Let me begin by acknowledging a certain hesitation in addressing this topic. I stand in
the Christian tradition. What am I doing talking about Jewishness? I contemplated changing
the title of my talk to, ’Jesus, not a non-Jew.’ Furthermore I am aware that in
addressing such a topic within the context of Jewish-Christian dialogue I cannot and must
not avoid the broader context and history which surrounds the issue.
In many cultures formal gatherings begin with a Moment of grief and remembrance of the
dead. That is appropriate here. For we are addressing a topic which in some hands became the
ground for hatred of Jews and found its most horrific manifestation in the holocaust. That
pain belongs to the truth, as does the corporate guilt which I share as a member of a
tradition which has fostered its cause. Yet that tradition also leads me to repentance and
the search for truth.
I approach the topic, ’Jesus, the Jew,’ as an historian.2
In particular I approach it as an historian of the early Christian writings, commonly called
the New Testament of the Christian Bible, and of the social, cultural and religious world in
which these writings emerged. I have just completed a major study, entitled, ’Jesus’
Attitude towards the Law. A Study of the Gospels’3
and another aimed at a broader reading public, entitled, ’Jesus and the Fundamentalism of
his Day.’4
Where does one begin? What are our sources for discussing Jesus, the Jew? Our primary
sources are the Christian gospels. Those of most historical value for our purpose are the
four included in the Christian Bible, the Gospels according to Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.
In addition, the modern historian takes into account the Gospel of Thomas, a second-century
gospel containing sayings of Jesus, many of which preserve early tradition. The Christian
gospels began to emerge in the fourth decade after Jesus’ death. Except for a brief
prologue which some have, they preserve collections of anecdotes and sayings strung together
within a narrative framework of less than a year, in the case of Matthew, Mark and Luke, and
three years in the case of John. Each gospel reflects careful authorship, often adept
literary skill, but also ideological perspectives informed by the Christian faith of
particular church communities and their concerns.
By observing the way the authors of Matthew and Luke rewrote Mark, we can appreciate both
the conservative nature of the process of transmission and the way in which it nevertheless
led to changes, sometimes subtle, sometimes radical. What they, writing in the 80s did with
Mark, we must assume, Mark in the late 60s or early 70s did with his sources, and they in
turn with theirs, back through forty years. This makes it difficult to reconstruct the exact
wording of Jesus’ saying and, at times, even to know whether what we have before us is
historical at all or part of the creative processes of the tradition. The quest for the
historical Jesus and the quest for the historical contemporaries of Jesus, his fellow Jews,
are alike fraught with difficulty. Both pictures are coloured by subsequent events. The
historian must weigh each unit of material critically and do so in dialogue with others
pursuing the same critical endeavour, of which there are not a few! Here, there are no
shortcuts, whether inspired by dogmatic assertions of historical worth or by speculative
reconstructions based on pesher codes or journalistic endeavour.
Sometimes the creative work of the bearers of the Jesus tradition is relatively plain for
all to see. Thus much of John’s gospel takes on the character of a stage play in which
Jesus as the leading character voices the faith of the community; and his opponents, that of
the community’s opponents. Yet the same is the case in all the gospels. It is all a matter
of degree. And, similarly, in all there is material of doubtless historical worth, including
in the Gospel of John.
Our information about Jesus, the Jew, must, therefore, be evaluated in the light of the
literary and historical context of the gospels. It must also be evaluated in the light of
wider sources about the world of the time, especially the religious, social and cultural
world of Palestine in the first century. Here again we face the challenge of evaluating
sources. The tannaitic traditions of the Mishnah and Tosefta and of early midrashim
face the same rigorous inquiry as the gospels: it is not necessarily to be assumed that
attributions preserved from the end of the second century onwards about alleged sayings and
rulings of pre-70 Judaism are accurate. Here, too, there are no shortcuts which enable us to
leap back over a hundred and thirty years. Yet there is little doubt that many of the
traditions are much earlier than the time of the Mishnah’s compilation and reflect
life and values already present before the destruction of the Temple.
Recent decades have uncovered or recovered a rich array of Jewish writings which emanate
from the first century of the current era and before. Beside the mighty corpus of Philo and
Josephus, and the various testaments, treatises, tales, and apocalyptic works which have
long been known, we now have the diverse library of manuscripts found at Qumran on the Dead
Sea. Archaeology also plays a significant role, especially when combined with demographic,
economic and sociological studies. We now know much more about Galilee and Judea than had
been known to previous generations. Some of this depends on new information; some depends on
looking at old information in new ways. One need only mention the new appreciation of the
impact of Hellenisation in Palestine or the complexity of social and political movements of
the time. The rather oversimplified analysis of pre-70 Judaism into three major sects or
parties, Sadducees, Pharisees, Essenes (and, as a fourth, Zealots), has given way to the
realisation that even within these there was considerable diversity and beyond them as well.
At the same time there has been a growing appreciation of the social and cultural systems of
the Mediterranean world, which goes far beyond a focus on individuals, as if they stood in
some sense independently of their world.5
This is and appropriate door through which to enter our discussion of Jesus, the Jew.
There is no dispute about Jesus’ ethnicity, nor about the fact that he grew up in Galilee.
He was a northern Jew, probably descended from those Jews settled by the Hasmoneans in the
region a century earlier. Unlike many of his contemporaries, such as Philip and Andrew,
Jesus bore a Jewish name: Yeshua, short for Yehoshua. Family names indicate a strong
commitment to Israel’s traditions: brothers Jacob (James), Joseph (Joses), Judas or Jude
(Judah), Simon, and father, Joseph, mother, Mary/Miriam.6
Even without knowing more than this we may assume that Jesus and his family were
observant of Torah, paid tithes, kept the Sabbath, circumcised their males, attended the
synagogue, observed relevant purity laws concerning foods, upheld days of purification in
relation to childbirth and menstruation, kept the dietary code and one could go on to all
the other elements of the Torah which applied to daily life. While the Christian gospels
record disputes about Jesus’ interpretation of a few of these, and to these we shall
return, we are doubtless on safe ground in assuming that Jesus, like his family, was
observant. In such close-knit societies disregard would have stood out. We would have heard
about it. Matthew even tells us that Jesus wore tassels as a mark of commitment to Law
observance and certainly believed Mark had indicated the same. The notion of a Christian
Jesus, who did not live by Torah or only by its ethical values, does not fit historical
realities. Jesus was, first and foremost a Jew, an insider; indeed, I suggest, if anything,
fairly conservative.
