Read The Jewish Gospels Online
Authors: Daniel Boyarin
The Jewish Gospels
Also by Daniel Boyarin
Intertextuality and the Reading of Midrash
Carnal Israel: Reading Sex in Talmudic Culture
A Radical Jew: Paul and the Politics of Identity
Unheroic Conduct: The Rise of Heterosexuality and the Invention of the Jewish Man
Dying for God: Martyrdom and the Making of Christianity and Judaism
Queer Theory and the Jewish Question
Border Lines: The Partition of Judaeo-Christianity
Socrates and the Fat Rabbis
The Story of the Jewish Christ
Daniel Boyarin
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© 2012 by Daniel Boyarin
Foreword © 2012 by Jack Miles
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, in any form, without written permission from the publisher.
Requests for permission to reproduce selections from this book should be mailed to: Permissions Department, The New Press, 38 Greene Street, New York, NY 10013.
Published in the United States by
The New Press, New York, 2012
Distributed by Perseus Distribution
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Boyarin, Daniel.
The Jewish Gospels : the story of the Jewish Christ / Daniel Boyarin.
p.   cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-59558-711-4
1. Jesus ChristâJewish interpretations.   2. Bible. N.T.âCriticism, interpretation, etc., Jewish. I. Title.
BM620.B69Â Â Â 2011
296.3'96âdc23 | 2011034643 |
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This book was set in Berling Lt Std
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For Aharon Shemesh,
,
in whom I have fulfilled both directives of our Sages:
to find a friend and acquire a teacher
1. From Son of God to Son of Man
2. The Son of Man in First Enoch and Fourth Ezra: Other Jewish Messiahs of the First Century
4. The Suffering Christ as a Midrash on Daniel
Jack Miles
“D
ANIEL BOYARIN,” A PROMINENT CONSERVATIVE
rabbi confided to me not long ago, “is one of the two or three greatest rabbinic scholars in the world,” andâdropping his voice a notchâ“possibly even the greatest.” The observation was given in confidence because, quite clearly, it troubled the rabbi to think that someone with Boyarin's views might have truly learned Talmudic grounds for them. As a Christian, let me confide that his views can be equally troubling for Christians who appreciate the equally grounded originality of his reading of our New Testament.
Boyarin's is a troubling brilliance because it blurs and complicates a pair of reciprocally settled identities. His achievement is to have taken conceptual control of this reciprocity and then deployed it in a bold rereading of the rabbis and the evangelists alike, the results of which are so startling that once youâyou, Jew, or you, Christianâget what he is up to, you suddenly read even the most familiar passages of your home scripture in a new light.
I can best illustrate this point, I think, with a recent,
quite personal example, but let me first set the scene with a little parable exploring what I mean by “reciprocally settled identities.” There is in our neighborhood a family with twin sons, Benjamin and Joshua. Because they are fraternal twins, not identical, they don't look alike, and they are different in other ways as well. Ben is an athlete, a scrappy competitor who makes up in hustle whatever he may lack in raw ability. Josh is a singer-songwriter with bedroom eyes whose second love, after his current girlfriend, is his guitar. Their mother, who comes from a family of athletes, says fondly of Ben, “He's all boy, that one.” Their father, from a family of musicians and romantics, dotes on Josh.
Being twins, sharing a bedroom since they were toddlers, Ben and Josh know one another quite well. Ben knowsâas no one else doesâthat Josh can beat him in one-on-one basketball. Josh knows that Ben can sing two-part harmony in a sweet tenor voice never heard outside their bedroom. But what they know about themselves has mattered less and less as time has passed and as a received version of who they are has taken hold in their extended family. Ben is the athlete and fighter, everyone in the family agrees; Josh is the singer and lover, and that's that. By degrees, the brothers themselves have succumbed to the family definition. Ben has virtually forgotten that he, too, can sing. Josh has stopped working out and this year did not even go to the homecoming game.
Reciprocally, but with family assistance, they have accepted simplified versions of themselves as their settled identities.
