logic, p. 6, lines 16-17).  I had believed that the word of Christ was all that was to be gained from reading the new testament, but I did not know that Jesus’s silent action symbolized certain truths hidden in this continuing usage of his parables (Hidden,  p. 4, lines 4-6).  My interpretive community were also aware of certain surprises, such as the crucifixion, death, and resurrection of Christ (Hidden, p. 5, lines 7-8). 
The importance of reading earlier sections of the Bible in the old testament is also important.   We must know who the Father is in order to know Jesus (Hidden, p. 5, lines 17-18). Like prior prophets, Jesus “cared about equality” (Hidden, p. 5, lines 19-21).   But in my first essay, perhaps because I was daunted by the monumental task of reading a large work of literature—the Bible—I believed, and so did others in the class that Christianity exists in part to mesmerize and control rather pessimistically (Logic, p. 2, lines 16).
I seemed to believe that God was this magical being, like in shamanism or other myths, that God was someone who turned the normal into the supernormal (Logic, Page 1, lines 1-3).  In writing the first Essay, I also believed that the concept of one God was the result of anthropomorphism, and that I was skeptical and ironic of “an entity known as God” (Logic, p. 1, line 3; p. 1, lines 15-16).  I did not believe God authored the scriptures as I had heard from some people (Logic, p. 2, lines 3-4). 
My essays seem to suggest that my community I belonged to strongly believed Jesus is humble and a provider to his apostles and the poor (Logic, p. 5, lines 8-10).  Not only that but Jesus had led the ideal life and that when confronted with death, during the falling action of the Gospel of John, Jesus used hidden meanings and parables in his actions after his last teaching in the Last Supper (Hidden, p. 1, line 1).  After reading about Jesus and prior books in the Old Testament, the second essay correlates Jesus with the Pentateuch well (Hidden, p. 1, line 5).
Reading response #3:
Misreading of the Bible in today’s culture
            In postmodern American culture, many people who claim they are Christian have come to the conclusion that many liberal institutions are incompatible with Christian beliefs, and liberal institutions such as programs that help mothers, social security, and universal healthcare should be eliminated.  They also disapprove of other liberal ideas, such as the raising of the minimum wage and tolerance to other religious beliefs.  I believe that when Christians take a politically conservative position that results in their disapproving of key liberal ideas that try to recognize the humanity of others and the needs of others, Christians misinterpret the teaching of Jesus.
             Regardless of what interpretive community they belong to, many of these misinformed Christians who consider themselves socially conservative do not accept that liberal institutions and liberal politics have been created so that society could be healthier, better, and less focused on the the elite at the expense of the poor, as Jesus had been focused on in his own society.   Jesus had understood humanity’s psyche better than most people, but this does not deter these misinformed church-goers from spreading lies about the overall importance of a  work ethic.  Though true in that Jesus would have wanted laborers to work hard, these Christians are incorrect in placing blame on and trying to destroy what they deem a bloated government that Jesus would disapprove of.  Although government looks bad in the New Testament—the Romans and the Jewish priesthood--Jesus had in fact wanted to make the ultimate sacrifice.  These Christians do not understand the umbrella of the corrupt Jewish priesthood at the time of Jesus’ crucifixion, and they blame the Roman provincial manager for sentencing Jesus to death, but it was Jesus who wanted himself to die for the sins of the many, and he could see no other way than to face trial.  Governments always have corrupt individuals, and the U.S. is doomed to a similar fate since humans cannot understand human motivation fully and their desires, nor can they see eye-to-eye on important matters.  Correcting an inadequate government was not the point of the New Testament, and in fact Jesus said that his followers should give to Caesar what is Caesar's and to God what is God's.
This community of misinterpreters does not support programs like Planned Parenthood, which provides abortions for young mothers who do not wish to have a baby because the former views a human being as existing in the womb.  If abortion were extremely immoral in the eyes of God, the sometimes violent God of the Old Testament would have taken care of these heretics with a plague, or granted them forgiveness through Jesus (Jesus gave his life to destroy sin).  Although many passages from the Old Testament are violent because of what God does to humans who disobey him, nowhere in the new testament does it say a human embryo cannot be aborted even though the practice was not alien to them during the years of an alive Christ.  In contrast, Jesus cared a lot about women who had hard a difficult life.  He encouraged a woman to listen to him rather than work too hard, he persuaded the elders not to stone an adulteress, he had a close friend who was a former prostitute.  I believe that although abortion is a difficult practice for society to tolerate, it is a necessary option for women who have no means of caring for themselves or a child.  Such women who make the decision to abort their children have God's forgiveness, I believe.  As do other women who “sin” in this way, since Jesus's sacrifice makes their sins forgiven, as the Christians themselves say.  The focus on abortion by Christians, and not a focus on warfare, where individuals who everyone can agree are actually human beings, is a sign that there is inconsistency in their beliefs and something self serving about them.  I think that this inconsistency points to a group of people who want to control women, who are using the power of the church to promote men's power.