I believe that some anecdotes preserved in the gospel writings corroborate this analysis.7
Confronted by a Gentile woman, a Syrophoenician wanting help for her daughter, Jesus’
first response is: “Let the children be fed first! It is not right to take the
children’s bread and throw it to the dogs.” (Mark 7:27). Mark is not embarrassed to
mention this because he goes on to show that the wily woman persuaded Jesus to drop the
barriers and respond to her need. A similarly conservative reaction appears when a leper
crashes through the established barriers and pleads at Jesus’ feet for healing (1:40-44).
One of our earliest manuscripts reports that Jesus was enraged (1:41 D) and all agree he
sent the man off gruffly to the priest with the reminder that he make the prescribed
offering (1:43). His offence at being touched by the woman with the flow of blood (Mark
5:25-34) probably reflected his sensitivity about her uncleanness in the earlier form of the
story. His response to the Gentile centurion wanting help for his son is initially
off-putting: “Am I to come and heal him?” (Matt 8:7). That is why the centurion responds
immediately by confessing his unworthiness, “I am not worthy for you to come under my
roof.” He sensed Jesus’ hesitation and understood why. Luke has Peter have the same
reaction in the days of the early church and it takes heavenly intervention to persuade him
otherwise. Jesus responds to the man’s pleas, but even so, as with the Syrophoenician
woman, he does not enter the Gentile house.
These are not typical Jewish responses of the time. They are perhaps typical conservative
Jewish responses. It is remarkable that they have been preserved. The same conservatism is
reflected to some degree in Jesus’ command to his disciples that they not enter Samaritan
territory or venture into Gentile areas in their mission (Matt 10:5-6). He saw his own
mission and theirs as one ’to the lost sheep of Israel’. When Matthew reworks Mark’s
story about the Syrophoenician woman (Matt 15:21-28; cf. Mark 7:24-30), he explains Jesus’
attitude in exactly these words, “I am sent only to the lost sheep of the house of
Israel” (Matt 15:24). And to reinforce the point, Matthew describes the woman as
Canaanite! Luke preserves a similar attitude. The celebrated repentance of Zacchaeus, the
tax collector, who made fourfold restitution for his misdeeds, receives Jesus’ accolade:
“Today salvation has come to this house” (Luke 19:9). The words which follow are
revealing: “For he also is a son of Abraham.”
The fact that Jesus focussed only on his fellow Jews also makes good sense of subsequent
history, where the first Christians had to grapple with whether to expand their horizons or
not and then on what basis. This became a problem because Jesus had made it clear that his
mission was to Israel. What was this task? When we address Jesus’ task, we begin to see a
pattern or framework of thought, which probably even had a place for Gentiles in time. One
might think of Jesus’ task as that of a healer. After all, most of the incidents I have
mentioned thus far are of that nature. The anecdote which tells us that John the Baptist
inquired about Jesus’ role has Jesus respond by describing his healing activity. Even
allowing for the exaggerations and embroidery which inevitably accompany heroes, there is
little doubt that Jesus was acknowledged as a faith healer and exorcist, whether positively
or negatively. Faith-healers and exorcists were rare but not unknown in the prophetic and
charismatic traditions of Israel as also among other peoples.
Yet Jesus apparently saw such activity within a broader perspective. In an era of unrest
and oppression, even if sometimes simply quiet and dull oppression or compromised by the
relief of survival, there was a variety of responses to what were seen as forces which were
not of God, especially political rulers. Many people longed for Israel’s liberation. Luke
is probably not far from the mark, when he depicts devout Jews praying in the Temple for a
reversal of Israel’s fortunes, the casting down of the mighty and the lifting up of the
poor (Luke 1-2). Jesus belonged to John the Baptist’s school, at least, his school of
thought. John announced that God would bring the world to judgement and call Israel to
account. People should realise this, submit themselves to God’s judgement, and show they
mean it by letting themselves be submerged in the Jordan River. The Jordan was a turning
point in more ways than one. Such baptisms marked a new beginning. Jesus had himself
baptized. Of this fact there is little doubt. He, too, submitted to God’s judgement and
promise.
The gospel traditions tell us that this event suddenly turned the thirty-year-old into a
spirit-filled prophet proclaiming God’s message and performing acts of liberation through
healing. This was his mission. In the first three gospels this idealised scene signals the
end of John’s ministry and the beginning of Jesus’ work. John’s gospel has them work
as contemporaries for a period. Whatever the historical reality, the encounter with John is
highly significant for understanding Jesus the Jew. John hadat wnfronted the apathy of those
who rested on their status as Abraham’s children and did not keep the Law. He called for
serious change. Jesus was similarly confrontational and similarly demanding. God’s Law
remained. There was to be no tinkering with even the tiniest stroke of a letter.
Matthew is probably right when he shows Jesus going out of his way to allay suspicions
that he in any way sought to undermine the Law (5:17-19). Matthew has him on the attack,
like John, against people who watered the Law down. The much-celebrated contrasts which
Matthew’s Jesus creates (5:21-48) were not contrasts between what the Law taught and what
he taught, but between the way people had been hearing the Law and what it really meant.
Thus like other great Jewish teachers of his time and later, Jesus railed not only against
murder but against anger and hatred; not only against adultery, but against lustful
exploitation of women. Like some of the stricter teachers of his day he attacked oaths and
divorce. In this he called for an even higher morality than Torah demanded, just as did the
writers of the Temple Scroll and the teachers of Qumran. It is as misleading to see these
strictures as abrogating Torah on the part of Jesus as it would be to accuse the Qumran
radicals of the same.
It is also clear that Jesus espoused an attitude towards Torah which we might describe as
affirming a hierarchy of values. He found agreement with a scribe in affirming that the
greatest command was to love God and the second to love one’s neighbour (Mark 12:28-34).
These mattered more than all the sacrifices one might offer. The Psalms and the prophets had
already affirmed this. Luke tells a number of stories which underline the same point. The
way to life is to keep the commandments and that means learning to be a neighbour to those
in need, like the good Samaritan (10:25-37). In an image of heaven and hell, Abraham bemoans
the failure of people to heed the call for compassion towards the poor (16:28-31).
