Untitled
close

The Exile of All Humanity

This is part two of our discussion on the theme of exile in the Bible.

Episode 2
43m
Feb 6, 2018
Play Episode
Show Notes
Transcript
Episodes

This is part two of our new podcast series prepping for our video release on the exile theme in the Bible. In part one (0:00-5:30), Jon and Tim recap their earlier conversation in the first episode. Tim explains that when the Hebrews returned from exile to Jerusalem under Persian rule, their empire and city was in shambles, but they kept clinging to this promise that God had given their ancestral father, Abraham.

In part two (5:30-18:10), Tim explains that the exile metaphor became a theme that runs through the entire Bible. The Hebrew Bible authors wrote Genesis believing that humanity has been exiled from the Garden of Eden and perfect unity with God. The Hebrews believed that their exile represented all humanity’s exile of heaven and earth being separated from each other.

Jon comments about how often times people feel displaced in life. Many people feel melancholic, knowing they should be at home here on earth, but often times wondering why life can be so hard and why humans make it harder with how they behave. Tim summarizes Walker Percy and says the fundamental mystery of the universe is why we feel so alone in the world.

Tim explains that the Bible states that the solution to both Israel’s exile problem and humanity’s exile problem is the same solution. A king who will come and deliver them and reunite heaven and earth for all.

In part three (18:10-end), Jon comments that this conversation is totally different than how he thought of it growing up. He recalls a book by Randy Alcorn, Heaven On Earth, and says that the point is not to magically escape the world to an ethereal heaven, but to work for and hope for a new heaven and a new earth.

Tim explains the oddity of the 1 Peter introduction. Peter chooses to address the people in the letter as “immigrants and exiles.” Peter chooses to identify Christians as exiles in a world that is waiting to be redeemed. Tim explains when a person becomes a Christian they shift their allegiance to the kingdom of God, not the earthly kingdom of Babylon. Tim says that words like “immigrant, and exile” and “citizens of heaven” becomes a type of code language that the Bible writers use to continue the metaphor and theme of the exile of humanity.

Tim and Jon recap the biblical idea of evil—a force that both rules the world and is somehow ingrained in human nature. The biblical hope is that Jesus has come and broken that power. Tim says that Jesus modeled for humans what it’s like to live in and build the kingdom of God on earth.

Thank you to all our supporters!

SHOW RESOURCES:

Lost in the Cosmos: The Last Self Help Book by Walker Percy.

Heaven by Randy Alcorn.

Link to Exile video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xSua9_WhQFE

SHOW MUSIC

Defender Instrumental by Rosasharn Music; Luvtea by Autumn Leaves; JGivens by 10 2 Get In

SHOW PRODUCED BY:

Dan Gummel. Jon Collins. Matthew Halbert-Howen.

Scripture References
Ezra 3-4
1 Peter 1:1-2
1 Peter 2:11-12
Philippians 3:20

Podcast Date: Feb 6, 2018

(43:37)

Speakers in the audio file:

Jon Collins

Tim Mackie

Woman


Jon: Hey, this is Jon at The Bible Project. Last week, we started a conversation on

the podcast about a biblical theme in the Bible, which we're calling the exile.

It's an event that has shaped the Bible that we know and read today. It's an

event that happened in 586 BC when the Babylonian Empire came and wiped

out Jerusalem and sent many of the Jewish people out of their homeland to

live as refugees in a foreign land.

We closed that episode talking about how the Jewish people while in exile

were desperately clinging to this promise that God had made their ancestor

Abraham. A promise that they would have their own homeland and be a

people in that land who would bless the whole world because of their special

relationship with the Creator God.

They've come so close with David and Saul in Moses, but it's failed over and

over again. So they've realized that in order for it to truly happen...

Tim: It's going have to be involved with new David, some kind of a new Moses,

David prophet deliver figure. It's going to have to involve all of the sin and

horrible evil and violence that our people have perpetrated. That's going to

have to be dealt with. The evil among the nations is going to have to be dealt

with as well. That's the tension that the Old Testament closes with.

