Jesus the Priest
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About this ebook
Nicholas Perrin
Nicholas Perrin PhD, Marquette University, is Franklin S. Dryness Professor of Biblical Studies at Wheaton College in Wheaton, Illinois. Between 2000 and 2003 he was Research Assistant to Nicholas T. Wright. He is author of numerous books, including Thomas: The Other Gospel, Lost in Transmission, and Jesus the Temple.
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Jesus the Priest - Nicholas Perrin
© 2018 by Nicholas Perrin
Published by Baker Academic
a division of Baker Publishing Group
PO Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287
www.bakeracademic.com
Baker Academic edition published 2018
Previously published in 2018 in Great Britain by SPCK
Ebook edition created 2018
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
ISBN 978-1-4412-4568-7
Unless otherwise indicated, Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible: Anglicized Edition, copyright © 1989, 1995 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations labeled NIV are from the Holy Bible, New International Version® (Anglicised). NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com. The NIV
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For Camie
Uxor carissima
Contents
Cover
Title page
Copyright page
Dedication page
Preface
List of abbreviations
Introduction
Treasures from the scrapheap
A tale of two Jesus scholars: Schweitzer and Bultmann
Schweitzer and Bultmann revisited
A few notes of explanation
A word on method
1 The prayer of Jesus
Introduction
The meaning of ‘Father’: a historical-critical conundrum
Naming Yahweh as ‘Father’ in early Christianity and Judaism
Naming Yahweh as ‘Father’ in early Christianity
Naming Yahweh as ‘Father’ in Judaism
Synthesis
The exodus narrative as backdrop to God-as-Father
The Lord’s Prayer: a consistently eschatological prayer
First petition: ‘Hallowed be your name’ (Q 11.2b)
Variations on a priestly theme: petitions two through seven
Second petition: ‘Your kingdom come’ (Q 11.2c)
Third petition: ‘Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven’ (Matt. 6.10b–c)
Fourth petition: ‘Give us each day our daily bread’ (Q 11.3)
Fifth petition: ‘And forgive us our sins, for we ourselves forgive everyone indebted to us’ (Q 11.4a–b)
Sixth petition: ‘And do not bring us to the time of trial’ (Q 11.4b)
Seventh petition: ‘but rescue us from the evil one’ (Matt. 6.13b)
Summary
2 The baptism of Jesus
Introduction
John’s baptism
Baptism and theophany as history
A review of the sources
Questions surrounding the theophany
Back to the theophany
The meaning of Jesus’ baptism according to Mark 1.11 par.
The sources of the scriptural quotation (Mark 1.11 par.)
The meaning of the scriptural quotation (Mark 1.11 par.) in the light of Second-Temple reception
Psalm 2 in Second-Temple Judaism
Genesis 22 in Second-Temple Judaism
Synthesis
Jesus’ baptism in the context of the synoptic narratives
Mark
Matthew
Luke
Synthesis
Summary
3 The kingdom of Jesus
The apocalyptic framework of the kingdom: the parable of the sower (Mark 4.4–9)
Interpreting the parable of the sower: a first pass
The pattern of apocalyptic expectation in three precursor ‘seed texts’
Jubilees
Apocalypse of Weeks (1 En. 93.1–10; 91.11–17)
Book of Dreams (1 Enoch 83—90)
Synthesis
The parable of the sower redux
‘A sower went out to sow seed’
‘Some seed fell beside the path’
‘Other seed fell on rocky ground’
‘Other seed fell among thorns’
‘Other seed fell into good soil’
The parable of the sower and the historical Jesus
The future trajectory of the kingdom: the parable of salt (Matt. 5.13//Mark 9.50//Luke 14.34–35)
Matthew’s parable of salt (Matt. 5.13)
The Matthean context
Priestly salt
Salt in Matthew
Luke’s parable of salt (Luke 14.34–35)
The Lukan context
Salt in Luke
Mark’s parable of salt (Mark 9.50)
The Markan context
Salt in Mark
The parable of salt and the historical Jesus
The present contours of the kingdom: the Beatitudes (Q 6.20–21)
The meaning of the Beatitudes
The social grammar of blessing
The redemptive-historical grammar of blessing
The ‘poor’ and the historical Jesus
The Beatitudes and the historical Jesus
Summary
4 Jesus Son of David
Jesus as ‘Son of David’
Jesus as the Son of David in early Christian tradition
Son of David and the historical Jesus
David and the ‘Son of David’ as priestly figures
David and Solomon’s priestly activity
Towards an explanation for David and Solomon’s exceptional priestly status
The united confederacy as a condition for legitimate royal-priestly rule
The priestly David and ‘Son of David’ according to Psalm 110
Jesus the priestly Son of David
Summary
5 The identity of the Son of Man
The identity of the Son of Man in Daniel
The cultic orientation of the book of Daniel
Backgrounds to the Danielic Son of Man
Who are the ‘holy ones’?
Synthesis
The historical Jesus and the Danielic Son of Man
Preliminary considerations
The healing of the paralytic (Mark 2.1–10 par.)
Summary
6 A re-envisaged priesthood
Sabbath-day liturgies: the grainfield controversy (Mark 2.23–28 par.)
