I often like to remind people that, when reading the gospel stories about Jesus, it’s important to wonder about who’s telling the story and why the story’s being told.
While there are stories common to all the gospels, particularly Matthew, Mark and Luke, there are some that aren’t. In addition, those that are may be basically similar, but have unique details and offer a different perspective. Every storyteller tells a story their way and I think it’s important to consider why.
That being said, I also think it’s important to consider what’s not in the story. I know I have no proof of this, and I wasn’t there, but I often think that there’s a lot missing in the gospels.
Like, did Jesus just mostly preach the way we do, talking at people who sit quietly and listen, or was his style more interactive? I’ve often thought it would be great if someone interrupted a sermon, either to ask a question or challenge something I said, so that we could have a conversation about it. I wonder if that happened to Jesus.
Did Jesus only ever say any of these things once or did he repeat them? If I heard Jesus speak in one town and followed him to the next, would I hear the same message or would it be a new one, in which case I would definitely need to follow him everywhere to hear everything. Let me check my schedule.
What about at night or a day off, when he was off the clock. Did Jesus have nothing to say or did he share some things with his closest friends around the camp fire that we’re missing out on? I know that we don’t always say things everyone needs to hear, but I wonder if we might be missing something.
Okay, some of that might seem frivolous (and I do have more), but most importantly, I wonder about those stories where Jesus meets someone and heals them, changing their life, and moves on. It all seems to happen so fast, as if Jesus already knew all about them. He fixes them and they move on, never to be heard from again. It just seems like the point of that character is to demonstrate the power of Jesus as the son of God and that’s - ah, I get it.
But. What if the real power of Jesus isn’t to show us what Jesus can do that we can’t, but to show us that we, too, are capable of these acts of love, kindness, compassion and grace? What if Jesus was trying to show us the power of empathy, that, in opening our hearts to others, we find relationship and connection that helps all of us thrive. What if Jesus was all about sharing the power with each other, not having power over others.
I wonder if Jesus could see when someone was hurting, broken or disconnected from the world, in body, mind or spirit, and then he would sit with them and say “tell me your story.” And he’d listen, really listen. That’s where the healing would begin. That’s where the sense of “being seen” would begin. That’s where they’d begin to feel part of the wholeness of creation again. That’s a much longer story than a few verses of scripture.
Empathy’s not a weakness. It’s what we’re missing most right now. I think it was the source of Jesus’ ability to heal and connect and bring people to reconciliation and then to wholeness. We need that.