Jon: As the prophets who were living in these exile camps, began to write down

their hopes and prophetic visions of who this new king would be, and how

this new king would deliver them, they began to tell a bigger story.

Tim: As the authors of the Bible go back to talk about the history of humanity that

Israel fits into of Genesis 1 through 11, now, the history of humanity is told as

a story from this land to exile. From Eden, Genesis 1 and 2 to exile in Babylon,

Genesis 11.

Jon: Today on the podcast, we talked about how the biblical authors think that

everyone's story is really a story about exile. Thanks for joining us. Here we

go.

[00:02:22]

Jon: When you say exile, you're typically referring to the one very traumatic event

where the Jerusalem was taken over by Babylon in 580 something.

Tim: Correct.

Jon: That was actually like the third invasion but it was the big one where they just

took it down. But in the north, they had an exile a couple hundred years

earlier from a different world empire before Babylon. And so that's pretty part

of the exile story as far as Israel as a whole is concerned.

Then this identity as an exile continues even as they come back to the land,

because they're still under occupation of it yet, the third empire—

Tim: And there are many Israelites now scattered all over the ancient world, who

are still in exile.

Jon: And somehow they've regained this ethnic identity and they're also

solidifying the story of who they are and why they're not just any ethnic

group in this part of the world. They have been called by the one true God of

all creation to be a group that's going to bring blessing to the whole world.

Tim: To be the vehicle of God redeeming and rescuing all nations and all creation.

That's the tension that the Old Testament closes with.

Jon: How's is it going to happen?

Tim: Well, it's going to have to be involved with new David. Some kind of a new

Moses, David prophet deliver figure. It's going to have to involve all of the sin

and horrible evil and violence that our people have perpetrated. That's going

to have to be dealt with and done away with. The evil among the nations is

going to have to be dealt with as well.

Jon: When this happens, our identity as exiles will be over and we will now be

citizens of the true home - The kingdom of God.

Tim: Because the Jerusalem they returned back to isn't the Jerusalem of the

Golden Era. Under Zerubbabel, in the book of Ezra chapters 3 and 4, when

they rebuild the temple after they've been away in Babylon, they come back.

The first wave comes back, and they build the temple. It says that some

people were celebrating. It said, in those elders who had seen—

Jon: They've seen Solomon's temple?

Tim: They saw Solomon's temple and they lived through it and got back here. And

it says, there crying because it's nothing like what they thought it was going

to be.

Jon: Oh, man. Can you imagine Solomon built an awesome, awesome empire?

Tim: Yeah, that's right. And the second temple.

Jon: It must have been impressive.

Tim: It must have been. Then you get the same—

Jon: He didn't build an empire. He built an awesome temple, but also just a city.

Tim: Yes.

[00:05:56]

Tim: That's Israel's story. We started with Abraham, Genesis 12 all the way through

to some people coming back from exile, but much of Israel still in exile. What

happens is, as the authors of the Bible go back to talk about the history of

humanity that Israel fits into - that's Genesis 1 through 11 - now, the history

of humanity is told as a story from promised land to exile. From Eden,

Genesis 1 and 2 to exile in Babylon, Genesis 11.

That experience, the narrative of Israel, being in the land getting taken into

exile becomes the framework for which they tell the story of all humanity.

Genesis 11 now in the order that you read it in the Bible becomes this

foreshadowing. All humanity is in Babylon, so to speak figuratively in Genesis

1 to 11, just like Israel is an exile.

So when Jesus comes on to the scene, and then the apostles are sent out to

the nation's, they view the Jesus movement as a movement of exiles going

out to a world that is in exile from its true home. This becomes a rich

metaphor to talk about.

Jon: I got to make sure I really...that's a lot.

Tim: It is a lot. You tell me what you just heard.

Jon: Okay.

Tim: You do a better job of summarizing.

