*Remembering a glorious rebel * V.R. Krishna Iyer * Was not the kingdom of
god that Jesus held up but the forerunner to socialism, social justice,
secularism and democracy? He was a raging egalitarian, an invisible
socialist, and an economic democrat. *

Jesus, born of humble parents in Bethlehem, rose as a glorious phenomenon.
He became a world wonder of spiritual-temporal revolution against an
imperial establishment and a corrupt priestly order. Judas Iscariot betrayed
his master for a few pieces of silver. Every barbarity from those
treacherous days still exists, indeed in magnified malignancy, to victimise
the have-not humanity and slay the radical humanist and activist.
 Lofty testament

For all of humankind, Jesus' magnificent, yet militant, teaching was a lofty
testament of egalitarian liberation from obscurantist faith, authoritarian
politics, theological orthodoxy and big business freebooting. Similarly, the
ring of his message constituted a *de facto* revolt against Roman
imperialism, absolutist injustice and priest-proud godism. He stood for a
higher culture marked by a sacred, sublime, compassionate ethos, and a
divinity of humanity that is free from crass, class-mired materialism and
gross, greedy, grabbing riches. This rare man of Nazareth resisted Jewish
ecclesiastical domination, opposed discrimination among brothers and
demanded, in God's name, socio-economic justice. This is the essence of the
Jesus jurisprudence of human dignity, inner divinity and fraternal
obligation to help every brother in distress.

Born into a carpenter's family, Jesus lived a sage and simple life and chose
his disciples from a weaker section of society — indigent fishermen. He
symbolised a revolutionary change in the theological-temporal establishment
and advocated social justice and divinity, dignity and equity in the social
order. Such a transformation was the truth of the kingdom of heaven, which
was a challenge to the Roman Empire, the Jewish priestocracy and the
arbitrary justice system that then prevailed. H.G Wells wrote: "This
doctrine of the Kingdom of Heaven, which was the main teaching of Jesus, is
certainly one of the most revolutionary doctrines that ever stirred and
changed human thought. It is small wonder if, the world of that time [and of
our time, if this writer may add] failed to grasp its full significance, and
recoiled in dismay from even a half apprehension of its tremendous
challenges to the established habits and institutions of mankind."
 Rare daring

Jesus, the glorious rebel, proclaimed the reality of a universal moral
order. He called it the kingdom of heaven and told the people that the
kingdom of god was indeed within them. He outraged the hypocrites who did
their commerce inside the temples and the shrines. He drove them out with
rare daring. Now, right before our eyes, our temples and churches are again
centres of big business.

Jesus, to the anger of the proprietariat, resisted the commercialisation of
god and the commoditisation of man. Big temples, great churches, god-men,
bishops, mullahs and acharyas are a mundane part of the capitalist
establishment and are anti-Jesus in spirit. India's Constitution mandates
equality, secularism and economic democracy. What a marvel it was that Jesus
preached ages ago — that God was equal in granting his favours to all, as
was the sun. Jesus was a raging egalitarian, an invisible socialist, an
economic democrat. Proof of this lies in his parables and preaching.

In the parable of the Good Samaritan, Jesus cast scorn upon that natural
tendency we all obey, to glorify our own people and to minimise the
righteousness of other creeds and races. In the parable of the labourers he
thrust aside the obstinate claim of the Jewish people to have a sort of
first mortgage upon God. All whom God takes into the kingdom, he taught, he
serves alike. There is no distinction in his treatment, because there is no
measure to his bounty. There are no privileges, no rebates, and no excuses.
H.G. Wells has presented these propositions in *The Outline of History*.

 Barabbas jurisprudence

The abolition of poverty is a socialist feature of the societal structure.
In order to wipe every tear of grief from every eye, you need a social
transformation and an economic regeneration, a special concern for women and
children, and a rage against those who rob the people's resources. This is
the majesty and humanity of true spirituality that was absent during the era
of Emperor Tiberius. It was his administration and justice delivery system,
presided over in the region by Pontius Pilate, which decreed, with perverse
judicial power and under pressure from the priestly class and in exercise of
state authority that Jesus, who argued for the kingdom of heaven, be put to
the cross. When treason was the charge and the priestly order was exposed by
the accused, there was terrific pressure on the Governor-judge to sentence
him. The same judge set free Barabbas. Even today innocence suffers state
punishment and robbery rides state power. Barabbas jurisprudence is in
currency even today.

Jesus spoke for all time and all mankind when he, bed-rocked on the
spiritual philosophy of the kingdom of god, told that court this truth of
human rights and social justice. His advocacy of the humanist culture as the
ultimate value, as against obscurantist godism, is evident from the
admonition that sabbath is for man, not man for sabbath.
 Advocate of unity and fraternity

Jesus advocated the unity and fraternity of humanity, like the doctrine of
Advaita that Adi Sankara propagated as an upanishadic fundamental. Not only
did he strike at patriotism and the bonds of family loyalty in the name of
God's universal fatherhood and the brotherhood of all mankind, his teaching
condemned all the gradations of the economic system, all private wealth, and
personal advantage. He said: "It is easier for a camel to go through the eye
of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the Kingdom of God."

To my mind, this glorious dimension of the kingdom of god is the forerunner
to socialism, social justice, secularism and democracy. The life of Jesus
was absolute simplicity, matchless humility, compassionate humanity, gender
reverence and pro-poor egalite. He washed the feet of his disciples, he
defined godist superstition. To share and care for your neighbour, even your
enemy, were the fundamentals he taught. He was thus a pioneer of world
brotherhood, who advocated freedom from dogmas and obscurantist cults. Such
a universalism is the testament of Jesus. This is the Christianity to be
practised daily — not the Christianity for a Sunday ritual, or for an alibi
to hold the world under imperial might and big business power. Not showy
charity coupled with mighty rapacity. The Buddha was a predecessor of Jesus.
The Mahatma whom Churchill called "the half-naked fakir" was his successor.

Yet, Jesus if born today will meet Pilate's justice yet again. Barabbas is
in power everywhere again. Judas the pretentious disciple and arch-betrayer
is a subtle and slight presence practising diplomacy — the Cross in one hand
and nuke bomb in the other. The terrorist incarnation today masquerades as
the ruler of the earth.

The resurrection of the world and the elimination of the sufferings and
slavery of millions are desiderata for many a million honest disciples of
Jesus. Even so, the finest teachings of Jesus have perished, and the world
today suffers a grave decline in the values of humanism, compassion,
morality and divinity. Greed, vulgarity and the collapse of the public good
have been a shock and a shame, a terror and a horror.
 Structural splendour

Resurrection, not in the lexical or biblical sense, but in the grand moral
dimension of the term conveying the spirit of trans-material mutation, is
the structural splendour of the world order. Peace, not war; stability, not
subservience; high morality, not any grab-based acquisitive success, is the
new ethic. Exploitation has become the rule of law, and equity and justice
have become the vanishing point of international jurisprudence.

The hidden agenda after a unipolar world is the malignant methodology of
insatiable accumulation of wealth. This terrible trend must be trampled
under the foot by a triumphant and dynamic generation. This should be done
with socialist convictions and a profound prognosis — of work, wealth and
happiness for every human being. This should be the 'developmental drama' of
the New World Order.

*(The author, 93 years old, is a retired Supreme Court Judge of distinction,
a former Cabinet Minister in the Kerala government, a great humanist, and a
regular contributor to* The Hindu*.)*

*Corrections and Clarifications*

A sentence in the ninth paragraph of an article "Remembering a glorious
rebel" (Editorial page, December 24, 2008) was "He washed the feet of his
disciples, he defined godist superstition." It should have been "defied".

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