Jesus’ Hidden Message to his Disciples while at the Last Supper

Daniel Apatiga
Prof. Lori Branch
Engl: 3140, Sect. 1
Dec. 16th 2016
Jesus’ Hidden Message to his Disciples while at the Last Supper
            Jesus’ action of washing the Apostles’ feet held a hidden symbolic meaning and the action was a turning point in the plot of the Gospel of John (Bible, page 1904).  Christians commonly associate the washing of feet as a lowly act including Catholics (Pope Francis in particular), but in the Gospel of John, Jesus cleansed the feet of his disciples because he understood the Jewish scriptures very well, and he enjoyed telling parables.  Jesus understood that in order to keep the love of his followers it must be shown in an extraordinary way.  In his last action and riddle, Jesus said, “’You do not know now what I am doing, but later you will understand.’”, and this was a fatherly kind of love that he held for them (Bible, page 1904).  To Simone Peter, he misinterpreted Jesus because he assumed that Jesus had quit his aspirations to become King of the Jews by assuming a lowly job as a feet washer, but Peter misunderstood despite thinking he understood when he said, “Lord, not my feet but also my hands and my head!”, because Jesus wanted to be the Lord, divine, and remembered in another way (Bible, page 1904).  The removal of the disciples’ sandals symbolized the trust the Apostles had in Jesus and he in them and also signified a major turning point in the plot in addition to Jesus saying much earlier in the Gospel of Mark, “‘But who do you say that I am?’  Peter answered him, ‘You are the Messiah.’” (Bible, pg. 1807).
Before Jesus shared his ideas during the last meal, he asked his disciples to let him wash their feet, and this request alluded to the story of Moses when he took off his sandals at God’s request because the divine voice that spoke to him communicated this truth: the feet are more holy than the sandals (a human’s creation), because, the feet are God’s creation—therefore, the action of taking one’s sandals off was signifying the act of being in the presence of the divine.  Also, the feet can become dirty from the matter that is near the divine—Jesus—for the feet are most welcome in his presence; and, the feet are significant parts of the body that symbolized cleanliness or dirtiness and either femininity or masculinity, and should be naked like how God made us.  And this action signified that the soles of the feet were designed to toughen so gaining callouses or blisters would not be bad.  This event may have symbolized the importance of being active in terms of work even though it is “the work of the lowliest of servants” by Jewish society at the time.
Although Jesus appeared to the disciples as both a person a mystical being, who used a lot of parables, the washing of the apostles’ feet meant to Jesus that his apostles were ready to understand the deeper meanings and truths in life.  Cleaning a person’s dirty foot will still be dirty again, and this infinite loop humans enter of washing ourselves despite becoming dirty again has a kind of insanity to it like a stopwatch: a stopwatch is a tool that lets an agent know how much time has passed, so in that way, Jesus was done preparing his disciples for a test of loyalty, strength of mind, and of character, but they would gain the benefit of being judged by him.  The event of Jesus’ crucifixion in the story of Christ evoked emotions of loss and tragedy, like when a close friend of mine died, and this event undoubtedly left the Apostles asking for Jesus to push the stop button but it was too late, he could no longer be their teacher for he was dead.   In Catholicism, I was taught that Jesus is alive in heaven, but no way existed to be judged except after death. 
After this turning point in the Gospel of John, Jesus foretold his betrayal and gave a piece of bread to Judas, and Jesus was removed from the last supper by Jewish authorities because Judas betrayed him.  What came before the feet washing was entirely about the joy of living, gaining a following, seeing things that a “blind man” had not been aware of before, sharing food with the poor and donating belongings to them, disavowing Kingship while the authorities accused him of seeking power, telling funny stories that poke fun at the absurdities of society, transcending cultural taboos by befriending a promiscuous adulteress, all of which were enjoyable to Jesus’ followers because of his quick advice and love for humans. 