Jon: This identity of being in exile and shaping their story as a people who began

as sojourners, built—

Tim: A family sojourned out of Babylon, Abraham, comes into this land—

Jon: Comes into this land, we build this great place, and then were taken out

traumatic and now we're trying to rebuild. That's our story. Now, that's their

story of one people group.

Tim: And we're waiting for the full return from exile. And the time when this place

will be so transformed, Jerusalem becomes our golden era promise.

Jon: Everything God had promise and everything you could hope for as a human.

Tim: Yeah. Whether you return from Babylon or didn't, we're still waiting for that

golden era.

Jon: For them, it wouldn't be some getting zapped out to some other reality.

Tim: The point is; it's not about going away somewhere. It's about this place.

Jon: When they say the kingdom of God, they want that reality of God ruling

through them.

Tim: That's right. You're getting it. This place that ought to feel like home to us

doesn't feel like home and it doesn't operate like home ought to operate as it

did in the days of David and Solomon.

Jon: So now as this people group wants to tell the story of all humanity, of

everyone's story, the way they do it is using the same idea. The same motif.

Tim: Or the same narrative arc for promised land to exile.

Jon: Which is, "Hey, all humanity had a home. It was great. It was as great as

Solomon's time essentially. If you can just make it..." I'm sure Solomon's time

had its problems. But just that that golden era of humanity.

Tim: Of heaven and earth united, God and human abundance God's peace and

safety...

Jon: It's this ancient garden temple beautiful moment in human history. And

something happened. It wasn't Babylon coming in. It was some mysterious

evil that came in.

Tim: The humans embraced.

Jon: Embraced and decided to ally with, which then exiled them, banished them.

Tim: Results in humanities exile?

Jon: Yeah, results in the exile.

Tim: Then the narrative arc, exile lands of them from their true home eventually

leading to Babylon in Genesis 1.

Jon: So Babylon becomes this linchpin image.

Tim: Yeah. That's humanity story.

Jon: So that's all humanity story. I'm just trying to let that sink in really quick. All

humanity story. The story of the human condition is that we are displaced in

our home.

Tim: We're earthlings.

Jon: We're earthlings. Like there's a remnant of a garden paradise but it's broken.

Tim: It's like imagine John Newton coming back to London all those years later.

After all those life experiences, you would never experience your home as the

same. And I imagine it was probably as dirty as it was when he grew up there

or something. But the point is, is that his view of his homeland is utterly

changed.

Then John Newton writes a poem that now humans all over the world can

sing and his experience becomes a way of talking about all humanity's

experience. His blindness and his dangerous toils and snares become mine

and every other human's dangerous toils and snares.

Jon: What's interesting is, in Israel story, they're hoping for new David, a new

Moses, this new kingdom, and blessing. That's their kind of salvation. But

then what about all humanity who was banished from the garden? What are

they waiting for?

Well, they're waiting, in the story, this kind of cryptic snake crusher savior

character who's the offspring of the woman? And that's kind of all you get for

the hope of humanity in Genesis 1 through 11, right?

Tim: Yeah. Then the promised Abraham.

Jon: But that's Genesis 12?

Tim: Correct.

Jon: That's the beginning of Israel story.

Tim: But in the logic of the biblical narrative, this is how it works. Historically, it's

Israelite authors who went through the exile who go back and then frame

humanity stories this way. But then as a reader of the Bible, I'm not reading it

in that order. I started page 1 on Genesis 12 - Israel story.

I begin with the story about all humanity here in the world but exiled from

the true home which is this world the way it ought to be. My only hope is for

a descendant, a human who will come to do away with evil. Because we're

sitting here languishing in Babylon, Genesis 3 to 11.

Then out of Babylon, however, God brought a human family of Abraham.

Through him, he's going to bring that deliver to bring that blessing to the

world. Then that becomes the thread uniting the Israel story.

We've used the Russian nesting dolls - dolls within dolls. It's like the outer

doll is all humanity and exile you open it and then there's this whole story

about Israel's being brought out of Babylon into the land and given another

chance, so to speak. And they blow it too.

