|
|
By
Larry W. Hurtado
Professor of New Testament Language Literature and Theology
University of Edinburgh (Scotland)
April 2003
How
soon did early followers of Jesus regard him as divine? By what historical
process did this Jewish man from Galilee who was executed by the Roman
governor of Judea become revered by followers as uniquely exalted to heavenly
glory? How did those who first thought of him as divine reverence him and
express their devotion to him? These are not new questions, but in recent
decades, what were thought to be secure answers have been challenged. In this
newer research, more sophisticated approaches to the questions are producing
major revisions in received scholarly opinion.
The approach and views that have been dominant were developed largely in the
closing years of the nineteenth century and early years of the twentieth
century in a period of German scholarship dominated by the so-called
“religionsgeschichtliche Schule” (“history of religions school”). The key
scholar on early Christian belief in Jesus was Wilhelm Bousset, and in a
monumental study first published in 1913, Kyrios Christos (English translation
1970), he laid out what became a widely echoed historical understanding of
matters. Essentially, Bousset portrayed a divinization of Jesus that took
place as the result of influences from the wider Roman religious environment
with its many gods and divine heroes. In his view, Jesus’ earliest followers,
“the Palestinian Primitive Community,” revered him as Messiah and “the Son of
Man” whom they expected to come soon to bring eschatological salvation.
Bousset sharply distinguished their beliefs about Jesus from what came later.
In Bousset’s view, it was only in subsequent stages, especially in “the
Gentile Christian Primitive Community,” that Jesus was regarded as divine and
invoked as “Kyrios” (“Lord”) in worship settings. Basically, these circles of
Christians brought their pagan concepts (such as apotheosis of heroic figures)
and religious schemes with them, treating Jesus as a “cult deity” like the
many divinities and heroes of their background. As traced by Bousset, these
subsequent developments, from the apostle Paul on through to Irenaeus (late
second century) essentially comprised a story of a progressive (and in
Bousset’s view, regrettable) paganization of an originally simple piety with
which Bousset more readily identified himself in its putative emphasis on
ethics and a “purer” monotheism unencumbered by dogmas about the divinity of
Jesus.
In short, Bousset portrayed devotion to Jesus as divine as an evolutionary
process that was largely explained by “syncretistic” influences from the wider
pagan world mediated through the influx of Gentile (non-Jewish) converts to
the early Christian churches, especially in diaspora locations such as Syrian
Antioch. Although Bousset certainly had his critics and major scholars (such
as Oscar Cullmann) offered cogent alternative views of some relevant matters,
the “story” set forth in Kyrios Christos has enjoyed remarkably wide
acceptance in scholarly circles, and the gist of it has also been echoed in
many popular accounts as well.
But in publications commencing as far back as 1979, I have drawn attention to
serious problems in Bousset’s characterization of matters, citing the work of
a number of other scholars (such as Martin Hengel, Son of God: The Origin of
Christology and the History of Jewish-Hellenistic Religion, 1976). Then, in a
1988 book that has enjoyed wide notice among scholars in the subject, One God,
One Lord: Early Christian Devotion and Ancient Jewish Monotheism (2nd edition
1998, T&T Clark), I set forth the basics of a view of things very different
from Bousset’s. I confirmed the judgment of some other scholars that devotion
to Jesus as divine, in fact, erupted in Jewish-Christian circles of the very
earliest years, far too early to account for it through the influence of
Gentile converts and by a strung-out process of development. Also, I showed
that all of the earliest expressions of belief in/about Jesus clearly reflect
the influences and resources of the Jewish religious tradition, which was the
religious matrix of earliest Christianity. Now, in a much larger study with a
chronological scope that runs from the beginning of the Christian movement
down into the late second century, I offer an analysis that is intended to
compete with Bousset’s classic study: Lord Jesus Christ: Devotion to Jesus in
Earliest Christianity (Eerdmans, 2003).
In these and other publications of the last decade and more, I have emphasized
that the most remarkable and eloquent indication of Jesus’ exalted place in
their faith was a constellation of devotional actions that comprised what I
termed a “binitarian” devotional pattern in which Jesus was reverenced
uniquely along with God. In fact, in these actions, which are taken for
granted already in our earliest extant texts, Jesus was given the sort of
reverence that was otherwise reserved for God alone in all known circles of
devout Jews of the time.
