Becoming #TrulyHuman: Embodiment Is Not Enough (Part 2)
What
do you think?
Tears began to form
and roll down my cheeks as she proclaimed over us, “In Jesus Christ, we get
our bodies back.” I sat on the edge of my seat at full
attention – holding back the impulse to stand and cheer. Cherith Nordling’s
words were cutting straight to my core during her plenary talk at the first North American
Gathering of Missio Alliance.+
Her words registered
so deeply and genuinely within me that they became to me Jesus’ gentle touch in
my bone-deepest aching. I sensed a holy relief settle throughout the room that
afternoon – like we had all been holding our breath for ten years and finally
had permission to exhale.+
She announced the
possibility of something more. It was an announcement of liberation and
renewal. We do not have to be stuck in cycles of hiding and compensating and
striving. Even though our humanity is a source of so much pain – something we
desperately want to escape – our brokenness and hurt, in Christ, could become –
has become – will become – the material of our salvation.+
In Jesus Christ, we
get our bodies back. How does THAT happen?+
— +
In Part 1
I made the case that, as we re-imagine how salvation gets real in the lives we
actually live, getting back to embodiment is good, but we must keep going. To
be truly human is not simply to get back to the body. Proclaiming
what it means to be truly human will involve cultivating the redemptive
imagination to know what to do next.+
If we do not keep
going, as I argued in part 1, we might exclude the possibility of transformation
in the places where it matters most. Rather than ignoring our humanity, we
might seek an embodiment that, unwittingly, does not have the wherewithal to
become more than what it already is.+
Growing an
imagination for “what to do next,” therefore, starts by articulating
and owning how our present embodiment is bent toward death. The “old human”
fights, schemes, avoids, and masks death at all costs but can only, ever
succumb to death.+
Left in our bodies to
fend for ourselves, misshapen desire will only lead us, ironically, to become less
human. This is part of the modern predicament and the hidden pivot around which
turns many political battles about whose humanity (i.e. sexuality) counts: the
deeply held belief that we are able to find self-fulfillment (that is, become
more human) by following our desires.+
On some level, it
seems to me, many who de-humanize salvation are reacting to the reality of the
old humanity, which leads to the pursuit of salvation in some other realm. How
and why, then, can it a good thing to return to embodiment?+
We can affirm that
our bodies matter and matter matters because God’s grace infuses it all in
Christ. The stuff of our bodies and the stuff of creation can, in
Christ, become a site and avenue of grace – a source of life – truly
what it was meant to be but could not be outside Christ.+
This means becoming
truly human goes beyond discovering who we already are (Oprah stops
here) – as if sin merely obscures the ability to see ourselves for who we truly
are. It does do that, but it goes beyond that. Sin is bondage to the old human.
Death. Inability to share in God’s life.+
Becoming truly
human is to truly share in God’s life. We can share in
God’s life because God, in Christ, shared our life, which means we can inhabit
our bodies and the world as if God’s life is exploding into our life. The good
news is that becoming truly human is not just a discovery that leads to
recovery. It is something totally new: being raised with Christ and
participating in the humanity he makes possible – sharing in resurrection life.+
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