And so now we've got two problems to solve. We need to solve the Israel's

exile problem which will be the way of solving humanity's exile in Babylon

problem. This all hooks back to that passage that you alluded to when we

started this conversation, which is Bible verses in the New Testament that talk

about Christians being sojourners in exile.

Jon: That's what I wanted to get back to because you did that whole three step

thing. Israel's identities exiles, then saying, well, that's all of humanity's actual

identity, not just ours. The solution that's going to come through us. The seed

comes through our family. The offspring of the woman, the snake crusher—

Tim: That will rescue humanity from exile.

Jon: That's actually coming through our genealogy.

Tim: Coming through the Israelite family.

Jon: And then will bless the whole world and then now we're in the time of Jesus

and the apostles. You said - and this is where I want to make sure was

landing for me - that now it's no longer the hope has come through Israel

that snake crushing king has arrived. Now let's bring it all humanity that

solution because not only is Israel exiles, everyone's exiles. All humanity.

That's the story.

Tim: Yes. This world is our home - we're earthlings - but yet at the same time, we

experience this disconnect from the world as our home. We're both at home

within it, but also feel like strangers.

Jon: That's such a weird existential experience of feeling like a foreigner in this

reality, but this is the only reality we have. But it's like it feels like home, it

feels like I breathe oxygen, I enjoy sunsets, I eat food, what else would I want?

But at the same time, there's just so many questions like, why am I here and

why am I experiencing these desires that I have and why are these conflicts

arising that I can't solve? There are too many questions. I don't actually feel at

home in my body even though all I am is a body.

Tim: All are welcome in the universe. This is the author, Walker Percy. I just read

this many years ago. He wrote, "Lost in the Cosmos: The Last Self-Help Book."

He's kind of making a mockery of the 90s self-help movement.

The opening part of the book, he paints a picture of human technological

process. This was in the 90s. He's painting the version of TV and telephones

and air travel. It's incredible. And science and chemistry. Then it all goes to

this movement, but there's still one last frontier is the thing between our ears.

Then he goes into this crisis mode of just saying, "The fundamental mystery

of the universe is why we feel so alone and alienated from our own bodies,

from our communities, from our families, and from the universe. This is

supposed to be our home. So why is it so unstable? And why is life so

dangerous here and so hostile? And we have this little reprieve on the space

rock."

Jon: Why is it so difficult to be happy? Why do I keep screwing up things that I

shouldn't be screwing up? What's going on?

Tim: Yeah. "So this place our home or not?" And kind of like, well, I think the

human experiences yes and no. Like the world seems a very unwelcome place

to humans sometimes, and human creates very unwelcome environments for

each other, but yet we still have a sense that this ought to be our home.

[00:18:13]

Tim: It was so funny the way we're talking about this is the exact opposite of the

way I talked about it growing up, which is this is not our home. We need a

completely different reality, and it's this fuzzy, not corporeal. Is that the word?

It's disembodied.

I remember when Randy Alcorn came out with his book on heaven in the

early 2000s, that was pretty big for an evangelical to say, "Hey, guys, we're

not thinking about heaven correctly, or biblically. Heaven is a new earth."

Tim: Yeah, new creation.

Jon: I remember when he actually came to Multnomah.

Tim: I remember that, too.

Jon: He talked on it and it blew my mind. And all of a sudden, I was like, "Oh." It

was so exciting to think about, "Oh, yeah, in the new creation, I might be able

to snowboard."

Tim: All your growing up images of having to leave behind everything you—

Jon: Just some fuzzy, cloudy...

Tim: Yeah, sure.

Jon: So thinking about it from the terms of being an alien or a sojourner and I

need to be in some other reality, the way we're talking about it is, you're

already in the Alcorn...you already get it and you're like, "Yeah, this is my

home of course."

Tim: This ought to be my home.