Mark preserves an anecdote according to which a rich man approached Jesus on the issue of
the way to inherit eternal life (10:17-22). The encounter is instructive and doubtless
reflects an historical incident. Addressed as “Good teacher,” Jesus immediately refuses
the compliment: “Why do you call me good. No one is good except one: God.” You can hear
echoes of the Shema. What is Jesus’ answer to the man’s quest? “You know the
commandments!” Mark tells us that Jesus looked on the man with affection when he declared
that since his youth he had kept the commandments. But then Jesus’ reply exposes a radical
flaw. Challenged to sell his goods and give them to the poor and Join Jesus, the man gives
up and goes away sad. It was not that Jesus was adding to the commandments or demanding he
convert. Jesus’ challenge exposed the man’s failure to grasp what underlies the
commandments: compassion for the needy. Keeping right practices to the letter means nothing
if there is no compassion. Jesus wanted people to follow him on this. But as a teacher, not
even as a ’good teacher’, because God was the centre of things.
It is interesting to find Jesus sometimes on the warpath like John against malpractice.
He attacks hypocrisy (Mark 38-40; Luke 11:37-52). He attacks leaders who put on a show,
exploit the poor, the widows. Like John and like the prophets, he warns of impending
disaster if people forsake the ways of God. It will lead to the destruction of the Temple,
he warns (Mark 13; Luke 13:34-35). That matters because the Temple is God’s house (Mark
11:17; John 2:16). John speaks of Jesus’ zeal for the Temple (John 2:17). It will lead to
his downfall, as we shall see. Jesus did not attack the Temple in itself or the sacrifices,
any more than had the prophets before him.
God’s things were to be given to God and that doubtless included tithes (Mark 12:17).
But he attacked some people for being preoccupied with tithing minute quantities of herbs,
indeed some that the Mishnah explicitly exempts, while neglecting justice and the
love of God. But it is interesting how that confrontation ends. Referring to such values and
to tithing of minutiae he declares: ’These you ought to have kept while not neglecting
those’ (Matt 23:23: Luke 11:42). That is, he affirms such tithing, nevertheless.
Jesus’ demands set him in continuity with John. With John he shares the belief that
people must be accountable and will face divine judgement. He even appears to share John’s
view that such judgement must be near at hand. But it is at this point that we discern also
differences. The little we have of John’s teaching and preaching focuses on judgement. In
Jesus’ teaching the climax of history is mostly portrayed in much more promising terms.
Jesus employs the biblical visions of hope, especially from Isaiah. ’How beautiful on the
mountains are the feet of the one who proclaims to Zion: Your God reigns’ (52:7). The
exiles looked to that glorious day. That glorious vision inspired Jesus. Poor Israel is to
hear this good news. “Blessed are you poor for yours is the kingdom of God; blessed are
you who hunger for you shall be filled; blessed are you who weep; you shall laugh!” (Luke
6:20-21).
Images of a great feast, of joy and laughter, of harvest and plenty, abound in Jesus’
teaching. He proclaimed the biblical hope: God is going to set up his kingdom. Life will be
transformed. Israel’s children will flock together from all points of the compass and
feast together with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom (Matt 8:11; Luke 13:28-29). Even
his choice of twelve disciples reflects the Jewishness of his hope: twelve disciples, twelve
tribes. Israel would grow as a tree. Perhaps he also shared the common hope so beautifully
portrayed in the Psalms of Solomon that the Gentiles, too, would flock to join Israel in the
worship of God (PsSol 17). There they would find a nesting place. Perhaps there is a hint of
this in the birds finding shade under the mustard bush (Mark 4:32; cf. Luke 13:19).
When Jesus of Nazareth left John and entered the populated areas of lower Galilee to
proclaim his message, he was reflecting this new optimism about the future. The kingdom of
God, God’s reign was at hand (Mark 1:14-15). Like the Kaddish prayer, the prayer he
taught his followers included the petition that God’s kingdom would soon be established:
“Your kingdom come!” (Luke 11:2; Matt 6:10). The Joy of expectation spilled over into
the present waiting, so that the present itself became caught up into the reality of the
hope. But there was more to it than that. Jesus appears to have identified his own
achievements and task as belonging to God’s strategy for the introduction of the kingdom.
Here is where he placed his miracles and acts of exorcism. Performed in the power of
’s spirit, they were indications of the triumph over evil and pain that was to come. “If
I by the finger of God cast out demons, then the kingdom of God has come upon you” (Matt
12:28; Luke 11:20).
Not only Jesus’ healing activity, also his radical exposition of God’s law belonged
within the context of his vision of the future. In a way this was what one might expect. If
you long for what will be God’s triumph at the end, then you will surely want to see that
triumph already becoming reality in the present. The vision of future peace finds its echo
in Jesus’ teaching about trust. It challenged the worrying about food and shelter and
pointed to the idyllic life of the lily of the fields and the birds of nature (Luke
12:22-32; Matt 6:25-34). While Jesus appears to have drawn heavily on images from the
prophets, Isaiah, in particular, much of his teaching also consisted in appeals to popular
understanding of nature and human values. God is like a caring father who refuses to abandon
a wayward child (Luke 15:32). These are images of Israel’s sages, but they also reflect
the piety of the Psalms. Jesus was a storyteller and a user of imagery.
It is interesting that this prophetic vision of Israel’s hope functioned as an
integrative point of reference for Jesus. Not that it replaced the greatest commandment.
Rather, the God who is to be loved is the God who shares the longing for the vision to
become reality. It is a way of thinking apici God. It meant that expositions of God’s will
tend to come from that starting point rather than from a more formal deposit of authority,
such as the scripture or the laws. This puts him in the category of the charismatic teacher
rather than the biblical interpreter (cf. Mark 1:22). We see this working itself out in
Jesus’ attitudes of hospitality and joy. Whether giving hospitality or receiving it, Jesus
related to the outcast and the despised in a way which indicated their inclusion (Mark
3:13-22; Luke 7:31-35; Matt 11:16-19). The disqualified were treated like the qualified. He
understood such radical inclusion as foreshadowing the radical inclusion of all in the feast
of the kingdom. The meal became an important symbol, later stylised after his death to
become a major Christian sacrament.