After Jesus shared his last demonstrative teaching of washing his followers’ feet, the story does not stop with the use of parables.  In the Gospel of John, the form of the story follows a Chiasmus form, but in a much bigger sense: the last teaching of Jesus is at the center, while everything after what came before the middle section is somehow related to each other but is variated.  This often takes the form of structural ironies to the plot in that the story contains parables before the turning point and Jesus speaks a lot, and his diction reveals his knowledge, wisdom, and intelligence.  But when we get to the central turning point of the plot in the Gospel of John, a higher calling or a search for the divine occurs like in all Psalm poems that employ Chiasmus form.  Some examples of parables that are later variated after the central plot are when Jesus fished and was a good fisherman, the raising of Lazarus, the breaking of bread and sharing it among a huge crowd of followers.  Similarly, in the prime sections (imagine this form ABC’B’A’ and now we are at section A’) and after the turning point, Jesus was arrested and like a fish in a net, flogged like a fish that was skinned, and Jesus was crucified, raised, and sent to heaven like the raising of Lazarus only it was God who raised Jesus, and Lazarus had sort of disappeared from the plot, too. 
After the turning point of the plot during the Last Supper, Jesus’ says that one of his disciples will betray him because he knows that his death is the will of God, but the reader later discovers that Jesus’ death is also a result of the unfairness of his trial.
²³ One of his disciples—the one whom Jesus loved—was reclining next to him;
² Simon Peter therefore motioned to him to ask Jesus of whom he was speaking.
² So while reclining next to Jesus, he asked him, “Lord, who is it?”
² Jesus answered, “It is the one to whom I give this piece of bread when I have dipped it in the dish.”
So when he had dipped the piece of bread, he gave it to Judas. (Oxford Bible page 1904).
Shortly after, Jesus compares himself to the true vine, signifying the end of his lowly, ascribed status, and now is this prophet of a new religious tradition.    
The last teaching foretells the death of Jesus as the death of the son of man.  By washing his disciples’ feet, Jesus prepares his disciples for the undertaking of their lifetimes since as a son of God, Jesus does not require that his disciples take off their sandals, for this symbolic act is not what God would have wanted from him, and Jesus never required that anyone follow his teachings.  As described by Exodus when Moses encountered the voice of God from the burning bush, by washing their feet, a very menial task, Jesus instructs his disciples that it is for his father and themselves so that they can wash each other’s feet, treating each other with respect and each other as though they are father.  Having cleansed feet suggests indirectly that the house of God is everywhere, unlike only the cave where Moses encounters Elohim.  This part of the narrative connects to the abandonment of Jesus by the disciples that occurs after the last teaching, because even though Jesus says to them where he is going they cannot follow, the disciples could not make everyone else realize in time that Jesus is a good man, that he is who he says he is, and what he preaches it does not desecrate God.  Jesus creates a drive and ambition in his disciples for them to spread his word though they were not prepared to defend the son of God right away, it would just take some time.  The reader is also unprepared for when Jesus becomes crucified, dead, and resurrected.
The last teaching echoes the beginning of the narrative in the Gospel of John when we read that someone greater than John, who by many is considered a prophet, will arrive.  In this last, verbal teaching, Jesus makes use of the symbology of vines that held significance to the Jewish and Jesus’ communities.   The vine has held mystical meaning that goes back to the time of Joseph when he lived in Egypt after he had interpreted the dreams of a chef and a cup-bearer.  Jesus uses this motif as a means of explaining himself to someone who barely knows him even though his disciples do know him.  Hidden within the farewell, Jesus implores for help in what to do but his disciples have misunderstood the message’s hidden meaning.  In answering who Jesus is we must answer who his Father is, and in answering who we are, we must know Jesus, the passage suggests, which we do not. 
            Jesus stressed the importance of egalitarianism in his last teaching in a world of inequality, unfair laws, and misrepresentations of good people because of religious doctrine, ascribed or attained status.  In the Gospel of John, Jesus combined many Jewish teachings with some of his own when he spoke to his disciples during the last supper.  He preached to them so that his disciples could judge themselves and mark progress after he was dead.  The climax of the Gospel of John was when Jesus gives his last verbal teaching to the Apostles, using Freytag’s Pyramid, because after that, Jesus is arrested and sent to trial during the falling action that occurred because what Jesus said in the Last Supper, and the conclusion of the story occurs after Jesus is crucified when he is resurrected, being seen by Mary and a few of his disciples talking on a road—that they could not really identify Jesus despite talking with him.













Works Cited
The New Oxford Annotated Bible: New Revised Standard Version With The Apocrypha. Ed.
Coogan D., Michael. Pub: Oxford University Press, 2007. Print.