Miners, Massey, and
Montcoal
The Choice for Progressives II:
Jesus – Magician or Liberator?
Luke 9:7-62
The first part of this section of Luke’s Gospel deals with Luke’s
version of the Feeding of the 5,000. These particular verses from
Luke are never read in any of the three-year cycle of the Revised Common
Lectionary. Mark’s original story of the Feeding of
the 5,000 is also never read; the developers of the RCL prefer
Matthew’s version. But neither Matthew nor Luke (and certainly not John
– whose version is substituted for Mark’s in Year B) lay out the
sequence like Mark does (see:
Losing the Way Parts I-III and Bread of
Life Parts I-IV).
Mark’s story (6:34-8:21) is an extended parable about the fair
distribution of food, interspersed with hints from an increasingly
exasperated Jesus about who he is and what he is trying to do. While
the idea that this was a demonstration of radical sharing is there in
Luke’s short vignette, Luke’s emphasis is on Jesus as the Anointed one,
“the son of Adam [who] is destined to suffer a great deal, be rejected
by the elders and ranking priests and scholars, and be killed and, on
the third day, be raised.” The Transfiguration scene is of course
read on the last Sunday of Epiphany and the second Sunday of Lent in
Year C. Luke does not include Jesus walking on the water, or the
discussion about food purity laws that Mark presents and Matthew copies
into his gospel. Instead, Luke concentrates on what Jesus’s
followers will, should, and must do after Jesus’s death.
What is Luke suggesting?
1. Deny yourselves, take up your cross EVERY DAY and
follow me.
2. Lose your life FOR MY SAKE and find it
3. Whoever is ashamed of ME AND MY MESSAGE the Son of
Adam will be ashamed of in return
4. Anyone who looks back from the plow is not
qualified for God’s imperial rule.
None of these phrases is considered to be traceable to the historical
Jesus. Instead, they are aphorisms for the community for which
Luke was writing, 50 to 75 years after Jesus’s death. The Jesus
Seminar scholars suggest that these admonitions are
softened, or “domesticated.” They do not reflect Jesus’s original
radical abandonment of self-interest in the service of distributive
justice-compassion. Instead, the Scholars argue, Luke has turned
the cross into an “everyday,” ordinary piety. The sayings
encourage belief about Jesus himself, not participation in the way of
life that he taught. The idea that “No one who puts a hand to the
plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God” (NRSV) reflects the
story of Lot’s wife, who looked back at Sodom and Gomorrah and turned
into a pillar of salt. Once you have accepted the Kingdom of God,
Luke seems to be saying, you can’t have second thoughts. To
follow the agricultural metaphor (which the JS Scholars do not pursue
in their notes) anyone who looks back at the row he’s been plowing will
veer off and the row will not be straight. Christian piety
abounds.
The JS scholars argue that Luke made Christianity safe for Roman
society, and Luke may well have succeeded in describing the message so
that only insiders would realize what it meant. But I would
suggest that Luke’s list can be read as radically as anything Jesus may
have actually taught. Let’s consider Luke’s sequence in 9:7-62 in
the light of the April 5, 2010 Massey Energy Company mining
disaster in Montcoal, West Virginia.
Interestingly, the story begins with Herod, the oppressor and
representative of imperial Rome, who wonders who this Jesus is.
“He was curious to see him,” Luke reports. Then Luke briefly
sketches the legend of the feeding of the 5,000. We might think
this has only to do with food. But what Mark (and Luke) emphasize
is the necessity for the followers of Jesus to trust the way of life in
the realm of God and share what they have. This sharing does not
begin and end with food, nor – applied to the 21st century – does this
sharing end with comfort or charity provided to the survivors of
preventable accidents. This sharing is in stark contrast to the
greed represented by the deliberate decision to enjoy profit and
productivity at the expense of the health and safety of workers.
The disciples missed the point in all the gospel accounts. It’s
not about magic and miracle. It’s about transforming the world
from greed to giving.
Next, Peter confesses that Jesus is the Messiah (God’s anointed
one). Jesus warns his followers that the anointed one will
suffer, be rejected by the elders and ranking priests and scholars, and
be killed and on the third day be raised. Here the consequences
of kenosis the
radical abandonment of self-interest, and the intention to create a
share-world instead of a greed-world are clear: rejection by the
authorities and death. Vindication or resurrection are a hope,
not a certainty. Luke’s Jesus says, “Those who want to come after
me should deny themselves, pick up their cross every day, and follow
me.”
This does not mean follow Jesus like sheep into the mines to be
sacrificed to the god of greed and international commerce, in the vain
hope that a miracle will bring us out safely. Nor does it mean
that once dead, we will live again in some heavenly realm beyond Antares. It means somehow
finding the courage to blow the whistle on the safety violations; to
refuse to work in illegal conditions; to organize collective bargaining
associations in the face of company rules prohibiting unions.
These are the crosses mineworkers are asked to bear. The
consequences can be dire: losing jobs through firing or because
the mine is at last shut down; falling into poverty; and death.