As it happens, though, the twins have a favorite teacher, Mr. Boyarin, who knows them both from school and once accepted an invitation to Thanksgiving dinner at their house. After dinner, as sometimes happens on such occasions, the family album was brought out for the visitor's edification. Mr. Boyarin, who likes both boys, noticed a fifth-grade photo of JoshâJosh, not Benâin football equipment and asked about it. Later, he noticed a photo of BenâBen, not Joshâsinging the national anthem at the school convocation, chosen for the honor because Mrs. Pignatelli, the music teacher, knew a great boy soprano when she heard one. The family chuckled at these completely out-of-character moments, but Mr. Boyarin took quiet note and resolved, as the opportunity may present itself, to allow what he sees as the neglected if not entirely suppressed side of each boy a little room to operate in.
Daniel Boyarin sees Judaism and Christianity as being like Josh and Ben, not that either sports or music is at issue. At issue, rather, is the questionâalways consequential but perhaps never more so than after the destruction of the Jewish Temple in 70
C.E.
âof how Jews should relate to their God and to the Gentile majority of the human race. Before the destruction of the Temple, there were various contending schools of thought about this core question.
After the catastrophic destruction, the two schools that survived were the Rabbinical and the Christian. Theologically, they had their differences, but they were both Jewish as surely as Josh and Ben are both brothers in the same family. Their differences were, as we say, all in the family, and they remained all in the family not just for a few decades but, Boyarin boldly asserts, for the first few centuries of the common era. It took that long for gradually escalating mutual polemics to overcome an underlying sense of fraternity on either side and to create two reciprocally settled identities where before there had been just one identity, albeit unsettled. What Boyarin regrets is that these two identities were polemically simplified and coarsened as each side learned to repudiate, as if on deepest principle, practices and beliefs that, at an earlier stage, either side would have admitted as unproblematically its own. It is as if Ben's great-grandchildren should be taught to believe as a matter of core identity that “we never touch the guitar,
they
play the guitar, that's what they're like,” while Josh's offspring, by the same token, should be taught to stake their lives on the self-evident truth that “we never touch a football,
they
play football, that's what they're like.”
Did Jesus keep kosher? Would that have been un-Christian of him? In
chapter 3
of the book you are about to read, titled “Jesus Kept Kosher,” Boyarin writes:
Most (if not all) of the ideas and practices of the Jesus movement of the first century and the beginning of the second centuryâand even laterâcan be safely understood as part of the ideas and practices that we understand to be “Judaism.”. . . The ideas of Trinity and incarnation, or certainly the germs of those ideas, were already present among Jewish believers well before Jesus came on the scene to incarnate in himself, as it were, those theological notions and take up his messianic calling.
However, the Jewish background of the ideas of the Jesus movement are only one piece of the new picture I'm sketching here. Much of the most compelling evidence for the Jewishness of the early Jesus communities comes from the Gospels themselves. . . . Counter to most views of the matter, according to the Gospel of Mark, Jesus kept kosher, which is to say that he saw himself not as abrogating the Torah but as defending it. There was controversy with some other Jewish leaders as to how best to observe the Law, but none, I will argue, about
whether
to observe it. According to Mark (and Matthew even more so), far from abandoning the laws and practices of the Torah, Jesus was a staunch defender of the Torah against what he perceived to be threats to it from the Pharisees.The Pharisees were a kind of reform movement within the Jewish people that was centered on Jerusalem and Judaea. The Pharisees sought to convert
other Jews to their way of thinking about God and Torah, a way of thinking that incorporated seeming changes in the written Torah's practices that were mandated by what the Pharisees called “the tradition of the Elders.”. . . It is quite plausible, therefore, that other Jews, such as the Galilean Jesus, would reject angrily such ideas as an affront to the Torah and as sacrilege.
Boyarin's reading of Mark 7, in which he turns what Christianity has traditionally interpreted as an attack on Jewish dietary and purity laws into a distinct kind of defense of them, is one of many stunningly persuasive but utterly surprising readings of what in his hands does indeed become “compelling evidence for the Jewishness of the early Jesus communities . . . from the Gospels themselves.” There is no denying, and Boyarin does not deny, that Jesus attacks the Pharisees, the forerunners if not the founders of Rabbinical Judaism, but few Christian commentators have recognized how clear a distinction Jesus draws between them and Moses and how much he is at pains to defend Moses and therewith to defend the Torah. It is by stressing that distinction that Boyarin brings the quarrel back into the Jewish family.