In the process, Jesus appears to have engaged openly in what one might call a celebratory
lifestyle. He did not fast and subject himself to the disciplines of asceticism as had John.
He had come in from the desert. There was nothing un-Jewish about this behaviour, but it was
at least unusual and for some disturbing. His response to the criticism that he was a
glutton and a drunkard who kept bad company was to counter that wisdom would prove itself in
the long run (Luke 7:31-35; Matt 11:l6-19).
We are beginning to move towards controversy. So far nothing I have said indicates that
Jesus was un-Jewish, let alone anti-Jewish. Nor, do I believe, does any of the material
considered thus far indicate that Jesus was abandoning the faith of his people. Quite the
contrary, his vision and behaviour depended upon it. He was not the first charismatic,
prophetic figure. Not all teachers of Israel were of the scribal mould; not all were
interpreters of scripture in the stricter sense. There were sages, prophetic figures,
visionaries, revolutionaries, holy men. The rather striking emphasis on God’s coming
kingdom was not an oddity for the time. If anything, future hope was something of a
preoccupation, especially among those articulate enough to see what had gone wrong.
What did go wrong with Jesus, or with his relationship with his people? Even to put the
question in this way skews the issue. It was never as simple as that. Let me turn to some of
the conflicts in which we know Jesus become embroiled. What did they add up to? One has
already been mentioned: Jesus was not like John. Perhaps the real difficulty was between
Jesus’ followers and John’s followers. Why did Jesus not behave like John? Nothing in
scripture said one must behave like John. This was not a matter of observance.
Yet the issue was confused by the fact that Jesus appears to have intentionally mixed not
just with the needy but with the rich (who were widely recognised as criminal or, at least,
immoral), among whom were toll collectors and prostitutes — he was frequently their
associate and common at dinner parties. What was a person claiming to be inspired by God’s
spirit doing courting such company? Alright if this is a missionary strategy, but you seem
to be enjoying yourself! Jesus’ quip, ’The sick need a doctor, not the well’ (Mark
2:17), has something of the mission feel about it, but he was not the Salvation Army and
must have behaved in a way that left him open to the accusation that he was personally
associating with such types. This behaviour would have been abhorrent to many fellow Jews,
not least the writers of the sectarian documents of the Dead Sea Scrolls, but to many others
as well. Jesus appears to have seen such association as an expression of inclusiveness.
Formally, it broke no law of scripture, but it represented an unusual stance towards
holiness. Does compassion for people warrant exposing oneself to moral and ritual
contamination? Doubtless many of these people were lax with regard to the Law in matters of
personal purity, observance of proper tithing, avoidance of impurities. After all, these,
too, were enjoined by God. You can hardly acclaim the first commandment and ignore what God
commands!
Mark tells of an occasion when in healing a paralysed man Jesus declared his sins
forgiven (2:1-12). Christians have often read this as a claim by Jesus to forgive sins. Mark
reflects the controversy of later days in depicting Jesus’ opponents as charging him with
blasphemy. Jesus’ trial has begun. It became quite common to transpose later controversies
back into the ministry of Jesus. In the anecdote Jesus declares that the man’s sins are
forgiven. By whom? By God of course. It is the passive voice. At some stage this has been
underlined by the statement that Jesus, the Son of Man, has authority on earth to forgive
sins — like the priests, like other charismatics, like John the Baptist, who did it every
day in association with his water rite. Jesus, like John, included declaration of God’s
forgiveness in his message. The Mosaic Law does not establish a monopoly concerning who may
declare God’s forgiveness, although it was mostly something linked with the Temple.
Assurance of forgiveness forms part of the piety of the Jew who knew the psalms.
Nevertheless both John and Jesus, while not acting contrary to the Law, were somewhat
maverick. Unorthodox channels of spiritual power are uncomfortable for any religious system.
Christians know all about that and doubtless charismatic rabbis raise similar fears. Add to
this alleged miraculous powers and it is little wonder that one early recipe was to declare
that, yes, Jesus did all this, but by the power of demons. Some tried it on. Jesus replied
that it hardly made sense for a demon to prevent the undoing of demonic damage (Mark
3:22-30; Luke 11:15-22).
There were other niggles, mostly from rather extreme perspectives. One was about washing
hands before eating (Mark 7:1-21). It assumes a position according to which unclean hands
might make food unclean which might make a person unclean. That is a long shot — three
removes from the original purity and by all standards would have to be extremist. Jesus’
response is a typical quip: ’Not what enters a person makes them unclean, but what comes
out of them’ (Mark 7:15). The earthy humour of the saying is apparent if we paraphrase it
this way: ’What stinks is what comes out, not what goes in.’ It should doubtless be
understood as a contrast like: ’I desire mercy, not sacrifice’ (Hos 6:6). In other
words, purity of ethical attitude and behaviour matters more than cultic purity. But, like
the tithing of tiny herbs, it was not rubbishing either aspect of purity. Only later did
Mark and his tradition turn the words into an absolute contrast and have Jesus effectively
deny the validity of biblical purity laws. Both Matthew and Luke backed off from such a
radical stance, Luke by omitting the episode, Matthew by making it square with biblical Law
again, with the result that Jesus is rejecting only an extremist interpretation.8
There are a number of occasions when Jesus incurs criticism because of Sabbath behaviour.
The best known derives from an occasion when disciples, walking through grain fields on the
Sabbath, pluck heads of grain and eat it (Mark 2:23-28). Distance from home is not the
issue. Plucking the heads of grain might be a technical infringement, although only on the
strictest reading. Jesus’ original quip belittles the complaint: ’The Sabbath was made
for people, not people for the Sabbath!’ It was not that the disciples were in desperate
need. They appear to have been harmlessly plucking the odd head of grain and chewing it.
Jesus’ response is a theological argument which says: God’s chief concern is with people
not with rules. It is alright to relax, what is the point to fuss about such minor things.
But it is borderline and controversial. Soon other explanations came into the story to
justify the approach. So the disciples become hungry, like David and his men who ate the
showbread. Jesus has authority to declare the right interpretation (The Son of Man is lord
also of the Sabbath). Matthew and Luke both prefer to omit Jesus’ radical quip in favour
of safer renderings.