Jon: "This ought to be my home. Oh, this is my home. What else do I have? I'm a

body and I'm a human, there's no other habitat in the universe where I can

exist, and it's finely tuned for my existence." And so you start there, like, this

is home. But then the question is, why doesn't it feel like home? It's noticing

that that's the exact opposite tact of how I usually think about it. But it seems

like that's the more natural and biblical [inaudible 00:20:19].

Tim: The narrative doesn't end with the Israelites staying in Babylon. They come

back to Jerusalem, and they are in the land that should be their home, but

they don't experience it as home. That's Ezra, Nehemiah. Then all the way

through to the time of Jesus.

That's why when John the Baptist launched his movement, all the gospel

authors say, John the Baptist was this great fulfillment of the prophet Isaiah.

And they quote from Isaiah 40. And what is it? It's a promise about returning

from exile prepare a highway for the Lord back to the promised land. But

they're using this language of returning from Babylon to describe their

current existence back in the land. They're not in Babylon, they're back in

their land.

Even the language of returning from exile becomes a metaphor for the

restoration - new creation. This place that ought to be my home will be so

transformed that it becomes my home. This is what? Here we go. I wonder if

this is the hook for the video then.

In the letter 1 Peter, you have a Messianic Jewish apostle of Jesus. Peter, he's

an apostle but he's Jewish. He grew up in Galilee—

Jon: The rock.

Tim: The rock.

Jon: Not the Rock, Dwayne Johnson.

Tim: Yes. Not Baywatch Rock. Different rock – Peter, Petros. So you have Peter.

He's same and commissioned by the risen Messiah, Jesus, king of the world.

He writes to all these communities of Jesus. They're full of mostly non-

Israelites, non-Jewish people. He opens the letter of 1 Peter with, "Peter, an

apostle of Jesus the Messiah, to those who live as immigrants exiled

throughout Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, all these cities in modern-day

Turkey, who were chosen by God's for knowledge, sanctified by the Spirit,

sprinkled by the blood of Jesus, grace and peace to. He's talking to these

people who live in their home.

Jon: They're not really immigrants.

Tim: No.

Jon: This is where they live.

Tim: This is their home. I get a letter...I mean, just think.

Jon: I get a letter from my grandma.

Tim: You're your Bethania, you're Greek, you grew up in Pontu, it's your home. But

you've given your allegiance to Jesus, the Jewish Messiah. And you think he's

the king of the world and he's coming back to bring new creation, and Peter

writes a letter to your church community and he says, "Greetings, exiles,

people who are exiled in Pontus."

Jon: You're like, "No, this is where I'm from."

Tim: You're like, "I live here. I was born down the street."

Jon: "I'm not an exile. He must not be talking about me."

Tim: Another time in the letter, he's going to repeat it. He's going to say, "Hey,

beloved friends, I urge you as immigrants and exiles to not live like the non-

Jewish people." "Don't live like the Gentiles," he says in 1 Peter chapter 2. And

you're like, "Well, I am a Gentile and I'm not exile." You can see the point here

is that becoming a Christian means—

Jon: Losing your identity.

Tim: Means calling into question my identity that the world as I now experience it

doesn't define my identity or my destiny. It's my home, but it's not my home.

In the sense of what I know this world is truly made for and what I'm made

for and what I'm waiting for.

Jon: It's identifying something you already feel, which is, "Something's wrong. I'm

waiting for something better." But what it's doing is it's saying there's actually

an allegiance shift that needs to happen because you're not just waiting for

the world to figure it out, whoever's in charge right now. You're waiting for a

king who's not of this world." Well, I mean, I don't know how you'd want to

describe it. But you're waiting for a kind of a new allegiance.

Tim: It's King Jesus, who is the human who broke through the veil and he became

what we are all made for, and destined to become. He's the one who will

recreate our homeland to be what it is truly designed to be. In the meantime,

I live in my home with the mindset of a temporary resident. Again, this

language is so leaded.

The whole point is that my home, therefore, is in heaven. The point of saying

"I'm an exile" is to say, this world as I experience it doesn't define my whole

identity.

