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Introductory Comment: The following essay is an adaptation of
the concluding section of my book Jesus After Two Thousand Years: What
He Really Said and Did (London: SCM Press, 2000 and Amherst, N.Y.:
Prometheus Books, 2001), pp. 686-693. Based on a translation from the
original German by Dr. John Bowden, to whom I am duly grateful, the
present text represents a revision I have made in collaboration with
Tom Hall, whose diligent efforts are especially appreciated in view of
his strong disagreement with several of my key conclusions. While the
book remains a useful compendium for quick reference or for detailed
study, the present brief sketch aims to transform the authentic words
and actions of Jesus into a readable narrative.
By Gerd Lüdemann
September 2003
Since the images people use in their speech reflect their
surroundings, it is clear that Jesus came from a small agricultural
village. The world of his parables is a rural one. Jesus is familiar
with the sower in the field, 1 the shepherd with his herd, 2 the birds
of the sky 3 and the lilies of the field. 4 Even the mustard plant,
commonly considered a weed in the garden, becomes for this peripatetic
provincial an image of the in-breaking kingdom of God. 5
Jesus grew up in a family of five brothers and at least two
sisters in the Galilean village of Nazareth. He was probably the
oldest. His mother tongue was Aramaic, but he likely gained some
proficiency in colloquial Greek. He learned the woodworker's craft
from his father. Like most of his contemporaries, he could not read or
write, but was able to obtain a considerable religious education in
the local synagogue. At Sabbath services and on other occasions he
acquired by word of mouth parts of the Torah, prophetic teachings and
predictions, and exciting stories which surely included the narratives
about Elijah and Elisha - the prophets whose miraculous deeds inspired
a good deal of contemporary popular piety.
The limitations imposed by his environment become apparent when we
contrast his situation with that of his close contemporary, the
apostle Paul. That Paul came not from a village but a city is likewise
indicated by his habitual images. His letters portray city life - with
the stalls of traders, 6 a tutor holding the hands of his little
charges on the way to school, 7 and a solemn triumphal procession
moving through the streets. 8 Paul often takes his imagery from
warfare, 9 and even soldiers' trumpets provide him with a comparison.
10 Similarly, his arguments employ parallels from the legal sphere, 11
the theatre 12 and athletic competitions. 13 Jesus probably never
visited a theatre or an arena, though he may have found work in the
city of Sepphoris, a center of Greek culture only about three miles
from Nazareth.
Unlike Jesus, Paul was highly literate, having received both a
Jewish and a Greek education. And though his mother tongue was Greek,
he had a good command of Aramaic. Roman citizenship endowed him with
numerous privileges. By origin and education Paul was as thoroughly
cosmopolitan as Jesus was provincial. Had they ever met, social
barriers would have discouraged communication, and at any rate they
might well have had little to share. Paul would probably have chuckled
at the country bumpkin from Galilee, or he might simply have shrugged
his shoulders. Jesus' reaction to Paul would probably not have been
any warmer. In any case he would hardly have understood Paul's
pedantic theological demonstrations, for scholarly exegesis of
commandments, prophets, and scriptures with all its nice distinctions
were not to his taste.
And yet the two shared important assumptions and goals. Jesus and
Paul were committed Jews, proud and eager to serve the one God who had
created heaven and earth and chosen Israel. Both acted in the
certainty that their God had destined Jerusalem to be the center of
the earth. Here the "Savior" would come at the end of days;
and here divinely ordained sacrifices were offered and great festivals
like Passover, Pentecost and Tabernacles established the consecrated
unity of the cycles of seasons and years. It should also be noted that
both Jesus and Paul displayed the gift of exorcism, and that both
considered themselves to have struggled successfully against Satan.
