Posted on 04/13/2014 11:32:14 AM PDT by Alter Kaker
A new religious statue in the town of Davidson, N.C., is unlike anything you might see in church.
The statue depicts Jesus as a vagrant sleeping on a park bench. St. Alban's Episcopal Church installed the homeless Jesus statue on its property in the middle of an upscale neighborhood filled with well-kept townhomes.
Jesus is huddled under a blanket with his face and hands obscured; only the crucifixion wounds on his uncovered feet give him away.
The reaction was immediate. Some loved it; some didn't.
"One woman from the neighborhood actually called police the first time she drove by," says David Boraks, editor of DavidsonNews.net. "She thought it was an actual homeless person."
That's right. Somebody called the cops on Jesus.
"Another neighbor, who lives a couple of doors down from the church, wrote us a letter to the editor saying it creeps him out," Boraks added.
Some neighbors felt it was an insulting depiction of the Son of God, and what appears to be a hobo curled up on a bench demeans the neighborhood.
The bronze statue was purchased for $22,000 as a memorial for a parishioner, Kate McIntyre, who had loved public art. The rector of this liberal, inclusive church is Rev. David Buck, a 65-year-old Baptist-turned-Episcopalian who seems not at all averse to the controversy, the double-takes and the discussion the statue has provoked.
"It gives authenticity to our church," he says. "This is a relatively affluent church, to be honest, and we need to be reminded ourselves that our faith expresses itself in active concern for the marginalized of society."
The sculpture is intended as a visual translation of the passage in the Book of Matthew, in which Jesus tells his disciples, "as you did it to one of the least of my brothers, you did it to me." Moreover, Buck says, it's a good Bible lesson for those used to seeing Jesus depicted in traditional religious art as the Christ of glory, enthroned in finery.
"We believe that that's the kind of life Jesus had," Buck says. "He was, in essence, a homeless person."
This lakeside college town north of Charlotte has the first Jesus the Homeless statue on display in the United States. Catholic Charities of Chicago plans to install its statue when the weather warms up. The Archdiocese of Washington, D.C., is said to be interested in one, too.
The creator is a Canadian sculptor and devout Catholic named Timothy Schmalz. From his studio in Ontario, Schmalz says he understands that his Jesus the Homeless is provocative.
"That's essentially what the sculpture is there to do," he says. "It's meant to challenge people."
He says he offered the first casts to St. Michael's Cathedral in Toronto and St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York. Both declined.
A spokesman at St. Michael's says appreciation of the statue "was not unanimous," and the church was being restored so a new work of art was out of the question. That statue found a home in front of the Jesuit School of Theology at the University of Toronto.
A spokesperson at St. Patrick's in New York says they liked the homeless Jesus, but their cathedral is also being renovated and they had to turn it down.
The most high-profile installation of the bronze Jesus on a park bench will be on the Via della Conziliazione, the avenue leading to St. Peter's Basilica if the City of Rome approves it. Schmalz traveled to the Vatican last November to present a miniature to the pope himself.
"He walked over to the sculpture, and it was just chilling because he touched the knee of the Jesus the Homeless sculpture, and closed his eyes and prayed," Schmalz says. "It was like, that's what he's doing throughout the whole world: Pope Francis is reaching out to the marginalized."
Back at St. Alban's in Davidson, the rector reports that the Jesus the Homeless statue has earned more followers than detractors. It is now common, he says, to see people come, sit on the bench, rest their hand on the bronze feet and pray.
Other than lining the pockets of the sculptor what,exactly, do they think this is going to accomplish?
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They can go to any major city and see homeless people. Why pay $22,000 for a fake one.
Heck, for a couple hundred they could rent a bus and bring fifty homeless people right to their own town square and enjoy the real thing.
Jesus was poor, not destitute. He was itinerant, not homeless. He was a God, come among us, not a sinful human.
He was only homeless because he left his home to preach. He was a skilled laborer in Nazareth prior to his public ministry.
this is very silly - especially since the resurrected Jesus is depicted.
But trying to align the character of Jesus with the common day bum is wrong.
Bums who come off the streets, drugs and alcohol...and who also find Jesus...do not inhabit park benches.
That theme has been done before that I have seen, not in a statue but in a prayerbook where they might show someone poor and say “Jesus Falls the First Time” as in going up Calvary. I do believe that we are commanded to love the least of our brothers and in reason I try to do that. That doesn’t mean to let people off the hook for fallen lifestyles. Some of your homeless perhaps can’t help themselves.
Carpenters I. Those days are solid middle class and donkeys were for the wealthy elite
Why not use the $22,000 to feed the homeless? It’s telling that political points score higher on the charity scale for this church than real people do.
Jesus was a carpenter, not an envious, lazy, taker, nor a mentally disabled person, nor someone with a dysfunctional immediate and extended family, and he and His family had many good and societally functional friends who would have given Him work to do to earn His keep if He weren’t capable, but He was a capable, competent, perhaps excellent carpenter because Joseph, his mentor, and foster father, would have taught Him very well, not only to be a carpenter but to manage His resources.
THis is class envy and complete ignorance. And, BTW, envy is a deadly sin - Every time, not just under certain circumstances. Envy causes death. It causes inc\action and lack of resources.
He was A God??
Jesus didn’t beg for money.
Too bad it wasn’t a homeless Mohammed
Probably the most deadly one of all......100 million deaths in the 20th Century from Communism is proof.
I’ll bet that church never put up a Christmas creche there.
“Why not use the $22,000 to feed the homeless?”
Uh, because when you “feed” homeless, they are hungry again. I am not justifying how $22K is spent, but feeding homeless and other wealth re-distribution schemes are liberal masturbatory hallucinations.
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