Jesus Was Homeless?


Hello my friends,

I pray you've had a wonderful beginning to your October. If you happen to follow me on social media, many of you may know that I have been cloud nine for several months now. Rebecca and I found out that we are having a little girl! She is due to arrive on March 26th! Which is two days after Foster's 2nd birthday. We are unbelievably excited. We can't wait to meet her and see Foster become a big brother. I count you all as an important part of my community and couldn't wait to share this exciting news with you!

This week, I am doing something a bit different. A fellow writer and friend of mine, Kevin Nye, decided to do a cross platform post this weekend. He shared a piece of my writing with his followers and I am going to share a piece of his with all of you. Kevin is a tireless advocate of ending homelessness. Not only is serving the homeless his daily vocation, but his heart for confronting and dismantling the root cause of homelessness and its impact on people can be seen in all he says and does.

If you are interested in following his work, you can subscribe to his Substack here.

I also highly recommend reading his wonderful book on this topic, which is called, "Grace Can Lead Us Home: A Christian Call to End Homelessness."

With that said, it's a pleasure to present to you, "Jesus Was Homeless? It's Complicated" by Kevin Nye.

When I first heard Shane Claiborne say “Jesus was homeless," it rocked my world.

I’m sure he wasn’t the first one to say it, but it my introduction to the connection. Taken from the verse where Jesus states that “Foxes have holds, and birds have nests, but the son of man has no place to lay his head,” Shane drew this connection with the hopes of countering the negative narratives about homelessness and the people who experience it. Perhaps, if we understood Jesus was homeless, it could help us see unhoused people differently. At the time, it certainly helped my perspective shift.

But over time, I began to grow less comfortable with this framing. Especially as I began my career actually working with people experiencing homelessness, the comparison felt off. Wasn’t Jesus’ lifestyle one that he chose? His ministry took him from town to town, and while he often slept encamped and in the homes of others, wasn’t this far more common in that time period than it is? It felt a bit like apples and oranges, and more than anything I was wary that the comparison might feed into a common myth, which is that homelessness is a choice that individuals make for themselves. If Jesus was homeless, and Jesus chose that lifestyle, does that mean all homeless people choose it?

The more time I spent in this vocation, though, the more I found that mode of thinking challenged. It was largely informed by a condescending view of homelessness; I needed to differentiate the “homelessness” of Jesus and that of my new acquaintances because I wanted to make sure we all felt adequately sorry for them. This is how many people, churches, politicians, and organizations choose to talk about homelessness. It sounds more like a commercial that airs at 2am with a Sarah McLachlan song playing in the background, leveraging sympathy in exchange for money.

You’ll never hear me sugar-coating homelessness. It’s critical that we understand the inherent dangers and risks we subject people to through our disregard—people who experience homelessness would much rather live indoors with all the safety and comfort it provides. There’s also little excuse with all the excess wealth in this country that anyone should have to live outside.

But I’ve also had the honor of witnessing ways that the experience of homelessness exposes some of the lies and flaws of how the “rest of us” live. As people are forced to live in nomadic, dependent lifestyles, they learn to depend on one another. They form relationships and communities that exist outside of the dynamics of the marketplace. I’m current reading, “A People’s History of Poverty in America,” and it makes this point so crucially—just as we understand that money doesn’t buy happiness, we must also recognize that homelessness or poverty does not mean everyone is miserable.

In many ways, I think this is why Jesus, the early church, and religious orders throughout history have chosen existences that include degrees of poverty and nomadic lifestyles. The point is not to glamorize the dangers and vulnerabilities of poverty, but to live as witnesses to interdependency and as resistors to dehumanizing economics.

This is far too much to project onto those experiencing homelessness. However, recognizing all of these dynamics at work helps us see the issue more clearly. It influences how eager we are to force unhoused people into job programs, as though our highest view of human existence is participation in the 40-hour work week. It also critiques the way many housed Americans live—expanding our square-footage while becoming ever more isolated and lonely. It demands that we understand homelessness as an indictment of systems that actually make all of us less human.

So was Jesus homeless? I’m not actually sure where I land. I’m much more comfortable saying that Jesus is homeless, in line with the consistent teaching that Christ can be found in the face of the most marginalized people among us. If Jesus is homeless, we can hold the full experience and reality of homelessness: that the crisis of homelessness calls us to repentance for the ways we have allowed people to suffer unnecessarily, and that it also beckons us to learn from people who exist outside of the numbing comforts of privilege.

Now I'd like to hear from you.

What are your thoughts about Kevin's words here? Have you encountered similar thoughts in how Jesus' own living circumstances shaped how you or someone close to you approached the issue of homelessness? I'd like to hear about them if you care to share.

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Thank you all for reading and for all the ways you support me and this project every week.

I truly appreciate you all,

Ben

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Rev. Benjamin Cremer

I have spent the majority of my life in Evangelical Christian spaces. I have experienced a lot of church hurt. I now write to explore topics that often are at the intersection of politics and Christianity. My desire is to discover how we can move away from Christian nationalism, religious fundamentalism, and church hurt to reclaim the Gospel of Jesus together. I'm glad you're here to join the conversation. I look forward to talking with you.

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