Since many have undertaken to set down an orderly account of the
events that have been fulfilled among us, just as they were handed on
to
us by those who from the beginning were eyewitnesses and servants of
the
word, I too decided, after investigating everything carefully from the
very
first, to write an orderly account for you, most excellent Theophilus,
so
that you may know the truth concerning the things about which you have
been
instructed (Lk. 1: 14; NRSV).
Was the real Jesus of history one and the same as the Christ of
faith whom we read about in the New Testament and worship in the
church? Was Jesus really raised from the dead? Is he really
the divine Lord of lords? Or
is it possible that the portrait of the divine Son of God is an
exaggeration, at best, or a complete fabrication, at worst, of the
original Jesus? Could the one whom Christians worship be merely a
mythological creation or
is he real?
These questions have exercised many great minds and have been
the dominant issue in New Testament studies during this century.
Between 1910 and 1950 approximately 350 lives of Jesus were published
in the English language alone. Since then the numbers have
increased significantly.1 Not
only are Christians writing about Jesus, but also Communists, Jews,
atheists and agnostics are taking up their pens to paint a portrait of
Jesus. Not only is this being done by the professional scholars,
but also by playwrights, journalists and many others not academically
qualified to pursue such a study within the canons and controls of
proper historical enquiry. This has led Luke Timothy Johnson of
Emory University to refer
to some studies of Jesus as "Amateur Night."2
With a literature
this immense it is obvious that we can only note a few high points in
the
lesson today, but a Bibliography at the
end of the booklet provides sufficient
resources for a more thorough investigation by those who are interested.
In the past decade these questions have escaped the confines of
scholarly journals and scholarly discussions and exploded on the scene
as a question of newsworthy interest equal to wars, politics and
sports. We are used to seeing world leaders on the cover of
national news magazines, but Jesus has been making the cover of Time,
Newsweek, and U. S. News & World Report with increasing
regularity. Jesus has become the central character of musical and
theatrical productions. We are used to seeing
television documentaries on Hitler, Roosevelt or Einstein, but Jesus is
the subject of numerous similar productions in the past decade.
Why the upsurge of interest? Why is a 2,000 year old story
suddenly newsworthy? Unfortunately the media has been used, even
manipulated, by a group of liberal, skeptical scholars to attempt a
major act of historical revision. Too many of these media studies
of Jesus imply that New Testament scholarship as
a whole has come to certain conclusions about Jesus. These
conclusions are that Jesus was not divine, that he performed no
miracles, that he was not raised from the dead, and that the Christ of
faith is a mythological creation of the early church. We are told
that Jesus never did most of what the New Testament says he did and
that he never said most of what the New Testament says he said.
We are told that the Jesus who is worshipped in the churches is a
figment of the naive, albeit pious, imagination of unsophisticated
people. As Robert Funk, the founder of the Jesus Seminar, claims:
"The only Jesus most people want is the mythic one. They don't
want the real Jesus. They
want the one they can worship."3
Religious news is not usually very good for selling papers. It
is boring unless there is a scandal to report. The members of the
Jesus Seminar have been quite newsworthy, though. Where else will
you get one who is supposed to be a university scholar of the Christian
religion saying something like this: "[Jesus was very likely] a party
animal, somewhat shiftless, and disrespectful of the fifth
commandment: Honor your father and mother." 4
The impression has been given that university scholars are
exposing the gullibility of churches and ministers. The Jesus
Seminar members have portrayed themselves as martyrs for truth against
an evil empire—the church. That makes good press. But the
tragic part of it all is that many casual observers are fooled by the
rhetoric, and they reject Jesus as a result.
A balanced view of what can be known and what can be believed about
Jesus is not being heard in much of the media. Because of "the
sometimes grandiose claims made" by and for the skeptical, radical
historical reconstructionists "as representing critical New Testament
scholarship," other New Testament scholars have gone on the attack and
responded that the Jesus Seminar, and others like them, do not
represent New Testament scholarship as a whole. That remark was
made by a professor from Emory.5
Another recognized New Testament scholar called them "an academic
disgrace."6 A professor from Duke
University said the case argued by the Jesus Seminar would not stand up
in any court. He said that "many of its novel claims are at best
dubious."7 Many similar
sentiments could be produced.
The public on the whole is confused. Believers tend to dismiss
these historical revisions of Jesus but without much real understanding
of what is being said or how these scholars reach such skeptical
conclusions.
Unbelievers often accept these denials of the divinity of our Lord,
assuming
that they are valid, reasoned, sound historical conclusions of scholars
and that anyone who believes in Jesus is simply naive. Because of
this
situation in our society at present, it is hoped that this pamphlet
will
bring some clarity to the issues and encourage faith in Christ for the
reader. [Top]
One extreme in this debate is a radical skepticism. Ever since
the publication of the writings of H. S. Reimarus in 1778, the belief
of the church that Jesus was and is the Christ, the divine Son of God,
born of a virgin, pre-existent deity incarnate in human flesh, worker
of miracles, crucified for our
sins, and resurrected to glory, has been under constant attack.
The story
of Jesus is undergoing a constant, radical reconstruction at the hands
of skeptical critics. This revision of the portrait of Jesus
claims to
get behind the later embellishments of the original story to present
the
real Jesus of history. It is claimed that the Christ of faith,
the Christ
preached and worshipped in the churches, bears little resemblance to
the
real Jesus of history. The simple story of a Galilean peasant was
supposedly
enlarged and transformed into the story of a divine being.
The skeptical critics believe we can know almost nothing about the
real Jesus of history. Dr. W. R. Inge, the former Dean of St.
