Today we have a beautiful guest-reflection from Matthew Fox.
The Hebrew Scriptures speak of royal personhood being a sign of the messianic times. For example, Psalm 2 sings:
“You are my son, today I have begotten you.”
Psalm 110 also celebrates this passing on of the divine, royal kingship. In Israel, the king is responsible above all for justice and therefore survival of the community.
Christians believe that such a royal person occurred in the person of Jesus who is with the people and calls for both love and justice. Above all, he calls people to the kingdom/queendom of God; that is, Jesus invites all peoples to be royal persons. He calls them to their dignity as images of God—a theology of human dignity and royal personhood.
The Yahwist author and Jesus call people to two things in reminding them of their royal personhood:
First, their dignity.
Next, their responsibility.
A royal person has dignity, a nobility, that proves a starting point for their release from captivity. By reclining with them at table Jesus made the dispossessed feel “clean and acceptable,” in God’s eyes. As Albert Nolan observes, Jesus offers the poor “the full recognition of their dignity as human beings,” and it is by this power that the poor become empowered. “He gave them a sense of dignity and released them from their captivity.” The Good News that Jesus brings is News that all are considered royal persons by God, all have rights, all have divine dignity. He is sensitive to the pain that the oppressed undergo but insists that no one can rob them of their divine and royal dignity.
All of Jesus’ teaching on the kingdom represents a crescendo in the Jewish teaching of royal personhood. This teaching includes the assurance that Yahweh would make the anawim (those without a voice) a royal people.
But with the dignity of all persons—who are all royal persons—comes responsibility: The responsibility for justice-making and preserving creation. On the part of the poor, this means being actively involved in asserting one’s dignity and therefore one’s rights, and of letting go of internalized oppression created by negative self-images that others may have handed on. On the part of those who are comfortable, this means letting go of privilege and siding with the afflicted. This challenge of Jesus is put forth in many parts of the gospels.
Queries for Contemplation
In prayerful meditation, sit with the following questions: what are the insights that they open within you?
- Have you had issues with ‘self-esteem’? How might knowing you are of ‘royal personhood’ assist your healing?
- How is your nobility or royal personhood inspiring you to contribute to the struggles for ecological, gender, racial, economic justice today?
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