Why Jesus’ Skin Color Matters
That he was an ethnic minority shapes how we minister today.
After
one of my recent lectures, a Christian college student approached me
and asked if black people are uncomfortable with the fact that Jesus is
white. I responded, “Jesus is not white. The Jesus of history likely
looked more like me, a black woman, than you, a white woman.”
I wasn’t shocked by this student’s assumption that Jesus
was of European descent, or the certitude with which she stated it.
When I am in US Christian spaces, I encounter this assumption so often
that I’ve come to believe it is the default assumption about Jesus’
appearance. Indeed, white Jesus is everywhere: a 30-foot-tall white
Savior stands at the center of Biola University’s campus; white Jesus is
featured on most Christmas cards; and the recent History Channel
mini-series The Bible dramatically introduced a white Jesus to more than
100 million viewers. In most of the Western world, Jesus is white.
While Christ the Lord transcends skin color and racial
divisions, white Jesus has real consequences. In all likelihood, if you
close your eyes and picture Jesus, you’ll imagine a white man. Without
conscious intention or awareness, many of us have become disciples of a
white Jesus. Not only is white Jesus inaccurate, he also can inhibit our
ability to honor the image of God in people who aren’t white.
Jesus of Nazareth likely had a darker complexion than we
imagine, not unlike the olive skin common among Middle Easterners
today. Princeton biblical scholar James Charlesworth goes so far as to
say Jesus was “most likely dark brown and sun-tanned.”
The earliest
depictions of an adult Jesus showed him with an “Oriental cast” and a
brown complexion. But by the sixth century, some Byzantine artists
started picturing Jesus with white skin, a beard, and hair parted down
the middle. This image became the standard.
In the colonial period, Western Europe for the most part
exported its image of a white Christ worldwide, and white Jesus often
shaped the way Christians understood Jesus’ ministry and mission. Some
19th-century Christians, eager to justify the cruelties of slavery, went
out of their way to present Jesus as white. By negating his true
identity as a dark-skinned, oppressed minority, slaveholders were better
able to justify the master-slave hierarchy and forget Jesus’ ministry
to set the oppressed free (Luke 4:18).
As a Jew, Jesus was an ethnic minority in the Roman
Empire. Jews were marginalized by Romans, Greeks, and other non-Jewish
groups in many imperial cities. As an infant, Jesus was a target of
ruler-sanctioned infanticide, fled to Egypt as a refugee, and faced
Roman tax collectors’ exploitation. Throughout his life, he knew the
pain of being a member of an ethnic group whose culture, religion, and
experiences were marginalized by those in power.
Since Jesus belonged to an ethnic minority, we are
compelled to re-evaluate who Jesus was and with whom he identified as he
fulfilled his mission. When people who were on the outskirts gathered,
Jesus was among them—not only because he ministered to them but because
he was one of them. As an ethnic minority, Jesus didn’t simply care
about people who were victims of Rome-sanctioned violence, he was a
victim of Rome-sanctioned violence. Jesus didn’t simply care about
refugees, Jesus was a refugee. Jesus didn’t simply care about the poor,
he was poor. To Jesus, ministry meant knowing from the inside the pain
of society’s most marginalized.
In order to follow Jesus in his mission today, we often
must choose a love that is based in solidarity. Many well-meaning
Christians minister across a social gap, but whites can minister to
people of color without truly seeing them as equals, and higher-income
people can serve lower-income people while knowing little about their
daily lives. Jesus’ ethnic identity and social location require that we
must not only minister to people who are marginalized, we must stand
with them as Jesus stands with them.
This involves seeing non-European cultural perspectives
and customs as valid and valuable, listening to people who are
marginalized, and demonstrating with our words and actions that both
spiritual and social liberation are central to the gospel.
But first, those who still perceive a white Christ must ask whether they can and will worship a dark-skinned Jesus. If the answer is anything but a resounding, "YES!" their Christianity is not an expression of the faith JESUS came to deliver to all mankind.
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