Paul's Cathedral, was supposedly asked by a publisher to write a life
of Jesus. He responded: "As there are no materials for a
life of Christ, I regret that I cannot comply with your request."8 Similarly, Rudolf Bultmann, the
leading scholar of this century in demythologizing the story of Jesus,
declared: "I do indeed think that we can now know almost nothing
concerning the
life and personality of Jesus."9
What needs to be understood very clearly is that this radical,
skeptical way of thinking about Jesus did not come about due to some
archeological discovery. It did not result from some historical
document, like the Dead Sea Scrolls, which called into question the
picture of Jesus in the four Gospels. It did not come into
existence because something was discovered in the biblical text which
disproved what the church had always thought about Jesus. The
skeptical view of Jesus is a historical reconstruction which
is theory, and a tenuous one at that, which is based on certain
presuppositions. The skeptics begin by affirming that there are
no miracles, nothing supernatural in this world. Therefore, the
story of Jesus cannot be true. They approach the text under the
guise of doing dispassionate, unbiased historical research, when from
the beginning the game has been fixed.
Critical study forms theories and then tests those theories against
the evidence to see which theory best explains the evidence. The
theory that Jesus actually was the divine Son of God is never given a
chance to explain the evidence, because a presupposition eliminates it
from consideration before the test even begins. Thus the
skeptical critics offer a variety of alternative explanations, most of
which can be summarized under one, single concept, their belief that
the early church embellished the story of
the real Jesus of history with later additions. They believe it
is the critic's
job to peal away those later additions and expose the small kernel of
truth
that remains.
Since an anti-supernatural presupposition has skewed the skeptic's
research from the beginning, it is not surprising that different
scholars find a different Jesus at the conclusion of their study.
They are like people who look into a pool of water and observe a
reflection of their own image. The Jesus they rediscover is
different from the Jesus of the four Gospels. He is also
different from the reconstruction of other critics, but he is very much
like the Jesus each of the critics wants to find. Claude
Montefiore, a liberal Jew, discovers that the real Jesus was a liberal
Jew. Another writer finds a Jesus who advocates "living at ease"
and "floating in the womb of the universe," the perfect Jesus for a new
age world.10 Others find a
politically correct Jesus who crusades for women's rights and the poor
in a countercultural egalitarianism. And, of course, we must
admit that many Christians begin with traditional
presuppositions. Not surprisingly they find the traditional
Christ after a simple study which has not really confronted the
problems and issues at hand.
The Jesus Seminar has warned others against finding a comfortable
Jesus. That is good advice which the members of the Jesus Seminar
should have heeded themselves. When E. V. Rieu began a
translation of the Gospels, his son is reported to have said: "It
will be very interesting to see what Father makes of the Gospel,"11 It is very interesting to see
what many have made of the Gospels. Most find the Jesus that they
want to find. Their reconstructions often tell us more about the
historian than they do about Jesus. One of the most damaging
criticisms of these liberal reconstructions of the real Jesus of
history is from the pen of William Temple,
Archbishop of Canterbury, who said: "Why anyone should have troubled to
crucify the Christ of Liberal Protestantism has always been a mystery."'12 Similarly, one of the greatest
Jesus scholars of our generation, the Roman Catholic John Meier, said
that "a bland Jesus who simply told people
to look at the lilies of the field—such a Jesus would threaten no one,
just
as the university professors who create him threaten no one."13
The other extreme which we need to avoid is a naive, untested,
unexamined faith. When confronted with difficulties in the
biblical text or with the limitations of historical knowledge, this
type of faith responds: "Well the Bible says it and I believe it
and that settles it!" This type of faith is often a faith
inherited from one's parents. It is sufficient for some people
for a whole lifetime, but for others it will not last. Some
Christians with such a naive faith are unable to handle a setting such
as what many
of you face on a daily basis on a state university campus. You
and I both
have seen too many people with a naive faith simply walk away from the
church
at some point in their adult life. The cause for a sudden change
to disbelief is often nothing more than a brief encounter with an
aggressive, skeptical person who throws one or two challenges their way
which they cannot handle.
Maybe many of these are what Ravi Zacharias calls the "silent
doubters in our midst." Zacharias says we need to answer their
questions first before we attempt to evangelize the world. And we
will not answer the ones
among us who are questioning if we simply say: "Just believe." If
historical
arguments are being used to deny Christianity, historical arguments
must
be used to defend the faith. Naively protesting "that historical
study is
irrelevant" will not do.14 As
the great scholar, J. B. Lightfoot, declared: "The abnegation of
reason is not the evidence of faith, but the confession of despair. "15
One minister's discussion of the origin of the four Gospels is an
example of a tendency in this direction. He explains that most
New Testament scholars postulate that Mark was written first and that
it was used as a source for Matthew and Luke. Matthew and Luke
are much longer than Mark, however, so they must have obtained other
information from other sources. The extra material which they
have in common is called "Q" ("Q" being the first
letter of the German word for "source"). This material is
primarily the
sayings of Jesus. Whether the source for these sayings was a
written document
or oral tradition is very much a matter of debate among scholars.
The
other material in Matthew is identified as "M" for Matthew's private
source,
and "L" likewise for Luke.
This minister then ridicules this whole scenario: "Some who
claim to believe that the Bible is inspired of God have accepted these
ideas to explain how God (?) got His word to man." How does he
respond to these theories? Does he note that Luke tells us in his
prologue that others had written before him? Does this preacher
note that Luke tells us that he researched these earlier sources and
investigated the information in order to write the Gospel of Luke (Lk.
1 :1-4)? No. He quotes a passage from Jeremiah
and another from the New Testament which are irrelevant. He
simply says
that the Bible is inspired. His message seems to be: "Just
believe the
Bible because the Bible tells you it is God's word."