Jon: I think what was helpful was when you said that the Judeans were living in

Jerusalem. They're in their home now, but they still considered themselves

exiles.

Tim: They're back in Jerusalem, but they continue using the language of exile.

Jon: What do they mean? They mean that even though I'm here, where home is

there's something wrong and something incomplete, something that needs

to come still and something needs to be transformed. Until that happens, I

still have the identity of as an exile.

To the same degree, me living in Portland, a city I was born in the northwest

where I grew up, living in a home where my family, my kids have grown up,

this is home, but it's not exactly what it needs to be.

Tim: But I'm also still experiencing it as something of a stranger. I'm estranged

from this world as much as I am at home within it.

Jon: But it doesn't mean that I'm waiting to go to another city.

Tim: No. I'm waiting for this city to become permeated with the kingdom of God.

Heaven and earth reunited.

Jon: And so, in that way, someone can say, "Hey, John, you're in exile and I'd be

like, "Yeah, I know what you mean."

Tim: That's right. It truly has this becomes like code language because you have to

know the story to know what it means that Christians call each other exiles.

What we're waiting for isn't to be shipped out. What we're waiting for is this

world that is our home but that doesn't work like it ought to if it were truly

home. We're waiting for the restoration of this to become the home it's

supposed to be.

Again, this is why all the language about heaven, this is why Paul says, "My

citizenship is in heaven, and from there we await a savior." This is in

Philippians chapter 3. "Our citizenship is in heaven and we await from there a

savior who will come here to bring about transformation, a new creation."

The point is that we're exiles here and here will become our true home when

King Jesus—

Jon: What's he referring to there when he says heaven?

Tim: He's talking about the exalted place of Jesus as the king of the world. We're

back to the heaven language as a way of talking about God's high enthroned

vantage point over the world. God's in heaven as King overall and Jesus was

exalted to heaven. So I wondered if a hook for the video is Peter a Jewish

missionary writing to non-Jewish people saying, 'Hey, exiles?" "What?"

Jon: Yeah, that's strange.

Tim: "Hey, I urge you as exiles, don't live like the Gentiles." "What?" "I am a Gentile

and I'm not an exile." Then the last paragraph is "Oh, yeah, the one who's in

Babylon chosen together with you, the church in Babylon sends its greetings."

And you're like, "What? Babylon hasn't existed for half a millennium.

Jon: "I see what you're doing here."

Tim: So the whole world is in exile in Babylon.

Jon: We're all in Babylon.

Tim: But Peters view as a Christian the whole world is an exile still in Babylon.

Jon: It's kind of Babylon becomes a word to describe the reality, which is, this is

my home, but it's not my home.

Tim: Yeah. It's the corporate human condition of systematic sin and justice, broken

systems, broken corporate life. You can be born in Pontus or Portland, and to

be a Christian is to actually foster this view that I love it here but I shouldn't

mistake it for home.

Because imagine Portland, which is my home, permeated with the life and

love of the kingdom of God completely and every neighbor loving their

neighbors themselves. That would be very different Portland than the one I

live in. But I shouldn't mistake even a great Portland for the kingdom of God

Portland. And so I live here fostering this ambiguous relationship.

Jon: It's not just the city. It's the street I live on and it's also a couple thousand

square feet that's my house. That has to also be transformed.

Tim: Or the one square foot that is my brain.

Jon: You have a square foot brain?

Tim: I guess eight by eight inches. I don't know. Whatever dimensions a human

brain are. You get what I'm saying?

Jon: Totally.

Tim: Just my own heart and mind, my own thought and impulses and inclinations,

I'm exile in my own body.

Jon: I'm an exile in my own body.

Tim: This is Paul's vision of the human problem in Romans 7. He retells the human

experience as the story of Adam and as the story of Israel as "I want to do the

right thing, but somehow my body driven by these sinful impulses and I do

the thing I don't want to do. I'm exiled. This body is good. But it also is a

problem at the same time."

Jon: I'm an exile in my own body.

