Identifying with the Oppressed: The Power of Faith

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1. "Jesus, whenever he would talk about himself, whenever he would tell the disciples who he was and what he was about, he would pull from scripture. Except he would not pull from scripture those characters who were known as strong or powerful or good looking or any of those kind of things. Jesus would quote from there's about three sections in the book of Isaiah that talk about a character called the suffering servant. When Jesus would describe himself he would pull passages from the suffering servant's passages of Isaiah." [41:04] (49 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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2. "His purpose was to suffer even to the point of death on the cross. His purpose was to relent to the systemic violence of the Roman government. And then to defeat even that through the resurrection. You know the story of the cross is gruesome. It's heavy. full of sorrow. It's full of mourning. All of that stuff that we don't like to deal with. Frankly. We don't like to think about it. But in some way we have to as people of faith find a way to own it. To make it personal for ourselves." [44:17] (58 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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3. "We have to own the crucifixion so that we can celebrate in the light of the resurrection. I love this image. Because it helps us to put ourselves at the foot of the cross. That's the appropriate kind of response for us. It doesn't feel good to mourn. We want to sing shout acclamations of joy. There's a time for that. There's a place for that. But we have to own the crucifixion. We have to make that part of our lives." [45:44] (45 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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4. "We have to recognize that we're broken before we can celebrate the defeat of that brokenness which is the resurrection. Which is our task as Christians and when we can get there then we can face a world where the Holocaust is real. Where civil rights had to be fought for with lives where all kinds of brokenness exists and people are crushed. If we want to speak good news into that world we have to own the crucifixion ourselves." [47:02] (44 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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5. "Cone would say because of the suffering that the African American people knew, that they become, through that suffering, through that oppression, they become closer to Christ. That Christ identified with them. He would say for those people in that time, God was black. And would walk with them. In that time of oppression. And then when they can look forward to the time of resurrection and know that their own liberation was coming." [39:43] (35 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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6. "The theme of Cone in this book is that the central kernel, the very identity of the gospels is wrapped up in Jesus' identification with the poor and the oppressed. And as Jesus is wrapped up in that systemic oppression that happened in the occupied Israel as Rome ultimately oppressed Jesus and other Jewish people of the time, Cone said this was a time when Jesus would identify with those who were being oppressed, those who were living in poverty, those who were living under the thumb of foreign rule." [38:30] (50 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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7. "We have to see how we have been oppressed. How we have joined with a broken world as it has sinned the best sins it could ever think of. We have to make our place there so that then we can receive the grace the unmitigated grace and the good news that is the resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ." [46:24] (27 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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8. "When Jesus talked about himself he spoke about himself as the suffering servant. As the one who would come not to rule with a mighty hand but suffer with the oppressed. And to share grace with those who are hurting in maybe the most catastrophic situation that we could ever kind of conceive of. This is the way that Jesus worked. He was the Messiah the one who would come but he did not quote and nobody before Jesus quoted the suffering servant as a description of who the Messiah would be." [42:58] (47 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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