This approach to faith is similar to the proverbial preacher who was
told that Moses and the children of Israel did not cross through the
Red Sea, but the "sea of reeds."16
Upon hearing this the preacher supposedly proclaimed: "Praise
God! It is an even greater miracle. God drowned the Egyptian army
in two inches of water." It is a sad fact that radical, skeptical
historical revisionists like the Jesus Seminar gain credibility because
they contrast themselves with this sort of naive faith in
fundamentalism. As Luke Timothy Johnson says in regard to many in
fundamentalism: "The Bible is less a text to be read than a
talisman to be invoked. The fundamentalists' claim to take the
literal meaning of the New Testament seriously is controverted by their
neglect of any careful or sustained reading."17
So a more acceptable approach, which avoids both the extremes of
radical skepticism and a naive faith, is to approach the New Testament
documents with an open mind, ready and willing to ask any question in
our search for truth. We must be willing to ask if there are
legitimate reasons for believing what the Bible has to say about
Jesus. Is blind faith the only option? Are the skeptics
right in saying that the only person who can believe is either a naive
person or one who is closed minded and unwilling to examine the
facts? I submit to you that reasonable faith is a viable option
for the truth seeker today. [Top]
We cannot prove everything in the Bible. The New Testament is
almost 2,000 years old. The real Jesus lived 2,000 years
ago. There are limitations to what one can know through
historical inquiry. People are still in
sharp disagreement over events which happened within the lifetime of
many of us such as the assassination of President John F.
Kennedy. How
much more so is it going to be difficult to speak conclusively
concerning
a person who lived 2,000 years ago. But while the limitations of
history
do not allow us to speak absolutely, they do not prevent our speaking
of
possibilities and probabilities.
The remarkable thing about this whole controversy is that the
skeptical revisionists reject almost in totality what the four Gospels
say about Jesus, but they then write a new history of Jesus which is
based upon surmise, speculation and theory. Their Jesus is
supposedly based on the very same Gospels they have rejected.
They are "insisting on discovering history
where it cannot be found."18 If,
for example, I cannot prove
the virgin birth of Jesus through historical analysis, is it not also
true
that someone else cannot disprove the virgin birth of Jesus by the same
method? Both of us can only speak of possibilities and
probabilities. What
is even more ridiculous about the Jesus Seminar and several other
radical revisionists is that they accept the Gospel of Thomas as an
equal or better source for information about Jesus than Matthew, Mark,
Luke and John. The Gospel of Thomas is from the mid-second
century or later and is possibly Gnostic.
It is noncanonical, probably heretical in origin and dated fifty to one
hundred
years later than the four Gospels. How in the name of common
sense can anyone
equate it as a historical source to the four Gospels?
Much of the gospel story lies beyond the reach of historical
inquiry. For example, it can be established quite firmly as a
historical fact that a man named Jesus was crucified in the early first
century. What cannot be established as historical fact, because
it lies outside the bounds of such analysis, is that Jesus died for our
sins and thereby made atonement for mankind to God. While it is
important that the Christ of Christian faith be the same as and
consistent with the real Jesus of history, the Christ of faith is the
living Lord of whom we must say much more than we can say in a strict,
limited historical sense about Jesus.
But what arguments from history can be made about Jesus? Only
the barest of sketches can be allowed here. I do not have
sufficient time to go into the details of literary criticism, form
criticism, redaction criticism, and historical methodology.
Neither is there time to survey the literature on crucial questions
such as the dating of New Testament documents, the authorship of the
four Gospels, the canon of the New Testament, the evidence for Jesus
outside the New Testament,19 and other
equally important and related issues. But here hopefully one can
be pointed in the right direction for further study.
The four Gospels are a combination of history and commentary.
They are history written from the post-resurrection perspective of
faith which adds interpretation to the events in light of a fuller
understanding of them from a later period of time. The Gospels
are religious propaganda designed to convert the reader. Let us
be honest and admit that the Gospels are biased in favor of
Jesus. But the Gospels are not useless in searching for the
real Jesus of history just because they are written by insiders.
Their favorable attitude toward Jesus and Christianity does require
that they be studied carefully in light of what they are and
cross-examined for their integrity, but they need not be rejected
without a hearing. A good historian knows
how to cross examine evidence, separating what is reliable from what is
unreliable.
One key point in cross-examining the story of the four Gospels is
their date. Skeptics tend to date the Gospels as late as
possible, because this allows more time for their theory that most of
the story of Jesus was
invented by the early church. Conservatives tend to date the
Gospels as
early as possible, because this places them within the lifetime of
eyewitnesses who would be on hand to verify their contents.
Actually we are not able to date any of the four Gospels
precisely. It is possible that one of them was written as early
as the late 50s and that one of them was written as late as the
90s. Within that range no one can speak with any certainty, even
though many scholars pontificate and pretend to be certain. In my
opinion it is likely that the first Gospel, Mark, was written in the
60s. Matthew and Luke were probably written sometime within the
next twenty years. John was likely last. Even though
honesty does not permit us to assign a specific date, the news is good
for those who want to believe in the traditional Christ of faith.
All of the Gospels are from the first century, as is the rest
of the New Testament. All of it is very close in time to the
events which
they narrate and interpret. And even though the skeptics attempt
to dismiss
the presence of any eyewitnesses among the writers of the New
Testament,
that is not so easily done.20
There is more good news, though, which shrinks this time frame
considerably. The Gospels are based, in part, on earlier
information, either oral or written. Luke tells us at the
beginning of his Gospel that others had "undertaken to set down an
orderly account of the events that have been fulfilled
among us, just as they were handed on to us by those who from the
beginning
were eyewitnesses and servants of the word" (Lk. 1:1-2). So while
the skeptical critics carry on long and loud about sources they think
they have detected within the Gospels or other New Testament documents,
that is not bad news for the historical Jesus. Most source
criticism is theory. It is speculation built on top of
speculation. Much of it might be right, or almost all
of it might be wrong. But if we are concerned about the accuracy
of the
information regarding Jesus in the Gospels, the presence of sources
behind
the Gospels is good news. If Mark wrote his Gospel in the 60s and
Matthew
and Luke sometime in the next decade or two after that, they are
removed
by a mere thirty-five or so years from the death and resurrection of
Jesus.
If they used sources of information which go back another ten, twenty
or
more years, that is even closer to the time of the event. There
is less
time available for any potential corruption and distortion of the
message
to occur, and certainly not enough time for a complete myth to evolve.