Tim: Just that phrase right there "I'm a stranger in my own skin" captures the

existential experience of millions of human beings. The stranger in my own

body.

Jon: And this is what Paul's getting at in Romans 7?

Tim: Yeah. My truest identity is as the image of God human living in the love and

power of God to love Him and love my neighbor. Imagine my true home is a

world that operates that way.

Jon: That's another place to start as a hook is a stranger in your own body.

Tim: That's true. That's interesting.

Jon: For a modern Western audience, that's a really good place to start.

Tim: Which is about audience of our videos. Which is us. That's interesting. That

could be more...yeah.

Jon: And then you can go to Peter.

Tim: That's the big umbrella is this is why now you can see it permeates the whole

story from the Garden of Eden to exile out ending up in Babylon, to Israel

story, out of Babylon exile, back to Babylon, back into the promised land, but

still waiting.

Jon: That's interesting is when they are waiting in Jerusalem, consider themselves

exiles, they're awaiting a king. Then in the New Testament, in the gospels, we

learned that Jesus is this king. It's not the way that we had anticipated it, but

it's the way we need it.

But then Jesus leaves and now we're awaiting the king again. So something

has changed, something has inaugurated is the word that theologians like to

use, but we're in a very similar position as Israelites rebuilding Jerusalem

awaiting the king.

Tim: That's right.

Jon: That's what Peter says. Or is it Paul? Where we're awaiting the king to come?

Tim: Yes. In Philippians 3.

Jon: Philippians?

Tim: That's right.

Jon: So Paul.

Tim: That's why Peter will write to these church communities saying, "Yeah, we're

an exiled, we're waiting the return of the King." The posture and the setting

of the exiles return and scratching out of life in Jerusalem forming the Bible

to retell the story of how we got here, how all humanity got here and what

hope is there, one of those main things was the problem of our broken

relationship to God, because we ended up in exile because of human evil and

sin. Stage one of the Jesus story dealt with that part.

Jon: Dealt with the power of evil.

Tim: That's right. And dealing with human sin and evil and both covering for it and

giving way to heal the covenant relationship. Covenant relationship's been

healed through Jesus stage one. Jesus stage two is the full transformation of

our home back into our true homeland.

Again, this exile and stranger language is a way of actually thinking about the

whole story of the Bible. And it's a different narrative arc that we've traced so

far because Jesus is a really important piece of it but it it's broader and it's

really taking seriously this Old Testament narrative arc of exile as the location

of all humanity awaiting of the healing and transformation of the world.

Jon: I want to dig into that more about the evil. We talked about how in Genesis 1

through 11, that's the story of all humanity becoming exiles. What happens

there is we've got a snake, this mysterious creature who's crafty and temps

Adam and Eve to not trust God and to kind of go out on their own.

You get this passage in Genesis 4 talking about sin crouching, ready to

devour you and have its way with you, and that's your enemy and don't let it

overtake you. So you just start getting this idea of this evil that we're dealing

with, it's very...other than us, but then somehow becomes like intimately tired

with us. And the enemy within that's having its way with us. That is the roots.

But then what happens is, human civilizations grow, and the thing that we

feel like we're dealing with is that bad dude over there with the sword and

the power. Like, that's the evil I need to be saved from.

Tim: Yes, yeah.

Jon: Pharaoh, Lamech, and then Babylon and Persia and Rome, that becomes the

real obvious bad guy. But when Jesus comes, he says, "No, the real bad guy..."

Tim: "The real thing driving Babylon, the real enemy that has exiled humanity, and

the real king of this exiled world is a being or force with evil." Which is

described by a variety of titles and images in the Bible.

Jon: The Satan, the serpent, the dragon.

Tim: The sin or the flesh like in Paul's writings.

Jon: So Jesus comes and says, "That's the problem I'm going to deal with."

Tim: That's the enemy.