These important early devotional actions, which comprise an unparalleled set
of phenomena, especially when compared to devotional practice in ancient
Jewish tradition, are the following. (1) Prayer was offered either “in Jesus’
name” or sometimes even to Jesus. (2) Collective ritual invocation and credal
“confession” of Jesus characterized Christian worship gatherings. (3) The
initiation rite widely used was a ritual immersion (“baptism”) that included
an invocation of Jesus, and the baptized person was thought of as having been
made Jesus’ property. (4) The sacred meals widely shared in Christian circles
seem to have been understood and practiced characteristically as “the Lord’s
supper,” with the risen Jesus understood as having a significance in the meal
that can only be likened to that of a deity. (5) A very important feature of
earliest Christian collective devotion was the singing/chanting of songs
(“hymns”) that typically lauded Jesus. These appear to have included Old
Testament Psalms interpreted as referring to Jesus and also fresh compositions
that arose from the religious exaltation attributed to the Holy Spirit. (6)
Prophetic oracles delivered as revelatory speech was another phenomenon
familiar in many early Christian groups, and the striking feature was that
these oracles were presented as coming from the risen Jesus. This is an
astonishing phenomenon, given the strong sanction against prophecy from any source other
than God in the ancient Jewish tradition that shaped earliest Christian
values.
Providing an extended review of ancient Jewish evidence in my 1988 book, I
showed that these phenomena/practices constitute a major and unparalleled
development: a distinctive “mutation” in, or “variant form” of, the
exclusivist monotheistic devotional practice that was characteristic of Jewish
tradition of the Roman period. Yet we cannot easily attribute these phenomena
to the influence of Gentile converts and their “pagan” religious background.
For, as I have indicated already in this article, the devotional pattern
represented in these phenomena seems to have characterized the Christian
movement from its earliest years and among circles that were either made up of
Jewish believers or were shaped by Jewish-Christian leaders (such as Cephas/Peter,
Barnabas, Silas, Paul, Prisca, and Acquila). Indeed, this devotional pattern
appears so early and quickly that it is better imaged as an explosion than an
incremental process, a veritable “big bang” of sorts in the religious history
of the early first century.
In seeking to understand in historical terms how such a major and sudden
development could have happened, my research included wider
history-or-religions phenomena and developments (such as the origins of the
Qumran community, Islam, the Bahais, Mormonism, and modern Pentecostalism),
and studies of new religious movements in various cultural settings (such as
studies by Rodney Stark and by Byron Earhart) and the phenomenon of
“innovation” in cultures. In One God, One Lord, I sketched a view of major
factors that drove and shaped the significant innovation represented by this
devotion to Jesus, and now in Lord Jesus Christ, I update and refine a
proposal as to the “forces and factors” involved. Although each factor had a
particular contribution, I emphasize that it is the dynamic interaction of all
four that provides us with a plausible model of the historical process
involved in the sudden emergence of devotion to Jesus as divine.
First, the monotheistic emphasis of Roman-era Jewish tradition is absolutely
crucial. This emphasis was most visibly expressed in a refusal to offer
worship to any figure other than the God of Israel. At the same time, devout
ancient Jews were very ready to accommodate this or that powerful figure
distinguishable from God in a role that can be characterized as God’s
“principal agent.” We see the effects of Jewish monotheistic tradition in the
consistent way that Jesus is identified and defined with reference to God
(e.g., “Son/Lamb/Image of God,” exalted/enthroned by God, given a name/status
by God, glorified by God, etc.).
Second, there is the impact of the figure of Jesus. Whatever Jesus’ intention
or understanding of himself and his activities, the results involved a
striking polarization of views about him, with some being his disciples and
others ready to proceed against him in mortal enmity. This polarization, with
Jesus himself as the issue, seems to go back to the time of Jesus’ ministry
and is particularly evident in his public crucifixion.
But these factors do not by themselves account for the remarkable ways in
which early Christian circles offered the exalted Jesus worship-type
reverence. So, thirdly, I propose that powerful religious experiences of
“revelation” played an important role. This proposal reflects observations of
scholars that major religious innovations often stem from such experiences
although this has not been reckoned with adequately by scholars of Christian
origins.
Finally, of course, there is the influence of the Roman-era religious
environment/setting. It must be said, however, that more often than not this
influence is exhibited in early Christian reactions against the religious
practic es of their time and in efforts to distinguish their beliefs and
practices from those that they regarded as idolatrous.
