Title: Spiritual, non-material reality. Infinite, eternal. Divine
1Religion 313Teaching of JesusDr. Donald N.
Penny
2- The Pre-Easter Jesus
- This course seeks to explore the teaching of the
pre-Easter Jesus. - Historical Jesus scholar Marcus Borg
distinguishes between what he calls the
pre-Easter Jesus and the post-Easter Jesus. - The pre-Easter Jesus is the historical Jesus, a
Galilean Jew of first-century Palestine. - The post-Easter Jesus is the Jesus of Christian
tradition and experience, a continuing presence
in the lives of Christian believers. - The following chart is adapted from
www.united.edu/portrait/compare.shtml, a web site
devoted to the work of Marcus Borg. It contains
detailed information on Borg and his approach to
the historical Jesus.
3The Pre- and Post-Easter Jesus
- Pre-Easter Jesus
- 4 BC 30 AD
- Human being of flesh blood
- Finite and mortal
- Human
- A Jewish peasant
- Figure of the past
- Jesus of Nazareth
- Monotheistic Jew
- Galilean Jew of 1st century
- Post-Easter Jesus
- 30 AD to present
- Spiritual, non-material reality
- Infinite, eternal
- Divine
- King of Kings Lord of Lords
- Figure of the present
- Jesus Christ
- Second person of the Trinity
- The Face of God (2 Cor. 46)
The better we understand the pre-Easter Jesus,
the more authentic our experience of the
post-Easter Jesus will be.
4Topic 1Sources and Methodology for the Study of
Jesus
- Overview of Sources
- Source Criticism of the Gospels
- Form Criticism
- Redaction Criticism
- Conclusion
5I. Overview of Sources
- Non-Christian Sources (F.F. Bruce, Jesus and
Christian Origins Outside the NT) - Suetonius (c. 120) Jews were expelled from Rome
by Claudius (c. 49) because of rioting instigated
by Chrestus. - Tacitus (c. 116) Describes Christian movement
persecuted by Nero (64) named for Christ, who
was executed by Pontius Pilate during reign of
Tiberius. - Pliny the Younger (c. 111) Letter to Trajan
asking for guidance in dealing with growing,
illicit Christian sect gathered before dawn to
recite hymns to Christ as to God. - Josephus (c. 90) Jewish historian mentions Jesus
twice. - Execution of James, brother of Jesus the
so-called Christ. - Laudatory description of Jesus the Christ under
Pontius Pilate (probably added or modified by
Christian copyists). - Talmud (c. 500) Many derogatory references to
Jesus. - Summary.
- Add little to our knowledge of Jesus.
- Main value is to confirm that Jesus lived,
attracted followers, was executed, and originated
Christian movement.
6I. Overview of Sources
- Extra-Canonical Christian Sources
- Apocryphal gospels (2nd-5th cent.) mostly
fanciful, legendary, secondary some may preserve
early tradition. - Narrative gospels
- Infancy Story of Thomas miraculous deeds of
child Jesus. - Gospel of Peter 2nd-cent. Passion
Resurrection narrative Crossan thinks an earlier
version (Cross Gospel) was used by canonical
gospels. - Protevangelium of James miraculous birth of
Mary virgin birth of Jesus as told by James,
brother of Jesus. - Jewish Christian gospels Gospels of Ebionites,
Hebrews, and Nazareans. - Sayings gospels
- Nag Hammadi library (discovered in 1945)
Gnostic writings. - Coptic Gospel of Thomas (ms. dated c. 350)
- Translation of Greek text of disputed date
(50-140). - Contains 114 detached sayings of Jesus some
parallel to Synoptic sayings some appear to be
earlier form others may have undergone Gnostic
redaction. - Used extensively by many recent scholars (esp.
Jesus Seminar) as early, independent tradition. - Others think it is dependent on canonical
gospels.
7I. Overview of Sources
- Extra-Canonical Christian Sources (cont.)
- Agrapha (unwritten things)
- Sayings not recorded in our gospels but preserved
elsewhere. - It is more blessed to give than to receive
(Acts 2035). - Story of woman caught in adultery (Jn.
753-811). - Many found in writings of early church fathers.
- Summary
- Very little outside NT with any claim to
authenticity or which adds substantially to NT
sources. - Apocryphal gospels mostly reveal more about
Christian groups that produced them than about
Jesus himself. - Main exception is Coptic Gospel of Thomas.