The grainfield controversy according to Mark
Jesus as a type of David
The temple elite as a type of Abiathar
The grainfield meal as a sacred meal
The historical Jesus and the grainfield controversy
Towards an explanation of Mark’s handling of the grainfield meal
Jewish conceptions of the present and future Bread of the Presence
Synthesis
Summary
Contrasting priestly approaches: Jerusalem’s powerbrokers and Jesus’ peripatetics (Q 9.58 = Matt. 8.20//Luke 9.58)
The homeless Son of Man
Common interpretations of Q 9.58
Reviving an overlooked reading: Q 9.58 as socio-political critique
Intertextual allusions in Q 9.58
Adam, Jacob and the Son of Man
An alternative ethic: an excursus on the double commandment (Mark 12.28–34 par.)
Synthesis
Inclusive table practices: the parable of the children in the marketplace (Q 7.31–35 = Matt. 11.16–19//Luke 7.31–35)
Hearing Jesus’ voice behind the traditions
Wisdom and her works (Matt. 11.16–19)
The ‘works’ of Wisdom – whose works anyway?
The complex interaction between Jesus, John and their disciples
The double helix of Wisdom and Spirit (Matt. 11.5)
Wisdom and her children (Luke 7.31–35)
Luke’s parable of the children in the marketplace in context
The meaning of Luke’s Wisdom
Synthesis
Summary
7 Final confrontations
Introduction
The tribute tax for Caesar (Mark 12.13–17 par.)
Problems with the standard readings of Mark 12.13–17
The significance of the image and inscription
The ‘things of God’ in Daniel
The ‘deep and hidden things of God’ in Daniel (Dan. 2.20–23)
The ‘things of God’ in Paul (1 Cor 2.1–14)
The ‘things of God’ in Mark
The ‘things of God’ in Mark 1—8 (Mark 8.33)
The ‘things of God’ in Mark 12.17
The ‘things of God’ in the setting of Jesus
The trial of Jesus (Mark 14.53–65 par.)
The trial narrative in its Markan context
The trial as a historical problem
The verbal exchange at the trial
Questions surrounding Jesus’ final statement (Mark 14.62)
The interrogation (Mark 14.55–59)
The nature of Jesus’ blasphemy (Mark 14.62)
Summary
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index of ancient and biblical sources
Index of modern authors
Index of subjects
Notes
About the author
Back Cover
Preface
One of the great paradoxes of the history of biblical interpretation is the fact that the study of the historical Jesus began to take flight in a particular moment of intellectual history when many of the words and actions attributed to Jesus were suddenly being called into question. Indeed, it was precisely this tension, between the extraordinary events reported by the Evangelists and the Enlightenment’s commitment to the critical sifting of fact from fiction that would eventually occasion the rise of various ‘criteria of authenticity’. Had it not been for the Enlightenment, it is unlikely that scholars would have ever developed rules for adjudicating the historical reliability of things reportedly said and done by Jesus. In this respect, the discussion over historical method, which has dominated historical Jesus research even down to this day, retains the indelible genetic code of this intellectual revolution – for better or for worse, or perhaps for a little bit of both.
Of course, it hardly bears stating that the Enlightenment is a historically situated intellectual movement with its own distinctive agenda and set of assumptions. With this in mind, many over the years have objected that the Enlightenment’s presuppositions about the nature of reality are a priori incompatible with theological positions which the Church has adopted since antiquity. Time and again, such theologically minded objectors have asked, ‘But if Jesus really is divine as well as human, then hasn’t the historically oriented quest of the historical Jesus started us off on the wrong foot by asking us to construct a Christology from below, as opposed to a Christology from above?’ While a question like this is certainly valid on some level, I wonder if the very framing of the question in these terms – if the very categories of ‘Christology from below’ and ‘Christology from above’ – are actually not themselves highly distortive, owing more to Western dualism than to the milieu in which the Jesus movement first took shape. What if, more specifically, in the theologians’ very attempt to save Jesus from the treacherous jaws of the ‘downstairs’ of empirical history by making his primary space the ‘upstairs’ of metaphysical speculation, they have unwittingly aggravated matters? What if the dualism standing behind the upstairs–downstairs framework for discussing Jesus actually obstructs our vision of his self-understanding and aims?
While there are at least a handful of motivations for my having written this book, one of these has to do with my conviction that, though first-century Judaism ordinarily maintained a strict Creator–creature distinction, it would not have been implausible for a high priest of that time and place to have considered himself – under the right conditions – as a human participant in the divine. This should come as no surprise. Israel’s priests, much like the temples they served, were the liminal space separating the divine realm from the human realm. As such, they straddled both worlds, dynamically functioning as both the ceiling to our post-Enlightenment ‘downstairs’ (phenomena) and the floor to our unseen ‘upstairs’, and that without contradiction.
