Read The Jewish Gospels Online
Authors: Daniel Boyarin
How the Jews Came to Believe That Jesus Was God
If all the Jewsâor even a substantial numberâexpected that the Messiah would be divine as well as human, then the belief in Jesus as God is not the point of departure on which some new religion came into being but simply another variant (and not a deviant one) of Judaism. As controversial a statement as this may seem, it must first be understood in the context of a broader debate about the origins of the divinity of Jesus. The theological idea that Jesus actually was God, however refined by the later niceties of trinitarian theology, is referred to as a “high Christology,” in opposition to “low Christologies” according to which Jesus was essentially an inspired human being, a prophet or teacher, and not God.
“Christology” is the term in Christian theology and the history of Christianity for all of the issues and controversies that make up the story and the doctrine of the Christ. In the fifth century, for instance, the great controversy about whether Jesus had one human nature and one divine nature or one combined divine-human nature was called the “Christological controversy.” Many other issues have been discussed and thought about under the rubric of Christology, however. Was Jesus divine from birth or an ordinary human later adopted by God and made divine? How did Jesus effect salvationâthrough his crucifixion, his teaching, his showing the way for humans to become
divine? It has frequently been asserted that low Christologies are “Jewish” ones, while high Christologies have come into Christianity from the Greek thought world. Oddly enough, this position has been taken both by Jewish writers seeking to discredit Christianity as a kind of paganism and by orthodox Christian scholars wishing to distinguish the “new religion” from the old one as far and as quickly as possible. This doubly defensive approach can no longer be maintained.
The question of the origins of high Christology is one that continues to animate a great deal of scholarship on the prehistory of Christianity, or the history of pre-Christianity as attested in the New Testament, for at first glance it would seem to violate the absolute principle of Jewish monotheism. In a recent article, Andrew Chester has helpfully summarized the various positions that are currently held and defended by scholars on this question, which can be divided into four broad schools of thought.
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According to the first, which has been popular among liberal Protestants for over a century, the idea of the divinity of Christ could only have been a relatively late and “Gentile” development that marks a decisive break with anything that could reasonably be called Jewish. The argument goes that the early Jewish believers in Jesus believed in him as an inspired teacher, perhaps a prophet, perhaps the Messiah but only in the human sense. It was only later on, this view would hold, after the majority of
Christians were no longer Jews, that the idea of Jesus as God came in, possibly under the sway of the “pagan” ideas of many of the new Christian converts.
A second approach, currently enjoying ascendance especially among New Testament scholars, sees the earliest versions of high Christology as emerging within a Jewish religious context.
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I submit that it is possible to understand the Gospel only if both Jesus and the Jews around him held to a high Christology whereby the claim to Messiahship was also a claim to being a divine man.
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Were it not the case, we would be very hard-pressed to understand the extremely hostile reaction to Jesus on the part of Jewish leaders who did not accept his claim. Controversy
among Jews was hardly a new thing; for a controversy to lead to a crucifixion, it must have been a doozy. A Jew claiming that he was God, that he was the divine Son of Man whom the Jews had been expecting and, moreover, not being laughed out of the village for this claim, would have been such a doozy.
The Blasphemy of the Son of Man
The reasons that many Jews came to believe that Jesus was divine was because they were already expecting that the Messiah/Christ would be a god-man.
This expectation was part and parcel of Jewish tradition.
The Jews had learned this by careful reading of the Book of Daniel and understanding its visions and revelations as a prophecy of what would happen at the end of time. In that book, as we have just seen, the young divine figure is given sovereignty and made ruler of the world forever. I want to show that Jesus saw himself as the divine Son of Man, and I will do so by explaining a couple of difficult passages in the second chapter of the Gospel of Mark.
The Son of Man has been afforded glory, sovereignty, and dominion over all the sublunary world, as we saw in Daniel 7 above: “
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The kingship and dominion and the greatness of the kingdoms
under the whole heaven
shall be given to the people of the holy ones of the Most High; their kingdom shall be an everlasting kingdom, and all
dominions shall serve and obey them.” While this verse comes from an interpretative framework within the chapter that seeks to demythologize the narrative of the Son of Man, such effort could not withstand the power of the verses earlier in the chapter in which the divinity of the Son of Man is so clearly marked.
In Mark 2:5â10 we read the following:
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And when Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralytic, “My son, your sins are forgiven.”
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Now some of the scribes were sitting there, questioning in their hearts,
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“Why does this man speak thus? It is blasphemy! Who can forgive sins except the one God?”
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8
And immediately Jesus, perceiving in his spirit that they thus questioned within themselves, said to them, “Why do you question thus in your hearts?
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Which is easier, to say to the paralytic, âYour sins are forgiven,' or to say, âRise, take up your pallet and walk'?
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But that you may know that the Son of man has authority on earth to forgive sinsӉhe said to the paralytic. . .
“But that you may know that the Son of man has authority on earth to forgive sins.” The Son of Man has authority (obviously delegated by God) to do God's work of the forgiving of sins on earth. This claim is derived from Daniel 7:14, in which we read that the one like a son of
man has been given “authority, glory, kingship”âindeed, an “authority that is eternal that will not pass away.” The term that we conventionally translate as “authority” in its New Testament contexts,
á¼
ξοÏ
Ïία, is exactly the same term that translates the Aramaic
in the Septuagint, namely, “sovereignty” or “dominion.” That is, what Jesus is claiming for the Son of Man is exactly what has been granted to the one like a son of man in Daniel; Jesus rests his claim on the ancient text quite directly.
