Craig Keen

After Crucifixion


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lectures, attended to too many seminars, spent too many hours—way too many hours—before movie and television screens and loud speakers, and pondered too long the words and deeds of my family and friends and enemies.101 That means that I have many possessions, intangible though they may be—or at least that’s what I hear. The question for me, then, is only a slightly different version of the one that went through the man of Mark 10, the man whom Jesus loved. “You lack one thing, Craig; go, sell what you own, and give . . . to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; then come, follow me” (Mark 10:21, sort of).

      How do I not go away grieving? Perhaps the answer—like the yes of a child to the voice of her mother calling her name—rises insolubly before the particular mystery precisely of the evocative gospel. “When I came to you, brothers and sisters, I did not come proclaiming the mystery of God to you in lofty words or wisdom. For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ, and him crucified” (1 Cor 2:1–2). The mystery before which I am to give up all my intellectual possessions, Paul is saying, is the crucifixion of Jesus Christ.

      I am to stand on the mound, cleats pressed into the rubber, senses raw and open to the park’s batter, runners, and fielders before whom I move, seeing and hearing, almost smelling, tasting, and touching what shifts within and without the strike zone, feeling the weight, density, and contour of the ball in my rosined hand, thought, emotion, imagination agitated, and with everything in me throw. Without balking. The Rich Young Ruler, Peter, and I are commanded to disperse our goods to the poor. How am I to obey this command without balking, I who profess