Needless to say, if the high priest was a kind of third category in which the human and divine converged, and if Jesus also regarded himself as Israel’s rightful eschatological high priest, it follows that our Christology need no longer be necessarily dictated by rigid categories of ‘from above’ and ‘from below’. The present book largely assumes (though not without some warrant) rather than sets out to prove the former of these two conditions: the quasi-divine character of the priesthood. It is the latter premise, Jesus’ self-identity as priest, which is the main concern of this book. As I will labour to show in the pages to follow, once we locate Jesus in the role of priest ex officio, we are able to make much better sense not only of certain otherwise perplexing Gospel texts, but also of the historical Jesus himself. If Jesus really saw himself as a priest on the terms that I am claiming, this begins to open a third path somewhere between the two broad options currently on offer in so much of historical Jesus studies: a secular, Arian-style Jesus (Jesus was just a man – nothing more) and, on a more popular level, a vaguely docetic, Apollinarian-style Jesus (Jesus was a God-man but his humanity did not extend to his cerebral cortex). This is not to say that the results of the present project have been driven by a certain theological agenda, but rather that by doing better history, as I hope to do here, we will also – as a fringe benefit – be poised to do better theology.
At its core, this book is a historical work, written for historians and students of history. I will have more to say about my historical method below. But in the meantime, suffice it to say that if history matters at all, then doing history on Jesus must also matter. I am quite aware that Jesus’ first biographers were hoping to register some pretty remarkable claims about their hero. I am also aware that precisely this agenda has often been taken as warrant for stretching a long swathe of yellow tape around early first-century Galilee and Jerusalem, as if to say, ‘Non-History Line: Do Not Cross’. (All the while, ironically, some of the same dispensers of such yellow tape are not the least deterred from offering a highly speculative sociological reconstruction of the so-called Q community or a detailed mirror-reading of Ephesians.) For my part, I wonder if this hermeneutical trend, sustained to some extent in North America as a reaction to simplistic fundamentalist readings of the Gospels, may itself be liable to the charge of being another kind of fundamentalism.
History, like life itself, is complicated and messy. Faced with this messiness, we can either throw up our hands before we’ve even started (consoling ourselves with the thought that we were never meant to get ‘behind the text’ of the Gospels anyway); or we can attempt to construct a holistic portrait, knowing that even if some of its parts may be tentative or even flat-out wrong, there’s always hope that the whole, once organized in a coherent and compelling paradigm, may have an evidentiary value that outweighs the sum of the parts. At this place in the woods of Jesus scholarship, I am no longer sure whether the path bending behind the undergrowth of the Gospel text is the road less travelled or the road more travelled – I’m not in the habit of counting noses. I am convinced, however, that neither the events of Jesus’ life nor the Gospel writers’ interpretations of the same are extraneous to reconstructing Jesus’ aims, as these have often been made to be. Unlike most books in the historical Jesus genre, the present volume will dedicate relatively considerable space to figuring out what the Evangelists meant, even as it seeks to secure the final goal of figuring out what Jesus meant. In my judgement, in stark disagreement with the classic form critics, penetrating to the story ‘behind the text’ can hardly be accomplished without some sense of what is going on, compositionally, ‘in the text’. No doubt that will irritate the purists among the narrative critics as well as the purists among the Jesus research guild, and for that I apologize but not necessarily with repentance. Meanwhile, for those who have been steeped in a counsel of despair when it comes to synthesizing all things dominical, may this book be one of those which says, ‘Take heart!’
This volume would not have been possible without a number of people. I am grateful, first of all, to my doctoral students and certain other student friends who have been involved – from compiling the Bibliography to offering sage editorial input – in the project: Nicholas Piotrowski, David Broughton, Rhett Austin, Greg Thellman, Jeremy Otten, Susan Rieske, Peter Green, Jarrett Van Tine, Caleb Friedeman, Nathan LeMahieu and Tyran Laws. Special mention also goes to my friend and close fellow pilgrim Bryan Eklund, who willingly read chapters with extremely helpful comment; other friends I remember eagerly responded to invited elevator-speech versions of the same: Rick Richardson, Dan Treier, John Powell, David Vinson, Joan Brown and Doug Koenigsberg. Then there were my two administrative assistants over the past five years, who in the process of having this project inflicted on them now deserve honorary doctorates of their own: Valerie Austin and Jessica Tate. In the broader academy, I think of the encouragement and input of colleagues like Simon Kingston (SPCK), Jeannine Brown, Greg Beale, Wendy Cotter, Edmondo Lupieri, David Moffitt, Elizabeth Shively, Mark Alan Powell, Nathaniel Perrin, Michael Barber, Leroy Huizenga, Scott Hahn, Ben Gladd, Mark Strauss, Jon Pennington and Warren Carter – I’ll stop there with trepidation, almost certain there are others I am forgetting. Especial thanks go to Tom Wright and Brant Pitre, both of whom have been great encouragers along the way; and also to Crispin Fletcher-Louis, who kindly reviewed a draft of the first half of the book and whose name is approvingly cited throughout my footnotes with almost embarrassing frequency. Philip Law also gets very honourable mention for hanging in there with me when the book became overdue (several times over).
Finally, my deepest debt of gratitude is to my immediate family: my two sons, Nathaniel and Luke, who do me so proud, and most of all, my wife Camie. After 25 years of marriage, I have never been more grateful for her unwavering love and tireless support. With fond thoughts of her cheering me over the finish line of yet another book project, I dedicate this book to her.
Wheaton, Illinois
Abbreviations
Abbreviations for the titles of ancient sources other than the Bible follow SBL conventions.
