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By
Mark Allan Powell
Professor of New Testament at Trinity
Lutheran Seminary Author of Jesus as a Figure in
History (Louisville: Westminster/John Knox,
1998).
Chair of the Historical Jesus Section of the
Society of Biblical Literature, beginning in
2002.
The “quest for the
historical Jesus” has returned and is
currently generating more publications than at
any time in the history of scholarship. The
central issue is the question of what can be
reliably asserted about the person of Jesus on
the basis of historical evidence alone—apart
from the imposition of a faith perspective. I
sometimes explain this to laity by asking the
question, “What would it be appropriate for a
teacher to say about Jesus in the public
schools?” Most Christians in the United States
recognize that it would not be appropriate for
such a teacher to tell students that Jesus was
born of a virgin; though we might believe this
as Christians, it is a conclusion of faith
rather than of historical research. That Jesus
was crucified, however, or that he befriended
outcasts and taught a radical ethic of love—these
are matters that virtually all scholars
(Christian or not) accept as indisputable facts
of history.
Most pastors will know that the historical study
of Jesus was in vogue in the nineteenth century
but was derailed by the work of Albert
Schweitzer, who seemed to demonstrate the
futility and irrelevance of such research. The
movement was taken up again in the 1960s in a
chastened and more critical movement called “the
new quest.” For those who wish to review some
of the essential documents of these periods, an
anthology has recently been published, The
Historical Jesus Quest: Landmarks in the Search
for the Jesus of History, ed. by Gregory W.
Dawes (Louisville: Westminster/John Knox, 2000).
The current explosion of scholarship on the
historical Jesus is sometimes called “the
third quest,” because it takes off in
directions that were not pursued previously. One
noteworthy facet of this third quest is its
interdisciplinary character: scholars draw on
resources of archaeology, literary criticism,
cultural anthropology, sociological analysis,
and even psycho-historical study in ways that
were not possible in previous generations. This
essay only begins to describe what is afoot, but
it does so with attention to the questions that
I hear most often from pastors and parishioners.
How Can I Get Up to Date?
So much is being written so
quickly that it may be impossible to stay
current on this issue; but I can recommend three
surveys of recent scholarship that provide a
general orientation:
• Ben Witherington III, The
Jesus Quest: The Third Search for the Jew of
Nazareth (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity, 1997)
• Marcus J. Borg, Jesus in
Contemporary Scholarship (Valley Forge, PA:
Trinity, 1994)
• Mark Allan Powell, Jesus
as a Figure in History: How Modern Historians
View the Man from Galilee (Louisville:
Westminster/John Knox, 1998)
Witherington writes from a conservative
theological perspective, seeking to correct
notions that are most challenging to traditional
Christian understandings of Jesus. Borg also
critiques research from an explicitly Christian
perspective, but he is more open to ideas that
challenge traditional or even orthodox
understandings of Jesus. Powell’s book is
intended as a classroom text and so strives for
neutrality, describing positions without
indicating whether they are right or wrong.
Who Are the Major Players?
Many of the world’s most
important biblical scholars and theologians are
now involved in historical Jesus studies; but if
pressed to name “the top three,” I would
list the following (with their major works):
• John Dominic Crossan, The
Historical Jesus: The Life of a Mediterranean
Jewish Peasant (San Francisco:
HarperSanFrancisco, 1993)
John Dominic Crossan, The Birth of Christianity
(San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1998)
• John P. Meier, A Marginal
Jew: Rethinking the Historical Jesus, 2 vols.
(New York: Doubleday, 1991, 1994). A third and,
possibly, a fourth volume are forthcoming.
• N. T. Wright, The New
Testament and the People of God (Minneapolis:
Fortress, 1992)
N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God
(Minneapolis: Fortress, 1996)
These works are for the truly committed. They
are dense tomes, devoted to explicating Jesus’
life and teaching with exhaustive attention to
detail. Was Jesus really baptized by John? Did
he have twelve disciples? Was he born in
Bethlehem? Did he tell the story of the Good
Samaritan? Whatever the question, these scholars
compile the data, weigh the arguments, and
render their verdicts. Crossan’s work
generally favors a secularized view of Jesus as
an innovative social reformer not particularly
interested in matters of theological doctrine.
Meier sticks pretty close to the biblical
portrait of Jesus as an eschatological Jewish
prophet who announced that God’s kingdom was
imminent, while challenging some Jewish
traditions in startling ways. Wright radicalizes
this view by presenting Jesus as a politically
charged prophet to Israel who became convinced
that he was the Messiah appointed to die as an
atoning sacrifice for his people’s sins.
