Transfiguration(Raffaello)_ w woman"God is a boy. God is a boy's name. God is not a girl." – Michael, age 4. 

   This is what one of ten children I interviewed at a nursery years ago told me. I might have answered the same at his age when, looking around, I saw a church dominated by males.

   God is "He," not she. The Pope is male (as are Catholic priests.) The Old Testament prophets are men. The New Testament disciples are males. 

  For Jews & many others, of course, the Messiah, male or female, has never arrived. For Christians, He appeared two thousand years ago.

   Across an uneven history, Jesus's radical new message, God IS Love, has endured. The evidence shows, however, that Christianity in the western world has been losing followers for decades.

   Is it time for a new Messiah – one who brings God's Love through a spiritual descendent of Jesus? The long-sought Daughter of God? That question is posed by an exhibit planned at Vanderbilt Divinity School's Art Gallery this September.  

   As the featured artist (who proposed the topic & will give the opening talk) I will not be there to Broadway w new messiah wi jesus answer but to pose the questions.

   Do we need a new Messiah? What gender & race, what message, how presented?

   Would a female Messiah need to perform miracles for her message to be heard? What would be the difference, if any, in a woman's version of God's word presented in today's world?

   Do America's faith-based hospitals, offering care beneath the cross, need a new Messiah to reawaken Jesus' message of Love in an environment where money may be crushing mission?

   In what is now acknowledged to be a Post-Christian Era, can Christianity survive with Jesus as the solitary savior?

   Please let me know your thoughts.

-Reverend Erie Chapman

Painting – Transfiguration, Raffaello

Photoart – "New Messiah?"- Erie Chapman (2019)

2 responses to “Days 203-207 – NEW MESSIAH?”

  1. Liz Avatar
    Liz

    As an artist and theologian, you catapult us out of our comfort zones. Erie. Jesus as savior, of unconditional love who lives, heals and ministers to the suffering… your inquiry will certainly challenge, dismay and offend some people.
    Yet, as I moved through my own self examine process, what I think you encourage us to discern is significant. The world is changing, technology has connected us globally in unprecedented ways so that we are becoming a global society. Our survival depends on learning how-to live-in cooperation with one another. To live with a love-based worldview instead of the fear-based view that is the current reality.
    This requires a dismantling and a breaking down of many long-held belief systems in order to open to new possibilities. We are challenged to deeply examine the subtle ways in which we hold biases, racist attitudes and prejudices towards others as well as to acknowledge injustices and ultimately to have a change of heart.
    So regardless of our spiritual beliefs, I think your inquiry if we can get beyond reacting and responding in defensiveness, is to look deeply and allow the mote in our eye to loosen and come free. This is truly the message of Jesus who calls us to love our enemy, to be a bearer of light in this world and to love one another. How do we exclude others? How can we be more inclusive? How can we honor the richness of our diversity and learn to recognize God’s light in every person we meet? Perhaps the first step is to challenge some of our long held beliefs, to tear down the barriers that separate us, so that the other, the stranger , the unworthy one becomes the friend, the long lost son/daughter who has returned to be with us; our Beloved.

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  2. erie chapman Avatar
    erie chapman

    Dear Liz. When I saw that you were the only one with the courage & heart to comment on this piece I was so touched. When I read the length and content and quality of your reaction it became so meaningful to me – to know that this strange notion of mine could be seen by you as the outgrowth of thoughts from an “artist and theologian” who has spent his life testing the boundaries, looking over the walls, breaking out of various boxes, (and the other cliches applied to rebellious thinkers) and finally entering land that fewer and fewer people occupy – a place that can be lonely. And then I look over and see…you!

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