Introduction
Treasures from the scrapheap
In the provocatively titled documentary Who the *$&% Is Jackson Pollock?, we are told the story of a 73-year-old retired lorry driver named Teri Horton whose life suddenly took a very curious turn. One day while browsing in a local charity shop in California, Horton put down five US dollars cash for a large, brightly coloured painting – just the thing, she thought, to cheer up a despondent friend. When it later became obvious that the artwork wouldn’t fit inside her friend’s trailer, Horton took the painting back home and put it in front of her house in hopes of making at least a few dollars back on it. Before the day was over (with no luck moving the canvas), an art teacher happened to stroll by and mused that the piece might be the handiwork of the abstract-expressionist Jackson Pollock. Even though at the time Horton had no idea who Jackson Pollock was, she decided to follow up on the suggestion by doing a little research. To make a long story short, at least if the analysis of certain forensic art experts is to be believed, the art teacher was correct: the item was – and is – a Jackson Pollock original. The ‘trash’ Horton had purchased for $5 has since commanded offers as high as $9 million. And thus the aphorism: ‘One person’s trash is another person’s treasure.’
For the purposes of introducing the present book, the story of Teri Horton may serve as a parable. In response to the question ‘What is the kingdom of historiography like and to what should we compare it?’, one answer might go something like this: ‘It is like a woman who bought a piece of artwork from a charity shop. She thought it was insignificant, but it turned out to be treasure.’ Though not nearly as memorable as any of Jesus’ parables, such a parable just might illustrate the truth that the study of history tends to advance not so much through the fresh discovery of new data but through a fresh re-evaluation of that which has been set aside.
A tale of two Jesus scholars: Schweitzer and Bultmann
The principle certainly applies to one memorable passage from Albert Schweitzer’s 1906 classic, The Quest of the Historical Jesus. Here, in his dialogue with the Old Liberalism of Albrecht Ritschl’s school, Schweitzer takes his interlocutors to task for their neglect of Jesus traditions relating to predicted suffering. For these colleagues, lamentably so, ‘the prediction of suffering has as little to do with objective history as the prediction of the parousia’.1 Yet, according to Schweitzer, the widespread assumption of this material’s inauthenticity had more than a little to do with the fact that Jesus’ anticipation of suffering did not integrate well with the standard reconstruction of Old Liberalism:
Consequently, none of the Lives of Jesus which follow the lines of a natural psychology, from Weisse down to Oskar Holtzmann, can make anything of it. They either strike it out, or transfer it to the last ‘gloomy epoch’ of the life of Jesus, regard it as an unintelligible anticipation, or put it down to the account of ‘community theology’, which serves as a scrap-heap for everything for which they cannot find a place in the ‘historical life of Jesus’.2
With this poignant metaphor of the ‘scrap-heap’, powerfully descriptive as it is penetratingly insightful, Schweitzer explains how and why the nineteenth-century Lives had sanitized the ‘Jesus story’ of suffering. At the turn of the twentieth century, Schweitzer had the perspicacity to recognize that the discussion surrounding the historical Jesus had been unduly constrained by a Kantian idealism which left little room for such larger-than-life portraits of Jesus, dripping with dark premonitions and gloomy experiences. Even if Ritschl’s heirs could find it within their hearts to grant authenticity to these foreboding streaks on the canvas of the Gospels, they wouldn’t know what to make of them. Steeped in their zeitgeist, such thinkers did not have the categories for even countenancing the possibility that Jesus’ experience and anticipation of suffering were actually the very method of his madness.
Parting company with his interlocutors at this juncture, just as he had parted ways with Old Liberalism’s eschatology by insisting that Jesus was indeed looking forward to the imminent transformation of the cosmos, Schweitzer assigned considerable significance to the Jewish background of the ‘Great Tribulation’. For our Alsatian author, it was precisely this anticipated event, a scenario of apostasy and suffering leading up to the messianic dawn, that explained not only Jesus’ determination to ‘turn his face towards Jerusalem’ but also his willingness to accept the grim fate awaiting him. However, as Schweitzer’s reconstruction would have it, Jesus would in the end experience sharp cognitive dissonance between his expectation of events and the reality which actually unfolded. As Jesus expires on the cross, he realizes that the much-anticipated tribulation had not climaxed in the way he had hoped. God had neither come to the rescue nor brought about the kingdom, leaving Jesus to die a disillusioned man.
But what if Schweitzer was essentially right about Jesus? What if Jesus did expect God to install a new cosmic order in a moment of crisis? How are we to reconcile this with his ethical teachings, which seem to imply their own ongoing relevance? At this juncture one might have expected Schweitzer, given his distinctive understanding of Jesus’ eschatology, to attribute the Gospels’ ethical materials to later ecclesial redaction. But instead our author boldly declares that these teachings are but an ‘interim ethic’, a kind of ad hoc measure temporarily implemented in preparation for the end of the present world order. And so: historical problem solved. But then this reconstruction creates problems of other sorts, namely, that since the ‘interim’ on Schweitzer’s scenario could have only been a matter of months, we can hardly suppose that these same makeshift norms would have had anything meaningful to say to the great moral questions of his day – much less ours. On Schweitzer’s reading, Jesus was far more interested in announcing his apocalyptic vision than in conveying a well-ordered set of moral teachings; consequently, the master’s ethical materials quickly consign themselves to theological irrelevance.