It is almost unanimously believed among New Testament scholars today
that Mark's Gospel was written first and that the Gospel of Matthew and
the Gospel of Luke used Mark as a source. There is a significant
portion of
material which Matthew and Luke share in common which is not found in
Mark.
This material is labeled "Q" from the German word for "source."
No one knows
whether this information was written down or whether is was merely
passed
along by word of mouth in oral tradition. The similar wording
suggests to
some that it was in written form, or possibly in several written
forms. Let
us for the sake of argument date Matthew and Luke in the 70s.
They both may
have been written a decade before or after, but let us put them in the
70s
which is not an extreme date in either direction. When did the
so-called "Q" traditions originate? In the 60s? In the
50s? In the 40s? Or possibly as early as the 30s?
Once again this puts us extremely close to the time of the actual
events. It is also a matter of scholarly discussion as to whether
or not Matthew and Luke had other sources. Most conclude that
they did.
Once again this pushes the origin of these traditions back closer to
the
time of their occurrence.
The writings of Paul, which are almost all dated in the 50s and 60s,
show evidence of earlier sources. While Paul's apostleship and
his encounter with the living Christ were the result of a direct
revelation from God, Paul conferred with eyewitnesses and received
information about Jesus
from them. In about 55 A.D. in 1 Corinthians Paul writes about
the last
supper, quoting the very words of Jesus (1 Cor. 11:23-26). This
was done
possibly ten years or more before any of the Gospels were written and
a mere twenty-five years after the event. Furthermore, Paul
reminded the
Corinthian church: "For I handed on to you as of first importance
what
I in turn had received" (1 Cor. 15:3). This takes us back to the
30s to
the time of Paul's conversion, only a few years after the resurrection
of Jesus. Paul was in contact with eyewitnesses and first generation
Christians
everywhere he went. Thus it is apparent, except to the person who
begins
with a skeptical attitude, that the stories and traditions about Jesus
were known and recorded a very short time after they occurred.
Let us draw
an analogy. The distance of time from today in the year 2,000 to
World
War II is as great or greater than the distance in time from the
ministry
of Jesus to the writing of most of the books of the New
Testament. And we
have already noted, many of them are much earlier and they are built on
information which predates them, sometimes by decades. But
working with
a fifty-five to sixty year time span, how many of you were involved in
the war effort, either as a soldier or a civilian? How many of
you were
old enough to listen to the radio during the war or read the
newspaper? How many of you have a parent who fits into one of
these first two categories? How many of you have a grandparent
who fits into one of the first two categories? Imagine how
difficult it would be to fictionalize a whole life story, a
series of events and a body of teaching, as if it all happened in the
heart
of Europe in the 1940s. If I attempted to do that and pass it off
as fact,
people all around could expose my deceit.
How much more so would that be true if I tried to do something
similar for events from the Vietnam war era. That takes us back
thirty
years. Thirty years after Jesus died, a significant portion of
the New
Testament was already written and sources for later use were already
developed, either in writing or in oral tradition. Let us push it
back
even further. The initial telling and retelling of the story of
Jesus
and the development of the oral tradition about him began immediately
after his resurrection. The gospel story had already taken
definite
form by the time of Paul's conversion in the 33 A.D. So imagine
me
trying to create some grand fiction about the Gulf War and passing it
off as history today. When the apostle Paul noted that there were
over
five hundred witnesses of the resurrected Jesus, he
added: "most of whom are still alive" (1 Cor. 15:6). His point
was
obvious. If the story of the resurrection were not true, there
were
close to five hundred
people who could have exposed it as a fraud.
Thus a very strong hypothetical case can be built for the accuracy
with which the early Christians handed down the story of Jesus, but
this is hypothetical. Bias on the part of the person
investigating the
historicity of Jesus is very evident if we keep the discussion at this
level. Liberal skeptics tend to distrust the accuracy of the
transmission of the story of Jesus. The believer assumes that the
story
has been accurately transmitted. Is there any way that we can get
beyond pure speculation about how well the story was transmitted
between 30 A.D. and the writing of the Gospels? Yes, there
is. Again,
it is almost certain that Mark was the first Gospel and that Matthew
and Luke used Mark to produce their Gospels. If we compare
parallel
passages between the three synoptic Gospels, we can see whether or not
the message was preserved accurately. For example, examine the
following narrative which is found in all four Gospels.
|
Mark
1:9-11 |
Luke
3:21-22 |
Matthew
3:13-17 |
John
1:29-34 |
|
In those days Jesus came from
Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan. And
just as
he was coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and
the Spirit descending like a dove on him. And a voice came from
heaven,
"You are my
Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased."
|
Now when all the people were
baptized, and when Jesus also had been baptized and was praying, the
heaven was opened, and the Holy Spirit descended upon him in bodily
form like a dove. And a voice came from heaven, "You are my Son,
the
Beloved; with you I am well pleased."
|
Then Jesus came from Galilee to John
at the Jordan, to be baptized by him. John would have prevented
him,
saying, "I need to be baptized by you, and do you come to me?"
But
Jesus answered him, "Let it be so now; for it is proper for us in this
way to
fulfill all righteousness." Then he consented. And when
Jesus had been
baptized, just as he came up from the water, suddenly the heavens were
opened to him and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and
alighting on him. And a voice from heaven said, "This is my Son,
the
Beloved, with whom I am well pleased."
|
The next day he saw Jesus coming
toward him and declared, "Here is the Lamb of God who takes away the
sin of the world! This is he of whom I said, 'After me comes a
man who
ranks ahead of me because he was before me.' I myself did not
know him;
but I came baptizing with water for this reason, that he might be
revealed
to Israel." And John testified, "I saw the Spirit descending from
heaven
like a dove, and it remained on him. I myself did not know him, but the
one who sent me to baptize with water said to me, 'He on whom you see
the
Spirit descend and remain is the one who baptizes with the Holy
Spirit.'
And I myself have seen and have testified that this is the Son of God.