All the other Sabbath controversies entail acts of healing on the Sabbath. They are all
borderline. Why not wait a day? Why wait? “Is it lawful to do good on the Sabbath or to do
harm?” (Mark 3:4). The quip is almost mischievous, yet it makes its point. Jesus’
defence seems to have been an appeal to what is appropriate observance of the Sabbath, not
an attempt to justify non-observance. In other words it is still an inner Jewish discussion.
Only later would Christians transform Jesus’ authority to interpret into an authority to
override and discard. Mark comes near to this and certainly espouses such an understanding
in some parts. John has Jesus replace the Law’s authority altogether, reducing it to a
witness on his own behalf (1:17; 7:39). But neither Matthew nor Luke allows such an approach
to stand. Jesus observes Torah rightly and defends its intention.
A further possible ground for criticism was Jesus’ attitude towards family, wealth and
land. He appears to have challenged the hold these had on people, sometimes in very
offensive ways. For instance, he tells a would-be disciple who wants first to bury his
father to let the dead bury the dead and to follow immediately (Matt 8:22; Luke 9:60). But
we hear no dispute about it and no indication anyone would have seen it as more than Jesus
claiming a more urgent need. It was radical to suggest that family systems could stand in
the way of God’s will, but that was Jesus’ way. His own family, Mark tells us, thought
he was mad, but Jesus refused to be healed; instead declaring his family to be those who do
the will of God (Mark 3:21, 31-35; cf. Luke 4:23). Elsewhere he confronted people about
dishonouring parents (Mark 7:10-13), so there was no sense in which he was jettisoning this
commandment; he was drawing attention to the fact it must never compete with loyalty to
God’s will.
Jesus did not call all to wander in his band. But along with those who did, Jesus appears
to have been making a statement against society’s values. There was a higher priority than
wealth and land, even though these were also God’s covenant blessings. Jesus was in that
sense about as counter-cultural as the teachers of the period whom we place in the broad
category of cynics. They too scoffed at pretension, attacked hypocrisy, lived a demonstrably
simple life, used earthy images and enjoined simple trust in God. But if Jesus might fall
into this category, he does so as a Jew and one also passionate about Israel’s future.9
Thus far Jesus looks like a charismatic Jew, impassioned by a vision of God’s goodness
and love and determined to apply it in the present. He is in every generation of Jews, I
suspect. He belongs firmly at least within the range of pre-70 Judaism as I understand it.
But something went wrong. Oddly enough it appears to have had little or nothing to do with
controversies over Law observance. At least nothing in the earliest accounts of Jesus’
arrest and trial indicates that Law observance featured as a charge, despite the
compositional links which Mark seeks to forge. Both Mark and John would have us believe that
the movement against Jesus was Temple-inspired and began building momentum at an early
stage. Even so, in the end Law observance is not the issue. This is not to say that matters
of controversy would not have contributed to the unease in Jerusalem about Jesus, but we
have little to go by. I think it quite possible that Jesus, like many other charismatic
figures of the time, was a worry for the authorities. John’s gospel probably captures the
situation well in showing the high priest concerned to scotch Jesus and his movement lest
the Romans see them harbouring unrest and become more oppressive (11:47-53).
Jesus will not have won much sympathy from the religious authorities of the Temple
system. His parable of the Good Samaritan is hardly subtle in its slight on priests and
Levites who by-pass the needy man on the side of the road. But then mocking religious
authorities may well have been a common phenomenon in the resentful north and it is
certainly a sport which survives to this day wherever there is centralised authority,
political or religious. Here it was both. If John bothered them, so would Jesus for much the
same reasons, but, as Mark indicates, John was an enigma for the authorities and so perhaps
was Jesus initially (Mark 11:27-33). It is hard not to feel some sympathy with the
authorities of this time; there were so many odd bodies emerging in the wake of hope and
fervour, some apparently quite mad and others downright dangerous. But then I write in the
so-called first world.
Jesus does not appear to have held back in criticism of some of the religious
authorities, especially in cases of exploitation and hypocrisy. He was evidently appalled at
commercialisation in the Temple precincts. I think it most likely that he saw the system as
corrupt and concluded that the end must be judgement. Other Jews, like the writer of
Jubilees and the teachers at Qumran, had been convinced of that for decades, if not for over
a century. Jesus was taking John’s message to its logical conclusion and echoing the
sentiments of Jeremiah against the Temple leadership of his day.
Jesus’ action of overturning the tables of the currency exchange and chasing out the
animals for sacrifice may symbolise coming judgement or may be a spontaneous act of anger at
what they represented. It is probably misleading to seek the cause in the exchange rates
they employed or in price manipulation. Whoever placed Jeremiah’s words on Jesus’ lips,
that the Temple had become a den of thieves was doubtless not thinking of these
transactions, but of the system as a whole. It was a single sudden act in a small corner of
the huge courtyard, not even enough to warrant the watching guards to intervene, but perhaps
noted by observers. Perhaps also it was the scene where Jesus made some fateful statement
about the Temple’s destruction. Fateful because whatever could be construed as an act
against the Temple could also be construed as an act against the nation and, what is worse,
against the Roman masters. That meant death.10
Was there a trial before the Sanhedrin? John’s gospel has only an informal hearing with
Annas, the former high priest and father-in-law of Caiaphas, high priest at the time. It is
scarcely possible to unravel the complexities of the evidence relating to the last days of
Jesus in this paper. Let me identify elements which belong at the high end of the scale of
probability. Jesus was crucified under Pontius Pilate by his soldiers. But Jewish
authorities of the time were somehow involved. The most likely scenario is that the Temple
authorities found Jesus offensive and a threat because of the reaction his movement might
provoke from the Romans. At best the issue was preserving stability and relative freedom of
worship. Populist movements which could look at all seditious must be eliminated for the
sake of the people. These were real dangers. History had shown it and would show it.