Perhaps like Shakespeare’s queen who ‘protests too much’, the initial reception of The Quest of the Historical Jesus was overwhelmingly negative; Schweitzer’s reviewers subjected his methods and conclusions to withering criticism. Today, with the luxury of more than a hundred years of hindsight, we can still agree that a number of these initial criticisms were justified. But by the same token, the clarity afforded by time has also allowed us to see that Schweitzer had become an enfant terrible in his day largely because he had, very unconventionally, smeared paint strokes on the conventional portrait of Jesus. The result was a portrait that raised serious questions about Jesus’ theological relevance. (What after all could be more irrelevant than a historical figure who was flat-out wrong in regards to his central conviction?) Equally troubling was Schweitzer’s representation of a wild and woolly, if not capricious, Jesus, one who ultimately defined himself by contingent crises, persecution and suffering. Neither good taste nor Kantian idealism had much tolerance for such things.
Notwithstanding the furore provoked by the Quest, Schweitzer’s recourse to ancient Jewish apocalyptic as a way of explaining Jesus’ vision of suffering has retained an enduring historical plausibility. The account has proven to be so plausible in fact that nine decades later N. T. Wright was able to declare that the Schweitzerstraße, one of two major avenues for twentieth-century Jesus research, was still open to considerable traffic. But the Schweitzerstraße would have never become anything more than a bramble-covered footpath, had Schweitzer not retrieved Jesus’ suffering from the scrapheap of history. Contemporary critics of Schweitzer may continue to doubt the authenticity of this piece, even as some art critics continue to doubt the authenticity of Horton’s alleged Pollock, but no matter. The point has been made and is still very much on the table, awaiting further discussion. A critical mass of Jesus scholars have come to agree that suffering occupied a prominent place in Jesus’ consciousness, but we have not sufficiently explored why.
The great Rudolf Bultmann was among the next generation of Jesus scholars obliged to engage Schweitzer’s thesis directly or indirectly. Publishing his Theology of the New Testament a half-century and two world wars after Schweitzer’s epic contribution, Bultmann was convinced of an apocalyptic Jesus in principle, but was careful to stipulate – against his predecessor’s thoroughgoing apocalypticism – that Jesus’ vision really pertained neither to the end of the current order nor to the ushering in of new political realities. Instead, on his reconstruction, Jesus had transposed the apocalyptic moment into a call for decision, requiring the individual to stand before God in a posture of absolute dependence and radical obedience. In taking this approach, Bultmann was attempting to distance himself from two fronts. Against, on the one side, the Jesus of Old Liberalism, depicted now by the likes of Adolf von Harnack (for whom the kingdom was largely a matter of personal formation) or Walter Rauschenbusch (for whom the kingdom was a renewed social-political order), the Marburger insisted that the historical Jesus’ message was characteristically apocalyptic; against, on the other side, those who like Schweitzer emphasized Jesus’ apocalypticism, he was equally firm that the synoptic reports of Jesus’ rabbinic-style ethical concerns could not have very well been tacked on by the same Church which declared him as Risen Christ. Yet like Schweitzer, Bultmann also believed that the only finally convincing account of the historical Jesus was one which maintained a basic unity between his eschatology and his ethics. Such unity was forthcoming, so he argued, on the premise that all of Jesus’ ethical teachings were eschatological in the sense that they were backed by the timeless demand of God on the individual. Thus, for Bultmann the existential crisis remained paramount: ‘All that man can do in the face of the Reign of God now breaking in is this: Keep ready or get ready for it. Now is the time of decision, and Jesus’ call is the call to decision’.3
Though Bultmann would also eventually distance himself from his friend and Marburg colleague Martin Heidegger, the former’s emphasis on individual decision had been much influenced by the latter. In the period between the wars, the sense of alienation generated by overwhelming socio-economic and political forces spawned the felt need for a fresh philosophical assertion of human freedom, much as Heidegger’s existentialist philosophy was able to provide. Now, in his post-war Theology of the New Testament, Bultmann sought to apply the same existential grid to Jesus. This was plausible at first blush simply because, as our author points out, the Gospel records are replete with indications that Jesus was constantly calling his hearers to decide. And although the call to ethical decision was certainly not absent from Old Liberalism’s moral suasion theories of Jesus, these accounts did not come close to explaining, as Bultmann had so magnificently done, the sense of urgent crisis pervading the dominical materials. Like Schweitzer before him, Bultmann had at least recognized the inherent persuasiveness of a vision that could do justice to the breadth – apocalyptic and sapiential wisdom material alike – of the synoptic tradition. But in order to achieve such a vision, it would be necessary to rescue not Jesus’ suffering but his call for decision from the scrapheap of history. Once again: one Jesus scholar’s trash is another Jesus scholar’s treasure.