Every life is affected by special features that range from inborn
traits to culturally acquired beliefs and values to the workings of
sheer chance. In Paul's case, for example, an illness that tormented
him to the end of his life evidently made him particularly susceptible
to ecstatic experiences. He hints at this when he speaks about the
thorn in the flesh, or the angel of Satan which - of course at God's
bidding - keeps pummeling him. 14 Jesus suffered from an even harsher
affliction, a blot on his reputation that originated with his mother;
for apparently this, her first-born child, had been fathered in
dubious circumstances. In our earliest written source he is
contemptuously labeled "son of Mary," 15 and Matthew's birth
story recognizes the lack of a father and immediately introduces the
Holy Spirit as a begetter. 16 Not only that, but in his genealogy of
the Messiah, Matthew mitigates the charge of immoral behavior by
including four female ancestors with questionable or immoral
associations 17 - women whose notoriety had clearly not deterred God
from his plan to raise up Jesus, the son of Mary, to be the Messiah
and Son of God.
But that is a carefully constructed theological interpretation;
the often harsh facts of life are not always so pretty, and Jesus came
to feel this to an increasing extent. From the very first, no doubt,
people in his hometown of Nazareth either shunned or attacked him as a
bastard without a proper father. Hence the taunt "son of
Mary." His later adoption by Joseph - long before he rose to
public notice - did not remove the stigma of being regarded as the son
of a prostitute. It is hardly unreasonable to suppose that his later
acceptance of those who were despised as sinners and outcasts reflects
his own bitter experience of blameless rejection. Such a sense of
alienation may also account for his difficult relationship to his own
biological family. Following the evidently early death of his adoptive
father, he would normally have been expected, as the oldest son, to
assume responsibility for the family, especially his mother. But the
sources tell another story. For Jesus the fourth commandment appears
to have had little attraction; he chose the way of radical separation.
However, insults and inclinations are not in themselves enough to
give rise to a movement. There must be other motivations from other
people. In Jesus' case, the key stimulus was the figure of John the
Baptist.
John was one of a long line of Jewish prophets who called for
repentance in the face of the imminent day of God. Yet like other
prophets, he mitigated the threat of judgment with the promise of
forgiveness for all those who repented and accepted his baptism. This
guarantee of escaping God's wrath gave his message great appeal and
led numerous Jews to come to him beside the Jordan. Among them was
Jesus the Galilean who, burdened with a nagging sense of
unfulfillment, had come south and found at least temporary relief in
the circle around John the Baptist. Here was a new kind of family -
one very different from his biological family, and more spiritually
nurturing. Now he belonged to a group of ascetics whose only obedience
was to God and whose gratitude for this one final opportunity for
repentance was palpable and genuine.
Clearly this eccentric prophet in the Jordan wilderness and his
followers worried and indeed challenged the members of the priestly
aristocracy in Jerusalem. What was this nondescript agitator trying to
do with his obvious parody of the Twelve Tribes crossing the river
under Joshua and the establishment of the pure desert religion of the
Tabernacle in the land? Had not the supervision, administration and
execution of the sacrifices that brought about atonement long since
been entrusted to them alone by God? But as long as the temple was not
in immediate danger, they tried to ignore the exotic Baptist sect by
the Jordan. Anyway, Roman oppression had produced an abundance of
"inspired" prophets with all sorts of messages - messianic
and otherwise. But they could not forever overlook the fact that John
was dangerous. As people began to understand - and perhaps even concur
in - his implied charge of temple corruption, things would heat up for
the authorities. Worse yet, his preaching had unsettling political
implications, since their jurisdiction depended on collaboration with
Rome; and John was preaching the rule of God, not Caesar. Indeed,
Herod Antipas, the ruler of the area in which Jesus lived, soon
recognized the underlying political radicalism, and had John summarily
executed as a messianic pretender.
It is not clear how long Jesus remained in the Baptist's company,
but the rivalry between the disciples of Jesus and those of John shows
that Jesus must have already gone his own way before the Baptist's
death. That defection must not be seen as a break with Jewish
tradition; rather it resulted from Jesus' re-focusing of John's
preaching. This new dispensation evolved from three sources. First,
Jesus was uncomfortable with John's fundamentally ascetic attitude.