The charge against Jesus on the cross and his mockery as ’King of the Jews’, his
execution between two brigands, the tradition about swapping Jesus for the brigand,
Barabbas, the appearance of the royal messianic motifs — these all suggest that Pilate
faced a man charged with sedition in general terms. Yet the failure to round up Jesus’
followers for execution indicates that his was not seen as a militant movement. He, himself,
had to be removed. It is one of the oddities of the gospel material that messiahship
features in these last days, whereas it is largely absent from the rest of the early
tradition. Only on one occasion does it come to the fore, when Jesus is reported as
accepting the acclamation, ’Messiah’, but straightaway Peter who voiced it is exposed as
misunderstanding what it was about (Mark 8:27-33). It seems unlikely that Christians
acclaimed Jesus Messiah after his death solely on the grounds that this was a false
accusation levelled against Jesus. We can only speculate that Jesus may have been willing to
have such an appellation applied to himself in the last days of his life. But it is not
reported as his concern prior to that. Even then the charge was false at one level. He was
not wanting to be what many hoped for in a Davidic Messiah.
With regard to a possible Jewish trial or hearing, it is very likely that later charges
against Christian belief have given shape to the accusations. This is very likely to be the
case on the matter of blasphemy. Claiming a kind of messiahship was not uncommon and
noidthen as blasphemous. That charge became relevant only when Christians developed their
high assessment of Jesus’ character and origin, but even in John’s gospel the charge is
vigorously defended. The issue of some kind of messiahship did most likely play a role and
fed the charge to Pilate.
The first charge mentioned, the claim to be going to destroy the Temple, is presented as
false, but thinly veils what was a valid concern. Like Jeremiah, Jesus had attacked Temple
authorities and warned of its destruction. Of this there is little doubt. As already
mentioned, such a charge lent weight to the view that Jesus was seditious. It may well have
been linked in some minds with messianic aspirations, namely, the rebuilding of a glorious
Temple, like Solomon’s, that first son of David.
Would Jesus’ execution have made the front page of the newspaper? Possibly, possibly
not. Viewed from a Christian perspective with a naive reading of the gospels, we might
imagine the world stood still and all of Israel held its breath. This is unlikely.
Executions were common. Human life was cheap. Times were desperate or could be if unrest was
not snuffed out. Political realities had to take precedence over individual aspirations. The
authorities must have believed they were acting in the nation’s best interests. Jesus
would not be the first innocent to fall victim to such necessitude. These were the days when
totalitarian regimes were the norm. Jesus died a Jew with a vision and a deep sense of
fulfilling God’s will. Romans killed him. The religious authorities of his people were
part of the act. This is very, very different from the wild and dangerous claims that ’The
Jews killed Jesus.’ It is also a long way from the overreaction against the horrors of
antisemitism which deletes any involvement of Jewish authorities and speculates that they
were working for his release. They were caught up in the system.
Jesus was not crucified because he denied his Jewishness, abandoned the Scriptures, or
disowned his people. He died as a result of a combination of factors which had conspired
also against others of his people who had captured a vision and launched prophetic
challenges. But he remained a Jew, Jesus of Nazareth, the Jew from Galilee. Why could it not
stay that way? Why the later split between Jesus’ movement and most of his compatriots? To
answer this question demands another paper, but let me indicate two major aspects which, I
believe, led to this parting of the ways, which is a rather innocuous way of speaking about
what for some was a very painful and traumatic family and community event.
First there was the issue of inclusiveness. The movement seems to have kept up the
egalitarian tendencies of Jesus and also continued to associate regularly with sinners and
outcasts. In itself that was not necessarily a problem. It was just dangerous. It became a
more acute problem when, whether ousted or just actively itinerant, members of the Jesus
movement found themselves in synagogues or in other public places where Gentiles were
attracted to their message. They very soon affirmed that the spirit of Jesus sanctioned such
a widening of the appeal. The assumption is that Israel’s God is the God of the universe,
so this had to entail proclaiming God’s goodness to all peoples. Israel must not keep God
to itself. What then should happen with non-Jews? Should they be allowed in? Provisions
about becoming a Jew are relatively unambiguous. There was biblical precedent and there were
biblical commands. That might have been the end of it.
But this charismatic movement, like its charismatic leader, Jesus, seems not to have
attended first to such requirements, but de facto received such people into its movement and
then, later, faced the issues. Some were all for following the normal procedures fully,
including circumcising the converts. But they had already been received and were
participating in the spirit of the movement, sharing in common meals and worship. So others
believed at least circumcision should be waived. The range of opinions spread further. Some
believed that all biblical laws which functioned as identity markers or barriers should
fall. Some, like Paul, argued that the new movement had its own sufficient basis for
goodness which would more than meet what was the spirit and intention of the Law. Some saw
themselves as needing to abandon Jewish heritage altogether.
The range reflects alsuot;ep division and pain, for these were Jews talking to Jews
within the movement. Jesus had not faced this situation. He left no concrete indication of
what might have been his response. The Christian Jews were on their own. Yet they did stand
under the influence of Jesus and to some extent you can see that he had an orientation which
had the potential to lead in some of these directions. He affirmed ritual and ceremonial
law, but gave higher priority to ethical commands of love. He affirmed love for God, but
appears to have seen this primarily in personalistic terms of trust and prayer, rather than
in cultic terms. When faced with a choice between preserving, what he sensed as barriers he
should uphold, and responding to human need, he could drop the barriers. But it is one thing
to say, some things matter more than others, an inclusive contrast. It is quite another
thing to start saying that one can abandon some things, an exclusive contrast.
Many Christian Jews, faced with the new situation of Gentiles argued that inclusion would
have to mean removal of barriers. Gentiles did not have to become Jews. They did not have to
become culturally Jewish. This, of course, begs the question in the view of those for whom
scripture is Scripture. God’s Law is unchangeable. We see here the interesting phenomenon
of cross-cultural encounter in which people of one culture are forced to decide what is
absolute and of abiding value and what belongs to the particulars of their culture which
need not be preserved. We all know this experience. You just need to look at Christianity to
see the same issues played out over and over again. God has instituted our way of doing
things — of course!
The Hellenistic world of the Roman empire and before had brought considerable
cross-cultural encounter. Jews dispersed throughout the region had long exposure to the
issues and mostly took a conservative line, even though there are many examples of
spiritualisation of cultic particulars such as sacrifice, food and purity laws and the like.