In offering their respective unified theories of the Jesus traditions, both Schweitzer and Bultmann were each in their own way attempting to resolve what is perhaps the central problem of historical Jesus studies: the tension between Jesus as sage (speaker of universal truths) and Jesus as apocalyptic prophet (predictor of future cataclysmic events). We barely need to restate the problem. If the historical Jesus’ principal concern was ethics, how could his moral teaching have been conceivably informed by the end of the space–time continuum (unless we are to suppose, lamely, that Jesus lingered on these looming eschatological realities merely to convey a little extra urgency)? Conversely, if Jesus’ main interest was in the apocalypse, then what lasting relevance could there have been in moral ruminations? While one common strategy (before and after the period of Schweitzer and Bultmann) for solving this dilemma has been to assign the apocalyptic material to one stage in the formation of the synoptic tradition and the sapiential material to another, neither writer was willing to go this route. (Perhaps they both sensed the inevitable circularity of an argument which conveniently escapes through the back door of a traditions-history argument wherever the paradigm incurs counter-indications.) For his part, Schweitzer’s solution to this dilemma was to reframe Jesus’ ethical message as a subsidiary crater of the imminent eschatological crisis, an event which finally turned out to be the great non-event. By contrast, Bultmann’s solution was to redefine (demythologize) the eschatological moment as the everlastingly present moment, which had the effect of severing moral reflection from one’s location in the time–space continuum. Despite coming to radically different conclusions regarding the nature of Jesus’ programme, both Schweitzer and Bultmann instinctively sensed that the best solution to the problem posed by the ethics and eschatology of Jesus is one which effectively integrates both.
Schweitzer and Bultmann revisited
The present book is, among other things, an attempt to revisit the same integrative project undertaken by Schweitzer and Bultmann. In doing so, I propose to retrieve certain components of their reconstructions, components which, though seemingly now right back on the scrapheap in more contemporary Jesus scholarship, deserve serious reconsideration. For the purposes of my project, I look to each writer in two respects. First, with Schweitzer I intend to take seriously the crucial importance of the tribulation within the self-understanding of the historical Jesus. Second, again alongside Schweitzer, I will entertain the possibility that Jesus was not so much interested in promulgating a universal norm (‘universal’ in the sense of being true at all times, for all persons and in all places) but rather in conveying an ethical message which, though eventually lending itself well to being principalized in different directions, was in the first instance intended to apply to the specific conditions occasioned by the tribulation. Issued as a guide for negotiating the current trials in the current eschatological crisis, Jesus’ teachings were fundamentally eschatological in nature. Third, with Bultmann I will agree that Jesus’ message implicated its hearers in a crisis of decision, demanding urgent response. The very nature of his challenge, implicit in his teachings, left no room for aloof detachment or hedging deferment: the time was now. Fourth and finally, again with the author of Theology of the New Testament, I will maintain that this enjoined decision was a totalizing and self-involving decision. Jesus’ instruction was not offered as a bit of for-what-it’s-worth advice but a call for absolute self-surrender. The only platform for working out that self-surrender was the controversial, even socially scandalous, community now taking shape around Jesus.
So much for my disclosed points of agreement with Schweitzer and Bultmann, but there are also critical junctures at which I will also disagree. First, Schweitzer’s account of tribulation is far too rough and unpolished a fixture to function properly within Jesus’ mental apparatus. While this book does not undertake a thorough critique of Schweitzer on this point, it can be said for now that there is no evidence that ancient Judaism coupled tribulation and divine intervention with the same chronological tightness that Schweitzer’s Jesus did.4 Consequently, to make my second point, as ingenious as Schweitzer’s theory of the ‘interim ethic’ may be, it turns out to be entirely unnecessary. I can agree that ‘interim ethics’ may be a fitting description for Jesus’ moral teachings, so long as we can stay flexible on the duration of ‘interim’, which for Jesus was an indefinite period. Third, whereas I agree with Bultmann on the critical nature of Jesus’ call for decision, I will disagree on the substance of that decision. Against the Marburger, who believed that both Jesus’ call and the enlisted response were individualized transactions easily abstracted from the historical context, I maintain that Jesus’ call to decision was his summons to join his society, with its own distinctive ways of thinking and doing. True, Jesus’ invitation was extended to the individual, but it was an invitation which demanded as an initial step personal solidarity with a specific social reality, the Jesus movement itself. Fourth, on a related note, though Bultmann’s Jesus has far more to say about the individual’s vertical commitments than their horizontal commitments, I believe that the historical Jesus’ conception of absolute surrender had a vertical and a horizontal aspect, demanding that self-surrender unto God be expressed through self-surrender unto the community – and vice versa. The notional intersection between these axes was nothing less than the vocation Jesus imposed.
Gleaning the most promising insights of both Schweitzer and Bultmann, while setting aside the less promising, I intend to renew their project of integrating eschatology and ethics. The key to this integration begins by describing Jesus in priestly terms. By stating that Jesus was ‘priestly’, I am not proposing that he laid claim to an officially sanctioned Levitical or Zadokite or Hasmonean office, but rather that he represented himself as taking on certain priestly functions notwithstanding his lack of conventional qualifications. These functions pointed to the onset of a divinely initiated process through which Jesus would become and in some sense already had become the eschatological high priest.