The studies of a number of other scholars of the last couple of decades have
contributed studies that are similar in approach and results (e.g., Richard
Bauckham, Loren Stuckenbruck, Carey Newman, David Capes, Alan Segal, Jarl
Fossum, April DeConick, Darrell Hannah, Jonathan Knight, Charles Gieschen,
Larry Kreitzer, Mehrdad Fatehi, Max Turner). A few observers have even
referred to a “new religionsgeschichtliche Schule”! However, this isn’t really
a German-type “school”; instead, what we have is a number of studies on
various cognate matters by scholars who are reaching similar and broadly
supportive (but not identical!) conclusions.
In the new book that I mentioned earlier (Lord Jesus Christ: Devotion to Jesus
in Earliest Christianity), I reinforce the judgment that devotion to Jesus as
divine appeared more as an explosion than as an evolutionary development so
quickly and so early that already in our earliest extant evidence (Paul’s
undisputed epistles) it is taken for granted as characteristic of Christian
circles, whether in Judea or the Diaspora and whether Jewish or Gentiles. For
example, Paul’s reference to “all those who in every place call upon the name
of our Lord Jesus Christ” (1 Corinthians 1:2) suggests that the devotional
action in question (to “call upon the name” of Jesus represents an invocation
of him as a divine figure) was ubiquitously a feature of early Christian
religious life.
I also show that devotion to Jesus as divine was exhibited with a completely
unparalleled intensity and breadth in earliest Christianity of the first two
centuries. Although there were numerous deities and divine heroes touted in
the Roman religious environment, these are not true parallels for the devotion
to Jesus that became so influential in Christian tradition. For one thing,
typically in the wider religious setting of the time, devotion to this or that
deity in no way meant that one could not also offer worship to any or all the
other deities and divine figures of the Roman era. But earliest devotees of
the Christian movement were expected to forsake all the other deities and
practice an exclusive reverence of the God of the Jewish Scriptures . . . and
Jesus. This is why I describe this devotional pattern as a “binitarian” form
of monotheism: God and the exalted Jesus are given the sort of reverence that
connotes their divine status and that is denied to any other figure.
Certainly, there were various circles of Christians in the first century and thereafter, sometimes
dissenting and clashing over issues of religious belief and practice, and
there were significant differences in the ways that they expressed Jesus’
significance. But, whatever these differences, all evidence indicates that
Jesus held a unique status in their beliefs and was revered as divine, both
among those circles that form the tributaries of “proto-orthodox” Christianity
and those various circles that came to be regarded as “heterodox” or
“heretical.”
In my own work, the focus is on the religious beliefs of earliest Christians
and the devotional practices that expressed their religious convictions. Most
scholarly work, however, has concentrated on what I refer to as the
“christological rhetoric” of the New Testament and other early Christian
writings, that is, the beliefs about Jesus and the ways that these beliefs are
verbally expressed. Scholars usually refer to these beliefs as the
“christology” of this or that text, author, circle, or period of Christianity.
In the sort of work that I have carried out and encouraged, however, there is
a broader scope of phenomena that comprise what I refer to as “devotion to
Jesus.”
In this, and in the attempt to approach earliest Christianity as a truly
historical development, the newer work affirms the questions of old
religionsgeschichtliche Schule. But, with all due appreciation for the
impressive scholars of that period and the influence of their work
subsequently, the results of the more recent scholarly efforts that are
referred to here represent a major revision in our understanding of what
earliest devotion to Jesus was and how it developed. The devotion offered to
Jesus in earliest Christianity is remarkable, even stunning, and all the more
so when seen in its full historical context. Thanks to the intense efforts of
a number of scholars, we appear now to have a much more adequate grasp of how
earliest Christians reverenced Jesus and how, in historical terms, this hugely
influential development happened.
Larry W. Hurtado is Professor of New Testament Language Literature and
Theology in the University of Edinburgh (Scotland). His publications drawn
upon here include: One God, One Lord: Early Christian Devotion and Ancient
Jewish Monotheism (Fortress Press, 1988; 2nd ed. T&T Clark, 1998); At the
Origins of Christian Worship: The Context and Character of Earliest Christian
Devotion (Paternoster, 1999; Eerdmans, 2000); and now, Lord Jesus Christ:
Devotion to Jesus in Earliest Christianity (Eerdmans, 2003).
Return to Home Page
Return to
Articles and Commentary |