Already scripture, itself, had affirmed that circumcision of the heart was the priority, a
contrite heart worth more than many sacrifices. It was not a huge step from inclusive
contrasts to exclusive contrasts. By and large the Christian movement opted for some forms
of exclusive contrast. Now no longer: circumcision of the heart more than circumcision of
the flesh; but circumcision of the heart instead of circumcision of the flesh.
Jesus and other Jews who were developing inclusive contrasts (and probably annoying
Temple authorities by doing so — like saying, ’You don’t really have to come to church
regularly to be a Christian’) were the forerunners for the more radical break. For some
Jews such abandonment meant abandonment of God’s people, Israel, and the Jewish way of
life. Debates about quality of observance and nonobservance were not new and continue. The
radical wings of the Christian movement took a liberal stance towards inclusion which meant
they had to redefine their relationship to their Jewish heritage. Reading Paul’s writings
you can see how much that continuity mattered. But many Jews remain unpersuaded that in Paul
sufficient continuity remains.
It was not that Christian piety lost what the Law represents, either ethically or
cultically. The tragedy of Jesus’ innocent execution, like moments of terrible tragedy at
other times, generated extraordinary spiritual energy, so that writers like Paul made it
central to their life’s meaning and helped bequeath to Christian tradition a profound
sense of death leading to life, pain leading to liberation. Poured out, innocent love became
the ultimate sacrifice beyond all others, so that Christians came to affirm: ’Christ died
for all!’ All need to live by the power of this vulnerable, self-giving love. It was still
the love of the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. Christian Jews saw Jesus as representing,
symbolising, the suffering of Israel. They are betrayed whenever such profound sensitivity
has been skewed against their people and the cross not laid beside their suffering but used
to inflict it.
The other major area, usually seen as the main area of conflict, is the way Christians
came to speak about Jesus. I think there is insufficient evidence to justify the claim that
Jesus saw himself as something other than a human being. When he spoke of himself as God’s
child and of God as his father, he was drawing on Jewish models, not making a DNA claim.
Undoubtedly he claimed a special place for himself, as had special figures before him. He
acts with charismatic authority. Charismatic authorities are always a bother to established
authorities, as we have seen, but they appear from time to time. Like John, Jesus acted with
authority, claiming God’s authority. Only at a functional level could one say,
representing God. But then such distinctions blur when we contemplate that it is not as
though God was somewhere else. Paul said, ’God was in Christ.’ God was also in Moses.
Christians want to say that God was uniquely in Christ. I am not sure that this would have
made a lot of sense to the historical Jesus. What does unique mean?
There is no question that Jesus exercised authority, in healing, in teaching, in
preaching. It was not authority over against Torah, but authority in declaring God’s will,
and that, focused especially on the future and its impact already now in the present rather
than exegetically in exposition of scriptural law. The enigmatic phrase, ’Son of Man’,
appears on Jesus’ lips in the gospel material. It is hard to know how much it preserves
historical memory. I still think it derives from apocalyptic speculation and alludes
primarily to the human one who will act as God’s agent at the climax of history. Did Jesus
see himself acting in this role? Perhaps. And perhaps he assumed that also his band would
assume leadership in a renewed Israel of the restored tribes (cf. Matt 19:28; Luke 22:30).
When the disciples claimed they had seen Jesus alive after his death, it meant for them
that God had vindicated Jesus over against his accusers. Belief in resurrection was not
uncommon. Here, however, it entailed a claim that the time of resurrections, the time of the
end, was at hand. It proved to them that Jesus was right in what he said and claimed. This
explains the continuity: the Jesus movement continued to proclaim God’s coming reign and
to behave in community and inclusiveness as had Jesus. Naturally Jesus moves into the centre
of their thought in a new way. He also becomes part of their hopes. just what had happened
to Jesus? In affirming that Jesus was the Messiah, the movement was transforming a category
which had once remained grounded in political aspirations. God had enthroned Jesus in
heaven. One day Jesus would reign on earth as Messiah, as Israel’s king, a strongly
persistent tradition of Jewish Christians.
But the focus on Jesus’ heavenly location moved Jewish thought about Jesus into the
realm of mystery. Some Jewish groups had a strong interest in heavenly realities. Heaven was
not only the place for angels, but also for exalted human beings, like Moses or Elijah or
Enoch. Spiritualising the royal messianic tradition lay behind these Jews’ claim that
Jesus had been enthroned in heaven. It was not just a matter of reward, but of
authorisation. God lent his sacred name the name that is above every name, to this Jesus.
That entailed empowerment. The idea was not entirely novel. Some had speculated about a
similar enthronement of Moses and of Enoch and of angels, sometimes with such naming.
Empowered with the divine name, what kind of being is this? Rabbinic traditions reflect
concern with speculation about two powers in heaven.11
Possibly Christian Jewish speculation about Jesus is in mind. Certainly Christians acclaimed
Jesus, ’Lord’. The combination of titles led to ’Lord Jesus Christ.’
Christian Jews also began to link Jesus in this exalted status with roles attributed to
divine wisdom. From Proverbs 8 through to Sirach, the Wisdom of Solomon and Philo and
elsewhere, God’s wisdom appears personified as God’s companion, God’s agent in
creation, God’s Law in person. It was no great step to identify Jesus in these terms. In
some sense heavenly realities know no time. What was true of Jesus now must have been true
of him then. Out of this developed Christian Jewish beliefs that Jesus had been with God and
borne God’s name, shared in God’s reality, from before creation and that Jesus was the
manifestation of his reality. Subsequent history shows that no one intended to surrender
Jewish tenets in the process. Neither the oneness of God nor the humanity of Jesus was to be
compromised. What a development! And beside these were other explanations, typical of the
time, to explain why Jesus was the way he was: divine seed in a human Mary, but, at first,
focused primarily on miraculous conception.
Oone can understand that Jews who did not share the stance of Jesus and his followers
found this all a bit ’over the top.’ How could you make a human being a deity in such a
short time. A blasphemous outrage! And so it must have seemed from outside and even to some
inside. Like the divisions over the scripture, the divisions over what to think about Jesus
were many. The most developed in such speculation is John’s gospel. It presents Jesus as
offering life and truth and bread and light and water. It presents him as speaking of his
descent from his Father into human life as the Father’s ambassador and then planning to
return. John’s gospel tells us that many Christian Jewish believers found all this too
much and left the movement, or, at least, the Johannine version of it. Yet the author is at
pains to point out, as we have seen, that the charges that Jesus claims equality with God or
tries to make himself God are false. In the framework of John’s thought they are false.