In maintaining Jesus’ sacerdotal self-understanding, I do not rule out the possibility that he also thought of himself as a prophet and messianic king. Indeed, although I won’t take the time to make a thorough argument to this effect, in my view – as will become clear – it is highly likely that Jesus considered himself to be both. My relative neglect of the messianic category in particular is not meant to indicate its relative (un)importance in Jesus’ mind. Yet I am writing this book to offset a particular problem: while scholars will regularly sling around terms like ‘messiah’ or ‘messianic’, and then unselfconsciously shift over to seemingly interchangeable terms like ‘king’ or ‘royal’, we still have hardly begun to elucidate how the Jewish messianic concept, variegated as it was, brought together the royal aspects and priestly aspects. To anticipate myself, I am convinced that in many a first-century mind the ultimate significance of the promise of Davidic restoration lay not in its implications of political autonomy (as important as autonomy might be) but in its cultic entailments, for as pressing as the problem of Roman occupation might have been, even more acute was the festering defilement of the temple. Along the same lines, in the imagination of the first-century pious, the final significance of the expected messiah was not in his vanquishing of Israel’s political foes (again, as important as this piece might have been) but in his renewing of temple space. The point is hardly extraordinary. I trust it will come as no shock when I suggest that the Jews of Jesus’ day did not stand in the streets of Jerusalem, chanting the Aramaic equivalent of ‘Liberty, Equality, Fraternity’. Likewise, I hope that it would not be the height of scandal if I were to suggest that ancient Israel never held out political autonomy as a moral end unto itself. For Israel the point was not political autonomy but its chief concomitants: a politically unified theocracy unburdened by the authority and ideology of foreign gods – crucial pieces for a finally functioning temple. As important as Jesus’ royal messianic aspect may be, the evidence suggests that he subordinated his royal identity to his primary identity as priest. Jesus sought to implement not a theocracy but a hierocracy under the God of Israel.
A few notes of explanation
For those conversant with contemporary historical Jesus studies, the account which I am proposing – if not the very title of this book, Jesus the Priest – may come as something of a surprise. After all, while Jesus’ self-consciousness of his messiahship has been both touted and denied, neither the affirmers nor the deniers on this issue have been generally willing to identify Jesus in priestly terms. ‘Jesus as priest’ may be a well-worn concept for students of the biblical book of Hebrews; not so much for those in the historical Jesus trade. For this reason, even in writing this book, I confess to feeling a little like Paul on the way to the Areopagus (Acts 17), half-expecting that some half-incredulous readers will pick up the book whispering to themselves, ‘What is this babbler trying to say?’, while others will consider my basic argument with a critical open-mindedness, as if to say, ‘May we know what this new teaching is that you are presenting?’ But in arguing for Jesus as a priest, I am not so much making a brand-new argument as making an argument that has not yet, for whatever reason, received the traction that it’s due.
With that in mind, it may be helpful to speak not only to the context of the present project, but also to certain contemporary socio-historical contexts that may help us better understand a ‘whatever reason’ here and there. In writing the current book, I am offering the second instalment of a three-volume trilogy. In the anticipated third book, Jesus the Sacrifice, I intend to explore Jesus’ death and the meaning – to tip my hand on this point already – which Jesus assigned to it. I mention this as part of a caveat: while some readers of the present tome may be frustrated by my occasional use of words like ‘atonement’ without fully explaining what I mean, I beg their patience ahead of time with the good hopes of their seeing the full case face to face in volume three. Meanwhile, in my earlier book Jesus the Temple (2010), I advanced a case similar to but not identical with the one being made here. To summarize the first book in this trilogy, I argued that the Jesus movement was a counter-temple movement whose most defining moment occurred with the so-called cleansing of the temple. In addition, I maintained that various activities characteristically attributed to Jesus in the tradition, including exorcism, healings and feedings, are best interpreted as counter-temple activities. While the present volume is a continuation of the project which began with Jesus the Temple, my argument here does not materially depend on the arguments marshalled there. Making minimal recourse to the first volume, Jesus the Priest offers a different argument on a different trove of evidence. As will become clear enough to readers of Jesus the Temple, the present book also retains a somewhat different thrust and methodology. In terms of scope of materials, the principal difference between this book and its predecessor is that while the earlier volume focused primarily on Jesus’ actions, the current book concerns itself more with Jesus’ words (with the exception of Chapter 2 which focuses on Jesus’ baptism, in which case we are dealing with the alleged voice from heaven). In terms of focus, while Jesus the Temple was principally concerned with Jesus’ quest for renewed sacred space, this present volume will attend more to how he and his followers self-consciously functioned as proleptic priests within that quest. I would like to think of the two books as complementary, sometimes overlapping but far from redundant.
That the essential argument of Jesus the Temple has been reviewed but unrebutted, I trust, provides initial warrant for the basic premise of Jesus the Priest. But as I have already hinted, in taking up this line of argument I am hardly standing alone in the field. Others have written persuasively on this topic. For some, the particulars of their arguments and/or their conclusions are somewhat different from mine; for others, the overlaps are quite close.5 Still others have written on the topic and I share many of their judgements. Perhaps like Teri Horton, who was emboldened by the musings of an art teacher passing by, I too have been encouraged by the musings of other scholars who are now seeing many of the same things I have been seeing. In writing this book, as well as its prequel, I am hoping to set out (for many) a new and (for some) an unusual portrait of Jesus for both a semi-popular readership and the guild alike.
