Page 144 - Biblical Backgrounds student textbook
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questions but at other times they did not dare? Why would they not dare? Randolph Richards explains
               that it is because there is an honor/shame game going on. He explains that in Jesus’ day if you wanted
               an answer you came to someone privately. Nicodemus is a great example of this. He came and asked
               Jesus questions in a private place at night. If you asked publicly you were challenging the other person to
               a game of honor. The person who could silence the other was the winner and gained public honor. The
               person who lost would decrease in honor. So, when the Jews came to Jesus and said, “is it lawful to pay
               taxes to Caesar”, it was a trap designed to shame him in public. The same is true of asking him about
               whose wife the woman who married seven times would be in eternity. The goal was to put Jesus to
               open shame. Jesus’ opponents kept losing, and therefore being publicly shamed, so they wanted Him
               dead.

               Abdu Murry explains the impact of this issue on as he preached on John 9. The parents deny knowing
               who the person who healed their son was. Rather than be put out of the synagogue themselves, they
               tell the council that the healed man was of age and to ask him. When he says Jesus healed him, he is put
               out of the synagogue. The parents fear of public shame led them to watching as their son was thrown
               out of the synagogue.

               In the epistles the issue of shame comes up as well. Paul shames Peter in public for playing the shame
               game by not eating with the Gentiles (Galatians 2). Peter was trying to avoid shame in front of the men
               from James. Paul said his shame was even greater because of his hypocrisy. The author of Hebrews says
               He wants the people not to be ashamed at the coming of Christ. This is a cultural fear. Richards also
               points out that in Hebrews there is a fascinating statement in Hebrews 11:6 that because the patriarchs
               were faithful “God is not ashamed to be their God.”

               It is important to understand that a person’s shame in this culture was equal to their identity. A shamed
               person was not just a person who had been shamed, the were a shameful person. It was almost
               impossible to remove themselves from shame once it had been acquired. This is especially important
               when we realize that in this culture Jesus endured the cross “despising its shame.” That a person dying
               on a cross could rise above that shame was unthinkable. Yet when Jesus had born the shame for the sins
               of the world, He was given the name above every name. Jesus redeems the shameful people and
               restores them to His honor. As pastors will we allow Jesus to do that to those we deem appropriately
               shamed in our churches and cultures? Will we see them as the redeemed people He has made them or
               force them to remember their former shame the rest of their lives? In short, would you do so to Jesus?
               The honor/shame cultural background has much to teach us about interpreting the Bible and pastoral
               ministry today.
















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