There are shorter works also, ones that would be
more appropriate for use in an adult study
group. The following three books are merely
examples of the dozens of fine “biographies of
Jesus” that are being produced:
• Marcus J. Borg, Jesus: A
New Vision (San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco,
1991)
• E. P. Sanders, The
Historical Figure of Jesus (London: Penguin,
1993)
• Paula Fredriksen, Jesus
of Nazareth, King of the Jews: A Jewish Life and
the Emergence of Christianity (New York: Knopf,
1999)
All three of these works are written in a lively
and engaging style. They do not assume an
advanced level of theological awareness. All
three are written by Christians with sensitivity
to the impact that historical study can have on
faith and piety; but all three also allow
scholarship to challenge traditional notions in
what they consider to be responsible ways. Borg
does not (in this book) dispute facts about
Jesus so much as encourage Christians to
envision certain aspects of Jesus that are often
ignored: What does it mean for us to realize
that Jesus was a social revolutionary who defied
the conventional wisdom of the political and
religious authorities of his day? Do we really
appreciate the charismatic quality of Jesus’
personality—the fact that he was a mystic who
saw visions, heard voices, and often devoted
himself to long periods of prayer and fasting?
Both Sanders and Fredriksen are more concerned
with the historical reliability of biblical
reports. They think that much of what the
Synoptic Gospels tell us can be sustained, but
there are specific instances where they conclude
that the Bible is wrong. For both of them, a
recurring problem is that the Gospels are
written for a church engaged in Gentile mission,
to the extent that the specifically Jewish
aspects of Jesus’ life and ministry are often
transformed.
What about the
Controversial Jesus Seminar?
Many laity have heard about
historical Jesus studies primarily through
reports about the Jesus Seminar. This group was
a consortium of scholars who met during the
1990s and voted (with colored marbles) as to
whether Jesus really did say or do the things
attributed to him in the Bible. Their
conclusions were often widely reported in
national news outlets, especially when the
verdict was negative. Headlines would scream,
“Scholars Decide Jesus Did Not Teach the Lord’s
Prayer.” Borg and Crossan were members of the
Jesus Seminar, though they did not necessarily
agree with all of that group’s findings.
The Jesus Seminar seems to be off the radar
screen at present; but for those who remain
exercised over the group or simply want to
understand better the role that it played, I
cautiously recommend two books that should be
read in tandem:
• Luke Timothy Johnson, The
Real Jesus: The Misguided Quest for the
Historical Jesus and the Truth of the
Traditional Gospels (San Francisco:
HarperSanFrancisco, 1996)
• Robert J. Miller, The
Jesus Seminar and Its Critics (Santa Rosa, CA:
Polebridge Press, 1999)
Johnson’s book is a blistering attack on the
Seminar by a theologian who believes its work is
not only misguided but antagonistic to
Christianity. Miller writes as a member of the
Seminar and responds to Johnson’s charges,
while also offering a sober analysis of what the
group did and did not seek to accomplish.
What about Those Other
Gospels?
Historical Jesus studies have
brought new attention to the oft-ignored
apocryphal gospels, such that many parishioners
are now hearing of these works for the first
time. A certain sensationalism attaches to the
phenomenon when the volumes are touted as “secret
gospels” that the church has tried to keep
hidden from the public. In fact, they are
readily available in theological libraries but
are of less interest to the general public than
conspiracy theorists would have us believe. For
one thing, the only apocryphal gospel that any
scholar regards as conveying authentic
information about Jesus is the Gospel of Thomas.
All of the other apocryphal gospels are studied
for what they reveal about later Christianity,
not what they say about the historical person of
Jesus. This is a rare point on which virtually
all scholars of all persuasions agree. The
Gospel of Thomas, furthermore, is not thought to
reveal anything authentic about Jesus that would
counter traditional concepts—at most, it
enhances those concepts with similar, parallel
material. The Jesus Seminar probably has a
higher estimate of the worth of the Gospel of
Thomas than any other group of scholars; and in
the entire book they find only two unique
sayings (that is, sayings not also found in our
canonical Gospels) to be authentic. Neither of
these unique sayings would alter the biblical
portrait of Jesus. Finally, many laity may
confuse the Gospel of Thomas with the Infancy
Gospel of Thomas, which is a completely
different work. The book that may contain some
historically authentic material is simply a
collection of sayings attributed to Jesus. The
Infancy Gospel of Thomas is a second-century
account of fanciful stories about Jesus when he
was a child; no scholar considers these stories
to be historically authentic.
What Was the Message of
Jesus?
When we inquire historically
as to the content of Jesus’ teaching, we
discover that scholars are divided. In general,
the teaching contained in material attributed to
the Q source is regarded as most reliable;
material derived from Mark’s Gospel belongs in
a second tier; and that which is found only in
John is least regarded. But we may also construe
this topically.
