Yea! Another White Jesus!

There is much in the blogosphere lately about the new NBC show that premiers tonight, "The Book of Daniel." I've gotta admit, I'm intrigued and will probably tape it to watch later.

For all the hoopla about the show - the outrage by the American Family Association, the reviews of it's lack of depth and tact - I'm more concerned about what (I'm shocked) has not been talked about.

What do these things have in common?
"The Greatest Story Ever Told"
"Jesus of Nazareth" (Zeffirelli)
"King of Kings" (DeMille)
"Jesus of Montreal"
"The Last Temptation of Christ"
"The Passion of the Christ"

That's right: they all feature your good friend and mine - White Jesus. Isn't it amazing how, just when we start to forget that Jesus wasn't actually white, we get a great cinematic rendering of our fair, lily skinned savior? Some may not see this as a problem, but I do. I see it as a big problem, and everyone's missing it!

Here are the facts: we live in a predominantly Christian (even if only nominal) culture, and racism is still alive and kicking.

(I'm not going to spend my time defending these points, but two quick points of proof: "Happy Holidays" and Who are the poor folks?)

I've written before about the narcissism of the mythic level Christian community, and this, I feel, dovetails with that line of thinking. Given that, roughly, 40-50% of the current US population operates out of this worldview, which is ethno-centric in nature, we cannot afford for the face of Jesus to be anything other than what it really is.

Here's how the cycle goes: From our younger days when our critical thought process is non-existent or not fully formed, we are inundated with images featuring a Jesus that does not look like he actually would have. "This is the Son of God" we are told, "This is God incarnate." So, we guess, God must be white.

It never occurs to us that God is not white when we are growing up, and the dominant image that we get of Jesus is a white guy with flowy hair. As such, if God gets equated with white then "good" also get equated with white. (you see where I'm going?) If white is good, then that means (in the little ego- and ethno-centric mind) that "not white" is "not good." And that's where the fun starts.

Jesus said "as you do to the least of these you do to me." Be honest what would it do to your sense of ethics if your image of Jesus was this instead of this?

It makes it kinda hard to ignore poverty, violence, hunger, and racism when your savior looks like "those people", doesn't it?

So I'll watch the Book of Daniel to see if it's even worth my time, but every time Jesus comes on screen I'll be saying a little prayer that the unholy image of white Jesus doesn't further entrench a racist mindset, no matter how subtle.

Read Landon's daily blog at "landonville.com: proclaiming an integral christian spirituality."

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Black Jesus

I know of non-white Jesus images that have been produced largely by painters of color such as Henry O. Tanner, Clementine Hunter, John Biggers... There are also visual portrayals by Europeans that take into account that Jesus was a Hebrew or that respect the need for people of every race to identify with Him; I agree there needs to be more of this. The church in Europe commissioned images that its congregations could identify with, so they looked European; when the Roman Catholic church expanded to other parts of the world, it tended to fill in the visual identity gap with specific saints who represented local populations.
I am less familiar with literary portrayals. Can you tell me some titles? I only know a few, like Marc Conelly's "Green Pastures" - I think Jesus is in there, even though it's mostly Old Testament.
I watched The Book of Daniel last night, hoping for another Joan of Arcadia, but was hugely disappointed by the ham-fisted writing. I noticed Jesus' resemblance to the ubiquitous Warner Sallman painting "Behold I Stand at the Door and Knock" and shrugged it off as Daniel's personal vision of Jesus; Daniel is not very imaginative. It would be interesting if we could see some of the other characters talking to a different-looking Jesus, maybe one with curly black hair and a dark complexion.
I myself am of Swedish complexion. One of my best paintings is an attempt to make Jesus's race indeterminate, and I succeeded to the point that a black woman asked me why I had made Him black.
Chris G.

Black Jesus

d_arnold@drupal.org's picture

This thread is kind of humorous because of something I saw on the TV show (born of the comic strip of the same name), The Boondocks.  Huey, the 10-year-old precocious protagonist, says at a garden party to a person of the cloth that he didn't see "The Passion..." because there was a white Jesus.  For all of the painstaking authenticity they shot for, having a black (or brown) Jesus, I guess, wasn't on Mel's list.Jesus should look as he was described.  He loves us whether he's black, white, Latino, Middle Eastern or Cablinasian.  Does it make blacks more of God's people because Jesus is black? No...because we are all God's people.  I think that some white folk have used the image of a white Jesus to portray whites as closer to God.   That's some serious, industrial-grade conceit._________________________________________________________ Derek

good choice. good choice, indeed.

White jesus

Maybe Naveen Andrews ought to play Jesus. He looks more like what my personal image would be.

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