Death can come at the hands of corporate collaborators, or friends who
– like Judas – see no other way
to survive than to sell out. If the mines can be shut down
because of safety violations, the temptation is high for inspectors to
ignore unsafe conditions, and for miners themselves to decline to
complain.
Luke’s Jesus asks, “what good does it do a person to acquire the whole
world and lose or forfeit oneself?” The writer of Mark’s Gospel
adds a correlative: “Or what would a person give in exchange for
life?” These are disturbing and dangerous questions to ask,
especially if those questions are asked about the victims who died, and
put to their surviving families. The point is not to blame the
victims. The point is that the people West Virginia coal country
(and throughout Appalachia) have no choice about where and how they
earn a living. If they are to have the level of wealth that
middle class white collar or unionized blue collar workers have
elsewhere, then they have to work in the mines.
However, in the context of 21st Century corporate malfeasance, these
are very valid questions with which to confront the boss. What
would the corporation give in exchange for the lives of the mine
workers? $70,000 a year, including required overtime pay? $4.2
million in corporate penalties and fines in one year, which amount to one hour of profit? Luke’s Jesus
suggests a judgment against those who are “ashamed of me and my
message.” Jesus’s message is, “deny yourself, pick up your cross
every day, and follow me.” In 21st Century words, Jesus demands
the radical abandonment of self-interest in the service of distributive
justice-compassion here and now. Otherwise, “when the Son of Adam
comes again to establish the Kingdom of God on earth, he will in turn
be ashamed of that person.” Again, in 21st Century language, the
judgment is not some time in the future when the world ends. The
judgment is now in the consequences that result in death.
About a week after delivering these sayings, Luke says, Jesus takes
Peter, James, and John up the mountain to pray. Jesus is
transfigured to a being of dazzling white light. Moses and Elijah
– the greatest of prophets up to that point in Jewish spiritual history
– appear to walk beside him. Then a cloud moves in, and God says,
“This is my son, my chosen one. Listen to him!” But the
disciples apparently don’t listen. The following day a man brings
his son to Jesus because the disciples are unable to exorcise the evil
spirit that is possessing the child. Jesus has had enough.
“You distrustful and perverted lot,” he yells, “How long must I
associate with you and put up with you?” And he heals the boy
himself. Luke follows this with another warning from Jesus about
his impending death, but the disciples not only don’t understand.
“They always dreaded to ask him about this remark.” Worse, Luke
chooses this point to talk about the argument that broke out among them
about who is the greatest.
Who is listening today? Corporations that are now considered to
be people by the U.S. Supreme Court are certainly
not listening. They are too busy determining who will be the
greatest, the richest, the most politically powerful. The workers
are not listening either, but at ths point cannot be blamed for
choosing what appears to be the only path. They are oppressed and
victimized by corporations that win awards for stated policies
regarding safety, but whose daily behavior nullifies what’s on
paper. Neither the political parties on the right who claim Jesus
as their Lord, nor the political parties on the left who claim justice
and equity for all, are listening.
Nor is the Church, the purported “body of Christ,” listening.
Jesus said, “Foxes have dens, and birds of the sky have nests, but the
son of Adam has nowhere to rest his head.” Scholars argue that
this may have actually been a call to the earliest of Jesus’s followers
to live a life of itinerancy. But the literal meaning of those
words is evident today: The Son of Adam is nowhere to be found in the
economics of mining nor in other economic systems on the planet.
Further, if the government of the State of West Virginia continues its
policy that assures that mining trumps everything, then the foxes and
the birds will soon join Jesus in the homeless population.
Jesus also said, “Leave it to the dead to bury their own dead; but you
go out and announce God’s imperial rule.” These are shocking
words. Luke tries to soften and explain them when he has Jesus
say, “No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is qualified
for God’s imperial rule.” We cannot know the context that
produced Jesus’s original words, handed down by oral tradition, and
captured in this sequence by the writer of Luke’s gospel. But in
terms of justice-compassion, and applied specifically to the Upper Big
Branch Mine disaster, Luke’s qualifier is just as radical as Jesus’s
seemingly heartless demand.
So far, what the coal companies have done is assure that regulations
and changes are only brought about with the blood of the people in the
mines. Let those who are dead to the possibility of
justice-compassion bury the dead. For those who would assure the
future health, safety, and justice for the mining industry, don’t look
back. The workers must organize and stand together for fair wages
and working conditions; the regulators must ignore threats from
corporations and close down unsafe operations; state legislators must
stop worrying about being elected, and start passing laws that assure
federal regulations will be enforced; and the rest of the people in
West Virginia must demand world-class education, retraining, health
care, sustainable, meaningful work, and affordable housing for
everyone. Higher taxes and lower profits are far less expensive
than 29 lives.
Luke’s sequence begins with Herod, the oppressor and representative of
imperial Rome, who wondered who this Jesus was, and wanted to meet
him. Perhaps, as the story of the Upper Big Branch Mine continues
to unfold, the supporters of business as usual in West Virginia will
have that chance.
BLOG ARCHIVE