Mimesis Report - Joppa, Israel
First, why "Mimesis"? The word mimesis means an imitation or reflection on aspects of the sensible world. My postings will reflect my consderation of the interaction between God, the natural world, and the world of the art, with an emphasis on the literature of the Bible and on the dramatic arts.
It's fitting that I log my first blog from Joppa in Israel. Joppa was a gateway to points west and a kind of bridge city in ancient times. Joppa is prominent in two biblical stories: in the story of Jonah, the prophet runs to Joppa to take a ship that will, he hopes, deliver him from his responsibility to carry God's message to a gentile audience. Jonah despised the gentiles (the people of Nineveh, in this case) and didn't want to take the chance that God might forgive them of their sins if he obeyed God's command to go to them and preach that they should repent of their sins. So, he ran to Nineveh to escape. Of course, things didn't work out the way Jonah had planned. He winds up going to Nineveh, preaching to the gentiles, and sulking while God does indeed forgive them after they repented. Joppa - Jonah used it as a gateway of escape, while the Lord used it as a gateway to the gentiles.
Joppa is also prominent in another biblical story - the record of the Apostle Peter in Acts, chapter 10. There, we find Peter is staying in Joppa in the home of a man named Simon, who was a tanner. Peter receives a vision from the Lord that he is to carry the good news of the risen Christ to the gentiles, beginning with one man - a Roman, no less - who is living nearby. Once again, the Lord uses Joppa as a gateway to the gentiles. In fact he sends Peter to the very people who were occupying Israel at the time. God's grace extended to the gentiles in the time of the unwilling prophet, Jonah, almost 800 years before Christ came as Messiah, and to the gentiles in the time of Peter during the earliest days of the church. In both instances, Joppa was the jumping off point, the beginning of an adventurous journey, where God's messengers were afforded the opportunity to carry His message of grace to those who had not heard.
How ironic that Joppa has become for me, a gateway to adventure as well - only in my case, Joppa is a port of entry to Israel, rather than a port of access to the gentiles. I have the privilege of sharing the love of Jesus Christ with many of God's chosen people, the Jews. I am traveling with Dr. Chuck Swindoll and around 600 friends of Insight for Living on a tour of Israel. My job is to perform seven different characters over the course of the next days. My first character is the Apostle Peter. I perform him tonight here in Tel Aviv, which is walking distance down the beach from Joppa. If you read this blog, I would appreciate your prayers for our safety and for God's blessing on our adventure. I'll keep you posted as time and internet access allow.
No comments:
Post a Comment