" |
While there are variations in the telling of the story, the
differences are not significant. We know that in the telling and
retelling of the gospel story, changes were made. Different
speakers
and writers used different words and ways to tell about Jesus.
But we
have no evidence that the story of Jesus was changed significantly
during the time period from the life of Jesus until the writing of the
New Testament documents. If the story of Jesus was going to be
transformed from that of a peasant rabbi into that of the miracle
working Lord, we would expect to see significant development.
Instead,
what we find from the latest to the absolute earliest tradition about
Jesus is the same: Jesus was believed to be the divine Son of God
who
was resurrected on the third day. We do not find him not working
miracles in the earlier layers of the tradition and working miracles in
the later traditions. We do not find his body decaying in the
tomb in
the earlier layers of the tradition and resurrected only in the later
layers of the tradition. The story of Jesus is the same in
substance
throughout.
This argument may be extended in some very powerful ways. For
example, not only is there evidence pointing toward the accuracy and
continuity in the transmission of the Jesus tradition, but also there
is no evidence for the free creation of words and deeds attributed to
Jesus. One of the simplest ways in which one can demonstrate this
is to
study the major controversies which gripped the church throughout the
later half of the first century. As Blomberg explains:
Numerous Christian controversies that surfaced after Jesus'
ascension and threatened to tear the New Testament church apart could
have been conveniently solved if the first Christians had simply read
back
into the Gospels solutions to those debates. But this is
precisely
what never happens. Not once does Jesus address many of the
major
topics that for the rest of the first century loomed large in the minds
of Christians—whether believers needed to be circumcised, how to
regulate
speaking in tongues, how to keep Jew and Gentile united in one body,
whether
believers could divorce non-Christian spouses, what roles were open to
women in ministry, and so on.21
As Ben Witherington put it: "The evidence for Christian
prophets
speaking words that were later retrojected into narratives about the
historical Jesus is nonexistent."22
If the writers of the Gospels were this careful, there is no logical
reason to think that anyone who went before them was not equally
careful. Not only did they want to be accurate in their
transmission of
the story of Jesus, since it was sacred to them, but they also had the
ability to transmit it accurately. In the ancient Jewish world,
and to
a slightly lesser extent in the Greco-Roman world, memorization was a
highly developed talent. Huge bodies of literature or tradition
were
passed along in this way. If the early Christians acted in the
ways
which were traditional for the first century, they would have passed
down the story of Jesus with great accuracv.23
As the New
Testament scholar I. H. Marshall reminds us, the tradition of Jesus'
deeds and words was transmitted in a Jewish environment "where
considerable importance was attached to the accurate memorization and
transmission" of traditions.24
There are other ways in which we can cross-examine the Gospel
witnesses as to their reliability. One is the test of multiple
attestation or converging lines of evidence. Just because only
one
person reports an event does not mean that event did not take
place.
But in testing the probability of whether or not something happened,
multiple attestation is better. In
the story of Jesus we have a multitude of witnesses. We have the
four
Gospels.
We have numerous other historical references in the rest of the New
Testament.
We even have a small amount of evidence from non-biblical sources,
although it is quite minimal. Multiple attestation points to the
credibility of
the Jesus story.25
Next, we have the test of embarrassment. If a story is told
about
Jesus which made the early Christians uncomfortable, that story is most
probably true. Why would the early church make up some story of
Jesus
which puzzled them or bothered them? We can know with certainty
beyond
a reasonable doubt that Jesus was baptized by John the Baptist.
Baptism
was a penitent act for the forgiveness of sins. Jesus did not
need to
repent, nor did he
have any sins of which he needed to be forgiven. Furthermore,
submitting to baptism by John might give some people the wrong
impression that John was superior to Jesus. Because of these
difficulties, it is as certain as it is possible to be, within the
limitations of historical knowledge, that Jesus was baptized by John
and that the early church did not invent this story.
The same thing is true of the crucifixion of Jesus. Crucifixion
in the ancient world was for slaves and the worst of criminals.
Christianity had a major public relations problem in preaching the
gospel due to the crucifixion of Jesus. It was "a stumbling block
to
Jews and foolishness to Gentiles" (1 Cor. 1:23).26
One
further example would be the statement of Jesus: "No one is
good—except
God alone" (Mk. 10:18; Mt.
19:17: Lk. 18:19). Many Christians are uncomfortable with that
statement. It almost sounds as if Jesus is denying that he is
good in
any absolute sense. Many Christians have misinterpreted this
passage to
mean that Jesus was trying to draw a confession out of this man by
pretending not to claim goodness. The embarrassment this passage
has
caused the church is a strong indicator that the saying is genuine.
Another way to test the genuineness of the New Testament message is to
ask if it is the best explanation of the facts. How do we explain
the
beginning of the church? How do we explain the existence of the
New
Testament documents, including the four Gospels? How do we
explain the
traditions about Jesus which predate the New Testament documents?
The
skeptical approach to Jesus claims that the original, simple story of a
Jewish peasant was transformed, layer by layer, into the story of the
divine Son of God. But the evolution of this story exists only in
the
minds of the radical revisionists.
The belief that Jesus was the divine Son of God did not appear in 60
A.D.
in Asia Minor, or in 50 A.D. in the writings of Paul, or in 40 A.D. in
Antioch. The belief in the Messiahship of Jesus can be traced
back to
within a
few months of when the resurrection is supposed to have occurred.
The innovators who proclaimed this story of a divine being born
in Bethlehem, crucified at Calvary and resurrected are not the second
and third generations of Christians. The innovator was not even
the
apostle Paul. "The innovators can be traced back to the earliest
days
of the Christian church."27 The
innovation of this gospel
story occurred in
the early 30s of the first century. Later embellishment and
fictionalizing by the second and third generation of Christians simply
cannot explain the origin of the story of Jesus, the emergence of the
church or the writing of
the New Testament documents. Some other cause must be found to
explain
where
all these traditions about Jesus came from.
Let us compare it to the big bang theory of the universe. The
universe
exists. How did it come into existence in its present form?
One theory
is the big bang theory. That theory does not explain where matter
came
from, but it is one hypothesis which does explain some of the features
of the universe which we observe today. Similarly, the church
came into
existence in the early 30s of the first century. Traditions about
Jesus
originated at the same time. In the next seventy years the whole
of the
New Testament was written. How do we account for all of
these? The
skeptical view that all of these can be accounted for by pious
embellishment and fictionalizing of the gospel story by the early
church is not an adequate explanation. I
submit to you that the best explanation, the most adequate cause, is
the resurrection of Jesus Christ.28
There was a real person, Jesus, who was the founder of this new
religious movement, and there was a significant founding experience,
a big bang, which set it in motion, namely, the resurrection of Jesus
Christ. We cannot prove the resurrection of Jesus Christ through
historical
analysis, but we can present it as the best explanation of the data and
thus the most probable scenario of what really happened.29
As
Johnson illustrated with an analogy to the Holocaust:
Anyone becoming aware of the drastically reduced number of
Jews in Europe in 1945 compared with 1932 could logically posit a cause
sufficient to account for the effect. Such reasoning would not
necessarily lead to the specific description of the Holocaust.
But it
would necessarily lead to some force sufficiently great to accomplish
so awesome an effect. Theories of increased tourism would not do.30
What can be known historically about Jesus can be placed on a
continuum from what certainly happened to what certainly did not
happen.
We know things in ancient history to varying degrees of
probability.
For
ancient history very few things can be placed in the extreme
categories.
Most things are placed somewhere in between, and we use terms such as
probably,
likely, maybe or could have. Recognizing that the boundary line
between
various categories is arbitrarily chosen and that scholars will
disagree
on what belongs in each category, let me outline five categories in
which
we can place the material about Jesus from the four Gospels and from
the
rest of the New Testament.
-
What beyond a reasonable doubt did happen
|
-
What probably happened
-
the resurrection of Christ
-
called and trained disciples
-
told parable of the prodigal son
-
cleansed the temple
-
the last supper
-
etc.
|
-
What could have happened
-
changed water into wine
-
worshipped by wise men
-
born of a virgin
-
etc.
|
-
What probably did not happen
|
-
What beyond a reasonable doubt did not happen
|
Through cautious
historical analysis the
careful student can reconstruct the real Jesus of history. First,
one
can compile those things that can be known about Jesus with some
certainty by means of historical study. At this point the picture
will
be incomplete. It will only be very minimal, because that is the
limited nature of
historical knowledge for ancient history. It
might be
very much like the picture 1.
Then one can add to these facts other things
which Jesus probably did or probably said, as long as they are
consistent with those things which can be known with much
certainty.
The material in this category
does not increase in probability just because it is
consistent with
the
more certain category, but it must pass the test of coherence to be
included here. At this point the picture of Jesus will begin to
fill in
with much more detail, and it will take on definite shape (as in
picture 2).
Finally, one can add those things which
could have happened, as
long as they are consistent with what is known with certainty about
Jesus
and that which is probable. Then, one can begin to interpret the
meaning
and the significance of Jesus' sayings and actions, which takes one
into
a world totally beyond the reach of history. It is a world of
spiritual
values such as divine forgiveness and salvation. It is a world of
spiritual
existence which speaks of heaven and God. At that point one should have
a more complete portrait (as in picture 3) of the whole personality of
Jesus which is
internally
consistent with itself.
In all humility as a finite being trying to
grasp
an invisible and infinite God, at this point may I suggest that the
resulting
portrait of the real Jesus of history has become identical with the
Christ
of the four Gospels and the rest of the New Testament documents.
[Top]
The real Jesus of history is consistent with the glorified Christ of
Christian faith, because he is one and the same. The skeptical
attempt
to separate the real Jesus of history from the Christ of faith is a
futile attempt to separate the inseparable. The Christ of
Christian
faith is simply the real Jesus of history plus a developed
understanding and interpretation of who he was and is. For
example, the
real Jesus of history was "born of a woman, born under the law" (Gal.
4:4). The Christ of faith is the Word who was "with God" and "was
God"
and "became flesh" (Jn. 1:1, 14; 1 Tim. 3:16). The real Jesus of
history was a teacher who shed light on many subjects. The Christ
of
faith is "the light of the world" (Jn. 8:12; 9:5; 12:46), "the light of
all people" (Jn. 1:4), and "the true light" (Jn. 1:9). The real
Jesus
of history was a Jew, a descendant of the royal line of David.
The
Christ of faith is the Son of God, the Messiah, the King of
kings. The
real Jesus of history died by crucifixion under Pontius Pilate.
The
Christ of faith "died for our sins" (1 Cor. 15:3). The real Jesus
of
history was resuscitated after his death. The Christ of faith was
"raised for our justification" (Rom. 4:25), "designated Son of God in
power ... by his resurrection from
the dead" (Rom. 1:4).
We began with a historical study. We have concluded at the point
of
faith. "Faith starts from knowledge, even if it reaches beyond
it, and
its character as faith is not destroyed by its association with
knowledge ... It appears, then, that we cannot do without the
historical
Jesus if we are to believe in the Christ of faith."31
Crossan, one of the
members of the Jesus Seminar, makes an important point: "There
can be
history without faith."32 There
were some who saw Jesus,
heard
him teach and even witnessed him perform miracles who did not believe
in
him. So yes, there can be history without faith, then and now.
But the more important question for us is the opposite one, which
Crossan also asks: "Can there be faith without history?" Again, I
would
answer in the affirmative. Even if Jesus did not teach all of
those
things we think he taught, even if he did not perform all of those
miracles recounted in the Gospels, and even if he was not raised from
the dead, people could still believe in him. But the problem is
that
such a faith is empty. It is a false faith. It is like
stepping on a
lily pad as if it will support your weight and enable you to walk
across a pond. As Paul said: "If Christ has not been raised, then
our
proclamation has been in vain and your faith has been in vain. ... lf
Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and
you are still in your sins" (1 Cor. 15:14, 17).
We need a rational, historical basis for our faith, so that it will not
become a subjective, individual feeling which is not guided by any
objective criterion. As N. T. Wright explained: "History,
then,
prevents faith becoming fantasy. Faith prevents history becoming
mere
antiquarianism."33 Any absolute
confirmation or denial of
who Jesus was and is lies beyond the grasp of pure, historical
analysis. But without giving up our powers of critical reason,
without
giving in to naively or incredulity even for a moment, as believers we
have good reason to say with the apostle Paul: "But in fact
Christ has
been raised from the dead" (1 Cor. 15:20).
Earlier it was noted that when E. V. Rieu, a Classical scholar,
began a translation of the Gospels, his son commented: "It will
be very
interesting to see what Father makes of the Gospels." That was
only
part
of the quotation of the son of Rieu. He went on to say: "It will
be
still
more interesting to see what the Gospels make of Father."34
After he had translated the Gospels into English, Rieu wrote:
Of what I have learnt from these documents in the course
of my long task, I will say nothing now. Only this, that they
bear the
seal of the Son of Man and God, they are the Magna Charta of the human
spirit.35
Is it the same with you? Can you confess along with the apostle
Peter: "You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God" (Mt.
16:16)? [Top]
-
I. Howard Marshall,
I Believe in the Historical Jesus
(Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1977) 11, 25n.
-
Luke Timothy Johnson,
The Real Jesus (HarperSanFrancisco,
1996) 32.
-
Cited by Johnson,
The Real Jesus, 7.
-
Leif Vaage,
Atlanta
Constitution, 30 Sept. 1989, Ibid., 15.
-
Ibid., 3.
-
Howard Clark Kee, Ibid., 18.
-
Richard Hays, Ibid., 26.
-
Cited by Marshall,
I believe, 12.
-
Ibid., 12.
-
Stephen Mitchell,
The Gospel According
to
Jesus, cited by Johnson, The
Real Jesus, 38. For a brief review of
the Jesus various critics "find" in their "historical" research, e.g.
Jesus
the sage, Jesus the religious genius, and Jesus the social
revolutionary,
see Scot McKnight, "Who is Jesus? An Introduction to Jesus Studies," in
Michael
J. Wilkins and J. P. Moreland, eds. Jesus Under Fire (Grand
Rapids,
MI: Zondervan, 1995) pp. 55-62.
-
Cited in Marshall,
I believe, 45.
-
Ibid., 113.
-
Cited in Craig L. Blomberg, "Where Do We
Start Studying Jesus?" in Jesus
Under Fire, 21.
-
Marshall,
I believe, 112.
-
Ibid., 112.
-
"Sea of reeds" is a literal translation of
the Hebrew (Ex. 10:19). We do not know exactly where Moses and
the children of Israel crossed over. There were marshy, shallow
lakes north of the Red Sea in ancient times which were more extensive
than those present today. If they crossed through them, it is not
a matter of two inches of water, but of several feet of water plus a
tidal surge from the strong wind.
See various Bible dictionaries and commentaries.
-
Johnson,
Real
Jesus, 63.
-
Ibid., 101.
-
See Edwin M. Yamauchi, "Jesus Outside the
New Testament: What Is the Evidence?" in Jesus Under Fire, 207-29.
-
In this brief study I make no argument pro
or con on apostolic and, therefore, eyewitness authorship of Matthew
and John, or even for the eyewitness of the apostle Peter being behind
the gospel of Mark. The reliability of the four Gospels can be
established quite well even without these arguments. My non-use
of eyewitness arguments is only due to time and space
limitations. The conservative case for eyewitness authorship of
some New Testament documents and eyewitness sources for others is a
strong one.
-
Blomberg, "Where Do We Start?" in
Jesus Under Fire, 32.
-
Ben Witherington III,
The Jesus Quest (Downers Grove,
IL: InterVarsity Press, 1995) 200.
-
See Blomberg, in
Jesus Under Fire, 32-34.
-
Marshall,
I believe, 196.
-
As an example Marshall points to
a saying of
Jesus found in Mark (Mk. 8:35; Mt. 16:25; Lk. 9:24), Q (Mt. 10:39; Lk.
17:33) and John (Jn. 12:25). Also, see Darrell L. Bock, "The Word
of Jesus
in the Gospels: Live, Jive, or Memorex?" in
Jesus Under Fire, 92-93.
-
See Martin Hengel,
Crucifixion (Philadelphia:
Fortress Press, 1977).
-
Marshall,
I
believe, 70. Also see Lee Strobel, The Case for Christ (Grand Rapids,
MI: Zondervan, 1998).
-
There are so many excellent studies
defending the validity and historicity of the resurrection of Jesus
Christ that they are too numerous to even attempt to list. One
brief defense in the literature already noted is William Lane Craig,
"Did Jesus Rise from the Dead?" in Jesus
Under Fire, 141-76.
-
Alan Richardson,
An Introduction to the Theology of the New
Testament (New York: Harper & Row, 1958) 9-15.
-
Johnson,
Real
Jesus, 139.
-
Marshall,
I
believe, 82, 84.
-
John Dominic Crossan, Luke Timothy Johnson,
and Werner H. Kelber, The Jesus
Controversy: Perspectives in Conflict (Harrisburg,
PA: Trinity Press International 1999) 1
-
Marcus J. Borg and N. T. Wright,
The Meaning
of Jesus: Two Visions. (HarperSanFrancisco, 1999) 26.
-
Cited in Marshall,
I believe, 45.
-
Ibid.
[Top]
Books by chief members of the Jesus Seminar, the group which voted on
which words of Jesus are authentic and which are not. These works
are
skeptical, liberal, historical reconstruction. They deny
virtually
everything traditionally believed about Jesus of Nazareth. The
Jesus
Seminar does not represent the most scholarly presentation of skeptical
historical reconstruction, but it does represent the view most commonly
presented in the media in
the last decade.
Borg, Marcus I. Jesus: A New Vision.
HarperSanFrancisco,
1987.
_____. Meeting Jesus Again for the First Time: The
Historical Jesus
& the Heart of Contemporary Faith. HarperSanFrancisco,
1994.
Crossan, John Dominic. Jesus A Revolutionary Biography.
Harper
SanFrancisco, 1994.
_____. The Birth of Christianity: Discovering What
Happened in the Years
Immediately After the Execution of Jesus. HarperSanFrancisco,
1998.
_____. The Essential Jesus: Original Sayings and
Earliest Images.
HarperSanFrancisco, 1994.
Funk, Robert W. Honest to Jesus: Jesus for a New
Millennium.
HarperSanFrancisco, 1996.
_____, Roy W. Hoover, and the Jesus Seminar.
The Five
Gospels: The
Search for the Authentic Words of Jesus. New York: Macmillan
Publishing Company, 1993. [This work is the summary of the
research of
the Jesus Seminar.
The words attributed to Jesus in the four Gospels plus the Gospel of
Thomas, a mid-second century or later Coptic Gospel, possibly Gnostic,
are color coded for their authenticity in the opinion of the Jesus
Seminar.]
Books which present skeptical and traditional views of Jesus in
a debate/discussion format. Crossan and Borg represent the Jesus
Seminar. Johnson and Wright represent the traditional view of
Jesus (on
the whole but not at all points, e.g. the virgin birth).
Crossan, John Dominic, Luke Timothy Johnson, and Werner H.
Kelber. The Jesus Controversy: Perspectives in Conflict. Harrisburg,
PA:
Trinity Press International, 1999.
Borg, Marcus J., and N. T. Wright.
The Meaning of Jesus: Two
Visions. HarperSanFrancisco, 1999.
Responses by moderate or conservative scholars to the Jesus Seminar and
other recent, skeptical historical reconstruction of the life of
Jesus.
The Original Jesus by Wright and Strobel's The Case for
Christ are written more on a layman's level than the other
works.
Jesus: The New Way is a six-hour
video curriculum which is
available through some local libraries.
Blomberg, Craig L. The Historical Reliability of the Gospels.
Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1987.
George, Denise and Tom Wright.
Jesus: The New Way.
Worchester,
PA: Church History Institute, 1998.
Habermas, Gary R. The Historical Jesus: Ancient
Evidence for
the Life of Christ. Joplin, MO: College Press, 1996.
Johnson, Luke Timothy.
The Real Jesus: The Misguided
Quest for the
Historical Jesus and the Truth of the Traditional Gospels.
Harper
SanFrancisco, 1996.
Strobel, Lee. The Case for Christ. Grand Rapids,
MI: Zondervan,
1998.
Wilkins, Michael J., and J. P. Moreland, eds. Jesus Under Fire.
Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1995.
Witherington, Ben, III. The Jesus Quest: The Third
Search for the
Jew of Nazareth. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press,
1995.
Wright, N. T. Jesus and the Victory of God.
Minneapolis:
Fortress Press, 1996.
_____. Who was Jesus? Grand Rapids, MI:
Eerdmans, 1992.
Wright, Tom. The Original Jesus: The Life and
Vision
of a Revolutionary. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1996.
General works which to one degree or another are relevant to the
question of the historicity of Jesus.
Anderson, Charles C. Critical Quests of Jesus.
Grand Rapids,
MI: Eerdmans, 1969.
Baird, William. The Quest of the Christ of Faith.
Waco,
TX:
Word Books, 1977.
Bruce, F. F. The New Testament Documents: Are they
reliable?
5th edition. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1960.
Carson, D. A., Douglas J. Moo, and Leon Morris.
An
Introduction to
the New Testament. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1992.
Dunn, James D. G.
Christology in the Making. 2d
edition.
Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1980, 1989.
Erickson, Millard J.
The Word Became Flesh. Grand
Rapids, MI:
Baker Book House, 1991.
Guthrie, Donald. New Testament Introduction. 3d
edition.
Downers Grove, IL: Inter-Varsity Press, 1970.
Hengel, Martin.
Crucifixion. Philadelphia:
Fortress Press,
1977.
Hoover, Arlie J. Dear Agnos: A Defense of Christianity.
Grand
Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1976.
Marshall, I. Howard. I Believe in the Historical Jesus.
Grand
Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1977.
_____. Luke: Historian and Theologian.
Grand
Rapids, MI: Zondervan,
1970.
_____. The Origins of New Testament Christology. 2d
edition. Downers
Grove, IL : InterVarsity Press, 1976, 1990.
Ramm, Bernard. An Evangelical Christology: Ecumenic
& Historic. Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1985.
_____.
Protestant Christian Evidences.
Chicago: Moody Press, 1953.
Richardson, Alan. An Introduction to the Theology of the New
Testament. New York: Harper & Row, 1958.
_____.
Christian Apologetics. New York:
Harper & Brothers, 1947.
Skarsaune, Oskar. Incarnation: Myth or Fact?
Translated
by
Trygve R. Skarsten. St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1991.
Wells, David F. The Person of Christ: A Biblical and
Historical
Analysis of the Incarnation. Westchester, IL: Crossway
Books, 1984.
A word of gratitude for their support and encouragement goes to
the elders and members of University City Church of Christ,
Gainesville,
Florida, where this lesson was first preached on October 8, 2000.
Appreciation
also goes to Carline Hines, a member of the youth group, for the
drawing
of Jesus and Marilyn Little, my secretary, for help in preparing the
manuscript. [Top]
Credits
©Copyright 2000 by Joel
Stephen Williams
All Rights Reserved
Illustrated by Carline Hines
All Bible quotations are from the
Holy Bible: New Revised Standard
Version, Copyright 1989 by the Division
of Christian Education of the National
Council of the Churches of Christ in the
United States of America. All rights
reserved. Used by permission.
A printed copy of this booklet
can be obtain through their
catalog.