Second, this aversion stemmed in considerable measure from his
powerful experience of the kingdom of God that was realized in meals
at which all were welcome. Third, he discovered a gift for healing,
and found in it an overwhelming experience - one he also associated
with the presence of God.
We can no longer claim to be completely clear about the
substantive or chronological connection between these three points,
but it is important to note that none of the three characteristics is
ever attributed to John. Clearly they mark a turning point in Jesus'
spiritual development. However, two or possibly three similarities
between them seem rooted in the Baptist's religious convictions.
First, Jesus shared with John an unshakable commitment to following
and expounding the will of God. Second, like John he remained
unmarried, as did also the apostle Paul. This point is all the more
worth noting since it was considered the religious obligation of every
male Jew to father descendants. Third, Jesus may have shared with John
the expectation of an imminent final judgment, though this point
depends more on interpretation than on solid evidence.
No doubt Jesus' gift for healing soon became widely known in
Galilee. His cures of psychological and psychosomatic illnesses are
the best attested of the New Testament "miracles." At that
time such afflictions were attributed to demonic possession, and since
Satan was regarded as the chief of these evil spirits, these cures
lent reality to the notion that Jesus was waging a successful battle
against him. The report that he had seen Satan fall like lightning
from heaven implies that he had become stronger than Satan himself,
and thus represents an anticipation of the advent of God's kingdom.
That he could snatch people from the rule of the devil by providing
healing and the forgiveness of sins shows that for him, sickness and
sin were inseparably joined. Here again he resembles Paul, who could
attribute an epidemic of debility, sickness, and even death in the
Corinthian community in Corinth to the sinful misuse of the Eucharist.
18
According to Jesus, however, the kingdom of God meant not only
liberation from sickness and other evils, but involved the
establishment of God's rule under the jurisdiction of Jesus and the
Twelve. Underlying the latter notion was the ancient but delusory
hope, that when God at last instituted his kingdom, he would also
restore the ten tribes annihilated by the Assyrians seven hundred
years previously. At the time of Jesus only the two tribes of Judah
and Benjamin remained, but at the end of history, according to a
promise attributed to Jesus, his twelve disciples would judge these
twelve tribes. What higher prerogative than to sit beside Jesus among
God's elect in the Court of Heaven? Indeed the apostle Paul expressed
a similar hope He called on the members of the Corinthian community
not to go to law against one another, since they themselves would
one-day judge angels. 19
Here we see directly into the hearts of a number of early
Christians, no doubt including some members of the community gathered
by Jesus. Their faith sprang not from reason or reflection, but the
prospect of sharing in God's rule. And this rule extended not only to
human beings, but also to an entire cosmos that must be restored to
the rightful order willed by God. Of course all this reflected a
Jewish perspective, since it involved only the Jewish people, and
focused on the New Jerusalem. Other peoples amounted to no more than
neighbors or supernumeraries. Jesus' exalted status reflected the
ardent hope that God would soon keep his promise. And the successes of
his ministry subsequent to his departure from John the Baptist may
well have convinced him that he must play the leading role in this
final drama. Again the parallel with Paul is striking and perhaps
illuminating: it was only a few years later that Paul became persuaded
that he had been ordained to effect the incorporation of the Gentiles
into the future kingdom of God. 20
The decisive actions of Jesus' career were molded by the
unshakeable faith that it was his mission to interpret God's law
authoritatively in God's name. And in general his interpretation can
be perceived as based on an accentuation of the divine will. Thus he
forbade divorce with an appeal to the goodness of God's creation, in
accordance with which the marriage of man and woman creates an
indissoluble unity. 21 He defined the commandment to love by the
extreme demand to love one's enemy. 22 He forbade judging 23 and
swearing. 24 Occasionally he proclaimed a sweeping retraction of the
law - as for instance when he in effect declared the food laws
irrelevant, 25 and when he adduced human welfare as the purpose of the
Sabbath. 26 But anything that in the modern view would appear to be
autonomy was grounded in heteronomy, in God enforcing his rule. Jesus
could ordain this free yet radically conservative interpretation of
the law only because he had received the authority to do so from the
deity he lovingly addressed (as Paul did later, 27 ) as Abba 28 - a
term connoting both intimacy and affection. Under such circumstances
Jesus and his heavenly Father were practically one and the same, a
notion that must have been highly offensive to his Jewish hearers.
