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What are we
to make of Jesus Christ?
From God in
the Dock by C S Lewis
'What are we to make of Jesus Christ?'
This is a question which has, in a sense, a frantically comic
side. For the real question is not what are we to make of Christ,
but what is He to make of us? The picture of a fly sitting deciding
what it is going to make of an elephant has comic elements about
it. But perhaps the questioner meant what are we to make of Him
in the sense of 'How are we to solve the historical problem set
us by the recorded sayings and acts of this Man?' This problem
is to reconcile two things. On the one hand you have got the
almost generally admitted depth and sanity of His moral teaching,
which is not very seriously questioned, even by those who are
opposed to Christianity. In fact, I find when I am arguing with
very anti-God people that they rather make a point of saying,
'I am entirely in favour of the moral teaching of Christianity'
- and there seems to be a general agreement that in the teaching
of this Man and of His immediate followers, moral truth is exhibited
at its purest and best. It is not sloppy idealism, it is full
of wisdom and shrewdness. The whole thing is realistic, fresh
to the highest degree, the product of a sane mind. That is one
phenomenon.
The other phenomenon is the quite
appalling nature of this Man's theological remarks. You all know
what I mean, and I want rather to stress the point that the appalling
claim which this Man seems to be making is not merely made at
one moment of His career. There is, of course, the one moment
which led to His execution. The moment at which the High Priest
said to Him, 'Who are you?' 'I am the Anointed, the Son of the
uncreated God, and you shall see Me appearing at the end of all
history as the judge of the universe.' But that claim, in fact,
does not rest on this one dramatic moment. When you look into
His conversation you will find this sort of claim running throughout
the whole thing. For instance, He went about saying to people,
'I forgive your sins.' Now it is quite natural for a man to forgive
something you do to him. Thus if somebody cheats me out of five
pounds it is quite possible and reasonable for me to say, 'Well,
I forgive him, we will say no more about it.' What on earth would
you say if somebody had done you out of five pounds and I
said, 'That is all right, I forgive him'? Then there is a curious
thing which seems to slip out almost by accident. On one occasion
this Man is sitting looking down on Jerusalem from the hill above
it and suddenly in comes an extraordinary remark - 'I keep on
sending you prophets and wise men.' Nobody comments on it. And
yet, quite suddenly, almost incidentally, He is claiming to be
the power that all through the centuries is sending wise men
and leaders into the world.
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