
Last season, the focus was on how a small town in Middle America deals with an apocalyptic event that cuts them off from the outside world: nuclear bombs (which we eventually learn are connected to a shadowy home grown organization) detonated in a handful of American cities. It was an often flawed but very interesting look at how we human beings react to situations—both individually and as a community (as our individual actions ripple far and wide)—that wreck the world we think will last forever. By the end of the first season, after working through issues of confrontation, sacrifice, forgiveness and reconciliation, the series ended with the town bonded together—and with the moral center of the series dying on a kitchen table after an attack from a neighboring town.

This season, the map has shifted. The military rolls into town and power and food supplies are restored. The town is suddenly reconnected to the outside world—but it isn’t pretty. America is torn down the middle, with the remnants of the original government on the east side of the Mississippi River and a new government led by a self-proclaimed president on the west. The town, bonded into a community of trust and loyalty by their trials, is facing the growing realization that this new government is not what it seems; a few characters even connect it to a cover-up of the real nature of the nuclear attacks. On the heels of a year of tribulation, they face the question of what, if anything, could and should they do about it. And what are they willing to sacrifice to do so.




Jericho echoes the way a right, just and loving community is supposed to work. People seek the truth, they listen to each other, they speak truthfully and honestly, they confront each other, they admit when they are wrong, they recognize each other’s gifts, and they work together and invite others to work with them towards right-ness within their borders and beyond. Johnston exuded those qualities and actions, and that influenced the people around them; in many ways, they learned how to lead, relate and go about life from him. In some ways, it’s as if Johnston’s been dispersed in each of them. And that draws others to them just like those qualities in Johnston drew people to him.
And all this makes me think about Kingdom community and our lives as followers of Jesus, who walked this earth in flesh and blood exuding the Life that we were created to live. Unlike the townsfolk of Jericho, however, we have more than a memory or influence of a person—we have the very Spirit of God within us, growing those Christ-like qualities and transforming us as we walk the Way. And that affects our living together, because as we go, the Spirit writes on our hearts the greatest of commandments, the Jesus Creed: to love God and love others. In that Love we learn devotion to truth, confronting wrongness, working for right-ness and just-ness, embracing others and their gifts.
And as we live and walk with Jesus this Way, we are drawn into God’s mission: his deep longing and work to restore a broken world and a broken people. It naturally rises out of our living in and with Jesus in his Life and Love. Not only do we grow in fellowship and community with each other, but we drip with an always stretching out mission towards healing, right-ness, justice, life and reconciliation, a mission always inviting others in, a mission of Love. That’s how God’s mission began: For God so loved the world (John 3:16). That is where ours is rooted as well: We love because we were loved first. And while that this kind of Kingdom-living may buck systems and people seeking their own gain, it will also draw others to God and his Kingdom and Life beyond imagination.
Jericho isn’t the most Emmy-winning material out there, and its current pacing definitely takes away from character development. And I really do miss Johnston Green. But the series still brings God-talk into open spaces—and that’ll keep me watching.
*Originally, Jericho wasn’t renewed for a second season. However, due to a grassroots fan campaign, the series was given seven more episodes with the potential for more—but it doesn’t look like that’s gonna happen.
(Images: CBS) jerichoctgy