And although he drove out demons and expounded the law, Jesus was
also a poet and wisdom teacher. He told intriguing tales of common
scamps and deep-dyed villains and from their realistic estimations of
the world drew morals for himself and his disciples. Indeed, his own
life often resembled that of a picaresque hero, especially because of
his itinerant mode of living; for having no income, he accepted the
support of sympathizers and trusted in God. Embedded in some of his
stories we find the kind of shrewd maxims one would expect from
philosophers. In other parables he showed vividly how God will bring
into being his kingdom: gently and yet at the same time irrevocably.
Still others strikingly portray God's attempts to reclaim the lost.
Jesus provided living commentary for this lesson: he was often the
guest of tax collectors and prostitutes. Some of the parables
attributed to him contain a threatening tone: there will be judgment
in the end, and God will destroy his enemies. Yet as the Beatitudes
powerfully testify, he will also make good the fate of the poor, the
hungry and those who weep.
One may reasonably wonder how the timeless nature of Jesus' wisdom
comports with those passages that indicate the expectation of an
imminent end. Some scholars cut the knot and declare the first
authentic and the other a later creation. That at least produces a
Jesus whom we find easier to understand today. But that is probably
too modern a solution. What we cannot reconcile, the first century
mind might have harmonized with little difficulty. Paul offers a
contemporary example of the accommodation of wisdom teaching and the
anticipation of an imminent end. Paul fully expected to experience the
coming of the Lord on the clouds of heaven and was obsessed with
spreading the gospel throughout the Roman Empire before Jesus' return.
Yet we find in his writings such timeless observations as the
foolishness of human wisdom before God, 29 and the magnificent hymn we
find in 1 Corinthians 13 is a paean to a timeless love that precludes
the calculation of an imminent end. This love is greater than hope
(for the end) and greater also than faith (in Christ who first made
possible the expectation of an imminent end). Surely then, Jesus could
also have combined apocalyptic preaching, wisdom teaching, and
divinely sanctioned ethical demands however contrary to modern logic
that may seem. A consideration of the final days of his life suggests
that the image of the approaching end may have by then become
predominant.
Jesus had experienced great success in Galilee, but the same call
to which the crowds had responded now drew him to Jerusalem, where he
must proclaim to the Jewish people and its leaders the need for
repentance. Marching into the city surrounded by both men and women
followers, he went to the Temple and dramatized both his criticism of
the existing cult and his hope for the coming of a new Temple by the
symbolic act of overturning the tables of some of the moneychangers
and traders. The Jewish priesthood and aristocracy could not forgive
him that, and the subsequent events bore little resemblance to the
occasional clashes between Pharisees and Jesus in Galilee. There Jesus
had received no more than insults; here, in a city swarming with
Passover celebrants, the authorities were in deadly earnest. Jesus was
falsely labeled as a would-be king of the Jews, and Pilate gave him
short shrift. Evidently his disciples were quite unprepared for this,
for they all fled. The crucified Jesus was the victim of a criminal
conspiracy: he suffered for deeds he had never attempted and
aspirations he would never have countenanced. Although this unforeseen
outcome seemed to repudiate all that he had told his disciples and the
Jewish people, he probably did not perceive it that way. Once again a
look at Paul helps: when some members of his community began to die
and Jesus failed to return as soon as the Apostle had promised, Paul
did not give up his faith, but proclaimed it all the more strongly. He
announced that whether he lived or died, he belonged to the
"Lord". In all likelihood that is how Jesus thought and felt
on the cross, surrendering himself to his Father. True faith can never
be refuted by reality, let alone by arguments.
