Sunday, May 31, 2020

Some Useful Links on the Recent State of Research on the Historical Jesus


James McGrath in his Patheos blog says: There has been so much of interest related to the historical Jesus and the Gospels recently that a collection of links with a few quotes and discussions seemed in order. 
https://www.patheos.com/blogs/religionprof/2020/05/historical-jesus-may-2020.html?fbclid=IwAR0rvcHQbqiQIXLm9jsx29ileio2VGfLL-flaLUa6afKta8zlEPlEhgbZ8I


The different links provided by McGrath in this article are really fascinating and, if one is involved in historical Jesus study (as I am), they are worth checking out in detail one by one. This is a note to myself and an encouragement to others!

Friday, May 29, 2020

Book Review: Paul vs. James: The Battle that Shaped Christianity and Changed the World (an historical reconstruction) - by Barrie Wilson PhD




Bibliographical Information
Wilson, Barrie, PhD. Paul vs. James: The Battle that Shaped Christianity and Changed the World (an historical reconstruction). N.p.: CreateSpace Independent Publishing, 2018. 191 pp.
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     Recently, I've been consumed by this book by York University (Toronto) Professor-Emeritus Barrie Wilson because it reads like a thrilling, page-turning detective novel but is filled with top-notch historical research, a fruit of Wilson's many years of New Testament scholarship.  I finished reading it promptly. This is a book I highly recommend not only to fellow academics interested in the New Testament, early Christianity, and, specifically, Pauline Studies, but also to everyone interested in a very possible (even probable) imaginative reconstruction of how the early Christians interacted with each other and zeroes in on a crucial conflict between the followers of James' ("the Lord's brother") and those of Paul and his"Christ-worshiping" followers.
     This present historical-fictional work has to be read in tandem with Wilson’s more academic work How Jesus Became Christian (Random House Canada, 2008) where he fleshes out more in detailed prose the fine points of the argument about the origins of Christianity which he presents here in a historical-fictionalized form.
     I've already known earlier, largely through my reading of British New Testament scholar Michael Goulder, that there were "two missions" in the early church (See his A Tale of Two Missions, SCM, 1994 – one of my all-time favourite books of New Testament history!). To put it simply: The dominant one tracing its lineage to the historical Jesus was led by apostolic giants such as James, the Lord’s brother and Jesus’s close companions—Peter and John. It was largely geared toward Jews. It saw itself as a form of Judaism in the style of Yeshua (Jesus) and continued to practice all the Jewish customs in the spirit of Yeshua. The other one was that headed by Paul which, of course, was directed primarily to the gentiles and stood on the revelations that Paul claimed to have had from the Christ himself and was viewed oftentimes as maverick or rogue by some disciples who knew Jesus in the flesh because of its spirit of downplaying Torah and Jewish practices and emphasizing faith in Christ. These two missions did not agree on many things—prominently, about what the continuing significance or irrelevance of “Israel” and Jewish matters were in the light of Jesus, the Christ.
     But this novelized biblical history by Wilson really puts the matter more starkly and more clearly in front of me: There was, he claims, an irreconcilable difference between the "Community of the Way" of James and his followers (among whom the protagonist "Mattai" was included) with the "Christ worshipers" of  Paul and his followers (the leaders of whom were Evodius and Ignatius -yes, THE famous apostolic father Ignatius of Antioch). 
     What Paul was trying to do was to claim that he and his movement were somehow a legitimate "development" of the religion of Israel which, after all, had a pedigree (already then) of at least over a thousand years. This was useful within the Roman Empire where "antiquity" was much respected. Besides, Paul drew converts largely from among the "God-fearers" who were associated with various Jewish synagogues in the Jewish Diaspora. 
     The book is noteworthy because it is an elaborate fleshing out of what the position of James and his followers could have been at the start of the Christian movement. According to Wilson, the followers of Yeshua in the tradition of James ("the Lord's brother") did not want to be associated with Paul's movement and that they sought to clarify at the famous "Council of Jerusalem" (circa 49 CE), that Paul's movement was an altogether different religion from the style of Judaism that Yeshua himself started and was continued by James and all the earliest disciples of Jesus who knew the "flesh and blood" rabbi from Nazareth. 
     In short, Paul was an interloper from the point of view of all the disciples who knew Yeshua because they could not see in Paul's "Christ-worshiping" movement any significant continuity with the style of Judaism advocated by Yeshua. Instead, they thought that Paul's insistence on worshiping Christ as a kind of deity who seeks to achieve an other-worldly kind of salvation through his death and resurrection while dispensing with Torah (the Law) and on everything being mediated directly through the mystical experiences of Paul/Saul himself, was NOT part of the Yeshua movement at all.
     Wow! I'm just being forced to seriously reconsider the earliest history of Christianity in a major way through this work! Kudos, Dr. Wilson for making New Testament studies this intriguing and interesting!

Thursday, May 28, 2020

Book Review: Sleuthing the Bible (by Kaltner and McKenzie)


Kaltner, John and Steven L. McKenzie (2019). Sleuthing the Bible: Clues that Unlock the Mysteries of the Text. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans. 279 pages.

I finished reading through this work. I think that this is an awesomely helpful and fun biblical reference work, particularly because it makes biblical study more interesting by comparing it to a “crime scene” investigation (p. 2). It is all the more significant for me because this is exactly what I’ve been doing about the biblical texts in my classes for the past 14 years as a university instructor. And I thought I was the “originator” of this metaphor for studying the biblical texts (tongue-in-cheek)!

  What is significantly noteworthy about Kaltner and McKenzie’s work is that they go deep into the metaphor of biblical studies-as-detective work and develop it extensively by identifying the most significant clues that could help the biblical detective. They even classify these clues (such as etiology, weird social custom, broken pattern, etc.) into “Smoking Guns” (Part One; clues such as etiology, weird social custom, broken pattern, etc.) and “Dusting for Prints” (Part Two; clues such as anachronism, messy manuscript, perspectival bias, etc.). The former are readily identifiable clues (hence, smoking guns), while the latter needs some careful and more painstaking biblical “detective work” in order for the clue to become more identifiable.

  With the explicit identification of biblical studies as a “crime scene,” the obvious consequence is that the focus and goal of the process decidedly become the possible or probable history behind the text. The biblical text itself is utilized as if it were a crime scene that carries “clues” that a trained eye could identify – clues that could shed light on things that probably happened behind the (crime scene) of the text. This makes the study of the biblical text a fascinating quest to spot different clues that would enable the “investigator” to do a good reconstruction of the past, thus helping us understand the different forces that shaped the creation of the “crime scene” (the text) as we know it today.

  If I could make a suggestion for a future edition, I would say that a good explanation of the different dimensions of the text would even expand the picture and make it more complete. These dimensions are often expressed as “worlds”: namely, the world “of” or “in” the text (the literary work itself); the world “behind” the text (the historical forces behind the creation of the text); and the world “in front of” the text (the reader[s] of the text who interpret the meaning and significance of the text). The different clues of Sleuthing the Bible could then be explained “more globally” in the context of these different worlds as to how they could inform one or another of these dimensions.

  But that does not detract from the fact that this is a very worthy effort to make biblical study more interesting and when that is done, (at least) half of the work has been done. Kudos to the authors for this wonderful aid for biblical studies! (reviewed by jkk)