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According to this tradition, then, Jesus claims to be the Son of Man to whom divine authority on earth “under the heavens” (Daniel 7:27) has been delegated.
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The sovereign, moreover, is the one who has the power to declare exceptions to the Law.
The objection of the Scribes, calling Jesus' act of forgiveness “blasphemy,” is predicated on their assumption that Jesus is claiming divinity through this action; hence their emphasis that only the
one
God may forgive sins, to which Jesus answers in kind: the second divine figure of Daniel 7, the one like a son of man, is authorized to act as and for God. This constitutes a direct declaration of a doubleness of the Godhead, which is, of course, later on the very hallmark of Christian theology. Throughout the Gospel, whenever Jesus claims
á¼
ξοÏ
Ïία to perform that which appears to be the prerogative of the divinity, it is that very
á¼
ξοÏ
Ïία of the Son of Man that is being claimed, which is to say, a scriptural authority based on a very close
reading of Daniel 7.
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We see now why the later Rabbis, in naming this very ancient religious view a heresy, refer to it as “two powers in heaven.”
“The Son of Man Is Lord Even of the Sabbath”
The question of how to read Daniel 7 was very much on the minds of Jews of the period, and not only those who became followers of Jesus. Mark, quite directly and intentionally, is offering us a close reading of Daniel. In this light, we can begin to interpret one of the most puzzling and pivotal “Son of Man” statements in the Gospel. I place these texts in an entirely different context from the one in which they are usually read; in this new context, certain clues become much more vivid and telling. It's a question of looking at the text in a new and different way, which in turn reveals connections that help sketch an entirely different picture of what's going onâor better put, what was at stake for the evangelist and his hearers. This interpretation of Mark 2:10 as being a close reading of Daniel 7:14 enables me to begin to understand anew the other puzzling Son of Man statement in Mark 2, known as the incident of the plucking of grain on the Sabbath. In this story, Jesus' disciples are discovered plucking grain and eating it as they walk on the Sabbath by some Pharisees who challenge Jesus as to this seemingly insouciant or arrogant violation of the Sabbath. Jesus defends them vigorously.
This passage helps us understand how it was that Jesus saw himself (or is portrayed as seeing himself) both as the divine Redeemer and as the Davidic Messiah whom the Jews were expecting:
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One sabbath he was going through the grainfields; and as they made their way his disciples began to pluck heads of grain.
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And the Pharisees said to him, “Look, why are they doing what is not lawful on the sabbath?”
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And he said to them, “Have you never read what David did, when he was in need and was hungry, he and those who were with him:
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how he entered the house of God, when Abiathar was high priest, and ate the bread of the Presence, which it is not lawful for any but the priests to eat, and also gave it to those who were with him?”
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And he said to them, “The sabbath was made for man, not man for the sabbath;
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so the Son of man is lord even of the sabbath.”
There are several well-known problems attending on this passage, which (as is Mark 7, which I will presently treat) is of enormous importance for reconstructing Jewish religious history.
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The major issues are the reason for the disciples plucking on the Sabbath; the nature and meaning of Jesus' reply invoking the analogy of David; the connection between that reply and vv. 27â28, in which the Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath, and the Sabbath is
made for man; and the meaning and connection between those verses.
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Jesus seems to be giving too many justifications of the disciples' behavior; is the defense based on an ancient halakhic principle that the Sabbath may be violated for human welfare, or does it have something to do with Jesus' messianic status? Many scholars have “solved” these problems by assuming that the text has been interpolated. This explanation, while in itself unsatisfactory, points up the tension in the text between ancient halakhic (legal) controversy (which there certainly is here) and radical apocalyptic transformation in the words of Jesus (which I believe is also here). What convinces me that there is genuine memory of halakhic controversy here is the fact that the elements of Jesus' arguments are found later within the traditions of the Rabbis.
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Here is the crucial text for our purposes:
Rabbi Ishmael and Rabbi El
Ê¿
azar the son of Azariah and Rabbi Akiva were walking on the way and Levi Hassaddar and Rabbi Ishmael the son of Rabbi El
Ê¿
azar the son of Azariah were walking behind them. And the question arose among them:
“From whence do we know that the saving of a life supersedes the Sabbath?”Rabbi Ishmael answered: Behold it says: “If a thief is caught breaking in and is struck so that he dies, the defender is not guilty of bloodshed;
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but if it happens after sunrise, he is guilty of bloodshed” [Exodus 22:2â3]. And this is true even if we are not sure whether he came to kill or only to steal. Now the reasoning is from the light to the heavy: Just as the killing of a person which pollutes the Land and pushes the divine presence away supersedes the Sabbath (in such a case of one caught at night breaking and entering), even more so the saving of a life!”Rabbi El
Ê¿
azar spoke up with a different answer: “Just as circumcision which [saves] only one member of a person supersedes the Sabbath, the entire body even more so!”. . .Rabbi Akiva says: “If murder supersedes the Temple worship which supersedes the Sabbath, saving a life even more so!”
Rabbi Yose Hagelili says: “When it says âBut keep
my Sabbaths,' the word âbut' makes a distinction: There are Sabbaths that you push aside and those that you keep [i.e., when human life is at stake, this supersedes the Sabbath].”Rabbi Shim
Ê¿
on the son of Menasya says: “Behold it says: Keep the Sabbath because it is holy to
you
; to
you
the Sabbath is delivered and not you to the Sabbath.” Rabbi Natan says: “It says: And the Children of Israel kept the Sabbath to keep the Sabbath for their generations. Profane one Sabbath for him [the sick person] in order that he may keep many Sabbaths!” (Mekhilta, Tractate Sabbath, 1)
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