His Jesus is the subordinate envoy, a cipher for God’s reality, always only glorifying
God, not himself.12
Had there not been the disputes over the Law, the Jewish Christian movement would
probably have been more sensitive to its heritage in developing its thought about Jesus
though without surrendering its unique claims for him. But in the context of the tensions
which the Law issues produced, claims for Jesus also escalated beyond a point where much
dialogue was possible. The sad pain of division exacerbated the tensions and the process
gave impetus to hatred instead of love. Bedevilling one’s opponents appears both in the
relation between Christian Jews and other Jews and within the Christian movement itself, the
one well illustrated in the Gospel of John (esp. John 8), the other in the First Epistle of
John (esp. 2:18-22; 4:4-6).
Christians still want to affirm that God was in Christ and uniquely so. What does unique
mean?. I sense that there is a spectrum of ways of affirming that God was addressing us in
Jesus. There is already such a spectrum in the New Testament. Some of the early Christian
ways of saying this, could probably remain within acceptable Jewish possibilities; others
are far beyond. For some, this is the main ground for the parting of the ways and continues
the major sticking point.
I also sense that there is a spectrum of ways of dealing with Torah in scripture. Here
Christian and Jewish attitudes to scripture show a similar diversity, I suspect, and that
includes the importance of continuing oral and later codified written tradition. But there
is an end to the spectrum where few Jews would dare, at least, theoretically. It is where
people relativise cultic and purity law, so-called externals, as cultural particularities
and abandon them. In practice it is not uncommon. Even Philo, for all his spiritualising,
railed against this option (MigrAbr 89-93). For many, I suspect, even before christology was
the sticking point, this was the impetus for parting. It continues to be a major difference,
although ironically Christianity is brim full of cultural particularities made absolute.
On both of these spectra the historical Jesus sits comfortably within the areas of
overlap, in his view of his own role and person, and in his attitude towards the Law. In
that sense one could perhaps claim that Jesus was comfortably Christian and certainly
comfortably Jewish and would not have sensed the conflict as other than intramural, within
his own faith community. Yet what he generated challenged people into the unknown and, like
the prophets of old, called them to radical compassion and evoked other responses as well,
not least, a tradition of adulation.
Ultimately, in my view, the abiding claim of Jesus lies not in what divided but in what
unites. Such a radical life as that of Jesus the Jew, lived under the vision of the kingdom,
may well have us all wanting to edge him out. For the gods of this world, self interest,
individually, culturally and nationally, who surround us with their altars and burn the
world’s poor in their groves, have their way of snuffing out the light of truth and
telling us there is peace where there is no peace. They discarded him, like generations
later would callously and cruelly discard his people, even in his name.
From his pain and from their pain a great cry for compassion and justice has gone forth
into the world. Jesus the Jew would have wept for his people and for us.
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Footnotes
- This paper was first presented to the Western Australian Council of
Christians and Jews, 14 October, 1996, at Murdoch University.
- For significant recent discussion see the collections contained in J.
H. Charlesworth (ed.) Jesus’ Jewishness. Exploring the Place of Jesus within Early
Judaism (New York: Crossroad, 1991); I. Broer, (ed.), Jesus und das jüdische
Gesetz (Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 1992); K. Kertelge (ed.), Das Gesetz im Neuen
Testament (Freiburg: Herder, 1986). See also G. Vermes, The Religion of Jesus the
Jew (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1993); note also his earlier Jesus The Jew
(London: Collins, 1973); E. P. Sanders, Jesus and Judaism (London: SCM, 1985); Jewish
Law from Jesus to the Mishnah (London: SCM; Philadelphia: Trinity, 1990); Judaism:
Practice and Belief 63 BCE – 66 CE (London: SCM; Philadelphia: Trinity, 1992);
among the many works of J. Neusner, note Judaism in the Beginning of Christianity (London:
SPCK, 1984) and Judaic Law from Jesus to the Mishnah. A Systematic Reply to Professor
E. P Sanders. South Florida Studies in the History of Judaism 84 (Atlanta:
Scholars.1993); M. Hengel, and R. Deines, ’E. P. Sanders “Common Judaism”, Jesus,
and the Pharisees’ J7S NS, 46 (1995) 1-70; and J. D. G. Dunn, The Partings of the
Ways. Between Christianity and Judaism and their Significance for the Character of
Christianity (London: SCM, 1991).
- Jesus’ Attitude towards the Law. A Study of the Gospels - in
the WUNT series (Tübingen: JCB Mohr).
- Forthcoming, to be published by the Joint Board of Christian
Education, Melbourne.
- J. D. Crossan, The Historical Jesus. The Life of a Mediterranean
Jewish Peasant (San Francisco: Harper, 1991), has a very useful coverage of these
issues.
- On this see also J. P. Meier, A Marginal Jew: Rethinking the
Historical Jesus. Volume One: The Roots of the Problem and the Person (New
York: Doubleday, 1991) pp. 205-208.
- For discussion of the following anecdotes from Mark see my
’Challenged at the Boundaries: A Conservative Jesus in Mark’s Tradition’ JSNT 63
(1996) 45-61.
- On the way the gospel writers portray Jesus’ attitude towards the Law, apart from
the works referred to in footnote 2 and 3 see also my ’Interpreters of the
Tradition’ Trinity Occasional Papers XVI,1 (June, 1996) 31-49.
- For discussion of the Cynic analogy see Downing, F. G. Christ and
the Cynics: Jesus and other radical preachers in first ceat sy tradition (Sheffield:
JSOT Press, 1988); Crossan, Historical Jesus, pp. 72-88, 421-422; B. L. Mack, The
Lost Gospel: the Book of Q and Christian Origins (San Francisco: Harper San
Francisco, 1993). For critique of the analogy see H. D. Betz, ’Jesus and the Cynics:
Survey and Analysis of a Hypothesis’ Journ Relig 74 (1994) 453-475.
- See the enlightening paper by K. Müller, ’Möglichkeit und
Vollzug jüdischer Kapitalgerichtsbarkeit im Prozess gegen Jesus von Nazaret’ in: K.
K