
Jesus wasn’t a heavenly mascot dropped down to prop up religion. He was a first century troublemaker who refused to play the games that keep power intact and people small.
His authority didn’t come from supernatural fireworks or divine credentials—it came from his ruthless honesty about the human condition. He saw through the lies we tell ourselves, the systems we sanctify, and the hierarchies we defend in God’s name. And he named them out loud.
He walked straight into the machinery of domination—religious, economic, and social—and jammed his fingers into the gears. He exposed how purity codes were used to exclude, how law was weaponized to control, and how God-talk had become a cover story for exploitation. The scandal wasn’t that he broke the rules; it’s that he exposed who the rules were really for. And it sure as hell wasn’t the poor, the sick, the women, the outsiders, or the disposable.
Jesus didn’t preach belief systems—he embodied a way of being. He chose presence over performance, compassion over compliance, courage over belonging.
He refused the false safety of fitting in. He told stories that dismantled moral superiority and left the “righteous” exposed, scrambling to justify themselves. His parables weren’t spiritual bedtime stories; they were psychological ambushes. If you understood them, it meant your worldview was about to collapse.
Strip away the religious varnish—the creeds, the worship industry, the fear-based salvation schemes—and what’s left is something far more dangerous: a fully alive human being who would not cooperate with dehumanization. Someone who stood in radical solidarity with those crushed by the system and had no patience for those who benefited from it. Someone who trusted truth more than tradition and love more than law.
Jesus shows us what happens when a person stops outsourcing their conscience, stops bowing to sacred violence, and commits—without reservation—to truth-telling and human flourishing. Not to save the world in some cosmic afterlife transaction, but to wake people up right here, in their bodies, in their relationships, in their shared humanity.
That kind of life doesn’t get you worshipped. It gets you killed.
And that may be the most honest thing religion has spent two thousand years trying to forget.
Jim Palmer, Inner Anarchy
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