Of course, the story of Jesus' life must include the accounts of
post-mortem events, since except for these extraordinary reports, all
knowledge about him would no doubt have ceased long ago. In their
eagerness to exalt his memory, his disciples began by making Jesus the
Jew into an enigma of the first order. Soon after his death they
claimed that Jesus had been raised from the dead and would come again
on the clouds of heaven as Son of God, as Savior, as Christ, as the
Son of man. Even more important, a number of his followers drove out
demons in his name and performed miracles similar to his. Some even
claimed to speak on behalf of the risen Jesus and, ostensibly filled
with the Holy Spirit, asserted the authority to deal with problems in
their communities. The apostle Paul, the erstwhile persecutor of
Jesus' followers whose reported encounter with the risen Christ
resulted in his conversion, provided the relentless will that
energized the mission to the Gentiles. With a genius for organization
and an indomitable dedication to his calling, he became the prime
example of this phenomenon.
After the Jewish rebellion of 66-70 C.E. and the resulting
destruction of Jerusalem, there followed a period of unparalleled
confusion, out of which emerged a church consisting almost exclusively
of Gentiles, who without delay branded their risen Lord's fellow Jews
as murderers of God. The flood of bizarre interpretations that began
with the reported resurrection of Jesus was unstoppable. Everywhere
the constraints of reason that had reined in religious pretensions to
infallibility began to give way. According to evangelists and
preachers alike, the Hebrew Bible (or Old Testament) provided numerous
cases in which God had alluded to Christ and announced his coming.
Indeed Christ had been at God's side when the world was created. As if
the assassination of Jesus the authoritative exorcist, the expounder
of the law, the prophet, the poet and the wisdom teacher at the hands
of a political cabal were not tragedy enough, the long history of
misinterpretation and misuse of his memory and message to benefit
individual and sectarian interests is a greater and even more shameful
one.
Nevertheless a vital question remains: Once the ecclesiastical
trappings and distortions are recognized as a shameless charade, what
can Jesus mean in today's world? For me Jesus is a sympathetic,
original figure, a man of humor and wit at whom I sometimes chuckle.
Yet one cannot doubt the earnest dedication that characterized his
mission to those on the periphery of the Jewish society of his day.
Jesus is the paradigm of one who will not be deterred from following a
chosen path to the end; but his interpretation of the law, which both
relaxed and intensified the essence of Torah, makes him too serious
for me. Nor can I revere an enthusiasm that repudiates reason, or
esteem the proclaimed kingdom of God that has failed to materialize.
Finally, in his confident dialogue with God, Jesus seems almost
delusional; like so many religious people he errs in seeing himself at
the center of the world.
Therefore the unity of Jesus' message and his integrity as a
person remain problematical, and we cannot expect to build upon the
sand of uncertainty solid answers to the haunting challenges of our
world.
Notes
[1] Mark 4:3-8
[2] Luke 15:4-6
[3] Matt. 6:26
[4] Matt. 6:28
[5] Mark 4:30-32
[6] 2 Cor. 2:17
[7] Gal. 3:24-25
[8] Cf. 2 Cor. 2:14
[9] 2 Cor. 10:3-5
[10] 1 Cor. 14:8
[11] Gal. 3:17
[12] 1 Cor. 4:9
[13] 1 Cor 9:24
[14] 2 Cor. 12:7
[15] Mark 6:3
[16] Cf. Matt. 1:18-25
[17] Matt. 1: 3-6: Tamar, Rahab, Ruth, and the wife of Uriah
(Bathsheba).
[18] 1 Cor. 11:29-30
[19] 1 Cor. 6:3
[20] Cf. Rom. 11:13-36
[21] Mark 10:9, 11
[22] Matt. 5:44a
[23] Matt. 7:1
[24] Matt. 5:34a
[25] Mark 7:15
[26] Mark 2:27
[27] Gal. 4:6
[28] Luke 11:2
[29] 1 Cor. 1-2
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