Posted by: Dan | May 12, 2008

Woodie Guthrie’s Jesus Christ

Here’s the lyric:

Jesus Christ was a man who traveled through the land
A hard-working man and brave
He said to the rich, “Give your money to the poor,”
But they laid Jesus Christ in His grave

Jesus was a man, a carpenter by hand
His followers true and brave
One dirty little coward called Judas Iscariot
Has laid Jesus Christ in His Grave

He went to the preacher, He went to the sheriff
He told them all the same
“Sell all of your jewelry and give it to the poor,”
And they laid Jesus Christ in His grave.

When Jesus come to town, all the working folks around
Believed what he did say
But the bankers and the preachers, they nailed Him on the cross,
And they laid Jesus Christ in his grave.

And the people held their breath when they heard about his death
Everybody wondered why
It was the big landlord and the soldiers that they hired
To nail Jesus Christ in the sky

This song was written in New York City
Of rich man, preacher, and slave
If Jesus was to preach what He preached in Galilee,
They would lay poor Jesus in His grave.

I suppose some might say that this is how you would expect a leftist folk-singer to characterize Jesus. But what’s wrong with it? Guthrie seems to capture what Jesus said in his earthly ministry quite well.

Responses

Good post. You almost have to be from outside the church to see who Jesus really is! I’ve been preaching through the gospels for the third years in a row, and I’m still astonished at what a foreign language he speaks compared to my denom’s evangelical culture. He just doesn’t talk about what we’ve been taught we should be talking about.

A couple of quick thoughts: Here, in Guthrie’s lyrics, we find Jesus, as inferred by the post, as the leftest Messiah, perhaps Jesus as social reformer. Jesus spoke much about giving to the poor. However, Jesus is not recognized as a God/man Redeemer in the construct of Guthrie’s Jesus. What is presented is a woefully narrow view of the Messiah.

I could ramble ad nausea on this subject, but for now…………

Does one have to say everything about a subject to speak truthfully about it?

My first reaction was not that the divinity of Christ was missing, but that his resurrection was… but then I realized people do not have to write entire systematic theologies on Christ in order to speak truthfully of him, and I don’t see anything in that post that is significantly misleading or false about Christ…

Andrew, excellent insight. I would go further - to say every statement describing Jesus Christ is woefully inadequate. Not wrong, as you point out, just incomplete. Even each Scriptural statement, taken alone, is incomplete. I preach every Sunday, and I am painfully aware of the incompleteness of the picture of Christ I can present in 30 minutes!

And I would say that this song represents a - perhaps the - major theme of Jesus, and one that is vastly under-represented in evangelical preaching.

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