8I. Overview of Sources
- NT writings
- Acts and letters
- Only barest facts about Jesus life and teaching.
- Paul seems to have little interest in pre-Easter
Jesusfocuses on his Death and Resurrection. - Gospels
- Four detailed accountsall datable to first
century. - Stark differences between Synoptics and John
force historian to choose.
9I. Overview of Sources
10I. Overview of Sources
- 2. Gospels
- Which picture of Jesus is more historical?
- John Theological development is more
pronounced. - Reads Christian theology back into story more
explicitly than Synoptics. - Jn. is not devoid of historical tradition, but it
is harder to isolate overall portrait is more
heavily theologized. - Synoptics Historical Jesus lies closer to
surface. - Preserve traditions in more primitive, less
theologized form. - Synoptics do theologize, but in more subtle ways.
- Conclusion
- Synoptics are our primary sources for historical
Jesus. - John is studied mainly for its profound theology.
11II. Source (Literary) Criticism of the
GospelsFocuses on literary origin authorship,
date, place, sources, etc.
- The gospel and the Gospels
- Gospel term borrowed from secular politics
- Good news of a kings victory.
- Announcement of rulers birth as good news.
- Christians borrowed term to refer to good news of
Jesus. - Oral proclamation of Christian gospel (30-70 AD
and beyond) - Written collections (50-65)
- Full Gospels (65-100)
- Eyewitnesses dying out.
- Imminent Parousia failed.
- Threats of heresy.
- Rapid growth and spread of movement.
12II. Source Criticism of the Gospels
- The Synoptic Problem
- Similarities among Synoptics (viewed together)
- Similar outline of ministry (Galilee journey
Jerusalem) - Much overlapping content
- Similar language and style
- Similar wording, often verbatim (literary
interdependence) - Differences among Synoptics
- Birth stories different in Mt. and Lk., absent
from Mk. - Many sayings common to Mt. and Lk., absent from
Mk. - Sayings arranged differently in Mt. and Lk.
- Mt. and Lk. each have unique material.
- How do we account for similarities and
differences among the Gospels?
13II. Source Criticism of the Gospels
- Solution the Two-Source Theory
- Priority of Mark (1835) Mk. was used by Mt.
and Lk. - Mk. is much shorter than Mt. and Lk.
- Most of Mk. is reproduced in Mt. or Lk.
- Mt. and Lk. never agree on order different from
Mk. - Mt. and Lk. improve Mk.s Greek style and remove
theological difficulties (cf. Mk. 1018 with Mt.
1917). - Q hypothesis (1838)
- Mt. and Lk. used a written collection of (mostly)
sayings of Jesus (Q Quelle source?). - Arguments for a written Q source
- Close verbal agreements between Mt. and Lk.
- Agreements in order even when grouping is
different. - Doublets two accounts of similar material in
same gospel one from Mk. and one from Q (cf.
Lk. 9, 10).
14II. Source Criticism of the Gospels
- Solution the Two-Source Theory cont.
- Material unique to Mt. and Lk. taken from Mt.
and Lk.s special traditions (written and/or
oral). - M 1/5 of Mt. is unparalleled.
- L 1/3 of Lk. is unparalleled.
- Synthesis of theory
- H. J. Holtzmann (1863) first to synthesize the
two-source theory (Mk. and Q as sources for Mt.
and Lk.) became dominant view by 1900. - B. H. Streeter (1924) developed four-source
theory (counting M and L, as well as Mk. and Q)
not widely followed. - Alternate views
- Utilization theory (Augustine) Mt. written
first Mk. used Mt. Lk. used Mt. and Mk. - Griesbach theory Mt. written first Lk. used
Mt. Mk. abridged Mt. and Lk. (revived by W. R.
Farmer). - Two-source theory remains the reigning view.
15The Two-Source Theory
16II. Source Criticism of the Gospels
- Contribution to the Jesus Quest
- Boosted confidence in 19th-cent. quest for
historical Jesus. - Mk. as early, reliable account of ministry.
- Q as early, reliable source of sayings.
- Basis for criterion of multiple-attestation
material found in more than one source is more
likely authentic. - Useful as a tool for gospel interpretation.