The greatest level of agreement concerns what
the Bible presents as Jesus’ ethical teaching.
Almost all historical scholars accept the
authenticity of this material (e.g., the bulk of
what is in the Sermon on the Mount). Most stress
that Jesus proclaimed a social ethic in addition
to personal morality, and many insist that this
was geared specifically to the context of Israel’s
crisis as a puppet state of Rome. Crossan
emphasizes Jesus’ critique of the
patron-client relations and brokerage systems
that had evolved under Hellenistic rule. Wright
argues for the hope of liberation and
articulates Jesus’ message as a prophetic call
to dependence on God.
There is less agreement with regard to the
authenticity of eschatological sayings
attributed to Jesus: did he really think that
the kingdom of God was at hand, and what did
that mean? Many scholars (Meier, Sanders,
Witherington, Wright) insist that Jesus expected
the end of the world (or, at least, the end of a
world) and proclaimed the imminent activity of
God in this light. Recently, however, several
scholars departed from this former consensus.
Borg, Crossan, and others associated with the
Jesus Seminar argue that Jesus was not a
future-oriented prophet but a down-to-earth
sage, extolling lessons for a life focused on
the present. These scholars attribute the
eschatological material in the Gospels to later
Christians who were responding to such
apocalyptic crises as the disastrous Jewish war
with Rome.
The material attributed to Jesus that is least
likely to be regarded as authentic by historians
is that in which he describes his own person or
mission. When the Bible presents Jesus as saying
that he must “give his life a ransom for many”
(Mark 10:45) or as proclaiming “I am the way,
and the truth, and the life” (John 14:6), most
historians dismiss these remarks as projections
of later Christians who are putting their own
ideas about Jesus’ significance on the lips of
the teacher himself. There is a growing movement
among many scholars, however, to ground
apostolic christology in the historical teaching
of Jesus. Wright asks, for instance, whether it
is reasonable to presume that the radically
monotheistic followers of Jesus would have
attributed divinity to him if he had not told
them that he was, in some sense, a manifestation
of God.
The following volume offers a summary on the
teaching of Jesus from a perspective that grants
a high degree of authenticity to what is found
in the Bible:
• Scot McKnight, A New
Vision for Israel: The Teachings of Jesus in
National Context (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans,
1999)
As the title implies, McKnight tries to relate
all of Jesus’ teaching (his ethics, prophetic
announcements regarding the future, and
articulation of his purpose and mission) to the
context of Palestinian Judaism rather than to
the later context of Gentile-oriented
Christianity.
Did Jesus Work Miracles?
Most Christians are curious
as to what historians do with all the reports of
Jesus’ miracles. It should come as no surprise
that most scholars dismiss these stories as
legendary or else bracket them out as unsuitable
for historical discussion. To believe in a
miracle requires faith. Therefore, by
definition, no one can ever say on the basis of
historical science alone that a miracle
happened. This is not the end of the matter,
however. Meier has recently broken with this
longstanding tradition of avoiding discussion of
the miraculous. He devotes several hundred pages
in the second volume of his study to a detailed
examination of every miracle story in the
Gospels. His conclusion is that, although
historians cannot say whether or not the
miracles occurred, they can (indeed, must) say
that Jesus did inexplicable things that the
people of his day regarded as miracles. This
much, he avers, is historical fact. Wright goes
even further, questioning whether historical
reporting must restrict itself to limits set by
post-Enlightenment scientific theory. If
historical evidence points to something that
scientists cannot explain (as he believes it
does in this case), the tension should be
allowed to stand. The following volume offers an
in-depth study of the miracles from a
perspective that is basically compatible with
that of Meier and Wright:
• Graham H. Twelftree,
Jesus the Miracle Worker: A Historical and
Theological Study (Downers Grove, IL:
InterVarsity, 1999)
Conclusion
It is no doubt obvious that
church leaders must approach this topic with the
utmost sensitivity. Parishioners rightly
perceive that what is being said about the
historical Jesus has implications for the
legitimacy of Christian doctrine and popular
piety. Academic distinctions between “the
Jesus of history” and “the Christ of faith”
are artificial and unconvincing to the average
churchgoer who hears whatever the academicians
say about Jesus as applicable to the One they
worship as Lord and Savior. A degree of humility
is warranted—and perhaps attainable—by
emphasizing the operative word: quest. The Bible
presents the kingdom of God as something that
must be sought (Matt. 6:33). Above all else,
historical Jesus scholars are seekers.
Mark Allan Powell is a
distinguished Professor of New Testament at
Trinity Lutheran Seminary. He is the author of Jesus
as a Figure in History (Louisville:
Westminster/John Knox, 1998). He has been
elected to serve as chair of the Historical
Jesus Section of the Society of Biblical
Literature, beginning in 2002
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