Itinerant Rabbi Jesus and his
disciples walked into many villages and towns around Palestine.
They probably also walked into some of the larger towns and cities. They spent
a great deal of time out-of-doors, walking from place to place. There were no
large auditoriums in those towns. There were synagogues that at that time were
more like community meeting places, and Jesus, as a rabbi, would accept
invitations to speak there. But Jesus’ school was primarily on foot, peripatetic,
walking to places where people usually gathered. Everyday he sat down with
groups of people and taught them. Sitting down was the normal teaching style of
the day. He could be itinerant because he had few possessions and few roots,
not held down by family concerns. In fact, itinerancy was characterized by
detachment from possessions, like the railroad hobos, the hitchhiking hippies,
or homeless vagabonds, all, because of their itinerancy, had few possessions To
carry out the powerful drive within him to usher in the reign of God, Jesus
preferred open-air meetings and speaking to people in their homes.
Jesus and the disciples probably
invited themselves to the homes of the peasants that they met. “Tonight we want
to spend the night at your home.” It seems to be not only to have been the
homes of the poor that Jesus visited. On a trip through Jericho Jesus chose a
well known, rich Jewish tax collector, named Zachaeus.
Jesus is reported to have said, “Tonight I want to spend the evening at your
home.” It is also reported that this probable corrupt, dishonest chief tax
collector was so inspired by Jesus’ visit that he said he was going to give
half of his goods to the poor, and, if he had defrauded anyone, “he would
return it to him fourfold.” He had probably defrauded many! Zachaeus
seemed dramatically changed. Probably over the years, bothered by the disparity
between his early training in the law and the breaking of the commandments in
his daily life style, longed for something more. Then he found it.
Jesus walked from place to place,
from the countryside to desert places, along the sea-shore, on the roads, in
the villages, hillsides, plains, all are mentioned, where the multitudes of
peasants would feel comfortable to come out to meet him. Itinerancy was the
model Jesus used, poverty was the style, vagrancy was the image, having
messianic banquets of eating and drinking in the homes of peasants was the
method of contact, subversive teaching and healing were the gifts to the family
in return for hospitality, detachment from possessions and volunteer poverty
were observable qualities, and watching for the reign of God to surreptitiously
slip in was the hope.
Itinerancy, the peripatetic
traveling around from place to place, is fascinating to me. During a recent
summer in south Jersey two different traveling circuses set up near my home,
Cole Brothers/Clyde Beatty Three Ring Circus in Tom’s River, New Jersey and
Evans Five Ring Tent Circus in Waretown, New Jersey, both very entertaining. I
am the only one in my family interested in going to circuses and so I went by
myself, two circus in one week! I watched the circus
begin to pull up to the large field reserved for the big tent. Huge
eighteen-wheelers drove up carrying equipment, animals, and even five
elephants. Scores of travel trailers also descended on the area, carrying the
large contingent of performers and circus workers, setting up camp for the
overnight stay. I am fascinated by this itinerant life style, no real
geographical roots for the greater part of the year, until the winter quarters
in Florida. Just camping or trailering for a week or two in the summer with four
children used to wear me out. Though I am fascinated with itinerancy, I like a
place for roots to take place. Besides, unfortunately, I have too many
possessions to ever consider itinerancy, but I still get attracted when a group
of gypsies, a group of hobos, or backpacking students
pass by.
The gospel of detachment from
possession that we later read about in the history of the early church can be
traced to Jesus’ teaching. I suppose that it must have been too radical for the
church to continue to practice this detachment from possessions and so it did
not last too long. Try to start itinerancy and a style of detachment from
possessions in today’s church, and you too may see something happen, perhaps
something quite close to crucifixion! Jesus abandoned a home of his own and the
synagogue as central and made itinerancy the model.