17III. Form CriticismFocuses on oral tradition
lying behind the literary process
- Pioneers of Form Criticism
- K. L. Schmidt (1919)
- Tradition circulated in small, independent units
of tradition (pericopes, lit. cutting around).
(Snapshots of Jesus) - Connecting framework (provided by evangelists)
can be removed with little loss of meaning. - M. Dibelius (1919)
- Classified traditions into 5 relatively fixed
forms. - Showed how forms functioned in Sitz im Leben
(setting in life) of early church (esp.
preaching and teaching). - R. Bultmann (1921) most influential,
controversial - Detailed analysis of Synoptic tradition.
- Emphasized creativity of early church shaped,
embellished, and borrowed material. - Distinguished Palestinian and Hellenistic forms
to separate layers of tradition and write a
history of the tradition.
18III. Form Criticism
- Method 4 main steps in Form Criticism
- Separate tradition from evangelists framework.
- Classifying the form (genre) of the tradition.
- Determine its function in its Sitz im Leben.
- Reconstruct the history of the tradition
identify modifications made by early church and
work back towards earliest form of the tradition.
Examples - Application to a new situation.
- Transference from Palestinian to Hellenistic
environment. - Elaboration of details.
- Influence of Christian prophecy speaking in
name of risen Jesus. - Etc.
19III. Form Criticism
- A Classification of Forms
- Pronouncement stories (apophthegms)
- Brief dialogue climaxing in striking saying (Mk.
223-28). - Often preserved in context of controversy with
Jews over Law. - Dominical sayings
- Sayings of Jesus as Lord of church many types
(Mk. 1031). - Often preserved as instruction of new converts.
- Parables 1/3 of Synoptic sayings most
considered genuine. - Miracle stories
- Fixed form description of problem the cure
demonstration of effectiveness reaction of crowd
(Mk. 140-45). - Used in preaching to demonstrate Jesus power.
- Stories about Jesus
- Birth baptism temptation transfiguration last
supper etc. - Terms legend or myth do not rule out
historical kernel. - Passion narrative earliest material to form
connected account
20III. Form Criticism
- Results of Form Criticism
- Our knowledge of Jesus is filtered through the
tradition of the early church. - Tradition was preserved in self-contained units,
so that the original sequence and context are
often lost. - Tradition was shaped to meet needs of early
church. - There may be expansions, embellishments, and
borrowing in the tradition. - Form criticism led to skepticism about knowledge
of historical Jesus. Raises three critical
questions - Does a tradition go back to Jesus at all?
- Has it been accurately preserved?
- Are the present sequences and contexts
historical? - Limitations of form criticism
- Only a tool, not the gospel.
- Creativity of church can be exaggerated (cf. J.
Jeremias).
21IV. Redaction CriticismFocuses on process of
editing sources and traditions into final form
- Pioneers of Redaction Criticism
- G. Bornkamm (1948) Matthew Showed how Mt.
edited Stilling of Storm to address theme of
discipleship. - H. Conzelmann (1954) Luke Responds to delay of
Parousia by creating 3-fold scheme of
Salvation-history (Israel Jesus Church) in
which Jesus ministry is the center of time. - W. Marxsen (1956) Mark Absence of resurrection
appearances leads readers to expect imminent
Parousia in Galilee. - B. Methodology observes an Evangelists
editorial work - Selectivity
- Arrangement
- Adaptation
- Editorial comments
- All aimed at discovering the distinctive
theology of each Evangelist.
22IV. Redaction Criticism
- Mark the Crucified Christ
- Author Anonymous. Tradition John Mark
(interpreter of Peter). - Place Tradition Rome. Others Syria,
Palestine. - Date 65-70.
- Purpose To strengthen Christians in the face of
suffering. - Outline geographical and topical.
- ch. 1-8 Galilee ministry
- ch. 8-10 Journey to Jerusalem
- ch. 11-16 Jerusalem ministry
- Key themes in Mark
- Jesus as Gods agent in battle with Satan.
- Jesus as Son of God who suffers and dies.
- Jesus as Son of Man in earthly ministry,
suffering, and future coming in glory. - The Messianic Secret identity not revealed
until after Passion. - Centrality of the Passion (Kähler passion
narrative with extended introduction). - Discipleship involves willingness to suffer for
sake of gospel.