Jon: That's the enemy. And so while you're preoccupied with that Roman occupier,

I'm not. I'm more interested in this deeper, more real problem. And because

of that, then it's easier for me to forgive people and forgive the soldier that's

killing me because I'm actually at [unintelligible 00:37:10] for the thing that's

actually causing him to be in this position in the first place. And so then Jesus

deals with that - with his death and resurrection. He tramples over it.

Tim: Yeah, here's the day of the Lord video.

Jon: It's day of the Lord. But then he's leaves and he says, "Hey, how about it now

with my spirit."

Tim: He leaves in one sense so that he can come back through the spirit so that he

cannot be bound to one spatial location.

Jon: And evil still exist.

Tim: That's right.

Jon: It's not like now evil is gone. The key to evil has been—

Tim: That's correct. Which is why they're still used to using the Babylon exile

language, I think. To be exiled in Babylon is to live in the world that ought to

be the kingdom of God, but is still under-occupying.

Jon: This is probably why Paul says, "Our battle is not against flesh and blood but

it's spiritual."

Tim: That's right. Totally. This is what he's turning into. That's exactly right. And it's

what John, the author of the revelation is tuning into by calling Rome or the

world powers of the distant future. Whatever review on revelation is, that

kingdom that represents broken, distorted human kingdom is called Babylon,

among other names in the book of Revelation. Which is itself generated and

motivated by just both human evil and spiritual evil.

Jon: As a 21st century modern Westerner who follows Jesus, it seems like it's

saying, "I identify with this problem of being an exile in my own body, but

also my city, and my home and even..." I mean, we live kind of, in a global

world now, so this whole world, the entire world system, I could travel

basically anywhere in the world.

Even though this is my planet, the pale blue dot, there's something horribly

amiss, and dangerously so. Then embracing that and saying, "The problem is

some dark evil force that I have become complicit with and so has everyone

and so as the whole system..."

Tim: It's taken us captive.

Jon: "...I believe there was a man from the first century, who was a Jewish man,

who lived in the century under Roman occupation, who identified that

problem and said, 'that's the real problem,' and somehow fought and won a

battle against it through his death and resurrection from the dead. And that

he was not just a human. He had broken through the veil. I like how you said

that. Like, he was the true human, he was God incarnate."

Tim: He was the creator, become the human on our behalf.

Jon: And that's only reason why he could do it.

Tim: Yeah. That we are all made to be...

[crosstalk 00:40:40]

Tim: And that's why he could fight against that on our behalf. Now my belief as a

21st-century global citizen is my identity needs to be first and foremost

saying, "Yeah, that's my allegiance to that guy. And the way he defeated did

evil is going to be the way that it's defeated within me. His vision for the

world needs to become my vision for the world. And I'm going to fight for

that while I'm here. I'm going to try to build the kingdom of God and seek

the kingdom of God."

Tim: Within the exile narrative, it's that he came and he showed us what it would

look like if we all lived here as if it were our true home. If we were to live and

treat each other as not exiles but full citizens in the kingdom of God, what

would that look like? Well, it would look like the Sermon on the Mount or

Luke's Sermon on the Plain - Luke chapter 6. It's funny that the material in the

Sermon on the Mount in Matthew it's in the blender and rearranged and

given on a plain.

Jon: In a different elevation.

Tim: Yeah, totally. But it's funny that in Matthew it's on high mountain and in Luke,

it's on the plain. Anyway, it looks like that. The teachings of Jesus.

Jon: And the actions of Jesus. Like the way he brings people—

Tim: That's right. And his teachings were an expression of how he was living. That's

right. Up to this point, we've stayed really global. There's merit to going

through moments in the actual biblical story to kind of walk the sequence

through because it's really interesting. We've done it from a high view. I think

we could do it fairly quickly.

Jon: Okay.

Tim: Knowing how we do quickly. Do you want to transition that?

Woman: [foreign language 00:42:45]. We believe the Bible is a unified story that leads us

to Jesus. We are a crowdfunded project by people like me. Find free videos,

study notes, and more at thebibleproject.com.

Play Episode
For advanced bible reading tools:
Login  or  Join
Which language would you like?