
Jesus traveled around in his nation with a good news (gospel), and his messengers (apostles) traveled to the ends of the world as known to them to spread this news farther. What exactly was this news? Is this news still good and relevant in the modern world?
Jesus proclaimed the good news of the Kingdom of God. Comparing his own world with the ideal world of the Kingdom of God, Jesus found it wanting. People were in slavery in their own land. The fruit of their hard labor was squeezed out of them by the foreign rulers as well as by their local political and religious authorities. They were even brainwashed to believe that they were worthless sinners. Human beings as such were not of any value. Transforming such a world of oppression to a world of freedom was the task that Jesus undertook. The first step was to clear the minds of the oppressed people from centuries of brainwashing, for where the mind is in slavery, there can’t be any freedom. That is why he traveled around the nation and sent his messengers around with the good news of freedom. Finally, Jesus inaugurated a nonviolent struggle on behalf of the oppressed majority in his land by materializing in himself the mythical figure of the nonviolent messiah, on whom people had pinned all hopes of freedom. As predicted by Jesus in the parable of the mustard seed and yeast, the powerful movement he began spread throughout the empire. Although Jesus proclaimed a good news of freedom, he clothed it within the heart-capturing myth of the Kingdom of God; where God rules, people would be free from all oppression, and they would have the freedom to live and grow to their maximum potential.
Jesus’ apostles continued to proclaim the good news of the Kingdom of God with a special emphasis on what was accomplished by Jesus. Jesus represented the best of their tradition, and he did what the best and the most responsible person would do in that historical context. His personality and his action shook the conscience and the imagination of a civilization. Their philosophers, storytellers, and poets sought to interpret his life in diverse ways to find meaning to their existence. As a result, the good news of freedom they proclaimed to their generation was about Jesus. The very fact that such a human being existed became the good news for some, for he could be made a role model for a civilization. Jesus became the very personification of freedom for them.
In Jesus’ world, most of the people have been robbed off of their self esteem by the few people who claimed to be righteous. This majority were called unrighteous or sinners by the minority who called themselves righteous. The few who claimed to be righteous claimed so based on their strict observance of rituals; they didn’t care much for the ethical rules, which dealt with relationships. This could be rightly called a religious oppression. Jesus emphasized ethical rules and marginalized rituals by creating the category of God’s righteousness. Accordingly, those who care to keep the relationship with God and with fellow beings are righteous in God’s eyes. Paul expounded this idea further in his letter to Romans, where the good news is about God’s righteousness. The good news of God’s righteousness proclaimed freedom from religious oppression to the so-called sinners and unrighteous.
As Christianity slowly emerged as a new community independent of Judaism, Paul called it the new Israel with Jesus as the new Moses. A covenant (agreement) was made between God and Israel at Mount Sinai with the mediation of Moses. If the people are fully obedient to God, they will be righteous in God’s eyes-- that was the covenant. The contract was signed in blood by sprinkling the blood of oxen on the altar and on the people, which implies that neither party would break the terms of the agreement even if they had to shed their own blood (Ex. 19-24). Israel originated with this historic event. Paul relates this to the origin of the Christian Church, the new Israel. A new covenant was signed between God and the people with Jesus as the mediator. Jesus was not only the mediator but also the sacrificial lamb. Thus the new covenant was signed and the new Israel was born at Jesus’ crucifixion. If people have faith in God, they will be righteous in God’s eyes—that is the new covenant.
In the same way, after supper he took the cup, saying, "This cup is the new covenant in my blood; do this, whenever you drink it, in remembrance of me." I Cor 11:25
For this reason Christ is the mediator of a new covenant. Heb 9:15
The old covenant asked people to be obedient to God, but the new one asked to have faith in God. Despite the apparent contradiction, the new covenant does not negate the old one; it merely offers a means to that end. Faith is a friendly trust, and it leads someone to surrender one’s will just as the prodigal son does. Although he is a son, he surrenders himself to his father willing to be a slave.
But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law…… through faith in Jesus Christ for all who believe. Rom 3:21-22. Paul further says: Do we then make void the law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish the law. Rom 3:31.
With such a meaning attached to Jesus’ crucifixion, the good news was named the message of the cross.
For the message of the cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us who are saved it is the power of God….. But we preach Christ crucified, unto the Jews a stumbling block, and unto the Greeks foolishness. I Cor 1:18, 23.
Under the old covenant, people felt like slaves to God because they were forced to obey God against their will. The new covenant cleared this misunderstanding so that people don’t need to feel like slaves anymore, but children. Their obedience to God comes willingly out of their love.
Conclusion
The real content of the Christian good news is freedom. Humanity needs to live and grow in freedom, and nothing should hinder the natural growth of humanity to its full potential. Based on a specific historical context, the form of this good news may vary, but its content has to remain the same. This news remains good and relevant to anyone or any people who are in need of freedom. Our world is very much in need of this good news because humanity is oppressed today in the name of race, color, class, and gender. Humanity is also oppressed by corrupt political and religious structures. Wherever there is a call for freedom from anything that oppresses humanity, it is a proclamation of this good news. The freedom movement lead by Mahatma Gandhi, the struggle against apartheid led by Nelson Mandela, and the civil rights movement led by Martin Luther King were movements inspired by this good news in our own time.
This offers us a dependable scale to measure all the beliefs that pass around under the label of Christian. A proclamation of freedom to humanity, whatever myth or metaphor it is covered in, is authentic Christian good news. All people in the world need to know that he/she is a child of God, and that the right to live and grow to his/her full potential is his/her God-given birthright. Nobody or nothing has the right to prevent human beings and societies from existing and growing to their maximum potential!









