Osvaldo D. Vena

Jesus, Disciple of the Kingdom


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about who this Jesus was/is and therefore who we are as God’s people on earth. Since there are a variety of practices of discipleship due to the fact that we are all immersed in different contexts and social locations, there will always be a variety of Christological affirmations that need to be seen not so much as competitive but as complementary. They need to be brought into dialogue so that each one of our communities may contribute to the other a new insight that can be used in the practice of discipleship. The goal here is not orthodoxy, an agreement on the right doctrines, but orthopraxis, a strategy for knowing what the right practice is in a given context.

      The Need for a New Model

      The Jesus who has been proclaimed by the various historical-Jesus researchers has also alienated people both in the church and in society at large, for this Jesus seems to be the product of liberal Christianity (Jesus the charismatic genius and great hero), or of scientific, and thus positivist, investigation that sees in Jesus a healer, preacher of renewal, cynic, and so on, who is at odds with the Judaism of his time. The problematic images of Jesus coming from these different quests have been addressed in depth by Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza in her book, Jesus and the Politics of Interpretation. She advocates for an ethics of interpretation that recognizes that any presentation of Jesus, whether religious or scientific, is really a reconstruction done with the tools available to the researcher that condition the results of the investigation. She says: