Jesus, the New Testament, and Christian Origins

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JESUS, THE NEW TESTAMENT, AND CHRISTIAN ORIGINS Perspectives, Methods, Meanings

Edited by Dieter Mitternacht and Anders Runesson Translated by Rebecca Runesson and Noah Runesson

William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company Grand Rapids, Michigan


Originally published in Swedish by Verbum AB, Stockholm, Sweden, under the title Jesus och de första kristna. © 2007 Dieter Mitternacht and Anders Runesson.

Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. 4035 Park East Court SE, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49546 www.eerdmans.com © 2021 Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. Published 2021 by permission of Verbum AB, Stockholm, Sweden. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America 27 26 25 24 23 22 21   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ISBN 978-0-8028-6892-3 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Mitternacht, Dieter, editor. | Runesson, Anders, editor. | Runesson, Rebecca, translator. | Runesson, Noah, translator. Title: Jesus, the New Testament, and Christian origins : perspectives, methods, meanings / edited by Dieter Mitternacht and Anders Runesson ; translated by Rebecca Runesson and Noah Runesson. Other titles: Jesus och de första kristna. English Description: Grand Rapids, Michigan : William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2021. | “Originally published in Swedish under the title Jesus och de första kristna.” | Includes bibliographical references and index. | Summary: “An introduction to the New Testament in its historical context, along with an overview of different interpretative approaches and exegetical exercises”—Provided by publisher. Identifiers: LCCN 2020028360 | ISBN 9780802868923 Subjects: LCSH: Bible. New Testament—Criticism, interpretation, etc. | Jesus Christ— History of doctrines. | Church history—Primitive and early church, ca. 30–600. Classification: LCC BS2361.3 .J4913 2020 | DDC 225.6—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020028360

Unless otherwise noted, quotations from Scripture are taken from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible. Artwork at the beginning of chapters 1–6 is by Per Gyllenör.


For Birger Olsson— mentor, colleague, friend


Contents

Foreword by David E. Aune

1

Preface

xix

Abbreviations

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INVITATION TO STUDY THE NEW TESTAMENT Beginnings

2

3

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1 1

A History of New Testament Research

12

The Peculiar Case of Pauline Scholarship and Judaism

23

Paths to the Past: On Sources and Methods

31

HISTORICAL BACKGROUND AND SETTING

51

From Persians to Romans

52

Greco-­Roman Religions and Philosophies

84

Beliefs and Practices in Second Temple Judaism

114

Men, Women, and Power in Ancient Society and the Early Jesus Movement

147

THE HISTORICAL JESUS

165

Sources about Jesus

165

Which Jesus Are We Speaking About?

169

The Origins of Jesus

175

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Contents

4

5

6

The Kingdom of God: The Center of Jesus’s Proclamation

180

Why Did Jesus’s Life End on the Cross?

189

THE TEXTS

199

The Origins and Transmission of the Texts

202

The Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles

233

The Pauline Letters

280

Catholic Letters, the Letter to the Hebrews, and the Book of Revelation

332

THE EMERGENCE OF EARLY CHRISTIANITY

363

Jewish Christ Followers and the Emergence of Christianity and Judaism

365

Paul, His Assemblies, and His Successors

399

Johannine Christ Followers

437

Non-­Rabbinic Jews and Varieties of Judaism

446

Gnosticism and “the Gnostics”

455

Diversity and the Struggle for Unity

467

READINGS

487

Approaches to the Text

488

How to Do a Historical, Text-­Oriented Interpretation of a New Testament Text Passage

509

A Historical, Text-­Oriented Reading of Matt 8:14–17

517

A Historical-­Analogical Reading of Matt 5:3–10

531

How Are Good Deeds Motivated? An Argumentation Analysis of 1 Pet 1:17–19

542

“Am I Now Seeking Human Approval?” A Rhetorical-­Epistolary Reading of Gal 1:10

547

Lost and Found: A Narrative-Critical Reading of Luke 15

557

“One New Humanity” (Eph 2:15) : A Pauline Tradition and Its Reception History

566

Living in the Time after Jesus : A Hermeneutical Analysis of the Johannine Farewell Discourse in John 13–17

573

Who Is Part of the Future? A Feminist Analysis of Rev 17:1–19:10

580

“Legion Is My Name, for We Are Many”: A Postcolonial Reading of Mark 5:1–20

591


Contents Appendix 1: Nonbiblical Sources

601

Appendix 2: Jewish History: A Chronological Overview

614

Appendix 3: Maps

619

Glossary

625

Contributors

647

Who Wrote What?

649

Bibliography

653

Index of Subjects

675

Index of Scripture and Other Ancient Texts

683

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Foreword

The book that you are holding in your hands, Jesus, the New Testament, and Christian Origins: Perspective, Methods, Meanings, edited by Dieter Mitternacht and Anders Runesson, is an introduction to early Christianity that is very different from the typical New Testament introductions currently available. One of the courses focusing on Christianity most frequently offered by many colleges, universities, and theological seminaries is typically called “Introduction to the New Testament,” and the kind of text designed to be used in such courses typically has that phrase as part or all of the title. Such texts typically focus on the twenty-seven individual documents that make up the canonical New Testament, discussing a range of issues, such as when and where each document was written; the identity of the individual authors or editors; the genre, content, structure, purpose, and key theological themes of each document; the sources of each document, including oral and written traditions; the possible relationships of particular documents to each other (e.g., the literary relationship between the four Gospels); the audience for which they were originally intended; and a bibliography on recent research on each book. Some introductions to the New Testament emphasize the historical background of the New Testament,1 while others include a treatment of theological issues as well,2 and yet others include 1. This is true of the widely used text by W. G. Kümmel, Introduction to the New Testament (Nashville: Abingdon, 1975, originally published in German). 2. E.g., Paul J. Achtemeier, Joel B. Green, and Marianne Meye Thompson, Introducing the New Testament: Its Literature and Theology (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2001); Carl A. Holladay, A Critical Introduction to the New Testament: Interpreting the Message and Meaning of Jesus Christ (Nashville: Abingdon, 2005); Donald A. Hagner, The New Testament: A Historical and Theological Introduction (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2012); M. Eugene Boring, An Introduction to the New Testament: History, Literature, Theology (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2012).

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some early Christian noncanonical texts.3 Often the historical process by which each text was eventually included in the canon of the New Testament is also surveyed. Introductions to the New Testament are typically arranged in one of two ways. The discussion of books of the New Testament can occur either in their canonical order, that is, beginning with the four Gospels and ending with Revelation, or in the historical order in which the books were written, that is, treating the Pauline letters first (the oldest documents in the New Testament), followed by the Gospels and Acts and then the rest of the epistolary literature and Revelation. Such introductory texts are written at various levels of sophistication; some are intended for college students at the beginning level and others are written for more advanced students at the graduate level. The purpose behind such introductory texts is, or ought to be, to teach students to read the New Testament in an informed and intelligent manner. This text, which is intended for students at a relatively advanced level of study, that is, those in graduate schools or theological seminaries, is very different from these more conventional introductions to the New Testament. The primary overlap with more conventional introductions occurs in chapter 4, which focuses on the main features of the twenty-seven canonical New Testament texts, written from 50 to 130 CE (this time frame indicates that the authors use the historical-critical method). The central core of this introduction consists of three chronologically arranged chapters, chapters 3–5. (I will give a more detailed chapter-by-chapter analysis below, but here a brief summary will suffice.) Chapter 3, “The Historical Jesus,” focuses on the sources for our knowledge of the historical Jesus, beginning with non-Christian texts, including Josephus and several second-century Roman authors, followed by a brief discussion of evidence for Jesus found in the Pauline letters and the apocryphal gospels, then a more lengthy consideration of the evidence for Jesus found in the Gospels, bearing in mind that the miraculous cannot be verified by the historical method. Chapter 4, “The Texts,” begins with a short introduction to the textual criticism of the New Testament, that is, how to reconstruct the most original written form of the New Testament books, followed by a discussion of each of the twenty-seven books of the New Testament, discussed in canonical order. Chapter 5, “The Emergence of Early Christianity,” examines the history of the Christ-believing Jews and the eventual separation of Christianity from Judaism, followed by a discussion of Paul, his congregations, and his successors, and the Johannine messianic faith and variety of Judaism and Gnosticism from the first and second centuries CE. The historical order of these three chapters emphasizes the fact that the New Testament texts contain traditions that stretch back to the historical Jesus himself and at the same time provide information about the early groupings within earliest Christianity, accentuating the various trajectories in the development of early Christianity. 3. Delbert Burkitt, An Introduction to the New Testament and Origins of Christianity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002).


Foreword These three core chapters are framed by chapters 2 and 6. Chapter 2, “Historical Background and Setting,” provides historical and cultural background, consisting of ancient Near Eastern history, Greco-Roman religion and culture, and the beliefs and practices of Second Temple Judaism, forming the broader historical and cultural context within which early Christianity arose and developed. Chapter 6, “Readings,” provides a discussion of the principles of New Testament interpretation and a selection of nine different step-by-step approaches to interpreting nine different types of New Testament texts. Chapter 1, “Invitation to Study the New Testament,” provides an introductory overview of the entire text and its arrangement. The discussion in each of the six chapters is enhanced by the inclusion of twenty “text boxes,” that is, helpful information to aid the reader (e.g., the temple in Jerusalem, Olympic gods and goddesses); four “tables,” that is, various lists of information of interest to the reader (e.g., canon lists); twenty-two “figures,” that is, helpful illustrations (e.g., the floor plan of the temple of Jerusalem, the two-source hypothesis); and twenty-five images or photos that illuminate aspects of the text (e.g., the Acropolis in Athens, tombs in the Holy Sepulcher). As the preceding paragraph indicates, this text provides a much more comprehensive resource for structuring an introductory course in early Christianity than do the more typical introductions to the New Testament described at the outset. This text not only covers the kinds of largely literary topics focusing on the twenty-seven books of the New Testament mentioned above (dealt with in chapter 4), but also supplements the discussion of the individual books of the New Testament with important related areas of study. The overall arrangement of the book is therefore chronological, providing insight into the various developments of earliest Christianity from its origins in Jesus of Nazareth in the early first century to its development in various directions in various historical and social contexts from the later first century through the third century. While some introductions to Christianity occasionally include references to some early Christian texts later than the New Testament, such as the Gospel of Thomas, the present text emphasizes the canonical New Testament texts but also includes an overview of a variety of later Jewish-Christian and gnostic texts in chapter 5, which provide information about the various religious contexts of developing early Christianity. This book contextualizes the New Testament texts in a variety of ways by providing historical and social contexts, emphasizing what came before and was presupposed by New Testament authors and their readers; that is, Hellenistic and Roman background material and particularly Hebrew and Jewish history and traditions. The books of the New Testament are intertextual, that is, they assume a knowledge of the Jewish scriptures, both Hebrew and Greek, and allude to them frequently both directly and indirectly. An introductory text should also deal with how early Christianity developed during the first century of its development and expansion. The present volume does this well, covering the historical and cultural background

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of early Christianity and its expansion and development throughout the Mediterranean world, including surveys of Near Eastern, Greco-Roman, and Jewish history and culture; the study of the historical Jesus; the emergence of early Christianity, including the separation of Christianity from Judaism; the growth and development of early Christianity, including a survey of Pauline and Johannine Christianity; and the influence of Gnosticism. One of the salutary things that this new text can encourage is the development of courses on the New Testament and early Christianity more comprehensively, dealing with these related areas of study in a more adequate and inclusive manner. It should also be recognized that courses in New Testament introduction are most frequently offered in colleges and theological seminaries that reflect particular denominational and theological traditions that span the spectrum from conservative and uncritical to liberal and critical, with everything else in between. More conservative introductions tend to accept at face value the claims of authorship made in the New Testament texts; that is, the presence of pseudepigraphy in the New Testament is generally denied. All the letters attributed to Paul, such as the Pastorals, are assumed to have actually been written by Paul, just as the apostle Peter is assumed to have actually written 1 and 2 Peter. For conservative scholars, the canonical status of individual books of the New Testament is typically dependent on whether they were actually written by the author to whom they are attributed. The text by Mitternacht and Runesson, on the other hand, is written from the standpoint of the historical-critical method; that is, the historical method is used as the basic way of understanding the texts. That means that there are some prominent features of the New Testament, such as miracles, which the historical-critical method cannot treat. While more conservative introductions regard the Pastoral Letters (1–2 Timothy and Titus) as actually written by Paul, as each claims to be, and dated therefore within Paul’s lifetime (ca. 50–64 CE), the Mitternacht and Runesson text, in line with mainline historical-critical scholarship, regards the Pastorals as pseudonymous, that is, probably written by a follower of Paul rather than the apostle himself in the early second century CE. While most introductions to the New Testament are written by a single author (occasionally by two or three)—typically someone who has taught New Testament for many years and is intimately familiar with all of the issues mentioned above— this text, originally written in Swedish, was written by twenty-two Scandinavian New Testament scholars, most of whom are both Swedish and Lutheran, and edited by Dieter Mitternacht (professor of New Testament at the Lutheran Theological Seminary in Hong Kong) and Anders Runesson (professor of New Testament at the University of Oslo). As mentioned above, this book consists of six chapters, the first of which, “Invitation to Study the New Testament,” provides a brief historical overview of the key aspects of research done in the field of New Testament and early Christian studies


Foreword and how it has developed over time. This chapter reveals just how distinctive this volume is from typical New Testament introductions. The chapter begins by summarizing what is known about the movement begun by Jesus of Nazareth, who founded what eventually became the largest religion in the world. (The historical Jesus is dealt with in detail in chapter 3, “The Historical Jesus.”) The chapter then provides a brief overview of Palestinian Judaism (dealt with in detail in chapter 2, “Historical Background and Setting”). This first chapter then discusses the diversity and unity of the books of the New Testament, mentioning several gospels that never became part of the New Testament and examining how the canonical New Testament eventually emerged, with some variety, as the later Christian churches functioned as interpretive communities; the New Testament canon thus provided a means of unifying the diverse groups of Christians scattered throughout the Mediterranean world (dealt with in detail in chapter 4, “The Texts”). The third chapter, which focuses on the historical Jesus, is particularly important and treats a subject rarely discussed in typical introductions to the New Testament. The authors distinguish between the historical Jesus, that is, the Jesus of history (the person who lived in first-century Palestine and whose life is open to historical reconstruction, as is any other historical person’s), the historical Jesus (the designation given to the reconstructed portrait of the Jesus of history), and the real Jesus (the actual person named Jesus who, like any other historical person, cannot be fully reconstructed using the methods of historical research). The Jesus who is the focus of this chapter is the Jesus who is accessible to historians. In general, the Gospels must be seen as primarily reflecting the life and faith of the early church rather than of the actual Jesus. Several methods have been formulated to provide access to the Jesus of history. One of the most important historical methods is the criterion of double dissimilarity: that is, only those traditions in the Gospels that are dissimilar from the Judaism of Jesus’s time and from the Christian community are deemed authentic. Since this problematical method is not used generally by historians, it should be replaced with the criterion of plausibility: that is, gospel traditions that plausibly fit into a first-century Jewish context and plausibly explain the impact of Jesus on the Christian movement have a better claim to provide us with reliable historical information about Jesus. Historical research on Jesus, the authors argue, should be carried out (1) with less distrust of the historical sources, (2) with ordinary historical methods, and (3) with what historiography can and should achieve. Early stories about Jesus are therefore read with the historian’s eye. The central theme of the proclamation of Jesus was the kingdom of God, that is, the total transformation of God’s creation and his chosen people, a transformation that was both present and future. Jesus was a charismatic who was surrounded by a group of disciples who memorized his teachings. The event of Jesus’s crucifixion was preserved in a passion story older than the Gospels. Since the historical method cannot deal with the category of “miracle,” all that can be claimed for stories of the

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resurrection of Jesus is that those who knew Jesus were convinced that he rose from the dead. Another important chapter is chapter 4, which focuses on the twenty-seven canonical texts of the New Testament, examining how oral traditions were incorporated into written texts and how scholars today, using the surviving ancient manuscripts, attempt to reconstruct the earliest form of the texts (a discipline called textual criticism). The first section begins with a discussion of the textual criticism of the New Testament, then turns to the process of canonization. The discussion of the texts of the New Testament begins with the four Gospels and Acts. A discussion of the Pauline letters comes next, beginning with a focus on the seven letters that scholars agree were written by Paul, followed by a discussion of the three letters whose Pauline authorship is debated, then by a discussion of the three letters that most scholars agree were not written by Paul but rather by followers of Paul. Chapter 5, entitled “The Emergence of Early Christianity,” provides a reconstruction of how early Christianity gradually developed from a group within mid-firstcentury Palestinian Judaism, which can be characterized as Christ-believing Jews, through the early second century, when Christ-believing non-Jews increasingly achieved prominence within the Jesus movement, even forming their own congregations, some of which excluded various forms of Christ-centered Judaism. By the early second century CE, Ignatius of Antioch even argued that Christianity was the antithesis of Judaism; that is, they were separate religions. The gradual emergence of Christianity as a religion separate from Judaism (which was a religion accepted by the Romans) meant that non-Jewish Christ believers had to find ways to be accepted by the Roman authorities. They did this in two ways: (1) they maintained that Christianity was not a new development but was actually very old and in complete continuity with Judaism, and (2) they denied the right of Judaism to its own traditions, arguing that Christianity was the true Israel and had replaced Judaism. Christ-believing Jews became increasingly marginalized from the second century on as non-Jewish Christ believers steadily increased in numbers and Jewish Christ believers became increasingly marginalized. This complex analysis of the gradual emergence of Christianity from Judaism is an important subject never discussed in conventional introductions to the New Testament and rarely touched on even in histories of early Christianity. Chapter 5 then continues by discussing Paul, his congregations, and his successors as reflected in the Pauline letters and the book of Acts. According to the genuine Pauline letters (Romans, 1–2 Corinthians, Galatians, Philippians, 1 Thessalonians, and Philemon), Paul was aware that he was entrusted with a mission to proclaim the gospel to the uncircumcised. Acts tells a slightly different story, in which Paul’s target group was primarily Jews, and only when Jews in various cities rejected his message did he turn to gentiles. The chapter then provides a complex summary of Paul’s central convictions and beliefs, focusing on such topics as the message of the crucified Christ;


Foreword the imminent expectation of the return of Christ; God’s dealings with Israel and the gentiles; one body, many members; and Jewishness, circumcision, and the law. In discussing the last cluster of interrelated themes, emphasis is placed on Paul’s contextual theology. In letters such as Romans, Galatians, and 1 Corinthians, Paul provides advice to the churches he addresses in a variety of contexts. The differences between Paul’s arguments on becoming a Jew, circumcision, and the law in these three letters are all dependent on the particular contexts in which these issues are discussed. Two other closely related themes center on justification by faith and participation in Christ. Here the authors indicate how thoroughly the traditional understanding of the Pauline understanding of justification by faith has changed over the last fifty years. The so-called new perspective on Paul maintains that Second Temple Judaism was not, as many have argued, a legalistic religion. When Paul referred to “the works of the Law,” he did not understand them as earning salvation; rather, works were to be understood as the means of remaining “in” salvation. Paul opposed the works of the Law as they represented the national exclusivism of Judaism. Against his opponents who argued that only Jews could be full members of the people of God, Paul maintained that all who believed in Christ were also children of Abraham. Finally, in Paul’s view, salvation was not something that had been accomplished, but rather something that is still happening and will be completed in the future. In discussing the successors of Paul, the authors trace the three trajectories of Pauline influence: (1) the Pastoral Letters (1–2 Timothy and Titus), almost certainly not written by Paul, (2) Luke-Acts, and (3) Colossians and Ephesians. The Pastoral Letters are of particular importance in reflecting the development of leadership in the churches originally founded by Paul, emphasizing leadership ideals intended to help congregations find their place in society as respectable associations. In the section of chapter 5 entitled “Johannine Christ Followers,” there is a discussion of Johannine literature, consisting of the Gospel of John and the three letters of John. These texts reflect a group of messianic Jews in the early church who adhered to the language and message of Jesus preserved in the Johannine literature. The text does not understand the Gospel of John as a historical source for the life of Jesus so much as a way of understanding the distinctive views and experiences of Jews who came to believe in Jesus as the Messiah and who produced the Johannine texts. The Johannine literature is in fact a type of crisis literature, reflecting the conflicts of some of those who returned to or remained in a Jewish sect that did not acknowledge Jesus as the Messiah; some of these Jews who came to believe in Jesus later abandoned the sect. It appears that the Johannine Christians remained within the public Jewish synagogue. From here the authors briefly characterize various types of non-rabbinic Jews and Judaism, including the prophetic Jesus-oriented Judaism reflected in the Martyrdom and Ascension of Isaiah, and non-rabbinic Jewish communities that existed in the third and fourth centuries CE, represented by such texts as the pseudo-Clementine

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Homilies and Recognitions, the Didascalia Apostolorum, and the Apostolic Constitutions. Very little is known of the groups who produced these texts, but at least in Syria it is clear that the boundary between Jews and Christians was blurred for centuries. Chapter 5 concludes with an examination of Gnosticism and a discussion of the diversity that existed at this time and the struggle to gain unity. The sixth chapter is a practical introduction to interpretative methods, including examples of various types of scriptural exegesis on select New Testament passages. This unique introduction to early Christianity provides a textual resource without parallel for academic courses concerned with a comprehensive, multidimensional treatment of the historical study of early Christianity in all its complexity. David E. Aune


Preface

Back in 2010, when Allen Myers, then senior editor at Eerdmans, invited us to consider publishing an English translation of our Swedish introduction to the New Testament from 2006 (Jesus och de första kristna), we all thought that the process would be completed within a couple of years. As the project developed, however, we became increasingly convinced that we should take the opportunity not only to update and translate the book but also to expand it to include new material responding to this ever-expanding field where the New Testament, Christian origins, and early Jewish studies increasingly intersect. Ten years later, we are happy that we made that decision. The book that you now hold in your hands not only describes and explains current historical research in the field but also takes seriously the task of encouraging students to become actively involved in interpretation, giving them the tools necessary to do so. This integrated approach to writing a textbook on the New Testament, which moves beyond traditional approaches and disciplinary barriers, is, we believe, uniquely positioned to drive the discussion forward and contribute to fostering a new generation of students of the New Testament, some continuing on to become teachers, others to become preachers, and yet others to become the scholars of tomorrow. It goes without saying that in order for a book like this to communicate effectively the most recent developments in research, as well as chart a way forward in the many specialized areas that together make up the field of New Testament studies, it is necessary to put together a whole team of scholars. We are grateful to all of the authors of this volume for their willingness to contribute their time and expertise to this project in the midst of otherwise very busy schedules. It has been a pleasure to work with you all. We also want to thank those who read and commented on the whole or parts of the manuscript, especially Ryan Davies, Mark Nanos, and Hugo xix


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Lundhaug. While some texts were submitted to us in English, most of the chapters were updated in Swedish by the authors and then translated into English by Rebecca Runesson and Noah Runesson. Without their work, this project would not have been possible; we are very grateful for the time and effort they invested in this book. The indexes have been prepared by Daniel M. Gurtner, and we are very grateful to him for his careful and excellent work. We also want to express our gratitude to the people at Eerdmans for their dedicated and patient work on this project. A special thanks to now-retired senior editor Allen Myers, who was an invaluable conversation partner as our plans took form; to New Testament editor Trevor Thompson, who oversaw the work as chapters were submitted and translated; and to senior project editor Jennifer Hoffman, whose outstanding work and efficiency made the final and most intensive stages of galley proofing and final editing so much easier and enjoyable. Last but not least, we want to express our sincere gratitude to Birger Olsson, professor emeritus of New Testament at Lund University. In Lund, Birger was our mentor as we learned to become scholars, challenging us always to go further and deeper, seeking new meanings by approaching materials from a range of different methodological vantage points. Since then, Birger has been a generous, supportive, and trusted colleague and friend, setting an example for others to follow. It is a joy for us, as editors, to dedicate this book to him. Thank you, Birger! October 2020


Abbreviations

General and Bibliographic ANRW Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt AYBRL Anchor Yale Bible Reference Library AYBC Anchor Yale Biblical Commentary b. born BECNT Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament BibInt Biblical Interpretation ca. circa ch(s). chapter(s) cf. confer, compare ConBNT Coniectanea Biblica: New Testament Series CRINT Compendia Rerum Iudaicarum ad Novum Testamentum d. died e.g. exempli gratia, for example EJL Early Judaism and Its Literature esp. especially FRLANT Forschungen zur Religion und Literatur des Alten und Neuen Testaments Gk. Greek Heb. Hebrew ICC International Critical Commentary i.e. id est, that is JBL Journal of Biblical Literature JECS Journal of Early Christian Studies

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JSHJ Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus JSNTSup Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement Series Lat. Latin LEC Library of Early Christianity LNTS The Library of New Testament Studies LXX Septuagint MS(S) manuscript(s) NA28 Nestle-Aland, Novum Testamentum Graece, 28th edition NHC Nag Hammadi codices NICNT New International Commentary on the New Testament NIGTC New International Greek Testament Commentary NIV New International Version NRSV New Revised Standard Version NT New Testament NTS New Testament Studies OT Old Testament par(r). parallel(s) r. reigned RBS Resources for Biblical Study SBLDS Society of Biblical Literature Dissertation Series SNTSMS Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series SP Sacra Pagina ST Studia Theologica WBC Word Biblical Commentary WUNT Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament

Old Testament Gen Genesis Exod Exodus Lev Leviticus Num Numbers Deut Deuteronomy Josh Joshua Judg Judges Ruth Ruth 1–2 Sam 1–2 Samuel 1–2 Kgs 1–2 Kings 1–2 Chr 1–2 Chronicles Ezra Ezra

Neh Nehemiah Esth Esther Job Job Ps(s) Psalm(s) Prov Proverbs Eccl Ecclesiastes Song Song of Songs Isa Isaiah Jer Jeremiah Lam Lamentations Ezek Ezekiel Dan Daniel


Abbreviations Hos Hosea Joel Joel Amos Amos Obad Obadiah Jonah Jonah Mic Micah

Nah Nahum Hab Habakkuk Zeph Zephaniah Hag Haggai Zech Zechariah Mal Malachi

New Testament Matt Matthew Mark Mark Luke Luke John John Acts Acts Rom Romans 1–2 Cor 1–2 Corinthians Gal Galatians Eph Ephesians Phil Philippians Col Colossians

1–2 Thess 1–2 Thessalonians 1–2 Tim 1–2 Timothy Titus Titus Phlm Philemon Heb Hebrews Jas James 1–2 Pet 1–2 Peter 1–3 John 1–3 John Jude Jude Rev Revelation

Other Jewish and Christian Writings Apoc. Pet. Apocalypse of Peter Bar Baruch Barn. Barnabas CD Cairo Genizah copy of the Damascus Document 1–2 Clem. 1–2 Clement DA Didascalia Apostolorum Did. Didache Gos. Jud. Gospel of Judas Gos. Mary Gospel of Mary Gos. Pet. Gospel of Peter

Gos. Thom. Herm. Ign. Magn.

Gospel of Thomas Shepherd of Hermas Ignatius, To the Magnesians Ign. Rom. Ignatius, To the Romans Jdt Judith 1–2 Macc 1–2 Maccabees Pol. Phil. Polycarp, To the Philippians Pss. Sol. Psalms of Solomon Sir Sirach

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Invitation to Study the New Testament Beginnings

This book is dedicated to the study of one of the most intriguing peculiarities of human history: the story of how a lowly Jewish artisan from an insignificant Galilean village of about four hundred inhabitants was executed by Roman imperial forces on suspicion of subversive behavior—only to become the most influential individual ever to have set foot on this planet. Jesus is today, two thousand years after his death, the central figure in a great number of creeds that together make up Christianity, the largest religion in the world, with most of its adherents now living in the so-called Global South. In terms of convictions, the central force behind these two thousand years of expansion is the astonishing claim that the man executed was brought back to life by the God of Israel. This belief spread rapidly around the Mediterranean, also among non-Jews, in the first few centuries of the Common Era. The originally oral traditions about Jesus’s life and teachings were eventually written down, and a number of the resulting texts came to be seen by the mainstream churches as Holy Scripture. Within three hundred years the belief in Jesus as the risen Lord (Gk. kyrios), who would return to pass judgment on humanity and establish the kingdom of God, had filtered through into the upper social strata and been designated the state religion of the Roman Empire, the very same empire that had crucified the one now worshiped. Indeed, a most remarkable journey from periphery to center. This journey began sometime between the years 7 and 4 BCE, when Jesus was born. According to the Gospels of Matthew and Luke this event occurred in Bethlehem, in Judea. Jesus then grew up in the village of Nazareth in Galilee, in the high1


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CHAPTER 1 Invitation to Study the New Testament

lands of the north, which at this time was ruled by the Jewish vassal tetrarch Herod Antipas (4 BCE–39 CE), son of Herod I, also called “the Great.” Judea, the country’s southern part where the capital Jerusalem was located, was from 6 CE ruled directly by Rome through prefects, of which Pontius Pilate, the man who condemned Jesus to death, undoubtedly is the most well known. The country that Jesus grew up in was a nation under Roman colonial control. The Roman imperial presence was felt by all, not least because of taxes and other burdens affecting the masses. The land that had been united under a Jewish king at the time of Jesus’s birth was, when Jesus began his ministry, politically divided. The Jewish elite in the Jerusalem temple, as well as the vassal rulers in Galilee and the northeastern regions of what was once Herod I’s kingdom, had to carefully balance between Roman demands, on the one hand, and the needs and will of the people, on the other. Those who did not belong to the ruling elite reacted to this political situation in different ways. Tax collectors, for example, could further their own financial gain by charging more tax than the Romans required, thereby increasing their commission. In the New Testament we have an echo of this type of fraud in the story of the tax collector Zacchaeus, who, after he met Jesus, decided to return the money he had gained through illegal means to all his victims (Luke 19). Others chose the way of armed resistance and rebellion. This resulted in, for example, two major revolts, first between the years 66 and 70 CE and then once more between 132 and 135 CE. There were also those who did not choose violence but rather hoped that the God of Israel would intervene and in a miraculous manner reestablish Israel as a kingdom (cf. Acts 1:6–7). The public, civic synagogue institution, where the local affairs of villages and cities were dealt with and Holy Scriptures were read and interpreted every Sabbath, constituted a sociopolitical and religious focal point where people gathered for deliberation on various matters. Religion and politics, the cultic and the common, were intertwined in ancient understandings of the world; the Sabbath’s discussion of Holy Scripture concerned the entirety of human existence and the society in which people lived. Additionally, by publicly reading and interpreting texts from Israel’s past, the people’s history was kept alive and relevant. Passages from the Scriptures that spoke of the liberation of the Jewish people from Egypt, or the people’s deliverance from the Babylonian exile, were read and interpreted in the context of contemporary situations. Luke 4 tells us, in a paradigmatic sort of way, of how Jesus makes use of the Sabbath’s Scripture reading and discussion to this effect. The use of ancient texts in interpreting the present and the future—in cities and in rural areas, in the homeland and in the diaspora—contributed to creating a distinct Jewish culture and identity. A great deal of the texts that have been preserved from the first century CE bear witness to the importance that was attributed to certain writings. Of course, different groups could, and would, have different ideas not only about how these special writings should be interpreted but also about what should


Beginnings

3

be considered Holy Scriptures in the first place. For example, the group known as the Sadducees accepted, like the Samaritans, only the five books of Moses (Torah), while the Pharisees, like Jesus and his followers, considered the prophetic writings and some other texts, traditionally called “the Writings,” to be authoritative texts too.

When dating historical events, many are used to the terms “before Christ” (BC) and Anno Domini (AD = “the year of the Lord”). For Christians this usage is certainly appropriate, but for persons adhering to other systems of belief, or none, the terminology may seem inadequate. Many academic publications today use a terminology that does not presume Christian faith or worldview yet still adheres to the Western dating tradition. This book uses “before the Common Era” (BCE) and “Common Era” (CE). Such terms give the additional benefit of preventing the common misconception that Jesus was born in the year 1, which in all likelihood he was not (see chapter 3).

The New Testament and Its Texts Jesus did not write any texts himself. Nor did the collection of texts we know as the New Testament exist in the early Jesus movement. Those who accepted Jesus as Messiah (Gk. Christos) read and found guidance in the same holy texts that were used by many other contemporary Jewish groups. Christians later came to call these texts the Old Testament. Jews came to call them Tanak. This latter word is an acronym that is derived from the first letters in Torah (the Law, the five books of Moses), Nevi’im (the Prophets), and Ketuvim (the Writings). In this book we will refer to this collection of texts as the Hebrew Bible and in some places, when we would like to point to the early Greek translation of these texts, as the Septuagint (LXX). The twenty-­seven writings that were authored by Jesus’s followers, and that eventually were included in the New Testament, represent different genres. The oldest are letters written by Paul to the assemblies he and others had founded around the Mediterranean. In these letters he motivates and admonishes Christ followers about how they, as he sees it, should best express their trust in Christ, in both theology and practice. Occasional oral traditions about Jesus are found in the Pauline letters. The most well-­known example of such is surely the story of Jesus’s last supper with his friends: “on the night when he [Jesus] was betrayed . . .” (1 Cor 11:23–25). It is not until the Gospel of Mark, written more than a decade after Paul’s last letter, that we find a coherent retelling of Jesus’s life and teachings. Following this text, a kind of ancient

Box 1.1 Dating


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CHAPTER 1 Invitation to Study the New Testament

biography, we have the Gospels of Matthew, Luke, and John, likely written in this order at some point between the years 80 and 100 CE, although a growing number of scholars now suggest that Luke may have been written in the early second century. Just like the Gospel of Mark, these gospels present Jesus’s life in the form of a narrative, albeit in different, sometimes supplementing, sometimes contradicting, ways. How it came to be that these gospels display such similarities and differences will be further explored in chapter 4. The New Testament also contains the earliest account of the expansion of the Jesus movement, the book of Acts. In this text we are offered a story of how the apostles spread traditions about and sayings of Jesus, claiming him to be the resurrected Messiah, the one promised by the Jewish sacred Scriptures. As the author vividly recounts the bravery of men and women, accompanied by divine miracles, the reader learns that the mission is first directed toward fellow Jews and then expanded to include Samaritans and finally other non-­Jews around the Roman Empire. At first Peter, one of Jesus’s closest disciples, is portrayed as the principal figure behind these developments, but this focus later shifts to Paul. Both Peter and Paul receive their instruction to spread the news about the resurrected Messiah to non-­Jews through visions—Peter on a roof in the city of Joppa, Paul on the road to Damascus. Paul, a Jewish intellectual who had been a zealous persecutor of Jews who had joined the Jesus movement, is entirely transformed by his encounter with the risen Christ and becomes one of the most eager missionaries of the movement. Among the remaining texts of the New Testament are those that are formulated as letters but are more similar to treatises meant for a wide and general audience. Here we find the so-­called Pastoral Letters, three letters written in the name of Paul that carry forward and adapt his legacy to new situations. Furthermore, there are three letters associated with John, of which the first and longest can hardly have been meant as a letter in the strict sense of that word. These texts mirror the Johannine tradition’s emphasis on true faith in Christ. The Letter of James and the Letter to the Hebrews—neither of which belongs to the proper genre of ancient letters—appear to be written with a Jewish audience in mind, although the texts never mention which communities they are writing to. Finally, we have Revelation, the only apocalyptic text in the New Testament. It describes, with colorful and complicated metaphorical language, what is to happen in the final days, when God will judge the evil and vindicate the righteous. While this is a text about the future, it is saturated with a critique of the society in which the author lived, being especially hostile toward Rome.

Diversity, Unity, and Continuity Most scholars hold that the texts of the New Testament were written over a period of eighty years—that is, between approximately 50 and 130 CE. The individuals who


Beginnings wrote them could hardly have predicted that their texts would become part of a literary collection that would be preserved for millennia and considered as holy as the Jewish Bible. Neither could the gospel authors, who shaped their portraits of Jesus with great care, know that their accounts would be included side by side in a collection of four gospels, providing the reader with diverse descriptions of who Jesus was and what he accomplished. It is this diversity that makes this literary collection so intriguing and challenging. In fact, already in antiquity attempts were made to merge the four gospels into one, thereby neutralizing the differences between them. At the same time, there were also strong forces that rejected such a harmonization of the gospels. The decision to allow the four different accounts to represent the truth about Jesus was deliberate and accepted early on by most authorities. There were also other gospels that were not included in the New Testament, all of them written later than the four. One of these has become rather well known: the Gospel of Thomas. This text is not a narrative like the other gospels but contains a compilation of Jesus’s words. For whatever reasons, the early authorities in the movement considered this list of Jesus’s words to depart too much from what they understood the other four gospels conveyed. It was never included in the canon, therefore, but shared the fate of a multitude of other writings about Jesus that were discarded. The early centers of belief in Jesus as the Christ—Jerusalem, Alexandria, Antioch, Ephesus, and Rome—sought unity in all this diversity. Finally, in the fourth century, they agreed that twenty-­seven books should be considered especially authoritative and thus be recognized by all Christians as part of a collection of holy writings. This meant that a visible sign of unity within the (majority) church was achieved, while still preserving a form of measured diversity. Different accounts of Jesus’s life and teachings, and different rules for how a Christ follower should live, were allowed to stand side by side in the same literary collection. The basic (theological) position seems to have been that revealed truth allowed for, even required, diversity, although within certain limits, which, of course, were determined by those considered authorities. The word “gospel” (Gk. euangelion) means “good news.” This word was used early on to describe Jesus’s teachings. With time, however, the term came to denote the texts that present accounts of Jesus (gospels). In a comparable manner, the descriptor “New Testament” began to be used for a single collection of texts in the second century. The word “testament” comes from Latin and translates the Greek diathēkē (covenant), which in turn is a translation of the Hebrew word berit. These designations indicate that the texts included in this collection, the New Testament, were thought to describe in a meaningful way God’s covenant with his people and humankind, a covenant that has its center in Jesus, called the Christ. The term “new covenant” is, however, older than this. It occurs as early as in Jer 31:31–34, where a promise is made that there will come a time when God will make a

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CHAPTER 1 Invitation to Study the New Testament

new covenant with his people Israel. Describing the covenant, the passage continues: “I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be my people.” The Hebrew Bible tells of many covenants, which were made at different points in time during Israel’s history (e.g., between God and Noah, Abraham, the people of Israel at Mount Sinai, and David). In all these cases, the new was not considered to be a replacement or annulment of the old, but rather seen as an addition to what already existed, as a sign of God’s faithfulness. The covenants were complementary in nature, in other words. The term “new” could even carry a negative connotation, as “old” traditions were generally considered better and more trustworthy. An example of this way of thinking may be found in Gal 3:17; a new covenant cannot abolish or supersede an older one (compare 1 Cor 3:10–13). The literary collection that came to be known as the New Testament was added to and combined with the more ancient Jewish Scriptures, which Jesus’s followers had venerated since the very beginning: the Torah, the Prophets, and the Writings. This in turn eventually led to the Christians coining the term “Old Testament” as a descriptor for these more ancient texts. The definitive contents of both collections (Old and New Testaments), however, was decided long after these descriptive terms had come into use. In fact, not even today do we find absolute agreement between different church traditions as to exactly which texts should be included in the canon. From the time when the texts included in the New Testament were written until the time when the collection as such was agreed on, Christianity grew and expanded its presence around and beyond the Mediterranean world. The formation of the canon may be interpreted as an attempt at unifying Christians in order to prevent schisms and to counteract the development of isolated Christian groups that had little in common with others. As a recognized literary collection, the New Testament later also became a tool for mediating and reaching agreements between various Christian groups. Many groups of Christ followers were marginalized in this historical process. Some of them are named in, for example, the writings of the church fathers, while others will remain unknown to us. In striving to limit diversity, the majority church identified, for better or for worse, what it saw as heretical groups. During the 1900s several sensational finds of papyri in Egypt were made, which have contributed to the fact that we today have access to some of the texts owned and copied by these groups themselves. The latest in this line of discoveries is the Gospel of Judas. The text is mentioned by the church fathers and was published in 2006 after extensive restoration work. Such finds are extremely important, since they make possible a better understanding than ever before of the early Christian movement in all its diversity. The historical Jesus interpreted in word and deed what were for him the holy texts of the Hebrew Bible. Later, the texts that were written about Jesus himself were at once a result of and an influence on the Jesus movement and emerging Chris­ tianity. Thus, text and history become intertwined in a fascinating development that results in the birth of a world religion—a religion that still holds sacred the texts that


Beginnings bear witness to the early centuries’ view on what defines legitimate diversity within Christianity. Throughout history and today, these texts have been and are read and interpreted in a wide variety of ways.

To Read and Interpret The diversity of textual interpretation corresponds to the diversity of readers and reading communities. In the past, just as in the present, humans have sought in different ways and for different reasons to understand. Reading and rereading is a hermeneutical process that in many ways is similar to the rereading of texts from Israel’s history by Jesus and others during the first century. How one reads is dependent on one’s identity and what one wants from the reading, the aim of the reading. The very same text can mean different things depending on how it is read. A good example of this is the early reception of the Gospel of Matthew. The text was in all likelihood written by Jewish Christ­followers who were careful to interpret their trust (Gk. pistis) in Jesus within the frame of their Jewish identity. Very soon, however, Matthew came to be used by non-­Jews, which resulted in a different understanding of the text. That which in the beginning had been Matthew’s inner-­Jewish criticism of other Jewish groups was later interpreted by non-­Jewish Christian groups as a general critique of Jews and Judaism as such—an entirely different reading that facilitated the construction and strengthening of a Christian identity that located itself outside of, and aimed to be independent from, Judaism. The tragic aftermath of this type of shift in meaning has been the object of extended analyses by scholars aiming to understand the use of the Gospel of Matthew in Christian anti-­Jewish rhetoric. Another example of how communicative settings affect texts and readings may be found in the New Testament’s Johannine literature. As early as among the church fathers, there were those who held that the First Letter of John was a form of reading manual, meant to guide the reader through the Gospel of John. The gospel strongly emphasizes that the Messiah is God’s eternal and only Son and that his presence on earth is a revelation of God’s glory. The purpose of such an emphasis could have been to overcome a tendency among certain Christ-­following Jews that saw Jesus as solely human. This in turn led to the text’s polemical prong being pointed toward “the Jews.” Interestingly, the effect of the gospel’s strong emphasis on Jesus’s divinity led the Christ followers in Ephesus to instead deny Christ’s human nature (1 John 4:2–3). Thus, the author’s attempt at preventing what he believed was a faulty train of thought seems, from his perspective, to have led to more misunderstandings rather than clarity. It is possible, then, that this whole process led to the writing of the First Letter of John to serve as a kind of instruction into how the Gospel of John should be understood. To correct perceived misreading, the letter emphasizes that the word of life indeed was from the beginning, but that it also is “what we have looked at and touched with our hands” (1 John 1:1).

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A third example is seen in the Letter of James, with its emphasis on the connection between faith and works, or deeds (cf. Jas 2:14–26). The letter has been interpreted by some as a reaction to a flawed reading of the letters of Paul. In Lutheran tradition, there have even been claims that the Letter of James polemicizes against Pauline theology. Luther called the letter an “Epistle of Straw,” which would burn on the Lord’s Day when everything is tried in fire, and only the gold, silver, and gemstones of the gospel remain (cf. 1 Cor 3:12–14). More likely, however, is that the Letter of James is a reaction to a misguided interpretation of Pauline texts that viewed Paul’s emphasis on faith as more or less canceling the importance of good deeds, an idea foreign to the apostle (cf. Rom 2:6–11; 3:31; Gal 5:19–23). When reading and interpreting any text, it is important to be aware of the role that the interpreter and the interpretative context play when understanding is formed. From the very first period of the Jesus movement, different groups of Christ followers constituted interpretative communities, not only regarding theological issues, but also on practical questions such as what Christian life ought to look like in terms of ritual, ethics, and everyday life. By uniting twenty-­seven texts in one collection of authoritative books, the emerging mainstream Christian church was shaped into a larger interpretative community, although it still held a great deal of diversity. For two thousand years Christians have continued to aim at forming their faith and their lives in agreement with their interpretations of the New Testament, and this has inevitably at times resulted in intolerance and violence directed against people expressing opinions differing from those of the (empowered) majority. Often in the history of Christianity, individuals and groups have claimed their interpretations to be absolute representations of truth, and on the basis of such claims some have even broken away from other groups and begun new churches, as if unity required absolute agreement on textual interpretation. Interpretative diversity, however, remains the original posture of the movement in this regard. It all begins with diverging oral traditions about Jesus, which are interpreted differently by groups with varying levels of access to those traditions. Diversity then continues as four gospels and a number of other texts are recognized as authoritative, despite their often-­contradictory perspectives, and brought together into a single canonical collection. The result of this process is the “library” we call the New Testament, which together with the Hebrew Bible is still read and interpreted throughout the world, both within and beyond the churches.

This Book This book moves from historical perspectives, chapters 2–5, to more reading- and interpretation-­oriented subjects, chapter 6. In order to introduce the study of the New Testament and Christian origins, taking aim at a historical understanding of


Beginnings

The canon of the Hebrew Bible is notoriously difficult to date, but most scholars would agree that it was established about a century after the birth of Jesus. The Jewish name for the literary collection, Tanak, is an acronym of the words Torah (the Law), Nevi’im (the Prophets), and Ketuvim (the Writings). The Tanak contains twenty-four books, while, for example, the Protestant Old Testament, owing to a different way of counting, contains thirty-nine books. The actual text in the two collections is, however, basically the same. Tanak Torah Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy

Old Testament The Pentateuch Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy

The Early Prophets Joshua, Judges, Book of Samuel (one book), Book of Kings (one book)

Historical Books Joshua, Judges, Ruth, First and Second Samuel, First and Second Kings, First and Second Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, Esther

The Later Prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, the Twelve (one book: Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi) The Writings Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ruth, Song of Songs, Ecclesiastes, Lamentations, Esther, Daniel, Ezra-­ Nehemiah (one book), Chronicles (one book)

Poetic Books Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs The Major Prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, Lamentations, Ezekiel, Daniel The Minor Prophets Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi

Many Bibles contain an “Additions to the Old Testament” section, which usually consists of the following books: Tobit, Judith, the Greek version of Esther, First and Second Maccabees, Wisdom of Solomon, Wisdom of Jesus Ben Sira (Sirach), Baruch, Epistle of Jeremiah, Additions to Daniel, and the Prayer of Manasseh. These texts are part of the Septuagint and are integrated into the Old Testament in Catholic and Orthodox editions of the Bible.

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Box 1.2 The Hebrew Bible


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CHAPTER 1 Invitation to Study the New Testament

Jesus, his early followers, and the texts they wrote, the remainder of chapter 1 will present an overview of key aspects of research done within the field, demonstrating how the field has developed over time. In addition, we have included a section discussing more methodologically oriented questions about how historical knowledge may be obtained in the first place. Chapter 2 aims to reconstruct the historical context in which Jesus and his followers lived, and in which the texts about him were written. The reader will be led through history, from Persian times to the period in which the Jesus movement begins to take shape. We will learn about the religious and cultural environment in the Roman Empire and about various forms of Jewish practice and belief around the first century CE. Within this larger context, we will then aim the spotlight at Jesus in order to attempt to understand who he was and what he wanted to achieve (chapter 3). Chapter 4 is dedicated to the texts of the New Testament. The chapter begins with a discussion of how oral traditions were textualized; how scholars reconstruct the texts today on the basis of the ancient manuscript evidence; and how, when, and why certain texts came to be included in the New Testament. After these introductory discussions, the New Testament texts themselves will be presented one by one, along with their communicative settings, content, structure, and key theological thoughts. Chapter 5 moves on to provide a historical perspective depicting some of the diversity and struggles for unity that existed from the earliest period until the emergence of Christianity as we know it today—that is, the time during which the New Testament was written and canonized. The first part of the book is thus structured chronologically. The reader is led step by step through history according to the principle that that which occurred first, historically, is presented first. In other words, the events occurred before the texts were written; therefore, the texts are presented after the events. At this point it is important, we believe, to distinguish between the via inventionis and the via expositionis. The first expression refers to the path (via) that is followed in the analytical process (inventionis), and the latter refers to the manner in which one presents (expositionis) the results to the reader. Why, then, have we chosen a chronological layout for a textbook? Let us explain briefly. If someone wishes to know more about, for example, Alexander the Great, who lived between 356 and 323 BCE, he or she will have to study the texts written about Alexander. We know that there were authors already during Alexander’s reign who recorded details about his life and exploits, but all these texts have been lost. The material accessible to the historian consists of texts that were written much later, which cite some of these earlier writings. Although debated, the most reliable of these texts is generally said to be the Greek historian Arrian of Nicomedia, who was active around 150 CE—several hundred years after Alexander’s death. The historian is thus confined to later accounts, which he or she must search in order to retrieve


Beginnings reliable information about the historical Alexander. However, texts function only as one among many source types that can be used when reconstructing a portrait of Alex­ander. Information pulled from the texts is thus combined with other information from older, more indirect sources (such as inscriptions) that are closer to Alexander’s actual lifetime, in order to gain an understanding of what may be considered reasonable for the 300s BCE. The reconstruction, then, ultimately consists of a mixture of types of information from different sources. The texts from the mid-­second century CE, however, contain information not only about Alexander but also about the time and context in which the text itself was authored. It is therefore possible to analyze the texts themselves, for example, as representations of an author’s fascination with a hero. The texts, in this case, are thus studied for their own sake and as expressions of a later time’s perception of events in the past. It is not Alexander as a historical figure but rather the text’s own historical context, the author’s perspective and purpose of writing, that is examined. When conclusions about Alexander and the texts about him are then presented in book form, the historian may choose to first create a historical picture by describing Alexander’s life in chronological order, from birth to death, and thereafter present the portraits painted of him by later texts. These portraits may then be compared to and contrasted with the historical picture that the historian has reconstructed. In other words, although the via inventionis, the research process, is multifaceted, making it impossible for the author to follow a strict chronological order, the presentation of the results of such a research process, the via expositionis, ought to be organized and chronological for the sake of clarity. Another way to introduce Alexander and the texts surrounding him would be to imitate the research process and thus begin with the later texts and proceed backward in time. The difficulty with such an arrangement is that it risks misleading the reader into thinking that the texts are used solely as a window into Alexander’s life and not as interesting and important artifacts in themselves, artifacts that have their own context, purpose, and historical value. With an overall chronological presentation, then, the reconstruction of historical figures and events, which builds on a diverse body of sources, is separated from the aims and contexts of the later texts. By choosing a chronological layout, we are joining a current pedagogical trajectory applied to textbooks. Several historical introductions to the early Christian period and its texts have recently prioritized chronology as a frame within which to present research results. Here we find, for example, Per Bilde’s En religion bliver til (The Origin of a Religion; in Danish) and L. Michael White’s From Jesus to Christianity. The difference between the present work and these two examples is that we have chosen to work with the New Testament as canon, rather than to include a larger variety of texts over a longer period of time. The main reason for this is the impact the canon has had, as canon, in culture, religion, and politics over the centuries. This means that while the

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book you are now reading does include discussion of both texts and movements beyond the canon and the majority church, the twenty-­seven canonical texts are treated in greater depth than these other texts and groups. At the end of the book, there is a list (see appendix 1) that summarizes other texts that are roughly contemporary with the New Testament texts and that are important for our understanding of the latter. We chose to place the chapter about the New Testament texts between the chapters “The Historical Jesus” (ch. 3) and “The Emergence of Early Christianity” (ch. 5) in order to mirror the fact that these texts originated at the same time that Christianity took shape as a religion, but they also preserve traditions that stretch back to Jesus himself. The texts therefore constitute a source of information on both the historical Jesus and the early Christ groups in which they were authored, much the same as the texts about Alexander the Great give us information about both the historical Alexander and the time at which those texts were written. Of course, if the reader so wishes, he or she may begin by reading chapters 2 and 4, and then continue with chapters 3 and 5, as this would imitate a research process that focuses on the historical Jesus. An important aim of this book is to nurture in the reader a desire to study the New Testament texts and the history surrounding them outside of the context of this present work, inspiring him or her to become an informed independent interpreter. In order to contribute to and guide the reader along such a path, the book’s second part (ch. 6) presents theories of interpretation, as well as examples of different types of interpretations that may emerge depending on the methods chosen. We have also included some concrete instructions for how work with historical texts may be carried out. One of the purposes of this is to illustrate the breadth and diversity of textual interpretation, and at the same time demonstrate how dependent all interpretation is on perspective, interests, and methods. With a certain chronological overlap at the beginning and the end, this book covers the discipline called “New Testament studies,” which usually, from a chronological perspective, inhabits the space between what in Christian scholarly traditions have been labeled “Old Testament studies” and “church history.” It is our hope that this introduction to Jesus, the New Testament, and Christians origins will contribute to increased historical knowledge and understanding, and also serve as an invitation to the reader to engage in an academic, critical reading of New Testament texts, assisted by the diversity of perspectives and methods that are perhaps the most distinctive characteristic of New Testament research today.

A History of New Testament Research The Origins of Biblical Research Ever since the New Testament was read for the first time, people have been attempting to clarify the content and origins of this unique collection of books. The author


A History of New Testament Research of the Second Letter of Peter complained that some of Paul’s letters could be difficult to understand (2 Pet 3:16), which should indicate to us that the desire to study and truly understand these texts began very early, perhaps around the beginning of the second century, even though the canon itself was not in place at that time. As the early church began selecting which of the many texts should shape their official faith, this study of the texts grew in importance. According to the authorities of the time, an important criterion for a text to be regarded as authoritative was that it had been authored by an apostle or a disciple of an apostle. An early example of this idea of apostolic legitimacy can be found in the writings of Papias, bishop of Hierapolis in Phrygia in the second century. He referred to an old tradition he claimed he had access to, that the author of the Gospel of Mark was in fact the apostle Peter’s interpreter, who decided to write down, though not in order, what he remembered of Peter’s teachings. This tradition is found in Eusebius’s book Ecclesiastical History 3.39.15, the oldest preserved history of the church. Eusebius lived circa 260–339 CE. We shall return to the selection process in more detail in chapter 4. It was also important to determine the meaning of the texts. In Alexandria the texts were read allegorically, which is to say they were not read literally but rather read on the assumption that they had five (Clement of Alexandria) or three (Origen) levels of meaning. Christians in Antioch nurtured a different school of thought, in which the study of the New Testament focused more on linguistic and historical methodologies. In this way, already during the fourth and fifth centuries, it was possible to question certain texts (Theodore of Mopsuestia) and instead view biblical history through a more typological approach (John Chrysostom). From such perspectives, authorities could think of biblical history as if it were a model for the later church. From the many ways to interpret the texts of the New Testament, a fourfold approach began to emerge during the early Middle Ages. This model consisted of the following interpretative methods: the historical (the literal meaning of the texts), the allegorical (the texts are about Christ and the church), the tropological (the texts speak of the individual human being), and the anagogical (the texts are about the heavenly world). There was much discussion about the relative value of these approaches as well as their interrelationship. Thomas Aquinas, the most prominent theologian of the thirteenth century, argued that the three latter models had to be grounded in the historical model, but there were others who interpreted the texts without consideration of their historical meaning. With the Reformation came an emphasis on the idea that only Scripture should determine the formation of Christian life and worship. Consequently, Lutheran theologians wanted to attribute only one meaning to the text, a historical or literal one. They argued that such a goal could be reached if one used biblical texts to interpret other biblical texts, to interpret Scripture with Scripture. In reality, however, this led to a situation in which each person developed his or her own interpretative keys. For Martin Luther, the main figure of the Reformation during the first half of the 1500s,

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the hermeneutical key was Christ and the context of the Christian faith. At this time, a focus on close readings of the biblical texts developed. Jean Calvin, the reformer of Basel and Geneva during the 1500s, argued that the purpose of theology was limited to a replication of the factual content of the Bible. Using his deep knowledge of ancient Greek and Latin literature, he studied the Bible at length and produced commentaries for almost every book it contained.

The Breakthrough of Modern Biblical Scholarship Modern biblical scholarship sprang from the French enlightenment of the eighteenth century. Instead of using the constitution of the heavenly realm as a point of departure, scholars now began establishing a coherent worldview based on human experience and knowledge, liberated from any constraining dogmas and authoritarian religious and political authorities. Around this time, Johann David Michaelis (1717–1791) was active in Göttingen. Michaelis worked untiringly with exegetical problems from the point of view that the key to a sound understanding of the biblical texts was thorough knowledge of the biblical languages and historical facts. At the same time, Johann Salomo Semler (1725–1791) was active in Halle, where Michealis had studied and taught previously. Semler argued that religion was something personal that revolved around the concept of faith. Theology, on the other hand, was about rational reflection and scholarship. The study of the canon belonged to this latter category (see the section “Which Texts Belong to the New Testament? The Canonization Process,” p. 211). Biblical scholars had made use of linguistic and historical methodologies already a couple decades earlier—for example, the French monk Richard Simon (1638–1712). However, with Michaelis and Semler came a general consensus about what biblical scholarship was, and this consensus eventually developed into the historical-­critical methodologies applied in the discipline. Michaelis and Semler had many students, including Johann Jakob Griesbach and Johann Gottfried Eichhorn. As professor in Jena, Griesbach contributed to the study of the original texts (text criticism) and the relationship between the first three gospels (the Synoptic problem). Eichhorn, active in Jena and Göttingen, is most known for his contribution to Old Testament scholarship, but he did introduce to our field ancient myth as a way for ancient societies to express their perceptions of reality and wrote an introduction to the New Testament. The concept of myth would later become crucial for the interpretation of the New Testament. At this point, modern biblical scholarship had made a definite breakthrough. The time ahead was characterized by discussions about the consequences of the new approach. Hermann Samuel Reimarus (1694–1768) published a book in Hamburg in 1754 in which he denied both that Jesus had performed miracles and the existence


A History of New Testament Research of supernatural revelations. His radical view that Jesus’s teaching was limited to moral instruction based on the Old Testament, and that his disciples in a deceptive way had tried to create a new religion after his death, triggered an intense debate. After Reimarus’s death, Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729–1781) fueled the debate by publishing in 1774 an anonymous fragment of one of Reimarus’s texts. It became difficult to separate historical and rationalistic approaches from reflections on the very validity of the Christian faith. Johann Gottfried Herder (1744–1803), a court preacher in Weimar, attempted to solve the conflict between faith and rational knowledge by seeing history as a successive revealing of God for humanity. The rationalistic point of departure of this type of biblical scholarship did not prevent people from trying to find solutions to the problem that historical claims about the biblical stories undeniably also make claims, in a society that is Christian, about the nature of ultimate reality and truth in a more religious sense.

A General Summary of Historical Jesus Research The newfound freedom within the biblical field became especially obvious where the question of the historical Jesus was concerned. In 1835 something groundbreaking occurred. The young David Friedrich Strauss (1808–1874) in Tübingen, only twenty-­ seven years old, published a book about Jesus’s life that was heavily influenced by the then radical philosophy of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel. He was not happy with the tendency of biblical scholars—especially his teacher Friedrich Schleiermacher—to reject the mythical strokes of the Gospels and yet assert that the historical Jesus and the Christ of contemporary faith was one and the same person. The myth as interpretative key returns with Strauss’s research. In his work, myths stand for a type of abstract idea about the supernatural. The Gospels, he argued, present myths within a historical framework and thus embody Jesus as an idea. The person behind the myths is an ordinary human being, subjected to human limitations just as much as everybody else. Jesus may serve as a manifestation of the divine within the genuinely human, but it is the idea that is of enduring importance, not the actual historical person. Therefore, there is no historical connection between the Jesus of history and the Christ of faith (myth). Strauss’s critical attitude toward the sources and his questioning of the notion that they were free of error, as well as his problematizing of their status as historically unique, still constitute important insights meriting consideration within historical Jesus research to this day. The latest clearly defined phase within Jesus research is often called “the Third Quest.” The first phase of the quest for the historical Jesus is defined as liberal (in the sense of “free from the church”) attempts to sculpt the real Jesus from behind the Gospels as a teacher of timeless truths about God’s fatherhood, the human soul, and love. The rationalism of the Enlightenment had created optimism about the

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possibility of reconstructing history as it actually had played out. German scholars still led the research, especially Berlin’s famous church historian, Adolf von Harnack (1851–1930). Early on, scholars realized that reconstructions of the historical Jesus were too optimistic. Albert Schweitzer (1875–1965), who in his youth was active as an exegete in Strasbourg, pointed out that the liberal Jesus portrayals actually portrayed the values that were relevant in Europe during the 1700s and 1800s. Schweitzer himself believed that Jesus’s teaching and actions revolved around his eschatology. Jesus was convinced that the end of the ages was near. Schweitzer’s view had been anticipated a couple decades previously when Johannes Weiss (1863–1914), son-­in-­law to the liberal theologian Albrecht Ritschl, had advocated that Jesus’s teachings about the kingdom of God were based on Jewish beliefs about the immediate destruction of the world in the coming judgment. The historical dimensions of the Gospels were also beginning to be seriously questioned at that time. Conterminously with Weiss, Martin Kähler (1835–1912) argued that the historical Jesus (der historische Jesus) could only be reconstructed as a person interpreted via faith (der geschichtliche Christus). In his study of the Gospel of Mark a couple of years later, William Wrede (1859–1906) undermined the entire liberal Jesus research project by showing that the Markan narrative, the earliest of all the gospels, rather than getting us closer to the historical Jesus, is itself defined by an understanding of who the Christ of faith is. It was around this time that the most influential exegete of the 1900s was schooled. Shortly after the First World War had destroyed much of liberal theology’s optimism and belief in the abilities of humanity, and as systematic theologians (e.g., Karl Barth) began toning down the possibility of finding God in creation, Rudolf Bultmann (1884–1976) presented the approach that would in a very definite way end the liberal Jesus research. He suggested that there is very little we can actually know about Jesus. The gospels are put together from smaller entities, steeped in the activities and views of the assemblies from which they emerged. They consist of preaching, not historical reports. With the so-­called form-­critical program, Bultmann and a number of other scholars (e.g., Karl Ludwig Schmidt, Martin Dibelius) put a stop to the first phase within Jesus research. The second phase was to a large degree a reaction against Bultmann by some of his former students. In the 1950s, Ernst Käsemann (1906–1998), at this point professor in Tübingen, pointed out the theological risks that come with separating the Christ of faith from its basis in the historical Jesus. His assertions initiated a new interest in Jesus. Among Bultmann’s earlier students, now spread across Germany and parts of the United States, only Hans Conzelmann (1915–1989) in Göttingen defended the thesis that the historical Jesus had no place in the theology of the New Testament. The rest had taken on Käsemann’s challenge to create theologically valid research about the historical Jesus. The quest for the historical Jesus had received new inspiration, but now the aim was not to play Jesus against the church but rather to ascertain what roots the preached Christ had in the historical Jesus.


A History of New Testament Research The second phase was theologically motivated, but that does not mean that it was not based on academic standards. As historians, scholars tried to bring forth valid criteria for how one should reconstruct a historical portrait of Jesus. A basic pillar of these criteria was the idea that historical material that reflected Jewish piety contemporary with Jesus, or texts that mirrored the convictions of the earliest church, had to be taken out of the equation when the historical Jesus was to be reconstructed. This criterion was called the criterion of dissimilarity, but it functioned poorly as a scholarly tool, as it arguably reflected more than anything else a desire to paint Jesus as unique in history Eventually, scholars realized that the historical Jesus could not be separated from his cultural and religious surroundings. In the beginning of the 1970s, the Hungarian-­born Jewish scholar Geza Vermes (1924–2013), professor at Oxford University, emphasized in his book on Jesus that a strictly historical approach means that one has to understand Jesus in his immediate Jewish context in Galilee. Vermes became an important scholar in the transition from the second to the third phase of Jesus research, which began in the 1980s. The third phase was a reaction against the theological focus of the second phase, which ultimately, proponents argued, led to a limiting of the role played by the Jewish society in which Jesus lived, as well as confining the source material analyzed to the New Testament. The third phase thus distances itself from the criterion of dissimilarity and argues that a historically likely reconstruction of Jesus has to be based on his own context, focusing on the Jewish setting and the emergence of the Jesus movement. This next step in the research trajectory, however, has not brought with it a consensus view of Jesus. The criteria provide certain frames but do not steer the individual aspects of the research process. There is also a difference in how scholars apply the criteria and which criteria are seen as more important than others. Among the many current portraits of Jesus today, we find a mysterious preacher of wisdom (Marcus J. Borg, John D. Crossan) as well as an eschatological prophet (compare the works of, for example, E. P. Sanders, Gerd Theissen/Anette Merz, John P. Meier, James D. G. Dunn, and Dale Allison; see also the discussion in chapter 3, “The Historical Jesus,” especially the section “How to Find the Historical Jesus,” p. 172). Today, important developments in historical Jesus research include taking into account social and collective memory research, as the criteria of authenticity, while still applied by many scholars, have come under increasing fire as misguided, and we might be moving toward a more hermeneutically sensitive phase of historical Jesus research.

A General Summary of Gospel Research Parallel with the different phases of Jesus research, there have been attempts to clarify the role of the Gospels as historical sources about Jesus. The most important are the

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Synoptic Gospels—that is, Matthew, Mark, and Luke. The Synoptic problem was observed early on by scholars and has its basis in the fact that the first three gospels exhibit great textual similarities. Since the beginning of the twentieth century, the most commonly accepted theory has been the two-­source hypothesis. According to this theory, Matthew and Luke are independent of each other, but both use Mark. For the overlap between Matthew and Luke that does not come from Mark, it is assumed that these authors used a source scholars call “Q” (from the German Quelle, meaning “source”). The overlap consists mainly of Jesus sayings, and so Q is assumed to have been a so-­called sayings gospel. In addition, the theory also assumes that Matthew and Luke had access to their own sources, which account for their unique materials, in the form of other texts or oral traditions. Scholars have tried and are still trying to reconstruct Q and comment on the different stages in its literary emergence (e.g., James M. Robinson, John S. Kloppenborg, and Harry T. Fleddermann). The two-­source hypothesis has seen criticism mainly from two perspectives. Some argue that the Q source never existed: after all, we have never found any actual physical evidence of its existence. The Synoptic problem is instead explained by asserting that Luke had access to both Matthew and Mark. This model is called the Farrer hypothesis, after the British scholar Austin Farrer, who published an article on the subject in the mid-1950s. Today, Mark Goodacre is the most vocal proponent of this theory, which is experiencing growing popularity among scholars. Another model that dispenses with the Q hypothesis is the Griesbach hypothesis, after Griesbach, who toward the end of the 1700s asserted that Mark is the youngest gospel and Matthew the oldest, and that the author of Mark selected material from Luke and Matthew, which he then incorporated into his gospel. This hypothesis also assumes that Luke knew Matthew. There are other models too, each more complicated than the next, which attempt to explain the Synoptic Gospels without Q. There are scholars who argue that the order of the gospels in the two-­source theory may be correct, but the textual relationship should not be determined by modern views of what a text is. What we call sources—even Q—may have actually consisted of oral traditions that circulated among the early Jesus followers. Scholars as early as Herder (see above) had suggested that there existed an original gospel that was transmitted orally. Although the Farrer hypothesis is gaining ground today, as noted, the majority of scholars still agree with some form of the two-­source hypothesis, but often with modifications. The gospels, including John, speak not only about its main character, Jesus, but also give away information about their authors and the context in which they lived. During the 1950s, some of Bultmann’s students (Günther Bornkamm, Hans Conzelmann, Willi Marxsen) developed an approach known as redaction criticism. They argued that the authors put together the gospels using traditions and other textual materials—that is, they edited together their gospels rather than authored them. Their selective editorial process, especially the small additions they made themselves,


A History of New Testament Research illustrates their own special theology and the theology of the community in which it was produced. Thus, scholars applying this method are not primarily interested in the gospels as reports of Jesus’s life but rather want to study them as a reflection of their authors and their respective context. Since the 1980s, this perspective has been further developed with the help of sociological perspectives; scholars sometimes speak of a socio-­redactional methodology (Philip F. Esler). With the help of this method, scholars aim to give the gospel authors sharper contours. An important subject today involves establishing how the communities that produced the gospels understood themselves in the context of contemporary Jewish piety and the different Jewish groups. Scholars are divided in their opinions in this regard. Some suggest that the gospel authors were marking their independence, others that at least the group behind the Gospel of Matthew saw their messianic faith as a variant of Jewish piety. The redaction-­critical and socio-­redactional methods stand in contrast to two other tendencies within gospel research. Since the early 1980s, many scholars, under the influence of the study of literature, have chosen to approach the gospels as stories or narratives. The American R. Alan Culpepper published a book in 1983 on the Gospel of John, which, for the first time, applied a consistent narrative methodology to a New Testament text. In the beginning, this method was not concerned with the relationships between the gospels, the text as a report of Jesus’s life, or the group behind the text. Rather, it highlighted that all we have are the stories themselves. Today, however, scholars have discovered that narrative style may say something about how the group behind the texts thinks or works, and how the first recipients of the stories may have interpreted them. Another group of scholars, under the leadership of the British scholar Richard Bauckham, argue that we can no longer assume that the groups behind the gospels had the sort of local basis that has previously been assumed within the redaction-­ critical and socio-­editorial camps. They were written by people who wished to spread the message about Jesus to a larger audience, to a large number of communities, not just a local group of believers. Thus, according to this perspective, one cannot use the gospels to reconstruct the sociological reality of a certain place. Instead, one needs to be aware of the texts’ patterns of openness.

A General Summary of Pauline Research The year 1977 marks the beginning of a new age for modern research on Paul. The American E. P. Sanders, then a professor at McMaster University in Canada, reacted in an important book to the trend in New Testament scholarship of portraying Jewish piety at the time of Jesus in discriminating ways, which he found similar to the polemics of the Reformation. In this previous scholarship, Sanders

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noted, Jewish piety was described as revolving around the need to observe every aspect of the law in the most minute detail in order to reach salvation (legalism). Paul, these scholars argued, represented, like Luther, the idea of a gospel without the law. A year before Sanders published his book, the Swedish scholar Krister Stendahl, then at Harvard University, published lectures and articles written since the 1960s where he aimed to critique one-­sided readings of Paul based on Lutheran convictions regarding righteousness through faith alone. Sanders developed Stendahl’s reaction further and in his own way. According to Sanders, Jewish piety is characterized by what he calls “covenantal nomism,” not legalism. He bases this claim on the fact that the belief that the covenant between God and Israel is a free gift from God is reflected in the majority of Jewish texts from around the turn of the era. God chooses a people as his own. The law (Gk. nomos) should be obeyed not as a way to earn salvific righteousness but rather as a response to God’s gift; God chose the people, and to show their gratefulness they follow his law. The sacrificial system provides an opportunity for forgiveness when the people have not managed to give their response fully. According to Sanders, Paul really only had one problem with the Jewish pattern of piety: it did not include Christ. Paul first received the solution, as he experienced Christ, and thereafter saw the problem with Jewish piety. According to Sanders, Paul’s newfound belief in the participation in Christ and the decisive drama that Christ triggered led him to understand the problematic aspects of Jewish covenantal nomism. He changed one religious system for another. Sanders’s work generated what has been called “the new perspective on Paul,” but research has been multifaceted and pointed in different directions. Some seek to nuance his image of Jewish piety by highlighting factors suggesting that Jewish groups in reality did not live up to the basic idea of the covenant and abused God’s free gift to them. These scholars believe that Paul’s discussions about the law illustrate that he himself was taking a position against a form of misdirected legalism (Stephen Westerholm) or nationalistic marking of their own identity (Dunn). There are also questions about Paul’s own religious identity. Those who accept Sanders’s perspective on covenantal nomism can still be reluctant to accept his strong emphasis on Paul’s experience of Christ and his change from one religious system to another. Instead, many scholars attempt to understand Paul’s belief in Christ within the frame of Jewish covenantal nomism. His dissatisfaction had to do with other Jewish groups that had abused God’s gift, rather than signifying his leaving the religion of his youth or having to do with the problems involved when non-­Jews now were to share the covenantal promises. This leads to the wider question of the relationship between the early Jesus movement and Judaism. Scholars analyze the letters of Paul and other texts in order to understand in which way Paul was part of the development of the Jesus movement into a group whose identity would eventually separate from Judaism.


A History of New Testament Research To a higher degree than before, it is today common to notice the tensions and contradictions in Paul’s reasoning. Previously, it had been assumed that Paul progressively changes and develops his thought about, for example, eschatology and the law. A new forum for discussion was begun when scholars took the next step and argued that Paul did not have a thorough understanding of his Jewish heritage and, especially where the law is concerned, contradicts himself (Sanders, Heikki Räisänen). Only a minority of scholars agree that his contradictions are substantial, but the idea is affecting biblical scholarship. It has led to a new awareness of the tensions within Paul’s letters, and attempts to explain them have followed. Some argue that Paul communicated using very complicated and sophisticated techniques that to the untrained eye may seem to be contradictions, and that the different communities he was writing for had different needs and thus merited different approaches. It has also become more difficult to present a general and overall harmonizing description of Paul’s thinking. Attempts are still made especially in Germany (Peter Stuhlmacher, Udo Schnelle, Michael Wolter), but for the most part scholars limit themselves to descriptions of the theology of specific letters. To avoid simplification of Paul’s complex thinking, scholars can choose to work with specific levels of and relationships between the coherence and contingency in his letters (J. Christiaan Beker). Another solution to the problem is to use Romans as a representative point of departure for the whole of Pauline theology, and then read the other letters from that perspective (Dunn). While the debate after Sanders revolved around Jewish patterns of religion, there nonetheless exists an important branch of Pauline scholarship that analyzes the letters according to their Greco-­Roman context. Two perspectives will be noted here. A very intensive research field, with its starting point in the lecture of the German-­ American Hans Dieter Betz in Sigtuna, Sweden, 1974, has focused on the heritage from the early rhetorical readings of the Pauline letters. With improved analytic tools stemming from a knowledge of how rhetoric was used in ancient texts to convince others of a cause, Paul’s way of making points and convincing others of his beliefs are analyzed. This rhetorical-­critical way of analyzing the letters is often combined with the Greco-­Roman custom of writing letters (epistolography) and illustrates how the Pauline letters—and other New Testament texts—were authored with considerable literary finesse. Another research field that today receives increasing attention combines a literary interest with an investigation of Greco-­Roman elements in Paul’s thinking. This type of approach springs from a desire to take seriously the fact that Paul was a Jew born and raised outside Israel with an education in Greek philosophy, in combination with the fact that his main aim is the conversion of non-­Jews. Several studies suggest that his writings had indeed been influenced by the way Greek philosophy deals with moral questions (Abraham J. Malherbe, Stanley K. Stowers, and Troels Engberg-­Pedersen).

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A Hermeneutic Awareness Exegetical research is a cultural phenomenon. The history of research illustrates, as we have seen, that throughout the centuries scholars have studied the texts on the basis of their contemporary context. Research today is no exception. Today, scholars use methodology and perspectives taken from modern historical research, literary studies, sociology, cultural anthropology, archaeology, and psychology. We carry out research according to the epistemological context and models that our Western culture views as means of acquiring knowledge. In other cultures, Western assumptions about what constitutes knowledge may not exist. In recent years, exegetes have, to a higher degree than in earlier periods, realized how bound they are to their own context, and have thus made the act of interpretation itself into an object of investigation and self-­critical analysis. This becomes especially noticeable within three fields. First, exegetes today are more interested than before in the reception history of the texts; that is, there is a focus on how the texts have been interpreted by people in different societies and churches through the centuries (Ulrich Luz, Robert Evans). Influenced by philosophical hermeneutics, scholars realize that every reading is an interpretation from a certain perspective, and every New Testament text carries within it an openness to different interpretations and interpretative effects. Exegetes now see themselves as standing within this constantly changing interpretative history, not outside as mere observers. Second, there is today a larger awareness of the moral responsibilities that exegetes have for their interpretations. The realization that researchers are part of an ideological context in which they choose methods and perspectives has led to the raising of questions with regard to how the scholars’ own contexts control the interpretations produced. Modern gender studies, especially, has revealed the power structures at work in the white, male-­dominated Western scholarly culture (Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza). In recent years, the goal of gender studies has been aided by the emergence of postcolonial studies. This field studies how political and other power structures influence what is considered “acceptable research.” Traditional Western belief in objectivity and the superiority of its interpretative paradigms is challenged by perspectives from the Two-­Thirds World (Fernando Segovia). Finally, the possibility of carrying out an overall New Testament theology has been problematized. In connection with the exegetes removing themselves from the constraints of church doctrines, there has emerged a tendency to describe the early Jesus movement using nonconfessional, religio-­historical, sociological, and psychological research models (Räisänen, Theissen, Ekkehard W. Stegemann, and Wolfgang Stegemann). As an alternative, it has been pointed out that the hermeneutic awareness of the scholar’s contextual limitations illustrates how these religio-­ historical, sociological, and psychological models actually constitute an example of


The Peculiar Case of Pauline Scholarship and Judaism how our context’s epistemological norms determine our research, and that biblical scholarship needs to exercise a greater degree of openness when dealing with such a diversity of equally important interpretative traditions.

Further Reading Baird, William. History of New Testament Research. 3 vols. Minneapolis: Fortress, 1992– 2013. Bauks, Michaela, Wayne Horowitz, and Armin Lange. Between Text and Text: The Hermeneutics of Intertextuality in Ancient Cultures and Their Afterlife in Medieval and Modern Times. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2013. Gillingham, Susan E. One Bible, Many Voices: Different Approaches to Biblical Studies. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999. McKim, Donald K., ed. Dictionary of Major Biblical Interpreters. 2nd ed. Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2007. Moore, Stephen D. The Bible in Theory: Critical and Postcritical Essays. Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2010. Reventlow, Henning Graf. History of Biblical Interpretation. 4 vols. Translated by Leo G. Perdue. Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2009–2010. Sawyer, John F. A., ed. The Blackwell Companion to the Bible and Culture. Oxford: Blackwell, 2006. Taylor, Marion Ann, and Agnes Choi, eds. Handbook of Women Biblical Interpreters: A Historical and Biographical Guide. Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2012. Thiselton, Anthony C. Hermeneutics: An Introduction. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2009.

The Peculiar Case of Pauline Scholarship and Judaism As indicated in the previous section, Paul has often been assumed to stand at the very crossroads where Christianity departs from Judaism. Indeed, for many interpreters, Paul is the person responsible for inventing Christianity as a religion. This alone would suggest the need, in a book on the New Testament and Christian origins, for a separate section discussing more specifically Paul’s relationship to Judaism in New Testament scholarship. In light of the use of Paul in anti-­Jewish polemic, some interpreters would go further, arguing that it is a moral responsibility of the modern exegete to engage with and evaluate research histories of those parts of biblical scholarship that have with particular fervor fueled conflict, prejudice, and pain. In the history of Christianity and biblical scholarship, theological misrepresentations and historically questionable portrayals of Paul have all too often been used to both negatively caricature contemporary Jews and reconstruct a highly biased historical

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background with which to justify these caricatures. To understand why the Pauline letters in particular have been used as tools of oppression, we need to understand the research history of Paul’s relationship with (and within) Judaism. Paul’s relation to Judaism has arguably been the dominant aspect determining the results of Pauline scholarship. Traditionally, Paul was considered to have left Judaism and converted to Christianity. Seen as the most prominent Christian theologian, Paul was believed to have invented the law-­free gospel for all humans and created a sharp contradiction between Judaism and Christianity. This view is the result of a long development that began already in antiquity and culminated after the Enlightenment when normative Christian theology and New Testament scholarship merged together, creating a powerful hermeneutical key for Pauline scholars. The fundamental component in this view of Paul’s relationship to Judaism is a negative perception of Jews and Judaism. The following presentation aims to explain the emergence of this research paradigm and the ways in which recent scholarship has challenged it.

Anti-­Judaism and the Rise of Christianity In the middle of the first century CE, non-­Jews who believed in Jesus were most likely connected to Jesus-­oriented Jewish communities. The early Jesus movement was one of many varieties of Judaism, characterized by the idea that the death of Jesus made it possible for non-­Jews to enter into a covenant with the God of Israel. While some Jesus-­oriented Jews believed this meant that non-­Jews should convert to Judaism, Paul argued that adherents of the movement should retain their ethnic identities and that humanity would eventually be saved as both Jews and members of the nations, respectively. This idea, which has roots in the Hebrew Bible and subsequent Jewish apocalyptic literature, caused political problems since non-­Jews were obliged to participate in the official cult whereas Jews normally were exempted from this requirement. In mixed communities, where Jesus-­oriented Jews and non-­Jews coexisted, non-­Jewish followers of Jesus were most likely seen as Jews by outsiders, and no conflict with the society was salient. However, in connection with the Jewish war, anti-­Jewish feelings arose. This made the situation complicated for non-­Jews, and the idea to separate from the Jewish part of the Jesus movement seems to have been born in connection with this. Consequently, in the beginning of the second century we find the earliest evidence of non-­Jews who claim to be followers of Jesus but who repudiate Judaism. Around 115, Ignatius, bishop in Antioch-­ad-­Orontes, states that it is an abomination to combine belief in Jesus with Judaism. Such anti-­Jewish statements were probably not primarily theological but rather part of a discourse aimed at convincing the Roman authorities to allow non-­Jewish followers of Jesus to become a legally recognized religion. Since Judaism was considered a potential


The Peculiar Case of Pauline Scholarship and Judaism threat to the civilized order in the aftermath of the Jewish war, such an enterprise could only succeed if repudiation of Judaism was a significant part of the rhetoric. This originally political discourse soon turned into a theological discourse and became a powerful part of the consolidation process of emergent Christianity. Anti-­ Jewish ideology even developed into a literary genre of sorts, the so-­called “against the Jews” literature. Thus, in the middle of the second century, Melito of Sardis claims that the Jews were collectively responsible not only for killing Jesus but for having murdered God. In Justin Martyr’s fictional dialogue with the Jew Trypho from around the same period, Justin argues that the blessings once bestowed on the people of Israel had now been transferred to the Christians, who constitute the “true” Israel.

Augustine and the Pelagian Controversy Changes in theology also affected the portrayal of Jews and Judaism. Whereas Paul seems to have been occupied with the question of how the category “non-­Jew” could be brought into a covenantal relationship with the God of Israel, resulting in non-­ Jews’ salvation, theologians during late antiquity became more interested in the salvation of the individual. The question at stake was whether a human being could please God by living righteously, thus affecting the prospect of that individual’s salvation. The monk Pelagius, who appeared in Rome shortly before 400 CE, argued that it was possible to live a sinless life since humanity is endowed with free will. Sin, according to Pelagius, should be considered single acts of volition, and the individual will be judged on the basis of whether evil or good deeds have dominated in his or her life. Against this view, Augustine (354–430 CE) argued that humans cannot do anything to affect the prospect of redemption since humanity, through the fall of Adam, is marred by original sin. This led him to the conclusion that God alone decides who is to be saved and who is predestined to perdition. The main issue at hand in the so-­called Pelagian controversy and subsequent discussions on salvation was basically the relation between “grace” and “works.” This became one of the main issues during the Reformation.

The Reformation—Grace and Works Martin Luther (1483–1546) was originally inspired by ideas similar to those of Pelagius: God would infuse his grace as a reward, provided that a person first did what was in his or her power. For Luther, however, the experience of not being able to offer God enough repentance and love led to the logical conclusion that he was predestined to condemnation. During his personal crisis, he found a solution in a radical

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interpretation of Rom 1:17: “The one who is righteous will live by faith.” In contrast to contemporary mainstream theology, Luther argued that Christians gain access to God’s righteousness by faith only, without works, since no one can please God by trying to live a righteous life. Good deeds will follow faith, but only as a consequence of this ascribed righteousness. This is what Luther meant by “grace,” and in Luther’s theology “works” stand in stark contrast to the notion of grace. Luther’s theology created an unbridgeable gulf between Judaism and Christianity. According to Jewish theology, the torah is supposed to be observed. Although the majority of Jewish theologians would claim that perfect torah observance was never required (the torah does actually contain regulations for how to repair a broken relationship with God), there is indeed some kind of relation between torah observance and salvation in Judaism. The Reformation, however, created a sharp distinction between two opposing religious systems: Christianity, on the one hand, was based on “grace,” and Judaism, on the other hand, was founded on “works.” As a result of this (mis)representation, Jews became the personification of humans doomed to perdition because of their inability to understand that salvation comes only through faith in Christ, without works of the law. Judaism came to represent self-­righteousness, the worst sin of all in a Lutheran world. The Reformation therefore gave reasonable theological explanation as to why Judaism was inferior to Christianity, an ideology that had been developing since the beginning of the second century. According to this theological paradigm, Jews strive for righteousness in vain by trying to observe torah, while Christians receive the gift of righteousness by grace. This particular construction of Christian theology and its relation to Judaism would soon exert a strong influence on biblical scholarship.

Theology Becomes Science Modern biblical scholarship is a product of the Enlightenment. Yet, in spite of the ambition to challenge the assumptions of normative theology, many scholars were, of course, influenced by the general cultural climate in which the opposition between Judaism and Christianity was an important aspect. Thus, the theological idea of the inferiority of Judaism soon became integrated into the emerging scholarly discourse. For instance, the extremely radical scholar Ferdinand Christian Baur (1792–1860) used Friedrich Hegel’s philosophy when interpreting the development of early Christianity. Hegel envisioned history as a continuous process toward increasingly higher stages, where a thesis merged with its antithesis, producing a synthesis embodying elements from both the thesis and the antithesis. Baur applied this idea to the history of early Christianity and found a conflict between a law-­free, Pauline, universal type of Christianity and a Jewish-­oriented, particularistic type, represented by Peter, still bound by the torah. In the Gospel of


The Peculiar Case of Pauline Scholarship and Judaism John, Baur considered this conflict to have been resolved, as all threats against the universalism of Christianity—Judaism, Jewish Christianity, and Gnosticism—had been eliminated. Christianity had taken the place of Judaism as the highest form of religion, and the inferiority of Judaism received a scientific legitimation of sorts. Judaism therefore became Christianity’s antithesis. Another important factor in the process of integrating the idea of Judaism’s inferiority into biblical scholarship was the publication of Ferdinand Weber’s (1836–1879) System der altsynagogalen palästinischen Theologie aus Targum, Midrasch und Talmud (The Theological System of the Ancient Palestinian Synagogue from Targum, Midrash and Talmud) in 1880.Weber, who wanted to become a missionary to the Jewish people, studied the classical Jewish texts and tried to organize them in a form of Jewish systematic theology. Rabbinic literature is, however, hardly suited for such systematization, and Weber’s reconstruction is heavily influenced by Protestant theology. The view presented is thus rather distorted. Judaism, according to Weber, was characterized by legalism and works-­righteousness, meaning that Jews tried to earn their salvation by acquiring merits through observing the torah, with no inner commitment. Because of the incident of the golden calf (Exod 32:1–14), the Jewish people are separated from God and can hope for redemption only through perfect torah observance. Weber’s presentation of ancient Judaism soon became the standard work used by almost all New Testament scholars, and his ideas of the character of Judaism are reflected in several influential New Testament handbooks, theologies, studies, and commentaries well into the twentieth century. The idea of the inferiority of Judaism was thus firmly established and provided New Testament scholars with an appropriate ideological background against which the New Testament could be interpreted. From this perspective, the idea that Paul left Judaism and converted to Christianity seems quite reasonable. On the assumption that Weber’s view of Judaism is correct, if Judaism really represented a particularistic, legalistic religious system, Paul’s law-­ free, universalistic, and anti-­Jewish theology appears to be the better choice and this portrayal is fully possible to harmonize with the apostle’s letters.

Toward New Assumptions In the middle of the twentieth century, almost all Pauline scholars saw Paul as a Jewish apostate who had realized the flaws of Judaism, especially the flaws inherent in torah observance. Even though there had been dissenting voices over the years challenging the established view of Judaism and individual scholars who had begun to reflect on the connection between the Protestant portrait of Paul and the atrocities committed against the Jewish people during World War II, it would not be until the 1970s that the scholarly community was prepared to accept an alternative view of ancient Judaism.

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The publication of E. P. Sanders’s Paul and Palestinian Judaism in 1977 would eventually result in a virtual revolution for New Testament scholarship. Sanders, who was interested in Paul’s relation to Judaism but not satisfied with the dominant view based on the work of Ferdinand Weber, undertook a new investigation into the nature of ancient Judaism. Sanders’s reading of the Jewish sources completely contradicts the picture painted by Weber. Ancient Judaism was, according to Sanders, characterized by love, grace, and forgiveness. Jews observed the torah not to earn their salvation but as an expression of their willingness to remain in a covenantal relationship with Israel’s God. A broken relationship with God can be repaired through the sacrificial system described in the Torah. Sanders labeled this relation between torah observance and covenantal theology covenantal nomism, a pattern he found in most expressions of Judaism in the period between 200 BCE and 200 CE. Even though Sanders’s reconstruction of ancient Judaism was very radical, his interpretation of Paul was not, even though the traditional anti-­Jewish aspects were significantly downplayed. Paul, Sanders states, did not embrace the pattern of covenantal nomism that Sanders found in other Second Temple Jewish texts, even though he found nothing particularly wrong with the torah. Paul does not deny that there is a righteousness coming from the law (Phil 3:9), but it is another kind of righteousness than the one that comes from faith in Jesus, which is the only one that leads to salvation. This is the reason why all other attempts to attain salvation were wrong. Paul’s main objection to the torah, according to Sanders, is that it does not constitute the way to salvation staked out by God. The fact that Sanders also believed that Paul broke with Judaism probably contributed to the success of his study. Scholars could embrace Sanders’s reconstruction of Judaism, while still holding on to the traditional idea of a distinct opposition between Judaism and Christianity. However, Sanders’s reconstruction of Judaism naturally led to new problems. Jewish “legalism” and “work-­righteousness” had constituted a perfect background for explaining both Jesus and Paul, but the idea of covenantal nomism called in question virtually all previous scholarship, and some scholars started to formulate new questions: If Judaism provided means for reconciliation, what was really the point of Jesus’s death on the cross? And if torah observance is an expression of the will to live in a covenantal relationship with God, why did Paul speak of the torah as a curse (Gal 3:10)? These and similar questions paved the way for quite new and radical perspectives on Paul.

New Perspectives on Paul One of the first scholars who used Sanders for interpreting Paul was James D. G. Dunn. In a famous lecture, published in 1983 as “The New Perspective on Paul,” Dunn suggests that Sanders’s concept of covenantal nomism could indeed be applied to


The Peculiar Case of Pauline Scholarship and Judaism Paul. Paul’s way of reasoning, Dunn states, actually presupposes the notion of a covenant between God and the Jewish people and alludes to the view of “righteousness” found in, for example, the Psalms and Isaiah. Thus, the absolute majority of Jews, including Paul, would have agreed that Jews within the covenant were righteous, and that this righteousness, given by grace, comes from faith. Accordingly, Jews in general did not believe that they were automatically made righteous only by observing the torah. However, when Paul in Gal 2:16 states that “no one will be justified by the works of the law,” this, according to Dunn, refers only to Jewish identity markers, such as food and purity regulations, circumcision, and Sabbath celebration. These identity markers are what Paul reacts against. The problem Paul discovered was that Jewish identity markers created a distinction between Jews and the non-­Jews so that the covenant was too narrowly interpreted in Jewish tradition, excluding everyone but Jews. Dunn states that, according to Paul, God’s actions toward a person, Jew or non-­Jew, should not depend on specific Jewish observances but on faith in Jesus. In this way, the meaning of the covenant is not invalidated but expanded to include all believers, regardless of ethnicity. As the starting point for a scholarly tradition aiming at understanding Paul from within Judaism, not outside, in contrast to, or apart from Judaism, Dunn’s interpretation must be regarded as a significant breakthrough. With the publication of Dunn’s article, the so-­called new perspective on Paul was born. Dunn’s “new perspective” involved many new insights, especially the idea that Paul did not repudiate the torah as such, but only Jewish identity markers. This means that the traditional opposition between Judaism and Christianity is significantly downplayed—but not obliterated. However, during the 1980s some scholars started arguing that Paul did not address humankind in general but predominantly non-­ Jews. This had been hinted at by other scholars before (notably Johannes Munck), but now this idea was inserted into a post-­Sanders perspective. For example, in 1987 Lloyd Gaston published a collection of ten articles, Paul and the Torah, in which he takes on the anti-­Jewish tendencies within Christianity. His starting point is the observation that it is common among Christians to consider Paul to have broken with Judaism, and that the church consequently has taken the place of the Jewish people in the history of salvation. In addition, according to most scholars at the time, Paul held the view that the torah had ceased to be a valid way for salvation even for Jews, and that the Christian church has replaced Israel as God’s chosen people. Gaston, however, claims that Paul defended himself against such charges and rather emphasized that his mission was in accordance with the torah (Rom 3:31; 11:1). The solution to the paradox that Paul, on the one hand, seems to be criticizing the torah and, on the other hand, stresses its continued validity is, according to Gaston, to be found in the question of intended audience. Gaston emphasizes that we should take seriously the fact that Paul presents himself as the apostle to the non-­Jews, which means that he writes to non-­Jews about matters that concern them. Therefore, when Paul writes about the torah in a negative manner, it concerns the torah in relation to

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non-­Jews, not the role of the torah in a Jewish context. According to Gaston, Paul agreed with other Jews in believing that the torah undeniably leads to righteousness within the covenant, but that it becomes a curse for those outside the covenant. The only way for non-­Jews to escape the curse of the torah is to be included in the covenant through Christ. According to Gaston, Christ is for non-­Jews what the torah is for Jews, and humanity will thus be saved by two covenants running parallel to each other. The combination of Sanders’s reconstruction of ancient Judaism, especially the concept of covenantal nomism, and the focus on Paul as the apostle to non-­Jews, addressing precisely non-­Jews rather than the whole of humanity, has led to a new research paradigm that in fact is in total opposition to the traditional one. Whereas most pre-­Sanders Pauline scholars understood Paul to be in opposition to Judaism, a growing number of scholars now aim at interpreting Paul as representing Judaism. Within this so-­called Paul-­within-­Judaism perspective, the fundamental assumption is that Paul remained completely Jewish and that he understood his call to be part of Israel’s mission to be “a light to the nations” (Isa 49:6). Some scholars adhering to this research paradigm even take for granted that Paul was torah observant as a result of the assumption that he never broke with Judaism (e.g., Mark D. Nanos). Rather than abandoning the torah himself, Paul argued that non-­Jews should not observe the torah the way Jews did. Paul’s vision was to bring non-­Jews into a covenantal relationship with the God of Israel, through Jesus, which indeed called for a significant change of behavior but did not change their ethnic status. Jews were to remain Jewish and non-­Jews were still members of the nations, but through Christ their soteriological status had changed. From initially being without any salvific hope, non-­Jews could now be saved, provided that they put their trust in Christ and changed their behavior accordingly. From a Paul-­within-­Judaism perspective, Paul’s critique of the torah is explained by assuming that he addressed non-­Jewish members of the Jesus movement who probably wanted to observe parts, or even all, of the torah. This would, according to Paul, compromise God’s oneness, since God would only be the God of the Jews rather than the God of the whole world. From this perspective, it was not Jews who constituted the main problem within the early Jesus movement, but non-­Jews. The main issue was how Jewish members of the early Jesus movement should relate to non-­Jews, who through Jesus had been included in the covenant with Israel’s God.

Conclusion In contemporary Pauline scholarship, one can discern three major trajectories concerning Paul’s relation to Judaism. Many scholars still adhere to a traditional Lutheran perspective that no doubt is heavily dependent on normative theology. Within this tradition, Paul is still seen as having broken with Judaism. Even though Sand-


Paths to the Past: On Sources and Methods ers’s view of Judaism is generally accepted, he is often—and sometimes correctly—­ criticized for having exaggerated the aspect of grace within Judaism. Dunn’s “new perspective on Paul” has proven to be a powerful compromise between a more traditional perspective and Sanders’s new view of Judaism. Many contemporary scholars are, to various degrees, influenced by this paradigm. Another way of looking at Dunn’s perspective is to regard it as a transition between a traditional perspective on Paul and the more recent Paul-­within-­Judaism perspective, which locates Paul fully within a Jewish context. Without claiming that this latter way of interpreting Paul is free from ideological constraints, scholars working from the hypothesis that Paul remained fully Jewish, and that his religion was Judaism, generally aim at understanding the apostle from the first-­century context, without taking later developments into consideration.

Further Readings Dunn, J. D. G. “The New Perspective on Paul.” Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester 65 (1983): 95–122. Eisenbaum, P. Paul Was Not a Christian: The Original Message of a Misunderstood Apostle. New York: HarperOne, 2009. Fredriksen, P. Paul: The Pagans’ Apostle. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2017. Gaston, L. Paul and the Torah. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 1997. Nanos, M. D. The Mystery of Romans: The Jewish Context of Paul’s Letter. Minneapolis: Fortress, 1996. Nanos, M. D., and M. Zetterholm. Paul within Judaism: Restoring the First-­Century Context to the Apostle. Minneapolis: Fortress, 2015. Sanders, E. P. Paul and Palestinian Judaism: A Comparison of Patterns of Religion. Minneapolis: Fortress, 1977. Thiessen, Matthew. Paul and the Gentile Problem. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016. Westerholm, S. Perspectives Old and New on Paul: The “Lutheran” Paul and His Critics. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2004. Zetterholm, M. Approaches to Paul: A Student’s Guide to Recent Scholarship. Minneapolis: Fortress, 2009.

Paths to the Past: On Sources and Methods Same Sources, Different Conclusions Consider the following scenario. The year is 4020. An international group of archaeologists, textual scholars, and historians from the wealthy southern hemisphere are

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working on a collaborative project, aiming to uncover Swedish religious behavior during the 1900s—the period during which the country experienced an enormous economic boom. The limited primary source material available to the team consists of an assortment of texts, including some statistical material, that were discovered by accident in an archive, as well as approximately forty excavated churches and a couple of synagogues and mosques. The synagogues and mosques were discovered in larger urban centers, whereas the churches were found in rural settings as well as in cities of all sizes. The statistical information reveals that, by the end of the century, approximately 80 percent of all Swedish citizens were members of the Lutheran state church. Additionally, one of the texts reveals that a copy of a new Swedish translation of the Bible, found in a previous excavation, was financed by the state. Another document, dated to the first half of the twentieth century, suggests that churches were in wide use at this time, filled with people on Sundays and other holidays. This was true of both urban and rural areas. In addition, new, larger churches were built around this time. Finally, the archaeological team also has access to a newspaper article from the second half of the twentieth century, which strongly advises individuals to leave the state church, pointing to economic benefits for them if they do so, as they would avoid the church tax. How should one approach and interpret this diverse source material? The members of the team disagree. The majority of the team subscribes to the theory that Christianity in the form of the state church was popular throughout the entirety of the twentieth century. As evidence, they point to the high membership rates and the overwhelming prevalence of churches in the archaeological material. They therefore see no reason to doubt that the information concerning widespread church attendance in the first half of the nineteenth century should also be applied to the second half of the twentieth century. Two factors validate this assumption. First, many of the churches that have thus far been found and excavated, and have been dated to the late twentieth century, showcase innovative architectural forms that had not been seen in any religious buildings prior to that time. The scholars interpret this as evidence for the existence of active and lively congregations that renovated their churches in accordance with the evolving needs of the masses. Second, a connection between the church and the state could be secured through the text mentioning that the translation of the Bible was funded by the Swedish state in the year 2000. According to the majority of the scholars, this supports the hypothesis that Christianity was a popular force in society on all levels: in urban and rural settings, in local congregations, and in national politics. The newspaper article advising people to leave the church is explained as a deviance from the norm, the product of an angry anti-­Christian minority that for various reasons had come into conflict with the state. A minority of scholars working within the team takes a different point of departure, however, placing special emphasis on the newspaper article and how it was


Paths to the Past: On Sources and Methods worded, suggesting a widespread dissatisfaction with the church. These scholars argue that because economic arguments against church membership were used by the author, it is likely that the majority of its members were not active in their congregations. Had they been active members, the author would have been more likely to use religious reasoning to advocate against membership. From this perspective, foregrounding this article in the interpretative process, the construction of new church buildings was understood as attempts made by shrinking congregations to architecturally adapt to the zeitgeist for the purpose of attracting more members. The new translation of the Bible from the year 2000 is interpreted as the state wanting to preserve and make available a cultural and historical artifact that had played a large role in the formation of the country but whose religious importance was no longer widely appreciated. The information concerning widespread church attendance is interpreted as being applicable only to the early twentieth century, after which there occurred major sociocultural shifts, resulting in changed popular opinions about religion. These shifts may be traced, these scholars argue, to the two world wars and their devastating aftermath as well as to an increasing belief that the natural sciences had the potential of answering existential questions. These researchers thus attempt to understand the Swedish situation as part of a larger European context. Simultaneously, the research team has studied the growth of Christianity in the so-­called Two-­Thirds World, or Global South, and found that very few buildings had survived from the twentieth century. The team concludes that Christianity did not experience much widespread growth in the southern hemisphere until the time of the great cathedrals, which came with the rapid economic growth a couple hundred years later, around the 2100s. Only a few cathedrals in this part of the world could be dated to the twentieth century. The intention of this somewhat detailed (semi-)fictional example is to draw attention to the many challenges and difficulties historians may face. The problems range from scarcity of sources to the much-­debated questions about how to actually go about reading and interpreting the sources that are in fact available. In other words, historical inquiry revolves around source material and methodology. The problems faced by our future fictional colleagues in the example above highlight many of the same issues faced by scholars today; the example illustrates how challenging it can be to acquire knowledge about the past.1 Different historians have different opinions as to whether it is possible to reconstruct the past with any precision at all. The 1. For those unfamiliar with Swedish society and history, it may be noted that the scenario closest to the historical situation is the one suggested by the minority in this fictional example. Further, the final conclusion reached by the team, based on the existence or not of monumental church buildings in the Global South during this time period, is flawed, since, as statistics show, the majority of Christians live in this part of the world and have done so since around the 1970s. The total number of Christians in the world today is about the same as it was a hundred years ago, but there has been a shift in population patterns, from the north and west to the south and east.

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axioms embedded in traditional historical-­critical analytical discourses have come under increased fire from postmodern and postcolonial scholars in recent decades. Such critique, which we unfortunately do not have the space to expand on here but which at its core deals with the impossibility of objectivity, has compelled historical scholarship to find new ways to improve its methodology.

Intersubjectivity Few historians today would maintain that objective knowledge about the past is possible. Instead, historical inquiry should be approached as an intersubjective conversation, in which the degrees of likelihood of various theories are discussed and debated. This has led to an emphasis on the word “construction” when dealing with historical reconstruction. The same source material may be interpreted in a variety of ways, opening up a certain degree of legitimate diversity with regard to conclusions drawn. Depending on the nature of the individual sources, the range of interpretations may vary from source to source. Instead of viewing historical inquiry as engaged in finding ways of fitting together a certain number of pieces in a jigsaw puzzle to create a larger picture, we should rather understand the process of historical reconstruction as first of all consisting of attempts at restoring diverse and incomplete fragments of information. The pieces themselves are not a given but need to be reconstructed before they can be combined with other sources in order for us to understand historical processes. To this should be added that the majority of the pieces of the puzzle are in fact missing. Scholars need to fill in the gaps themselves, making assumptions about what happened on the basis of factors and insights gained from previous studies. We shall return to this part of the research process later on. Let us stop here for a moment and contemplate some of the problems of interpretation presented to us by the sources we actually have access to. For example, if a Roman legal text from the sixth century contains an imperial ban on the building of synagogues, should this be interpreted as a sign that no synagogues were built at this time? Or could one hypothesize that the ban was issued precisely because synagogues were being built? Should we assume, if synagogues were indeed being built, that Jewish communities halted their construction when the ban was issued? How do we measure the effectiveness of imperial bans in various parts of the empire? As to the building of synagogues, we do have archaeological evidence from both Palestine and the diaspora that their construction continued despite the emperor’s wishes. How does this affect our understanding of historical legal material? Another example will further problematize the nature of the sources. A 1,500-year-­ old literary text accuses and condemns a specific group of people as marginalized and lacking any kind of position of power or influence in society. Can such a text give us


Paths to the Past: On Sources and Methods direct information about social realities at the time? Or is the text more concerned with rhetoric than actual social reality? It could very well be that the situation described in the text reflects a scenario that the author wishes to see, rather than what actually happened. It could also be the case that the author wishes to promote the scenario he or she describes. To answer our question, we must carry out numerous investigations, including a rhetorical analysis of how ancient writers used diction and different forms of expression in order to communicate with their audience. There are several cases in which scholars have found that the church fathers’ description of the Jews and their place in society in fifth-­century Palestine (which is what the previous example was about) can not be considered a historically accurate description of the social reality at the time. The texts concern themselves with Christian (theological) triumphalism and Jewish subordination. There is archaeological evidence, as discussed earlier, that points to the fact that Jews were, at this time, building impressive monuments across the land. Such remains point to Jewish self-­confidence and economic independence in relation to their Christian neighbors both near and far. Thus, it must be kept in mind that literary sources may be worded (intentionally or unintentionally) in a way so as to create a view of reality that serves the purposes of the author. Studying the church fathers’ theological worldview, on the one hand, and attempting to understand the historical context in which they lived, on the other, can thus constitute quite different endeavors, although such research questions are intertwined on a number of levels.

Game Rules The fact that the same sources may be interpreted in a number of ways means that academic humility becomes an epistemological necessity rather than merely a likeable personal character trait, which some scholars happen to develop. Despite this, it must be emphasized that not every historical reconstruction should be viewed as equally legitimate. It is not possible to argue that, if no one can reach absolute objectivity in their interpretations, this must mean that any interpretation made by anyone is legitimate. The efforts put in to understand historical phenomena have led to the formation of a certain “discursive game,” governed by certain “game rules,” whose purpose is to keep discussions on track. These “rules” of historical research (composed of certain attitudes, approaches, and methodologies) are constantly tested and developed. They may be applied to any historical discipline, not only the study of ancient religion, and they aim to make possible a better understanding of the past. From a historical perspective, there is thus no difference, in principle, between reconstructions of Alexander the Great, Jesus, or Mother Teresa, even though the types of sources available imply different kinds of challenges for each of the quests. The opinion has sometimes been voiced that the aim of religious texts is not to provide accurate historical information, and that historical investigations of the New

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Testament therefore are misguided. From an academic point of view, such claims are hardly tenable. All historical artifacts, including texts, are open to historical interpretation regardless of the intentions of their authors. A work of art from the eighteenth century can, for example, be analyzed from a variety of perspectives, some of which the artist could never have dreamed of, such as detailed analysis of the chemical combination of the colors used to create the painting. The important thing for scholars is to make it clear to themselves, as well as to their readers, what kind of questions they bring to the table, how they intend to go about answering them, and in which ways the conclusions they will eventually draw are a product not only of the source material but also of the methodology employed and their own perspective. We shall return to this in just a moment. At this point it should be noted that historical investigations of the New Testament do not rule supreme within the academic field of biblical studies. At the center are the texts themselves, and these may be read and interpreted in various ways, even ways that do not further historical understanding. For this reason, we have divided the section on methodology into two parts: one concerned with a more general historical approach and the other focusing on a more text-­oriented approach, which also includes historical understanding of the texts (see ch. 6). In the following, we shall focus on aspects of historical reconstruction and take a closer look at how the questions that we pose are related to the source material and the methodology that we employ.

“The Answer Lies in the Question”: Choosing Source Material and Methodology It is important to keep in mind that the point of departure for all research is the questions that we ask. The historical artifacts, buildings, art, and texts remain silent until we approach them with our questions in an attempt to understand them. We are the ones giving them a voice. In other words, that which we call history is “created” in the tension between source and interpreter. When we encounter historical phenomena (or any phenomena at all), the spontaneous interpretations we make are completely dependent on our previous experiences and our contemporary context. We interpret what we see using reference points and knowledge we already possess. Were we to travel to a foreign culture, we would have to learn to interpret the language, symbols, art, and architecture of that culture if our aim was to understand the people of that culture and their worldview. In the same way, we must train ourselves to think outside our own immediate frames of reference and our own culture when we seek a historical understanding of Jesus, his earliest followers, and the texts of the New Testament. Such a process requires practice and takes time. But it is not impossible. There are two foundational preconditions for a historical understanding of our


Paths to the Past: on Sources and Methods

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subject. The first may seem somewhat obvious but should be mentioned nonetheless: it is essential that we are aware of the historical context surrounding Jesus and his earliest followers. Context may be viewed as a three-dimensional figure in which the synchronous section moves in concentric circles from the religion and culture Jesus shared with the Jewish people to the Roman Empire, which ultimately controlled the land of Israel in the first century. Diachronically, the context is also defined by history, since the history of the Jewish people influenced the social, political, and religious situation in which Jesus and his disciples found themselves (see fig. 1.1). Our first step on the path toward a historical understanding is thus to try to modify our (modern) reference points. This is done through the study of Jesus’s and the earliest Christ followers’ surroundings, variously defined (see below), as well as the history of their context. This mode of procedure is mirrored in the structure of the historical section of this book. The second precondition of historical analysis is related to the above-mentioned procedure and focuses on the questions that tend to arise after a first reading of the source material. We must reflect on what we know in relation to how we know what we think we know. Which tools, or methods, do we use in order to attain knowledge? How can Synchronic they help us to interpret the source material? It is through questions such as these that historical research can progress beyond common-sense arguments. (“Common sense” itself represents culturally determined ideas of how “reality” works and may be a hindrance rather than a help in research focused on a culture not our own.) With the above in mind, we may describe the basic parts of the research process in five steps. First, we need to understand that all historical investigations have their origins in our questions. Second, after choosing a research question, it is our job to select relevant source material that will help us anFigure 1.1 Contextual analysis: diachronic and synchronic swer our question. In a third step we move on to perspectives on historical interactions and relationships. determine the methodology that will best enable us to interpret the source material. Fourth, we need to choose conversations partners; that is, we must decide which scholars we should read and interact with as we aim to answer our questions. Scholarship is not done in a vacuum; we need to learn from others. Lastly, we draw our conclusions. It is crucial to understand that these six basic steps are interconnected. The conclusion must match the question asked; it should not attempt to say more than the


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source material and the methodology allow for. Further, the methodology we choose must be compatible with the selected source material and the questions asked, and the source material must be relevant to the original question. We cannot, for example, draw sociohistorical conclusions from a literary analysis of a text. Neither can we use a narrative methodology to answer a question that would require analysis of both textual and archaeological material. If our question is concerned with a group’s social location in a specific geographic location, we must not work solely with archaeological analyses of buildings; we should also consider textual material and inscriptions, if such are available, to reach solid conclusions. The basic steps of the research process may be summarized as in figure 1.2. Has impact on Should correspond to Should be in conversation with

Purpose / Choice of Subject

Choice of Sources

Should correspond to

Choice of Conversation Partners

Choice of Method(s)

Should correspond to

Conclusions

Audience

Should correspond to

Should correspond to Should correspond to Should correspond to

Regarding the interpreter: In the ideal case the interpreter’s personal views and preferences should affect only the choice of subject. The scholarly debate itself is made possible and meaningful by not legitimizing the unavoidable bias of the individual researcher. The interpretative frame is set by the interpreter’s choice of audience; the choice of audience will therefore determine the “game rules” for the interpretative activity.

Figure 1.2 The six basic steps of the research process.

With regard to source material, we have already noted that there are multiple types of sources. We have mentioned a few of the more important ones: legal texts, literary texts, letters, inscriptions, and archaeological remains. In addition, there is an important source type that has often been ignored in the past but that should be mentioned, since it has received increased attention in recent scholarship: geography/topography. These source types yield different kinds of information, which can later be woven together to create a fuller and more complete understanding of historical phenomena. With regard to the perspective that the sources bring with them, it should be noted that legal and literary texts represent the upper strata of society, letters and


Paths to the Past: On Sources and Methods inscriptions represent a somewhat wider sample of the population, and archaeological remains give us information concerning both the upper and lower strata of society (even though more expensive buildings usually last longer and are thus found in a better-­preserved state than less expensive ones). The ruins of a fisherman’s simple house may be analyzed just as much as the palace of an emperor, without the emperor’s (biased) perspective on the social stratum to which the fisherman belonged. A literary text concerning fishing and fishermen, however, provides us with only indirect information (fishermen usually could not read or write; thus the author of the text was most likely not a fisherman), and should therefore be used with care and in combination with other sources. Perhaps geography/topography represents the most “democratic” source, since it frames all the different strata of a society within their physical boundaries. Pilgrim and trade routes, the time it takes to travel from one place to another, and thus the amount of contact that may have existed between people from different villages and cities are issues determined in large part by what the geography of a region allows. The career choices of individuals are also to a certain extent determined by what geography permits, even though we should put a larger emphasis on social and political factors when considering this aspect of ancient societies. To clarify the arguments above and simultaneously invite the reader to develop an independent working relationship with the questions this book addresses, the following section will provide short and general examples of historical questions related to our field. The examples illustrate the challenges faced by scholars and provide a framework for the chapters to follow by indicating important steps in the research process, which preceded the authoring of this textbook. We shall ask the following questions: Who was Jesus? What does the Gospel of Matthew say about judgment and salvation? How are the three earliest gospels connected? Was it Paul who created the form of Christianity we see today—that is, a Christianity separate from Judaism? The presentation and discussion of these questions will be general in nature; the reader is referred to the respective sections in chapters 2–5 for a more detailed discussion of the topics and technical terms used in historical inquiry. The concluding bibliography provides the reader with additional material for further study of methodology.

Jesus If we begin with the question “Who was the Jesus of history?” and follow the previously outlined basic steps in the research process, the first question must be as follows: Which source material is relevant to answer this question? If one views the different types of sources as layered frames, where the inner frames give more direct information and the outer frames give more indirect, albeit necessary, information, the image in figure 1.3 emerges.

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If we begin with the innermost frame, we see that all the sources consist of textual material: we have no inscriptions and no archaeological remains that provide us with direct information on Jesus. The texts listed inside the inner circle warrant further discussion. A majority of scholars hold that the gospels of the New Testament, in particular the Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke), Geography / typography provide us with the best information. Agrapha (meaning “not written” in Greek) refers to sayTexts, inscr., papyri, archaeol. ings attributed to Jesus that are not included in the Gospels but are quoted in other places, Texts, inscr., papyri, archaeol. both within and outside the canon. There exTexts ist around 225 such Jesus sayings. Examples NT-Gospels include John 7:53–8:11, since this text does not Agrapha Paul exist in the oldest versions of John’s Gospel and Thomas did not appear in any of the other gospels unJosephus Tacitus til fairly late (although it had previously been linked to Luke at one point). Other examples Jewish Religion, Culture, Politics within the New Testament are Acts 20:35 and 1 Cor 7:10–11. Papias (d. ca. 130), Justin MarGreco-Roman Religion, Culture, Politics tyr (d. 165), and Tertullian (ca. 160–230) quote several noncanonical Jesus sayings, which they Galilee, Samaria, Judea, and Adjacent Regions considered to be authentic, but most scholars have concluded that very few of the agrapha are useful for historical research. We can, further, Figure 1.3 A schematic representation of source material obtain some information about Jesus from Paul, relevant to the study of the historical Jesus. our oldest direct source. The value of the Gospel of Thomas is emphasized by some scholars as important for our task, but this remains disputed. Josephus (ca. 37–100), a Jewish historian who did not belong to the Jesus movement, contributes a brief note on the matter, and Tacitus (ca. 56–118) is considered to be among the few Greco-Roman authors whose (very limited) information about Jesus can be regarded as useful. These sources are discussed in more detail in chapter 3. The more indirect sources provide us with information concerning Judaism in the first century, and here we have at our disposal texts, inscriptions (e.g., the Theodotus inscription, which gives us information about a synagogue in Jerusalem), and archaeological remains (synagogues and private houses, as well as roads, towns, boats, tools, etc.). Through a study of the places where Jesus is said to have proclaimed his message, healed sick people, and exorcised demons, we can gain insight into how these people lived and the social strata to which they belonged. In this way, we may learn more about the people to whom Jesus primarily brought his message. Remains of simple houses in Capernaum, the village that Jesus, according to the texts, chose as the base for his


Paths to the Past: On Sources and Methods mission, give us an idea of how his message about social change and the kingdom of God (or the “dominion of God,” as the original texts may also be translated) may have been intended by him to be understood, and also how it was likely actually understood by his audience. Jesus chose primarily to speak publicly and gather followers in the rural districts and villages of Galilee, as opposed to the bigger and wealthier cities in the area. The way Jesus died—crucified by the Roman authorities in the province of Judea—should lead us to include, among our sources, information about Roman imperial rule in the Middle East. This evidence should go beyond details such as the inscription found in Caesarea Maritima, which mentions Pontius Pilate, the man who sentenced Jesus to death, and include more general knowledge about how the Roman imperial presence—and the rule of their puppet tetrarch in Galilee, Herod Antipas—affected Jewish society and the general population culturally and politically. What laws were in place in Judea, a region that was under direct Roman rule, and what did the legal situation look like in Galilee, which was ruled indirectly by Rome via Antipas? What was the significance for Jesus of these two political regions not being united under one (Jewish) king? And why was Jesus executed by Pilate? The latter question is rather simple and straightforward, yet it is one that is absolutely central to the reconstruction of the historical Jesus. Lastly, the geography/topography of Galilee and Judea gives us information about where and how Jesus traveled, which roads he took, which ones he could have taken but avoided instead, how far a day’s journey could take a person, and what Jesus’s pilgrimages to Jerusalem may have looked like. Where the choice of methodology is concerned, it is perhaps easiest to state that archaeological excavation—and the reading and evaluation of excavation reports— requires knowledge of archaeological methodology. Further, an analysis of inscriptions must involve a good grasp of paleography (the study of the development of writing and the dating of different letter shapes), as well as an understanding of how inscriptions (dedications, injunctions, prohibitions, etc.) may be related to historical phenomena.2 The geography/topography mode of analysis requires a combination of archaeology (ancient road systems, for example) and detailed knowledge of the landscape.3 Finally, one must note that the texts that directly present or discuss Jesus are problematic from a methodological perspective since these texts represent interpretations of Jesus; they do not provide us with a direct window into his life. As opposed to Paul, Jesus never wrote anything himself—and Paul is difficult enough to understand! We also have the problem of language and translation. The Gospels were written in Greek, but Jesus spoke Aramaic. Further, the texts were authored approximately 2. Kant, “Jewish Inscriptions in Greek and Latin.” 3. Freyne, Jesus, a Jewish Galilean.

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thirty-­seven to seventy years after Jesus’s death. Prior to being written down, the traditions about him were transmitted orally. Here we encounter an important problem: Can we decide which parts of the written gospels are “authentic”? Methodologies for such analysis have been developed, but they continue to be challenged and modified; a more detailed discussion of this is found in chapters 3 and 4. Generally, one may note that scholars today are moving away from methods involving the dissecting of the text in order to isolate authentic traditions. Instead, many are attempting to view the text in a more holistic manner, often taking a more sociological approach to the problem. Such approaches include the study of relevant geographical, cultural, and political realities.4 Memory studies have also emerged as an important field relevant to our question. In other words, recently scholars have increasingly been integrating direct and indirect source material, which in turn has resulted in a more elaborate and diversified use of methodology. It is important in the current situation to insist that the conclusions drawn about Jesus are considered in relation to the methodology that has been employed. It is difficult to compare and evaluate the results of investigations that have employed different methods. Finally, on a more general note, it should be observed that the historical Jesus, whichever way he is reconstructed, does not correspond with any of the portraits painted of him by the individual gospel authors. The historical Jesus is a reconstruction based on the fragments of these and other texts, understood within a larger social, political, and religious context, a context that is itself a reconstruction of first-­century Galilee and Judea.

The Gospels: Who Wrote First and Who Copied Whom? Those interested in the historical Jesus are usually interested not only in the oral traditions about him and their transmission but also in the question of which of the texts written about him is the oldest. Attempts have been made by a minority of scholars (e.g., Helmut Koester and John D. Crossan) to show that several sections of the Gospel of Peter (ca. 200 CE) go back to around 50 CE. If correct, these sections would represent the oldest remaining text about Jesus. Others, also a minority, suggest that certain parts of the Gospel of Thomas (second century CE) are independent of the New Testament gospels and thus may go back farther in time than they do. Despite suggestions such as these, the consensus remains, after hundreds of years of research, that the oldest texts available to us are in fact the Gospels of Mark, Matthew, and Luke, also called the Synoptic Gospels. In addition, these gospels are at times so similar that it is highly likely that some sort of a literary dependency exists between them. 4. Freyne, Jesus, a Jewish Galilean.


Paths to the Past: On Sources and Methods For example, how does one explain the similarities and differences between Matthew’s Sermon on the Mount (Matt 5–7) and Luke’s Sermon on the Plain (Luke 6:17–49)? How are we to understand the different interpretations of the same Jesus tradition in Mark 7:1–23 and Matt 15:1–20? Who wrote first, and who copied whom? Who had the “original” version, and who revised or changed the text when he copied it? Even though such questions are related to the quest for the historical Jesus, they represent a separate area of investigation. For this reason, the source materials and methodologies applied must be different from what we saw above in the case of historical Jesus studies. The source material here consists primarily of the first three gospels. Methodologically, we are dealing with what is called source criticism, the attempt to ascertain which sources the different authors have used. The texts are analyzed in much detail and certain (general) theories are applied in order to conclude who wrote first. Analyses such as these and the theories that have been employed are further explored in chapter 4. In terms of results, it is important to remember, as we have mentioned, that conclusions cannot be drawn that extend beyond what the source material and the methodology allow. Source criticism provides us with information about which text is the oldest but says nothing about which of the texts most accurately portray the historical Jesus. The latter question requires wider use of sources and other methodologies, some of the most important of which we have already discussed above.

Analyzing Ancient Theology If the first question about Jesus relates to a historical phenomenon beyond the texts, and the second question concerns itself with the technical task of ascertaining the relationship between the three Synoptic Gospels, then the third question, which deals with theological aspects of ancient texts, provides us with yet another example of a historical challenge. When posing questions about key theological issues, such as, for example, how the Gospel of Matthew understands divine judgment and salvation, we may take either a historical-­theological approach or a more general theological approach in which we are not dependent on first-­century worldviews. The main difference between these tasks is the choice of source material. Certain scholars argue that the latter approach (i.e., a purely theological approach) is independent of historical context and thus ahistorical in nature. Such a statement can, however, hardly be sustained. It is fairly easy to show that ahistorical readings are impossible. When reading a text, we understand it on the basis of our previous experiences and knowledge, which we use in order to attribute meaning to the text in question. Meaning is thus dependent on our own background and identity. In other words, the real issue here is which historical and social reference points an individual wishes to understand

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a text within. A reading that is not based on first-­century theological worldviews relocates the interpretation of the text to a different, more modern context. There is simply no way in which we can read a text outside or beyond a context. If we wish to understand our question from a nineteenth-­century perspective, we must study what people wrote about the text at that time, as well as the worldviews that were prevalent when the nineteenth-­century authors wrote. It is thus possible to study different interpretations of a text made throughout history through adjusting and shifting the historical reference points within which the text needs to be understood, but a text cannot be understood ahistorically. This means that the source material we choose for the study of the theme of judgment in the Gospel of Matthew cannot be limited to Matthew only. If we made such an attempt at exclusive use of the text only, our modern experiences and world­ views would inevitably influence our analysis. Even though Matthew is the focus of our study, we need to understand the theological symbols and metaphors in the text through investigations into how other (Jewish) texts from the same time period use the same (or divergent) metaphors. Once we have reconstructed the appropriate historical reference points, we can proceed to focus on how the Matthean text deals with the theological concepts we have chosen for this methodological exercise. An example of how important this methodological process really is surfaces when we consider the prejudices against various Jewish groups mentioned in New Testament texts, especially in the Gospel of Matthew. If we interpret the ancient rhetoric with our modern context as the reference point, we gain a very different understanding of these texts than we would have achieved had we viewed them from a first-­century perspective. If we do not learn about how people expressed themselves in the first century and what they meant with their (in our ears) harsh, even violent rhetoric, our historical reading of the texts will be compromised.5 Since we are, in this example, interested in how the Gospel of Matthew presents the theme of divine judgment and salvation, and not how the historical Jesus viewed it, we must focus our analysis on the final version of the text, as we have it reconstructed today. This can be done in a variety of ways. Redaction criticism takes a closer look at how the author changed the traditions he adopted from his sources (most likely, in this case, Mark and Q, if the theory of Q is accepted). By studying the differences, one can glean the author’s own perspective. A more developed version of redaction criticism, often called composition criticism, goes further and takes into consideration also those traditions that have been preserved unchanged in the gospel. The reason for this is the legitimate claim that even those Jesus sayings and stories that have been preserved unchanged acquire different meaning when placed in new literary contexts. Composition criticism is well suited for thematic investigations, such as the one we are dealing with here. Then, with the help of narrative 5. Johnson, “New Testament’s Anti-­Jewish Slander.”


Paths to the Past: On Sources and Methods criticism, we can study how the story develops and how, if at all, the meaning of the theological concept under investigation shifts when the story moves forward. Are the criteria of God’s judgment and salvation the same in the beginning of the story as they are at the end? Or do they change as the story unfolds? The most effective method for answering this type of question would be a combination of composition and narrative criticism. With regard to results, these must not move beyond conclusions relative to the first century, based on the research question and the methods used. We cannot, for example, draw many conclusions regarding the group that produced the Gospel of Matthew if our investigation focuses exclusively on the text; such questions would also require other, sociohistorical methods.

Did Paul Invent Christianity? Lastly, if we take a closer look at our final question, which explores the important issue of whether it was Paul, rather than Jesus, who shaped what later became Christianity, we find that this is a very complex problem that requires a series of different investigations. The source material for such an inquiry will necessarily be diverse, and the methods many. Nevertheless, it is quite common in popular publications and discourses to ascribe to Paul a most crucial role in the development of Christianity without much thought dedicated to the complexity of the matter. If we divide the inquiry into several consecutive sections, the first section needs to answer the question of whether Paul had any relationship whatsoever to what was to become the religion of the Roman Empire. If we can prove such a connection, we have secured a link between Paul and later mainstream Christianity. This would necessitate a historical analysis of both Paul and later Christian authors. If the results of such an investigation reveal a lack of continuity, the question about whether the historical Paul had a greater influence in the shaping of Christianity than Jesus had must be answered in the negative already at this point. An equally important question concerns the continuity between Jesus and Paul. If Paul is considered to have direct connections to the future (i.e., to later forms of Christianity) but not to the past (i.e., to Jesus), then we naturally must assume that he had a crucial role in the development of Christendom. However, that would not be the case if one could establish continuity between Jesus and Paul; then Paul would simply become one of many disciples who carried on what Jesus had already begun. An investigation of this type would require not only a study of Paul but also a study of the historical Jesus (see above). In both the first and second sections, the investigations would have to include theological themes as well as possible sociopolitical motives of Jesus, Paul, and later figures within mainstream Christianity. In terms of method, such a task necessitates historical-­literary analyses and sociohistorical analyses, as well as the labor-­intensive task of categorizing textual material from a comparative perspective. With the enor-

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mous scope of such a task in mind, it is surprising how easily certain authors make decided claims about the issue at hand. Of the research problems explored so far, this one is perhaps the most multifaceted, since it consists of several complex investigations, which must be linked together before any conclusions can be drawn. Chapters 3 and 5 below provide a starting point to understand the problems involved.

Can Modern Societies Shed Light on the Ancient World? The four historical inquiries discussed above—the historical Jesus, the Synoptic Gospels, the Gospel of Matthew, and Paul—will suffice as examples of how source material and methodology can be selected in the research process. Beyond the specific methods we have already talked about, we shall, finally, look at some general methods borrowed from the social sciences—methods that are not directly shaped to suit investigations of specific sources but that may be applied to all source types. The emphasis here is more generally on our mode of procedure, which affects how we approach the source material and produce historical reconstructions. More specifically, we shall consider here the role of modern empirical studies and in which ways their results may or may not be relevant for historical investigations. Such studies may include social-­psychological analyses, dealing with the ways in which individuals in certain situations, such as in a colonized society, tend to react and change their religious behavior. Can results of such studies help us understand the ancient world? Scholars disagree about whether such methods and their results are compatible with historical investigations. Is it at all possible—and legitimate—to apply results gained from modern studies to first-­century societies? Does such an approach run the risk of resulting in anachronistic interpretations of Jesus’s time? Scholars who support the use of modern empirical studies in historical research argue that only those results that are based on analyses of several different cultural contexts may provide legitimate generalizations about people’s behavioral patterns. These same scholars also argue that if such results are not used to interpret human behavior in antiquity, other tacit assumptions about what people think, do, or say given certain circumstances will illegitimately influence the interpretation. Such unspoken assumptions, unsupported by comparative material, are in reality more open to critique than approaches making explicit use of results generated by modern social-­scientific methodologies, since the former have not been the object of a scientific investigation at all. Among those who accept the use of modern empirical studies as a path to the past, people have different opinions about how such studies should relate to the source material. Some scholars believe that only when the sources—often textual— already indicate agreement with the results found using empirical studies can these studies be used in order to strengthen the argument made. Others argue that empiri-


Paths to the Past: On Sources and Methods cal results can also be used “against” the text, as a tool for a hermeneutic of suspicion. The latter position implies that the content of a text may be challenged as historically unreliable, if modern studies suggest that the behavior described is unlikely given the specific circumstances. In such cases, the text should be understood to reflect the author’s bias, what he or she would like to see rather than what really happened. Such use of the social sciences is connected to the more generally accepted fact that ancient texts reflect primarily the perspective of the social elite, and thus must be used with care in historical reconstructions. Lastly, there is some dispute between scholars who argue that modern empirical studies can only be used together with specific relevant source material and those who believe that results from modern social-­scientific investigations may be used to “fill in the gaps.” In the latter case, the idea behind the theory is that when textual sources lack the information searched for, it is possible to fill in these gaps using empirically tested theories, and thus create a reconstruction that is tailored to how individuals, according to these theories, act and react in certain situations. Examples where we have very limited access to direct source material include the situation and religious identity of the Jews in Syrian Antioch. We know that Jews lived in the city, since we have information about Jewish immigration in Antioch long before the first century CE. Just as all other people finding themselves in the position of a minority in a given population, it is reasonable to assume that Jews related to the majority within the population in one way or another. Instead of offering conjectures that are impossible to verify, it is possible, as Rodney Stark and Magnus Zetterholm have done,6 to make use of modern empirical studies exploring how immigrants tend to develop their religious identity in foreign countries in different ways, in order to shed light on the situation in this ancient city.

Conclusion When one focuses on the complexities that surface with the challenges faced by scholars today, one might ask oneself whether it is at all possible for an individual scholar to master all the source material and all the methodologies that are needed to arrive at historically plausible conclusions. The truth is that most scholars develop an expertise within a few areas only and rely on the results of other scholars who work in adjacent fields for the additional information they need. Few, if any, can master fully all the areas related to New Testament exegesis, although a more general competence is of course required. This state of affairs reflects well the reality of the academic discussion, which builds on both a scholar’s individual expertise and his or her confidence and trust in the reliability of the work of colleagues. When the 6. Rodney Stark, The Rise of Christianity; Magnus Zetterholm, The Formation of Christianity.

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university student, who initially is at the mercy of what the textbook claims, begins to gradually acquire the knowledge and skills necessary to discern what is historically reasonable, he or she has taken the first step to participating in this discussion of Jesus and his earliest followers.

Further Reading Baird, William. “Biblical Criticism: New Testament Criticism.” Pages 730–36 in Anchor Bible Dictionary. Vol. 1. Edited by David Noel Freedman. New York: Doubleday, 1992. Black, David A. New Testament Textual Criticism: A Concise Guide. Grand Rapids: Baker, 1994. Collins, John J. Historical Criticism in a Postmodern Age. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2005. Coogan, Michael D., ed. The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Books of the Bible. 2 vols. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011. Elliott, John H. What Is Social-­Scientific Criticism? Guides to Biblical Scholarship, New Testament Series. Minneapolis: Fortress, 1993. Freyne, Sean. Jesus, a Jewish Galilean: A New Reading of the Jesus Story. London: T&T Clark, 2004. Goodacre, Mark S. The Synoptic Problem: A Way through the Maze. Biblical Seminar 80. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 2001. Holmberg, Bengt. Sociology and the New Testament: An Appraisal. Minneapolis: Fortress, 1990. Johnson, Luke Timothy. “The New Testament’s Anti-­Jewish Slander and the Conventions of Ancient Polemic.” JBL 108 (1989): 419–41. Kant, Larry H. “Jewish Inscriptions in Greek and Latin.” ANRW 20.2:671–713. Part 2, Principat, 20.2. Edited by H. Temporini and W. Haase. Berlin: de Gruyter, 1987. McKenzie, Steven L., and Stephen R. Haynes. To Each Its Own Meaning: An Introduction to Biblical Criticisms and Their Application. Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1999. Moreland, Milton C. Between Text and Artifact: Integrating Archaeology in Biblical Studies Teaching. Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature, 2003. Novenson, Matthew V. The Grammar of Messianism: An Ancient Political Idiom and Its Users. New York: Oxford University Press, 2017. Powell, Mark Allan. Methods for Matthew. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009. Reed, Jonathan. Archaeology and the Galilean Jesus: A Re-­Examination of the Evidence. Harrisburg: Trinity Press International, 2000. Runesson, Anders. “The Historical Jesus, the Gospels, and First-­Century Jewish Society: The Importance of the Synagogue for Understanding the New Testament.” Pages


Paths to the Past: On Sources and Methods 265–97 in A City Set on a Hill: Essays in Honor of James F. Strange. Edited by Daniel Warner and Donald D. Binder. Mountain Home, AR: BorderStone, 2014. Ryan, Jordan J. The Role of the Synagogue in the Aims of Jesus. Minneapolis: Fortress, 2017. (Note especially Appendix A and B on historiographical method and hermeneutics.) Soulen, Richard N., and R. Kendall Soulen. Handbook of Biblical Criticism. Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2001. Stark, Rodney. The Rise of Christianity: How the Obscure, Marginal Jesus Movement Became the Dominant Religious Force in the Western World in a Few Centuries. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1996. Udoh, Fabian E. To Caesar What Is Caesar’s: Tribute, Taxes, and Imperial Administration in Early Roman Palestine. Providence: Brown Judaic Studies, 2005. Zetterholm, Magnus. The Formation of Christianity in Antioch: A Social-­Scientific Approach to the Separation between Judaism and Christianity. London: Routledge, 2003.

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