23IV. Redaction Criticism
- Matthew the Teaching Christ
- Author Anonymous. Tradition Matthew the tax
collector. - Place Antioch/Syria?
- Date 75-90.
- Purpose Manual of instruction for Jewish
Christian church defining itself over against the
synagogue. - Outline organized around five discourses of
Jesus. - ch. 1-2 Infancy narrative
- ch. 3-7 Discipleship
- Discourse 1 Sermon on the Mount (ch. 5-7)
- ch. 8-10 Apostleship
- Discourse 2 Mission Discourse (ch. 10)
- ch. 11-13 Kingdom
- Discourse 3 Parables of the Kingdom (ch. 13)
- ch. 14-18 Christian community
- Discourse 4 Discourse on Church Discipline
(ch. 18) - ch. 19-25 Preparation for death
- Discourse 5 Eschatological Discourse (ch.
24-25) - ch. 26-28 Passion and Resurrection
24IV. Redaction Criticism
- Matthew the Teaching Christ (cont.)
- Key themes in Matthew
- Jewish Gospel relating Christian faith to
Judaism. - Fulfillment of prophecy (formula quotations).
- Jesus as the expected royal Messiah, Son of
David. - Continuing validity of the Law as interpreted by
Jesus. - Jesus as Teaching Messiah whose authority
transcends the Torah. - The most church oriented gospel.
25IV. Redaction Criticism
- Luke the Universal Christ
- Author Anonymous. Tradition Luke, Pauls
beloved physician. - Place outside Palestine Aegean region?
- Date 75-90.
- Purpose To commend and clarify the gospel for
Gentile readers. - Outline
- 11-413 Preface infancy preparation for
ministry - 414-950 Galilee ministry (620-83 lesser
interpolation) - 951-1927 Journey to Jerus. (951-1814
greater interp.) - 1928-2453 Jerusalem ministry
26IV. Redaction Criticism
- Luke the Universal Christ (cont.)
- Key themes in Luke
- Delay of the Parousia.
- Salvation-history divided into three periods
- Period of Israel (Adam to John the Baptist).
- Period of Jesus public ministry (Baptism to
Ascension). - Period of church (Pentecost to Parousia cf.
Acts). - Gods mercy for sinners and outcasts (tax
collectors prostitutes the poor women
Samaritans Gentiles). - Universalism of the gospel.
- Role of the Holy Spirit.
- Conduct of the Christian life prayer humility
love proper use of money. - Defense of the political innocence of
Christianity.
27IV. Redaction Criticism
- Results of Redaction Criticism
- Evangelists are theologians in their own right.
- Edited sources and traditions in interest of
their own theology. - Not primarily concerned with historical accuracy
but with preaching the gospel to their
particular readers. - Shifted focus of scholarship away from historical
Jesus and toward theologies of Evangelists.
28V. Conclusion
- What Are the Gospels?
- Not eyewitness, objective biographies but
2nd-generation witnesses to Christian faith in
Jesus. - Based on historical traditions, so they tell us
much about Jesus. - Traditions have been reshaped twice to serve
theological interests once in oral tradition
and again by the Evangelists. - Gospel passages can be interpreted in the context
of three settings in life.
29V. Conclusion
- B. Three Gospel Settings in Life (Sitzen im
Leben) - Interpretation may focus at any of three levels
- Setting of the Evangelist
- Literary context of final form of gospel.
- Focus of redaction criticism (message of gospel
writer). - Setting of the early church
- Context of oral tradition.
- Focus of form criticism (what does form of
tradition tell us about the early church which
preserved it?). - Setting of Jesus
- Context of historical ministry of Jesus.
- Focus of historical quest (meaning for Jesus
himself).
30V. Conclusion
- C. Criteria of authenticity
- Three classic criteria
- (N. Perrin, Rediscovering the Teaching of Jesus,
pp. 39-47) - Criterion of dissimilarity material dissimilar
to Judaism and early church must be Jesus. - Criterion of multiple attestation material found
in more than one source is more likely authentic. - Criterion of coherence material which coheres
with authenticated material may be considered
authentic. - Additional criteria
- Criterion of embarrassment material embarrassing
to early church would not have been invented. - Criterion of language and environment material
not compatible with language/culture of Palestine
may not be authentic.