, Bromby Senior Lecturer in Biblical Studies, Trinity College, University of Divinity
I
grew up in a Christian home, where a photo of Jesus hung on my bedroom
wall. I still have it. It is schmaltzy and rather tacky in that 1970s
kind of way, but as a little girl I loved it. In this picture, Jesus
looks kind and gentle, he gazes down at me lovingly. He is also
light-haired, blue-eyed, and very white.
The
problem is, Jesus was not white. You’d be forgiven for thinking
otherwise if you’ve ever entered a Western church or visited an art
gallery. But while there is no physical description of him in the Bible,
there is also no doubt that the historical Jesus, the man who was
executed by the Roman State in the first century CE, was a
brown-skinned, Middle Eastern Jew.
This
is not controversial from a scholarly point of view, but somehow it is a
forgotten detail for many of the millions of Christians who will gather
to celebrate Easter this week.
On
Good Friday, Christians attend churches to worship Jesus and, in
particular, remember his death on a cross. In most of these churches,
Jesus will be depicted as a white man, a guy that looks like
Anglo-Australians, a guy easy for other Anglo-Australians to identify
with.
Think
for a moment of the rather dashing Jim Caviezel, who played Jesus in
Mel Gibson’s Passion of the Christ. He is an Irish-American actor. Or
call to mind some of the most famous artworks of Jesus’ crucifixion –
Ruben, Grunewald, Giotto – and again we see the European bias in
depicting a white-skinned Jesus.
Does
any of this matter? Yes, it really does. As a society, we are well
aware of the power of representation and the importance of diverse role
models.
After
winning the 2013 Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her role in 12
Years a Slave, Kenyan actress Lupita Nyong’o shot to fame. In interviews
since then, Nyong’o has repeatedly articulated her feelings of
inferiority as a young woman because all the images of beauty she saw
around her were of lighter-skinned women. It was only when she saw the
fashion world embracing Sudanese model Alek Wek that she realised black
could be beautiful too.
If
we can recognise the importance of ethnically and physically diverse
role models in our media, why can’t we do the same for faith? Why do we
continue to allow images of a whitened Jesus to dominate?
Many
churches and cultures do depict Jesus as a brown or black man. Orthodox
Christians usually have a very different iconography to that of
European art – if you enter a church in Africa, you’ll likely see an
African Jesus on display.
But
these are rarely the images we see in Australian Protestant and
Catholic churches, and it is our loss. It allows the mainstream
Christian community to separate their devotion to Jesus from
compassionate regard for those who look different.
I
would even go so far as to say it creates a cognitive disconnect, where
one can feel deep affection for Jesus but little empathy for a Middle
Eastern person. It likewise has implications for the theological claim
that humans are made in God’s image. If God is always imaged as white,
then the default human becomes white and such thinking undergirds
racism.
Historically,
the whitewashing of Jesus contributed to Christians being some of the
worst perpetrators of anti-Semitism and it continues to manifest in the
“othering” of non-Anglo Saxon Australians.
This
Easter, I can’t help but wonder, what would our church and society look
like if we just remembered that Jesus was brown? If we were confronted
with the reality that the body hung on the cross was a brown body: one
broken, tortured, and publicly executed by an oppressive regime.
How
might it change our attitudes if we could see that the unjust
imprisonment, abuse, and execution of the historical Jesus has more in
common with the experience of Indigenous Australians or asylum seekers
than it does with those who hold power in the church and usually
represent Christ?
Perhaps
most radical of all, I can’t help but wonder what might change if we
were more mindful that the person Christians celebrate as God in the
flesh and saviour of the entire world was not a white man, but a Middle
Eastern Jew.
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