Even so, perhaps an explanatory word or two is in order as to why the particular angle I am exploring appears to be such a novum. I think there are a number of complex reasons for this, but I will try my hand at naming a few of them. In the first place, I believe that ancient Judaism’s long-overdue makeover, set into motion by E. P. Sanders’ Paul and Palestinian Judaism and continuing in discussions surrounding the New Perspective on Paul, has yet to make its full impact on historical Jesus studies.6 If Sanders insisted that the twentieth-century study of Paul had been warped by its reliance on inaccurate and fundamentally anti-Judaistic portrayals of ancient Judaism, the sub-discipline of Pauline studies seems to have heard the implicit call to repentance. In recent years, I notice that when the same set of concerns is raised in historical Jesus studies, it regularly appears in connection with allegations of supersessionism or replacement theology, that is, a reconstruction which envisions the Church as a replacement for Israel. While I have been accused by at least one reviewer of peddling a form of supersessionism in publishing Jesus the Temple (and may perhaps receive the same criticism in relation to Jesus the Priest), I dispute the charge but nevertheless find a certain irony in the fact that it has been the anti-Judaistic tendencies latent within so much twentieth-century scholarship that has long impeded the very thesis I am seeking to advance. Here we need to go no further than Bultmann’s above-discussed Theology of the New Testament, where he not uncharacteristically writes:
Polemic against the temple cult is completely absent from the words of Jesus. As a matter of fact it, too, had essentially lost its original meaning in his time; for Judaism was no longer a cultic religion, but had become a religion of observance.7
With the disparaging phrase ‘religion of observance’ Bultmann of course means that Judaism had devolved to a religion of meaningless externalities. Accordingly, the day-to-day operations of the cult and the life of the temple had become nothing more than a trifling legal formality – and therefore virtually irrelevant not only to many pious Jews who deserve better but also to Jesus himself (good neo-Kantian that he was). Sentiments such as Bultmann’s are exactly the kind of thing Sanders has in mind when he draws up his excoriating and broad-sweeping indictment. But sentiments such as these also explain why the vast bulk of Jesus scholarship has neglected the temple, despite clear indications in the Second-Temple literature of its utmost significance, in its reconstruction of Jesus. Is it going too far to suggest that the current disregard of Israel’s cultus within contemporary Jesus studies is at least indirectly related to the anti-Judaistic (and therefore anti-cultic) paradigm instantiated in Bultmann? I think not. For my part, I believe, hope and trust that the current project actually stands near the culmination of guild-wide effort to escape the (conscious or unconscious) anti-Judaism of our academic forebears and to allow Jesus to be a fully fledged Jew of his time.
If anti-Judaistic thinking has been one of the scandalous skeletons in New Testament scholarship’s closet, the other remaining set of bones – and perhaps, to cite Philip Jenkins’ title, ‘the last acceptable prejudice’ – is the anti-Catholic tenor of the last two hundred years of Protestant-dominated scholarship.8 This point, I think, is commonly enough observed that it hardly needs demonstrating.9 As a Protestant scholar, I suspect that much of the inertia surrounding Jesus’ interest in the cultic has at least something to do with Protestants’ characteristic disinterest in the same topic. I am not alone in this suspicion. In her book Anti-Cultic Theology in Christian Biblical Interpretation: A Study of Isaiah 66:1–4 and Its Reception, Valerie A. Stein speaks to this point when she comments how it is
evident that Protestant anti-cultic theology is reflected in interpretations of Isa 66:1–4 in the Modern Era, including in historical-critical scholarship. The anti-cultic attitude is rooted in the theology of Martin Luther. Protestant scholars have dominated modern biblical scholarship until recently. This is especially true for German scholarship of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, which is still influential today. Aversion to ritual dominates this scholarship. Sometimes these attitudes take the form of a preference for prophetic and Deuteronomistic material (which is often identified closely with Christianity) over Priestly material (which is identified with Judaism).10
Stein’s remarks pertaining to the reception history of Isaiah 66 may perhaps, with only slight modification, be extended to the modern-day quest of the historical Jesus. Is it far-fetched to imagine that, despite all its pretensions of scientific objectivity, Protestant-dominated Jesus research for the past two hundred years has unconsciously yet systemically downplayed Jesus’ priestly aspect? Hardly. If studies show that business recruiters tend to hire people like themselves again and again, Protestant Jesus scholars have likewise been unconsciously attracted to a very Protestant Jesus again and again.
As readers we can hardly extract ourselves from our own social locations, but with a little self-awareness we can at least put some critical distance between our scholarship and our culturally conditioned biases, just as we can reflect self-critically on our pre-theoretical assumptions. Call me naive, but I am enough of a modernist to believe that, with a measure of intellectual honesty, escape from solipsism remains possible. As responsible readers of history, we are not entirely doomed to the vicious circle of our self-referential universe. My hope in writing this book is no different from the hope of any author: that its readers will be able to set aside constraining prejudices (not least anti-Catholic and anti-Judaistic biases) and judge its merits by the overall strength of the argument.
A word on method
At the present moment, many sense that the quest of the historical Jesus is lurching towards a cul-de-sac which will soon be requiring us to wheel around and try a different route. The present impasse is both methodological and substantive, fraught with unresolved issues involving criteria and interpretative judgements, stymied by controverted questions of ‘How can we know?’ and ‘What do we know?’ Confidence in the once tried-and-true tools of critical scholarship has eroded; conventional methodologies, like an old bridge failing the engineers’ annual inspection, are no longer being trusted to bear the evidentiary load they once had carried.11 For some, such developments sound like the final tolling of the bells for historical Jesus scholarship. I demur. As long as we can agree that Jesus of Nazareth existed in time and space, we should continue to work towards a mutually